OPINION
The charges in this ease arose from a domestic incident that occurred at the North Minneapolis residence shared by the appellant, Kennedy Amenya Gisege, his wife Heather Brasch, their infant daughter Kayla, and Adrian Brasch, the 3-year-old son of Heather Brasch by a previous relationship. A Hennepin County grand jury indicted appellant for the first-degree murder of Adrian and the attempted first-degree murder or attempted second-degree murder of Brasch. Following trial, a jury found appellant guilty of the first-degree murder of Adrian and of what the trial court had instructed was the lesser-included charge of the first-degree assault of Brasch. The court sentenced the appellant to a mandatory life term for the first-degree murder and a consecutive 129-month sentence for the first-degree assault.
We affirm both convictions and the accompanying sentences.
The following facts are undisputed.
Shortly after 2 a.m. on April 17, 1995, a motorist saw Brasch running down a street with blood all over her. The motorist stopped. Brasch told the motorist she had been stabbed by her husband and that “he is going to kill my baby.” The motorist’s boyfriend then called 911. The 911 operator arranged for an ambulance and forwarded the information to a police dispatcher who sent officers to meet Brasch. When the police arrived, Brasch told them she had been stabbed by her husband and that he was going to kill her 3-year-old child. She gave the police her address and they left for the residence. An ambulance later took Brasch to the hospital. She had a laceration on her head, a laceration extending across her neck, and lacerations on her hand and abdomen. The hospital released her 48 hours later.
After arriving at the residence, the police observed a man, later identified as the appellant, inside the house. After a time, the appellant walked out the back door and the police took him into custody. The appellant had fresh blood on his hands and blood stains on his body and shorts. The police took appellant to the hospital for treatment. Tests indicated that appellant had a .29 percent blood alcohol level. The officers who remained at the scene then entered the residence. They found Kayla sleeping and unharmed in the downstairs bedroom. They found Adrian crouched in a corner in an upstairs bedroom, covered in blood from multiple stab wounds to the head. He was alive but had trouble breathing. An ambulance transported Adrian to the hospital where doctors determined that Adrian suffered a series of very deep cuts to the scalp and face. Doctors declared him brain dead two days later. Forensic scientists testified that tests indicated that the blood in Adrian’s bedroom was Adrian’s, and that the blood on appellant was that of Adrian and Brasch.
The following facts are disputed.
The appellant testified that Brasch killed Adrian and then attacked the appellant fol *155 lowing an argument. According to the appellant, Brasch took both children to her mother’s for Easter dinner while the appellant remained home. The appellant fell asleep in his bed and was awakened by Brasch when she returned home. The couple began to argue in the bedroom and then moved into the sitting room. The argument lasted for close to two hours. The appellant then told Brasch he wanted a divorce and planned to move back to his native Kenya. After Brasch became hysterical, the appellant went back into the downstairs bedroom. The appellant testified that he heard Brasch move things in the kitchen sink. Shortly thereafter, the appellant walked into the kitchen, but Brasch was not there. Appellant then heard Adrian scream. Appellant subsequently saw Brasch come into the kitchen. She threw something into the sink and then threw a knife at appellant. The struggle moved into the bedroom and then the living room. Eventually, appellant gained control of the knife and held Brasch down. Brasch then told appellant she had killed Adrian. Appellant ran upstairs where he saw Adrian crouched by the wall and covered in blood. Appellant moved Adrian to the bed and went back downstairs, but Brasch was gone. The police arrived shortly thereafter.
Brasch testified that the appellant attacked her and threatened to kill Adrian. According to Brasch, she was asleep on a couch in the living room when appellant awoke her. He asked that she come to bed with him, and then they began arguing. Brasch told appellant that she wanted to end the marriage. Appellant turned off the living room light and went back to the bedroom. Brasch fell back asleep face down on the couch. She awoke, however, when appellant climbed on her back, pulled back her hair, and cut her throat and forehead with a knife. They struggled over the knife, and he continued to stab the top of her head. Finally, he stopped and threw the knife down after Brasch agreed to go to bed with him. After moving into the bedroom, she suggested that she call an ambulance, but discovered the phones had been disconnected. The appellant began stabbing Brasch in the ribs. Brasch wrested the knife away from the appellant. He went back into the kitchen and Brasch ran into the bathroom and locked the door. Brasch testified that the appellant said “I am going upstairs to get Adrian. I have nothing to live for and neither does he.” Shortly thereafter, Brasch climbed out the window and ran down the street for help.
A grand jury indicted appellant of first-degree murder of Adrian, and attempted first-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder of Brasch. At the close of trial, the defense apparently requested that the court also instruct the jury on what the defense classified as the lesser-included charge of first-degree assault of Brasch. The court apparently granted that request, and the jury convicted appellant of first-degree murder for the death of Adrian and first-degree assault of Brasch. 1 The appellant now contends, however, that the trial court erred in instructing the jury on first-degree assault because the grand jury did not indict him of that offense and because it is not a lesser-included offense of either attempted first-degree murder or attempted second-degree murder. The appellant also contends that the trial court erred in failing to give his requested self-defense instruction after each of the three charges involving Brasch. 2
I.
Before we decide whether it was error for the trial court to instruct the jury on first-degree assault, we must decide whether first-degree assault is a lesser-included offense of either attempted first-degree murder or attempted second-degree murder. And if we conclude that first-degree assault is not a lesser-included offense of either attempted first-degree or attempted second-degree murder, we must determine whether the inclusion of such a charge would be improper.
*156 The legislature has defined a lesser-included offense as:
(1) a lesser degree of the same crime; or
(2) an attempt to commit the crime charged; or (3) an attempt to commit a lesser degree of the same crime; or (4) a crime necessarily proved if the crime charged were proved; or (5) a petty misdemeanor necessarily proved if the misdemeanor charge were proved.
Minn.Stat. § 609.04, subd. 1 (1996). Because first-degree assault is not a lesser degree of attempted murder, see Minn.Stat. § 609.221 (1996) (first-degree assault), Minn.Stat. § 609.17 (1996) (attempt), Minn.Stat. § 609.185 (1996) (first-degree murder), Minn. Stat. § 609.19 (1996) (second-degree murder); or an attempt to commit attempted murder, see id.; or an attempt to commit a lesser degree of attempted murder, see id., or a petty misdemeanor, see Minn.Stat. § 609.221 (1996), it will be a lesser-included offense of attempted murder only if it is “necessarily proved” when attempted murder is proved. See Minn.Stat. § 609.04, subd. 1(4) (1996).
In determining whether one offense necessarily is proved by the proof of another, “the trial court must look at the statutory definitions rather than the facts in a particular case.”
State v. Gayles,
First-degree assault, however, includes “great bodily harm” as a necessary element. Minn.Stat. § 609.221 (1996). Consequently, the state does not necessarily prove first-degree assault by proving attempted first-degree murder or attempted second-degree murder because these two crimes do not require proof of bodily harm. Although it is true that the victim in the ease at bar did suffer great bodily harm, such a factual finding is irrelevant for the purposes of determining whether the court properly added a charge for a lesser-included offense.
Gayles,
We next turn to the first-degree assault charge itself, and whether its inclusion was improper. The charges upon which the state may proceed at trial must be included within “the indictment, complaint or tab charge.”
See
Minn.R.Crim.P. 10.01;
see also
Minn.R.Crim.P. 15.08 (requiring prosecutor to file new complaint when defendant pleads to a crime different than the one charged); Minn.R.Crim.P. 17.01 (requiring an offense punishable by life imprisonment to be prosecuted by indictment);
see also State v. Voracek,
Minnesota rules of criminal procedure preclude the trial court from adding new and different charges once jeopardy has attached. Minn.R.Crim.P. 17.05;
State v. Alexander,
It is undisputed that the trial court added the charge of first-degree assault after the trial had begun. It also is clear from our earlier analysis that first-degree assault is not a lesser-included offense of either attempted first-degree murder or attempted second-degree murder, and that state law did not
require
the trial court to grant the defendant’s request for the instruction.
State v. Coleman,
The purpose of restricting the
prosecution
to the charges included in either the complaint or indictment is to provide the defendant with notice and an opportunity to prepare his or her defense.
State v. Clark,
Because the elements approach involves a textual comparison of criminal statutes and does not depend on inferences that may be drawn from evidence introduced at trial, the elements approach permits both sides to know in advance what jury instructions will be available and to plan their trial strategies accordingly.
Schmuck,
II.
Conceding that the trial court committed error, the state argues that this court should not vacate the conviction because it was the defendant who invited the error. The general rule in Minnesota is that “a party cannot avail himself of invited error.”
Majerus v. Guelsow,
The state, however, offers numerous foreign cases for the proposition that the doctrine of invited error estops a defendant who requests and then receives an instruction on a lesser
but nonincluded
offense from later complaining of the error. Many of the cases, however, deal with issues far less fundamental than the one in the ease at bar and are, therefore, unpersuasive.
See United States v. Baldwin,
The state does cite two cases that directly support the proposition that a defendant who asks for and receives an instruction on a
*159
lesser but nonincluded offense cannot later claim the instruction was erroneously granted.
Griffith v. State,
Because we conclude that it is fundamental error to convict a defendant of a crime with which he or she was not charged, we adopt the rule used in Ross and will examine the merits of the appellant’s claim under the doctrine of reversible error.
III.
Although the first-degree assault conviction was at variance with the indictment, we will reverse the conviction only if this variance deprived the defendant “of a substantial right, namely, the opportunity to prepare a defense to the charge against him.”
State v. Dickson,
IV.
The defense also argues that the trial court erred by giving its requested self-defense instruction only once. The defense had requested that the trial court include the instruction with each of the three crimes charged in connection with the altercation with Heather Brasch. Instead, the trial court, without objection, instructed the jury on the elements of attempted first-degree murder and attempted second-degree murder before instructing the jury on self defense. At the close of the self-defense instruction, the court stated:
The state has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not act in self defense. The law provides that upon prosecution of a person for a crime, if the person is not guilty of that crime, the person may nonetheless be guilty of a lesser crime. The lesser crimes in this case as to the charges involving Heather Brasch are: attempted murder in the second degree; and assault in the first degree.
The trial court then instructed the jury on the elements of first-degree assault. At the close of instructions and after a side-bar *160 discussion with counsel, the court further instructed the jury:
All right, just by way of clarification, you were given an instruction on self-defense. Please be aware that the self-defense instruction applies to all the charges, including the lesser included that involved conduct involving Heather Brasch.
In reviewing the sufficiency of the trial court’s jury instructions, the instructions must be viewed as a whole and in their entirety.
State v. Auchampach,
In the case at bar, the defense did not object to the trial court’s failure to include the self-defense instruction within the specific elements of each charged crime. In addition, the defense offers no support for the proposition that it is a fundamental error of law for a trial court to fail to give self-defense instructions within the specific elements of each charged crime. Although it is at least arguable that the instruction could have confused the jury, 6 there is no indication that such confusion would have substantially and materially prejudiced the defendant. The defense’s theory of the case was that Heather Brasch had killed her son and then attacked the defendant. Given that the jury found enough evidence to find the defendant guilty of the first-degree murder of Adrian Brasch, it seems unlikely they were prepared to accept the appellant’s self-defense theory of the case. Consequently, any error would be without prejudice.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The jury also found the appellant not guilty of either attempted murder in the first degree or attempted murder in the second degree of Brasch.
. The appellant does not appeal his first-degree murder conviction.
. Such a finding “is a bar to further prosecution of any included offense.” Minn.Stat. § 609.04, subd. 2 (1996).
. Only when all of the elements of the lesser crime are included in the elements of the greater crime, can a court instruct the jury on the lesser crime. The elements test “permits lesser offense instructions only in those cases where the indictment contains the elements of both offenses and thereby gives notice to the defendant that he may be convicted on either charge.”
Schmuck,
. The state argues that invited error and unob-jected-to-error are different, and that the doctrines of plain eiTor and fundamental law do not apply to invited error. In other words, the state is asking that this court refuse to review any case in which a party appeals the validity of an instruction requested by the same party. But that is not the law in this state. As this court has stated, “conceding the right of the court to review, in a special case, the correctness of an instruction at the instance of a party who has procured it to be given, a new trial should not be granted unless the charge was substantially wrong and apparently prejudicial to the defendant.”
McAlpine v. Fidelity & Cas. Co. of New York,
. It is possible that the jury could have understood the instruction to mean that while the defendant's act of self defense could have made him not guilty of attempted murder, it did not apply to the lesser crime of aggravated assault. Given the clarifying instruction, however, even this possibility appears remote.
