Lead Opinion
Opinion
' 1 Michael Waddell Johnson appeals from a conviction of murder, a first-degree felony, following a jury trial in March 2010. We reverse and remand.
BACKGROUND
{2 The deceased (Decedent) in this case was discovered dead on the night of Monday, January 12, 1998, by her son
1 3 Johnson was interviewed by authorities during the police investigation following Decedent's death. He told authorities that he and Decedent went to a party and used cocaine on the night of her death-Friday, January 9, 1998. He was not considered a suspect at that time, and the investigation was eventually closed in June 1998 "as a suspicious death."
T4 Several years later, in 2005, the cold case was reopened and assigned to a new homicide detective (Detective). Detective began his investigation by submitting DNA samples from Decedent and Johnson for analysis. The analysis identified the presence of Johnson's DNA on fingernail clippings that were taken from Decedent during the initial investigation. Detective re-interviewed Johnson, at which time Johnson described having had an on-and-off romantic relationship with Decedent. He admitted to Detective that he sometimes "slapped [Decedent] around" when they were drinking but that they were in the process of patching things up and getting back together. Johnson also told Detective that he and Decedent had used cocaine at his daughter's house the night of Decedent's death before going to the party that he had told the police about during the initial investigation. He indicated that Decedent left the party before him, that he was later picked up from the party by two friends, and that he stayed at a friend's apartment for the rest of the weekend. Detective interviewed other individuals who recounted the circumstances surrounding Decedent's death in ways that conflicted with Johnson's account. One individual informed Detective that Johnson had admitted to him that he had strangled Decedent to death.
15 Johnson was ultimately charged with alternative counts of murder, one based on a theory of intentional murder and the other based on a theory of depraved indifference murder, both first-degree felonies. See generally Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-2083(2)(a), (2)(c), (8)(a) (LexisNexis 2012). At trial, the primary controversy was over causation-whether Decedent's physical injuries were caused by a fall, an altercation, or strangulation and whether she died primarily as a result of the mixture of alcohol and cocaine in her system or from strangulation.
T 6 The testimony of the medical examiner, called as a witness for the State, Mlustrates the complexity and closeness of the causation issue. He testified that it was possible that
17 On redirect, however, he also testified that as "a scientist" he never "foreclose[s] possibilities totally" because "anything can happen." He explained that his determination that something is "more likely or probable" means that "the odds are that this is the type of event that took place, as opposed to just some reaching type of hypothetical." He also testified that there is no exact amount of a drug or alcohol that is necessarily deadly because individuals have varying tolerances to intoxicants and that where Decedent was apparently both an intravenous drug user and potentially an alcoholic, she presumably had a higher tolerance of those substances and their combined effects. In other words, the levels that may have been fatal to one person may not necessarily have been fatal to Decedent.
T8 Johnson's expert witness, a forensic pathologist and a chief medical examiner in Michigan, agreed with the medical examiner's analysis on many points-the general time of death estimate provided; that there was evidence of an altercation; that strangulation was a plausible consideration; and that the combined effects of alcohol, cocaine, and the physiological responses to an altercation could have contributed to Decedent's death. The primary difference between the two experts' analyses was which set of factors each believed more likely caused Decedent's death. Johnson's expert believed that "the primary cause associated with [Decedent's] death [was] the drug and alcohol intoxication." He explained that though "there is evidence of an altercation," it is "not sufficient evidence ... to outright call a strangulation cause of death," particularly in light of the intoxication evidence. He stated that "[the toxicology testing demonstrates a very high level of alcohol and a combination of alcohol and cocaine intoxication" that is "not disputed and can't be disputed." In light of that evidence, Johnson's expert believed that although strangulation could not be entirely exeluded as a possible cause of death or contributing factor, he "would not necessarily associate the [injuries from the] altercation with a specific act of strangulation"; rather, he opined that some of the injuries Decedent sustained only "potentially could have been the result of neck injury associated with a strangulation." Like the medical examiner, Johnson's expert could not be totally certain which was the cause of death, noting that "the evidence in this case does not allow distinct separation between three different
T9 The trial court granted Johnson's request for a jury instruction on the lesser included offense of homicide by assault, and the court agreed to prepare the corresponding verdict form. The trial court read the instructions to the jury, including an instruction on the elements of homicide by assault, and later observed that it included the same elements instruction in the jury instruction packet. The jury ultimately found Johnson guilty of intentional murder. The verdict form returned by the jury, however, did not list the homicide by assault option, and a separate verdict form for the lesser included offense is missing from the trial record. Omitting the trial court's heading and eaption-ing, the verdict form the jury received stated,
We, the Jurors empaneled in the above case, find the defendant, MICHAEL WADDELL JOHNSON,
Guilty of Criminal - Homicide, Murder, intentionally and knowingly causing the death of [Decedent] Or
Guilty of Criminal Homicide, Murder, acting under cireumstances evidencing depraved indifference to human life Or
Not guilty of Criminal Homicide, Murder.
DATED this-day of 2010.
FOREPERSON
T 10 Johnson appeals his conviction, arguing that the missing verdict form indicates that the trial court did not actually provide a verdict form for the lesser included offense of homicide by assault and that this omission is reversible error. Upon the filing of Johnson's appeal, this court granted the State's remand request to allow the trial court to supplement the record with any documentation related to the missing verdiet form. On remand, almost one-and-a-half years after the trial, the trial court issued a minute entry, stating, "After carefully combing through the case file, the exhibits, and all other materials associated with the record of the case, the court was unable to locate the lesser-included offense verdict form." Nonetheless, the trial court concluded that, "Although the lesser-included offense verdict form does not now exist, it is the court's recollection that the court created the lesser-included offense verdict form and sent the verdict form with the jury instructions with the jury when it was released to deliberate." The trial court found that because the jury convicted Johnson of murder, the missing verdict form "was not used by the jury and, therefore, not signed by the jury foreperson" and, as a result, "may not have been brought into the courtroom by the foreperson, but was left in the jury room where it was ultimately discarded by court staff." The trial court issued its minute entry on remand without holding a hearing, and Johnson amended his opening brief to include his challenge to the propriety of the trial court's procedure and findings on remand.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
111 As stated, Johnson's primary argument is that the absence in the record of a verdict form on the lesser included offense establishes that the trial court failed to provide the jury with a verdict form on the lesser included offense
(12 However, before we reach that issue, we must address the question we posed to the parties in a request for supplemental briefing: whether the lesser included offense jury instruction (Instruction 24) misstated the mens rea element of homicide by assault in a manner that effectively removed the lesser offense from the jury's consideration, rendering resolution of the primary issue on appeal-whether the corresponding verdict form on the lesser included offense was properly provided to the jury-irrelevant. When an appellate court discovers an "astonishingly erroneous but undetected ruling" that if left unaddressed "could subject the losing party, especially a defendant in a criminal case, to 'great and manifest injustice," "(elven if the theory is uncovered after arguments, in the final stages of opinion drafting, the [appellate] court should allow the parties the chance to weigh in on its validity through supplemental briefing." State v. Robison,
ANALYSIS
I. The Homicide By Assault Jury Instruction
113 In response to this court's request, the parties submitted supplemental briefing addressing for the first time the argument that Instruction 24 misstated the mens rea element of the lesser included offense in a manner that effectively removed the lesser offense from the jury's consideration and rendered the question of the missing verdict form inconsequential, Our request for supplemental briefing first instructed the parties to address the propriety of this court's review of Johnson's conviction on alternative grounds under State v. Robison,
A. The Facts of this Case Satisfy the Robi-son Standard.
114 The State argues that the invited error doctrine precludes our review of Instruction 24 under a plain error analysis because Johnson's trial counsel provided and approved of the instruction given to the jury. "The doctrine of invited error bars review for plain error when the defendant led the trial court to believe that there was nothing wrong with the instruction," State v. Binkerd,
1 15 In State v. Breckenridge,
16 Our supreme court revisited Breckenridge in its Robison decision, in which it held that the court of appeals erred by reversing the defendant's conviction on an unargued legal theory. Robison,
117 Robison seeks to balance the sometimes conflicting ideals of procedural regularity and the institutional integrity of the courts with basic notions of fairness and justice. In other words, as has long been recognized by our jurisprudence, Robison effectively reaffirms the notion that "the safeguards of the rights and privileges of the accused should not be overlooked and a loose rein held for the prosecution and a tight, technical, and restricted rein held on the accused." State v. Cobo,
118 The facts of this case are similar to Breckenridge because "[o]n the suggestion of this court," the parties have "addressed for the first time" an issue that will implicate Johnson's "felony conviction and sentence." See Breckenridge,
19 For reasons explained infra, we determine that the error in the homicide by assault jury instruction presents the very type of "astonishingly erroneous but undetected ruling" that our jurisprudence and the State, in its supplemental briefing, agree an appellate court should not "refus[e}, out of principle, to reverse." State v. Robison,
B. The Homicide By Assault Instruction Misstates the Law.
120 Here, there is no dispute that Johnson was entitled to a lesser included offense instruction or that the trial court read such an instruction to the jury. See generally State v. Spillers,
1 21 To determine whether Instruction 24 correctly states the law, "we compare the instruction given with the statutory elements of the offense." See State v. Dunn,
Homicide by Assault [requires that the jury] find from all of the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt each and every one of the following elements ...: 1. That on or about the 10th day of January, 1998, ... [Johnson], . under cirenmstances not amounting to aggravated murder, murder, or manslaughter caused the death of [Decedent];
2, And that he did so intentionally or knowingly while attempting, with unlawful foree or violence, to do bodily injury to [Decedent].
22 The Utah Code defines homicide by assault, stating, "A person commits homicide by assault if, under cireumstances not amounting to aggravated murder, murder, or manslaughter, a person causes the death of another while intentionally or knowingly attempting, with unlawful force or violence, to do bodily injury to another." Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-209(1) (LexisNexis 2012) (emphasis added)
123 The differences between Instruction 24 and the criminal homicide instruction (Instruction 21) do not remedy this error. See generally State v. Lawson,
*752 Before you can convict [Johnson] ... of the crime of Criminal Homicide, Murder as charged in the Alternative Count I of the Information, you must find from all of the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt each and every one of the following elements of that offense:
1. That on or about the 10th day of January, 1998, ... [Johnson], ... caused the death of [Decedent]; and
2. That he did so intentionally and knowingly.
(Emphases added.) With the exception of the phrases "under cirenmstances not amounting to aggravated murder, murder, or manslaughter" and "while attempting, with unlawful foree or violence, to do bodily injury to [Decedent]" (the assault language), the two instructions are identical. The first phrase merely asserts that homicide by assault is not the same as murder, but the effect of this on a jury could easily have been negated by the fact that Instruction 24 then duplicates the elements given in Instruction 21 on criminal homicide. Likewise, to a jury, the inclusion of the assault language in Instruction 24 may appear as little more than stylistic.
C. - The Error Is Harmful.
124 For the error in Instruction 24 to warrant reversal, it must be prejudicial, ie., absent the error "the likelihood of 2 different outcome [must be] sufficiently high as to undermine our confidence in the verdict." Crookston,
(25 The State argues that any error in Instruction 24, and for that matter any error in providing the jury with the proper homicide-by-assault verdiet form, is harmless because Johnson's conviction of the greater offense "necessarily forecloses" the jury from having convicted him of the lesser offense.
1 26 Both the convicted offense of criminal homicide and the lesser included offense of homicide by assault are intent-based offenses. The cases the State relies on in support of its argument involve challenges to the omission of instructions on lesser included offenses that have lower mens rea requirements than the convicted offenses and are therefore not helpful to our analysis. See, e.g., State v. Pearson,
127 Given how close the causation evidence is, as discussed swpro 11 6-8, and the fact that both the lesser and greater offenses here involve an "intentionally and knowingly" mens rea, we cannot agree that Johnson's conviction of the greater offense indicates that any error in Instruction 24 or in providing the homicide-by-assault verdict form was harmless. We agree with Johnson that because Instruction 24 effectively mirrored the elements of the eriminal homicide instruction, the jury may have believed that the two instructions required it to make "essentially the same factual determinations and that it did not matter which offense was selected." As Johnson put it, "[the choice is not a choice when," as instructed, "there is no real difference between" criminal homicide and homicide by assault. The error in Instruetion 24 left the jury with the option of either "convicting the defendant of [the charged offense], or acquitting him outright." See Keeble v. United States,
II. Whether the Verdict Form Was Properly Provided to the Jury Is Immaterial.
128 Johnson's primary argument on appeal is that the absence of a lesser-included-offense verdict form in the record indicates that the trial court failed to provide one. Cf. People v. Nguyen,
129 The "astonishingly erroneous" placement of the mens rea element in Instruction 24 effectively removed the lesser included offense from the jury's consideration by equating the lesser offense with the greater offense. This error renders the question of whether the verdict form on the lesser included offense was ever provided to the jury irrelevant. Accordingly, the jury did not have a meaningful opportunity to consider the lesser included offense. That the jury convicted Johnson of the greater offense does not demonstrate that a proper instruction on the lesser offense would not have resulted in a different outcome for Johnson, particularly in light of the closeness of the causation issue. Our confidence in the verdict is therefore undermined. We reverse Johnson's conviction and remand the case to the trial court.
Notes
. - '"We relate the facts in the light most favorable to the jury's verdict." See State v. Litherland,
. This summary is a portion of the medical examiner's testimony and represents only a fraction of the evidence presented on causation.
. The expert identified those three "distinct" possible causes of death as (1) drug and alcohol intoxication as the sole cause, (2) the combination of a minor altercation with drug and alcohol intoxication, or (3) an altercation with a strangulation component in combination with drug and alcohol intoxication.
. - Johnson also challenges the jury instruction on causation as inadequate for failing to include a definition of proximate cause. Because of the manner in which we resolve the other issues before us, we do not address this argument. See State v. Tucker,
. - The applicability of the invited error doctrine is not as obvious as the State's argument implies. It is true that Johnson's trial counsel requested the lesser included offense instruction, but the record does not contain the two drafts of the elements instruction that his trial counsel provided to the court. Further, the trial court acknowledged that it was going to use the version of the instruction offered by Johnson's trial counsel "'that quotes the statute[] itself," and the court had earlier correctly quoted the homicide by assault statute while questioning the prosecutor about the propriety of providing a lesser included offense instruction. In other words, we cannot definitively ascertain if the language employed in the final instruction matches the language supplied by Johnson's trial counsel. Additionally, unlike the majority of invited error cases, here we are not presented with a challenge initially raised by the defendant that the instruction incorrectly stated the law. See, e.g., State v. Perdue,
. This principle has been recognized by courts in other jurisdictions as well. See, e.g., Wiborg v. United States,
. We cite the current version of the Utah Code for the convenience of the reader.
. Both homicide by assault and criminal homicide are intent-based crimes. However, the instructions defining "intentionally" and "knowingly" offer little clarification because each is defined in conduct-based and result-based terms and in an either/or fashion. See generally State v. Lawson,
. To the extent the State's argument may be read to imply that depraved indifference murder is a lesser included offense of intentional murder, we disagree. These two types of murder are two theories of the same offense that were here charged in the alternative. Both constitute first degree felonies subject to the same sentence. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-203(2)(a), (2)(c), (3) (LexisNexis 2012). There is only one lesser included offense at issue in this case-homicide by assault.
. The State also argues that even though Instruction 24 does not track the statutory language for homicide by assault, this error harms the State, not Johnson, by imposing on the State ""the additional burden of proving that [Johnson] intend[ed] the result of his conduct, rather than
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
130 The lead opinion concludes that we may review an error in a jury instruction that was unpreserved below and unargued on appeal based on the supreme court's opinion in State v. Robison,
131 Our court has determined that "the plain error and exceptional cireumstances exceptions are sufficiently broad to encompass any situation requiring Utah's appellate courts to consider a constitutional issue for the first time on appeal in the interest of justice." State v. Archambeau,
32 The exceptional cireumstances exception is "ill-defined," however. State v. Holgate,
133 As a consequence, while I concur in Judge Davis's opinion, I write separately to articulate further why I believe reaching the merits is appropriate despite any invited error and even though the facts here are different in some aspects from recent cases that
TI 34 The supreme court has stated that the exceptional cireumstances exception to the preservation rule "applies primarily to rare procedural anomalies," id. 112 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted), and the court has cautioned that the exception is "applied ... sparingly," being reserved for "the most unusual cireumstances where our failure to consider an issue that was not properly preserved for appeal would have resulted in manifest injustice," State v. Nelson-Waggoner,
€35 Admittedly, there is no intervening change in law here that would have affected Johnson's decision to object to an error in the jury instructions like there was in Ho-ston. But allowing Johnson's conviction to stand despite a fatally flawed jury instruction that misstated a material element of a plausible lesser included offense with significantly reduced consequences (zero to five years for homicide by assault versus five years to life for murder) seems to me to be manifestly unjust for reasons already articulated in the lead opinion. And those reasons include troubling cireumstances that I believe qualify this case as a "rare procedural anomally]." See Holgate,
For example, the verdict form the trial court claims to have provided to the jury is absent from the official record, and it is missing from the files retained by the State, Johnson's trial attorneys, and the trial court. A central dispute in the parties' initial briefing was whether the trial court had actually given the jury the verdiet form for the lesser included offense. As the lead opinion notes, the undetected error is therefore virtually inseparable from the underlying merits of the issues preserved below and argued on appeal: Does it really matter if the jury received the form if the jury instruction that provided the option of conviction on a lesser offense was itself fatally flawed? And this seems to me to be the basis for taking this issue up, though unpreserved and unargued; if the unpreserved issue bore no relation to the missing verdict form or other arguments Johnson addressed in his initial briefing, I believe we would not be faced with the type of "rare procedural anomaly" that would justify a departure from well-established preservation requirements.
137 The dissent argues that defense counsel invited any error
€ 38 The dissent also argues that any error is best left to a postconviction proceeding, a position that has some appeal. For example, while in the face of the error in the jury instruction itself, I could not have joined the dissent's proposed resolution of the original issue by simply affirming the trial court's decision on remand that the jury had indeed received a verdiet form for the lesser included offense, the severity of the instruction error itself suggests another path to affir-mance-we might conclude that the error in the homicide-by-assault jury instruction is egregious enough to render any failure to provide the jury with the corresponding verdict form essentially harmless and then simply affirm on Johnson's failure to have addressed that overarching problem. And the lead opinion sufficiently articulates the error in the jury instruction and its likely significance to the outcome of the case to provide Johnson with a fairly weighty attachment to a potential petition for postconviction relief having obvious substance. The lead opinion, however, has convinced me that the significance of both the substantive error and the rare anomaly that brought it before us unnoticed and unremarked by either Johnson's trial and appellate counsel or by the trial court
139 Finally, I disagree with the dissent's suggestion that the flawed instruction was harmless error because it "may have increased the likelihood of a complete acquittal by overstating the mens rea required for conviction of the lesser offense." See infra 150. Our supreme court has noted that defendants are entitled to lesser-included-offense instructions to "afford[them] the full benefit of the reasonable doubt standard." State v. Baker,
40 For these reasons, I concur in Judge Davis's decision.
. - It is not entirely clear to me that trial counsel ended up being the source of the jury instruction. As the lead opinion points out, the court invited Johnson's trial counsel to provide the lesser included offense jury instruction after stating that counsel's proposed instruction "quotes the statute[ ] itself." See supra 114 n. 6. The final instruction, of course, misquotes the statute in a way that deprives Johnson of the benefits of obtaining the instruction in the first place. And the draft instructions Johnson's counsel submitted to the court are not in the record.
. - It is to the State's credit that it pointed out in a footnote in its initial brief that the fury instruction did not correspond to the statute's definition of the offense of homicide by assault. But the State did not explore in depth the details of that divergence or its significance, nor was it required to do so; and we did not come to appreciate the problem until well after oral argument.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting):
141 I respectfully dissent. The jury in this case concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that Johnson committed the first degree felony of murder by intentionally and
T42 As originally briefed by the parties, this appeal involved just two issues. First, Johnson argued that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the issue of causation. Johnson wanted an instruction on "intervening causes" for Decedent's death, and he argued on appeal that the trial court erred when it refused to give his requested instruction. I agree with the State that this issue was inadequately briefed. See Utah R.App. P. 24(a)(9) (enumerating requirements for argument sections of appellate briefs); see also State v. Green,
' 43 Second, Johnson contended that he is entitled to a new trial because the record on appeal does not include a verdict form on the lesser included offense of homicide by assault. "[Nlot every instance of a missing portion of the record necessitates reversal." State v. King,
44 Thus, on the issues originally raised by the parties, this appeal should result in a straightforward affirmance. However, over my objection, my colleagues decided to call for additional briefing on the ground that the court had "identified an issue that was not addressed by the parties' briefing"-a misstatement of the mens rea element in the lesser included offense instruction on homicide by assault (Instruction 24). The briefing order sought the parties' input on whether the language of Instruction 24 constitutes error and, if so, what the effect of that error should be. Almost as an afterthought, the briefing order invited the parties to discuss "as a threshold issue, the propriety of this court addressing an unpreserved and otherwise unbriefed issue in general and in light of the circumstances and the supreme court's decision in State v. Robison,
145 In his supplemental brief, Johnson agrees with the briefing order's suggestion that Instruction 24 is erroneous and urges that the error warrants reversal of his conviction. Johnson argues that this result is appropriate under Robison because this is a criminal matter, failure to address the unargued issue would subject him to "great and manifest injustice," and the parties were allowed to present supplemental briefing on the issue. See
(46 The State, in its supplemental brief, argues that Instruction 24 does not fall within Robison's guidelines for when an appellate court can raise issues sua sponte. The State goes on, however, to point out that Instruction 24 was proposed by defense counsel. Therefore, the State argues, our consideration of the issue is barred by the doctrine of invited error. See, e.g., State v. Binkerd,
47 I agree with the State that the apparent error in Instruction 24 was invited by defense counsel below and that we are therefore precluded from considering it. "Unless a party objects to an instruction or the failure to give an instruction, the instruction may not be assigned as error except to avoid a manifest injustice.
48 Notwithstanding this preservation problem, the majority opinion concludes that analysis of the wording of Instruction 24 is warranted to avoid a "great and manifest injustice" as discussed in Robison.
49 As noted above, Johnson's trial counsel invited the misworded instruction by submitting it to the trial court. Johnson could have challenged his trial counsel's actions by raising an ineffective assistance of counsel claim in his supplemental briefing, but he failed to do so. Had he done so, he would have borne the high burden of demonstrating both deficient performance by counsel and resulting prejudice. See Strickland v. Washington,
1 50 I am not at all sure that the error in the wording of Instruction 24 was prejudicial to Johnson. First and foremost, the flawed instruction still preserved the jury's ability to convict Johnson on the lesser offense if it harbored concerns about the State's case on the greater offense. However, by equating the mens reas for murder and homicide by assault, it also gave the jury the option of convicting Johnson on the lesser offense even if it concluded that Johnson knowingly and intentionally killed Decedent. At the same time, Instruction 24 may have increased the likelihood of a complete acquittal by overstating the mens rea required for conviction of the lesser offense.
152 For all of these reasons, I would refrain from considering the jury instruction issue relating to the lesser included offense of homicide by assault. This issue was not preserved below, was invited by Johnson's trial counsel, and was not raised by the parties in their initial appellate briefing. The two issues that Johnson did raise on appeal are without merit. I would therefore affirm Johnson's conviction.
. I acknowledge that the issue addressed in State v. Robison,
. The majority opinion also seems to import the preservation concept of "exceptional circumstances" into the Robison analysis, even though that case did not discuss exceptional circumstances as a basis for reaching unargued issues. Whatever the majority's purpose for invoking "exceptional circumstances" may be, I see nothing extraordinary about this case so as to warrant the reversal of Johnson's murder conviction on the unpreserved and unargued jury instruction issue.
