¶1 Petitioner Johnny Dale Fuller was charged with two counts of assault in the second degree, each count presenting an alternative means of committing the offense. The jury acquitted Fuller of one count and deadlocked on the other. The trial court declared a mistrial on that count, and the State sought to retry Fuller. Fuller moved to dismiss, arguing that retrial would subject him to reprosеcution for the same offense after an acquittal, in violation of double jeopardy. The superior court denied Fuller’s motion, and the Court of Appeals affirmed. We hold that jeopardy never terminated as to the count the State seeks to retry, and that the jury’s acquittal on the other count is of no consequence. Because retrial does not implicatе double jeopardy, we affirm the Court of Appeals.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2 Fuller was charged with two counts of assault in the second degree, one count of trafficking in stolen property in the first degree, and one count of possession of stolen property in the third degree.
¶3 The trial court instructed the jury that a separate crime was charged in each count, and that its verdict on one count did not control the verdict on any other count. Although the jury wаs given an alternative means instruction for assault in the second degree,
¶4 The jury found Fuller not guilty of count II (substantial bodily harm) but was unable to reach a verdict as to count I (deadly weapon). With counsels’ agreement, the court declared a mistrial as to count I due to a hung jury.
ANALYSIS
¶6 The United States Constitution and the Washington State Constitution protect individuals from being twice put in jeopardy for the same offense. U.S. Const. amend. V (“nor shall any person be subject for the same offence to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb”); Wash. Const. art. I, § 9 (“No person shall ... be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense.”). “The double jeopardy doctrine protects a criminal defendant from being (1) prosecuted a second time for the same offense after acquittal, (2) prosecuted a second time for the same offense after conviction, and (3) punished multiple times for the same offense.” State v. Linton,
¶7 Fuller argues that prosecuting him again for assаult in the second degree violates the constitutional bar on reprosecuting the same offense after acquittal. Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 4. He reasons that counts I and II were alternative means of committing a single assault, and that he was acquitted of committing that assault. Although Fuller is correct that the State may not reprosecute count II—the count on which he was acquitted—he is incorrect regarding reprosecution of the other charged means. Jeopardy did not terminate on count I specifically or on the overall offense of second degree assault. The State may therefore retry Fuller on count I without implicating double jeopardy.
Retrial on Count I Does Not Implicate Double Jeopardy Because Jeоpardy Did Not Terminate on That Count or on the Assault Offense
¶8 The second degree assault statute, RCW 9A.36-.021, articulates a single criminal offense and currently provides seven separate subsections defining how the offense may be committed. State v. Smith,
¶9 The situation here is analogous to one in which a reviewing court reverses a conviction due to insufficient evidence of one аlternative means of committing an offense, but remands for retrial on the remaining, valid, means. In State v. Ramos, we explained the alternative means principle:
The alternative means principle dictates that when a jury renders a guilty verdict as to a single crime, but one of the alternative means for committing that crime is later held to be invalid on appeal and the record does not establish that the jury was unanimous as to the valid alternativе in rendering its verdict, double jeopardy does not bar retrial on the remaining valid alternative mean.
¶10 This principle holds true “even when one alternative mean has been reversed on appeal due to a finding of insufficient evidence, a finding that has the same double jeopardy implications as an outright acquittal in other circumstances.” Id. at 661. For double jeopаrdy purposes, a reversal for insufficient evidence is equivalent to an acquittal “because it means ‘no rational factfinder could have voted to convict’ on the evidence presented.” Wright,
¶11 Our decision in Garcia guides our reasoning here. In Garcia, the defendant was convicted of first degree kidnapping, second degree burglary, and first degree criminal trespass.
¶12 The same principle applies here. Clearly, jeoрardy never terminated as to the count on which the jury deadlocked, even though it terminated with respect to the count on which the jury acquitted. Cf., e.g., State v. Russell,
¶13 The double jeopardy principles that apply in the context of lesser included offenses also apply to alternative means crimes. For double jeopardy purposes, a lesser in-eluded offense is the “same offense” as the greater offense. See Brown v. Ohio,
¶14 In this case, the jury acquitted Fuller of one means of committing assault and deadlocked on the other. As in cases in which the jury acquits the defendant of the greater crime but is hung on the lesser included offense—the “same crime” for double jeopardy purposes—Fuller may be retried on the means on which the jury could not agree. Jeopardy as to that means, and for the crime as a whole, has not terminated.
¶15 It is important to recognize that Fuller could not have reasonably relied on the jury’s acquittal as terminating jеopardy for second degree assault because it took place at the same time the jury deadlocked on the same offense. All of the charges were brought in one trial, before one jury. In one proceeding, the jury simultaneously acquitted Fuller on one means of committing an offense and was hung on the other means. Fuller stands in the same position as a defendant who is simultaneously acquitted and convicted of the same offense under two subsections of a statute. He cannot reasonably rely on an acquittal on one means as being sufficient to terminate jeopardy for the overall offense when the jury simultaneously deadlocked on the other means. See Williams v. Warden,
Fuller’s Reliance on Sanabria and Wright Is Misplaced
¶16 Fuller relies heavily on Sanabria and Wright for the proposition that an acquittal on one means of committing assault in the second degree is “ ‘an absolute bar to any further prosecution.’ ” Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 8 (quoting Sanabria,
¶17 In Sanabria, a single-count indictment charged the defendant with involvement in an illegal gambling business that concerned numbers betting and horse betting.
¶18 Fuller’s case is distinguishable from Sanabria in two key ways. First, in Sanabria, the Court was contemplating a new prosecution after a full acquittal. It prohibited “further prosecution for participation in that [gambling] business” because there was an acquittal on an element of the crime which the currеnt and future crimes would share.
¶ 19 Second, in Sanabria, the trial court acquitted “on the entire count and found petitioner not guilty of the crime of violating 18 U.S.C. § 1955 (1976 ed.), without specifying that it did so only with respect to one theory of liability.”
¶20 Fuller’s reliance on Wright is likewise ineffectual. Fuller depends specifically on this statement in Wright: “When a proceeding ends in аn undisturbed verdict or verdict equivalent on any alternative, the State may not prosecute the defendant on any other means of committing the same offense.”
¶21 Furthermore, recent case law undermines the dicta in Wright. In Garcia, the court found insufficient evidence to support two of the three presented alternative means of committing kidnapping.
¶22 Fuller was charged with alternativе means of committing assault in the second degree, each means presented in a different count. The jury acquitted him of one means and was declared hung on the other. Jeopardy thus terminated as to only one means of committing the offense; it did not terminate as to the offense overall or as to the means on which the jury could not agree. Because jeoрardy never terminated as to the offense as a whole, retrying Fuller on the means on which the jury deadlocked does not implicate double jeopardy.
CONCLUSION
¶23 We hold that when the State charges alternative means of committing an offense in separate counts and the jury acquits on one count but deadlocks on the other, the State may retry the defendant on the count on which the jury was declared hung. Retrial on that count does not violate the prohibition against double jeopardy because jeopardy never terminated as to that count or as to the overall offense. We affirm.
Notes
The jury acquitted Puller of both property charges, and they are not at issue here.
Jury instruсtion 5 provided, “A person commits the crime of Assault in the Second Degree when he: 1) intentionally assaults another and thereby recklessly inflicts substantial bodily harm, or 2) assaults another with a deadly weapon.” CP at 80.
Since Smith, the legislature added subsection (g), which includes strangulation and suffocation. Laws of 2007, ch. 79, § 2; Laws of 2011, ch. 166, § 1.
Because Fuller did not object to the State charging the alternative means in separate counts, we do not consider whether this unusual method of charging a single assault implicates issues other than double jeopardy.
Fuller relies on this language to support his argument that an acquittal on one means of committing an offense is an acquittal of the entire offense, barring retrial. See Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 8. As explained in this section, Fuller’s reliance is misplаced because in his case jeopardy did not terminate as to the offense overall.
This statement is also dictum. It was not necessary to the court’s decision in Wright, permitting retrial despite the jury having returned a general guilty verdict after the conviction was overturned due to the jury being instructed on a legally invalid means.
