The jury convicted Frederick King (defendant) of the first degree murder of Pearline Brisby and of the attempted first degree murder of Linda Outright. Defendant appeals from the judgments of guilt and the sentences imposed. We discuss the issue of whether the trial court committed fundamental error in its instructions to the jury with respect to defendant’s burden of proof on the insanity defense. We have jurisdiction under Ariz. Const, art. 6, § 5(3) and A.R.S. §§ 13-4031 and -4033. We reverse.
FACTS
Defendant and Brisby had been involved in a long-term relationship eventually resulting in Brisby’s giving birth to defendant’s child. Defendant, Brisby, and the *421 child had lived together for a period of time, but Brisby took the child and moved away prior to the incidents at issue. Defendant and Brisby became alienated, if not hostile toward one another, and defendant acted with some degree of irrationality pri- or to the day in question. On the day of the crimes, defendant purchased a pistol and ammunition, and went to Brisby’s workplace. In the parking lot, he began shooting at Brisby’s supervisor, Outright, seriously wounding her. When Brisby shouted and begged him not to shoot Cut-right, defendant turned on her and emptied the gun into her body, killing her.
The grand jury indicted defendant on one count of first degree murder and one count of attempted first degree murder. See A.R.S. §§ 13-1105(A) and -1001(A). At trial, the defense was insanity. See A.R.S. § 13-502. Defendant offered trial testimony from two psychiatrists. One psychiatrist testified that defendant was in a disassociative state 1 at the time of the shooting, and the other testified that defendant was M’Naghten insane during the shooting. The state elicited opposing, though somewhat equivocal, evidence from its psychiatric witnesses.
A.R.S. § 13-502(B) governed defendant’s burden of proof on the question of insanity. A defendant claiming insanity as a defense has the burden of proving his insanity by “clear and convincing” evidence. Id. Asserting that placing the burden of proof on him was unconstitutional, defendant objected to the court’s insanity instructions on that ground only. He did not object to the wording of the individual instruction defining “clear and convincing evidence.” The jury found defendant guilty, and the court sentenced him to life imprisonment without possibility of parole for twenty-five years on the first degree murder conviction and to a term of ten and one-half years on the attempted first degree murder conviction, the sentences running concurrently. See A.R.S. §§ 13-703, -1001(C)(1), -604, and -701. Pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-4031, defendant filed a direct appeal in this court.
DISCUSSION
Defendant first contends that A.R.S. § 13-502(B), which places the burden of proof of insanity on defendant, violates the due process and equal protection clauses of the fourteenth amendment to the United States Constitution. We have recently upheld the statute against constitutional challenges.
State v. Fletcher,
Defendant raises a much more serious problem, however, with respect to the instruction on his burden of proof: Did the trial court commit fundamental error in its instruction on the quantum of evidence required to establish the insanity defense?
A. Did the court err in its instruction on the clear and convincing standard?
A defendant relying on the M’Naghten rule must carry his burden of proof by “clear and convincing evidence.” A.R.S. § 13-502(B). The trial court instructed the jury on this quantum of evidence as follows:
The defendant has the burden of proving that he is not responsible for criminal conduct by reason of insanity by clear and convincing evidence.
To be clear and convincing, evidence should be clear in the sense that it is certain, plain to the understanding, unambiguous, and convincing in the sense that it is so reasonable and persuasive as to cause you to believe it.
Reporter’s Transcript (RT) Dec. 12,1985, at 24.
In his supplemental brief, defendant claims the trial judge erred in so instructing the jury. He argues that the instruction creates an impossible burden by requiring him to provide evidence which is “certain,” “plain” and “unambiguous.” If *422 not an impossible burden, defendant continues, the instruction requires far more than should be required by the standard of “clear and convincing evidence.”
Our court of appeals recently considered a similar contention and instruction. It agreed that such a definition of the standard of proof “inappropriately escalated [defendant’s burden] beyond that imposed by the clear and convincing evidence standard as developed in caselaw and incorporated into A.R.S. § 13-502.”
State v. Renforth,
The state argues that the Renforth decision confuses the “highly probable” definition used in civil cases with the so-called “traditional” test for M’Naghten insanity, a test requiring a degree of certainty best described as “clear” evidence. We are unpersuaded by this argument. We see no good and much harm coming from adopting differing definitions of “clear and convincing evidence” for use in civil cases (including those involving fraud, punitive damage issues and other quasi-criminal questions) and cases involving criminal law. Nor do we find any authority for the proposition that the “clear and convincing” standard is given a different definition in criminal cases than that followed in civil cases.
The state also argues that the instruction given in the case at bench more clearly embodies the legislative intent in enacting A.R.S. § 13-502(B) than the “highly probable” formulation found in Ne-ville. Again we disagree. The legislature certainly intended to adopt the “strictest possible approach to the insanity defense.” Arizona State Senate, Minutes of the Committee on the Judiciary (Discussion of S.B. 1120), 36 Leg. 1st Sess., Jan. 25,1983, at 2. Undoubtedly, these sentiments pertain to the retention of the M’Naghten rule per se and the shifting of the burden of proof to the defendant. 2 Absent some explicit statement by the legislature with respect to a specific formulation of the clear and convincing definition, we find it hard to believe that the legislature intended to adopt the definition contained in the instruction given in this case — a definition, bearing little, if any, relation to reality. Indeed, the legislative history indicates the senate judiciary subcommittee realized that the “clear and convincing” standard was an intermediate standard, and found the “beyond a reasonable doubt” standard “too strict” a standard to place upon a defendant claiming insanity. Final Report of the Senate Judiciary Interim Subcommittee on the Insanity Defense, Dec. 28, 1982, at 14. We approve, therefore, the following views of the court of appeals:
Among the common definitions of “certain” are “not to be doubted as a fact: indisputable” and “given to or marked by complete assurance and conviction, lack of doubt, ... as if through infallible knowledge or perception....” [citation omitted] To convince a fact finder to this degree clearly requires a greater intensity of proof than to convince that a proposition is highly probable. The use *423 of the term “certain” is so likely to mislead in defining clear and convincing evidence that, rather than attempting to parse degrees of certainty on a scale from reasonable to moral to absolute, we would avoid its usage altogether.
The error of defining clear and convincing evidence as “certain” was compounded in this case by further definition as “unambiguous.” “Ambiguity” is “the condition of admitting of two or more meanings, of being understood in more than one way____” [citation omitted] Few things in law are unambiguous, least of all the question whether a defendant’s lack of understanding of the nature and quality of his acts renders him not responsible by reason of insanity. The defendant in this case was not required to eliminate ambiguity from his proof or to instill certainty in the minds of the jurors. His lesser burden was to persuade the jury that his position on the psychiatric issue was highly probable.
Renforth,
The state further argues that any isolated error in the “clear and convincing” instruction was cured by a subsequent instruction on the state’s burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt which, inter alia, informed the jury that
[ t]he burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt is a greater burden of proof than the burden of proof by clear and convincing evidence.
RT, Dec. 12, 1985, at 25.
We acknowledge, of course, that the instructions must be considered as a whole.
State v. Schrock,
In advancing its argument on this point, the state relies on
State v. Turrentine,
Clear and convincing evidence is that ... degree of proof that will produce ... a firm belief or conviction____ It is intermediate, being more than a mere preponderance of evidence, but not to the extent of such certainty as required with proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Id.
at 68,
The instruction now before us utilized the term “certainty” in defining the clear and convincing standard, while the
Turrentine
instruction used “certainty” to define beyond a reasonable doubt. We believe that “certainty” is truer to the concept of proof beyond a reasonable doubt than to the “highly probable” meaning of the clear and convincing standard. Likewise, a “firm belief or conviction” is truer to the clear and convincing standard than a definition equating clear and convincing with “certain, plain ... unambiguous” evidence. Moreover, the instructions before us today, taken as a whole, are much more susceptible to erroneous interpretation than the
Turrentine
instruction quoted above.
See Henderson v. Kibbe,
We hold that the trial court erred in giving the instructions it did in the case at
*424
bench. In this context, the better instruction would inform a jury that clear and convincing evidence is evidence that makes the existence of the issue propounded “highly probable.”
Neville,
B. Was the error fundamental?
Defendant’s trial counsel failed to object to the wording of the “clear and convincing” instruction, and the record does not disclose that trial counsel suggested alternative language. Normally, the failure to object to alleged errors in instructions constitutes a waiver of the error. Rule 21.3(c), Ariz.R.Crim.P., 17 A.R.S. Nevertheless, defendant argues that the instructional error was fundamental in nature, making the waiver rule inapplicable.
See State v. Zaragoza,
Error is fundamental when it reaches “ ‘the foundation of the case or takes from the defendant a right essential to his defense,’ ” or is an “ ‘error of such dimensions that it cannot be said it is possible for a defendant to have had a fair trial.’ ”
State v. Thomas,
Ordinarily, errors in jury instructions defining a party’s burden of proof are considered fundamental.
The very purpose of a jury charge is to flag the jurors’ attention to concepts that must not be misunderstood, such as reasonable doubt and burden of proof, [citation omitted] It is vital that the jury not misunderstand the concept of the defendant’s burden of proof on self defense; the jury must be instructed with great care to prevent the misunderstanding of this concept.
State v. Hunter,
The state argues that our cases involving formulation of the burden of proof in the *425 justification defense context are inapplicable to the case at bench, which involves a formulation of the burden of proof in the insanity defense context. Due process requires the state to carry the burden of persuasion to disprove beyond a reasonable doubt any justification defense once there is sufficient evidence supporting a justification instruction. The distinction, according to the state, is that an insanity issue is a pure affirmative defense, so that a defendant carries both the burden of production and persuasion and may completely waive the defense by failing to raise the issue. See Appellee’s Supplemental Answering Brief at 2-3. More simply, the state argues that because defendant could have waived an insanity defense at trial, he cannot be allowed to claim any issue concerning that defense as fundamental error on appeal.
The state’s argument misses the mark. The point is that defendant did raise insanity as a defense.
6
By so doing, he effectively admitted the criminal act, for all practical purposes leaving only one factual issue in the case — the question of his sanity. Given the divided psychiatric evidence, the case hinged entirely upon whether defendant had carried his burden of proving insanity. Where, under the facts of the case, the error affects the primary or sole issue, we are likely to find fundamental error.
See State v. Allen,
We conclude, therefore, that the instruction materially misstated defendant’s burden on the primary issue; it went, necessarily, to the very heart and foundation of defendant’s case, damaging that case on a matter essential to the defense and casting doubt on the integrity of the verdict.
Hunter,
We do not believe, moreover, that the trial court helped the fundamental error problem or rendered it “harmless” by noting for the jury that the clear and convincing standard is a lesser burden of proof than the state’s burden of proving all the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. First, the erroneous instruction went to the defendant’s burden, not the state’s. Second, one isolated, non-definitional comparison of the two burdens, in light of the lengthy, erroneous definition of “clear and convincing,” cannot be said to have sufficiently apprised the jury of the significant difference between the two standards. In effect, the jury was instructed that both parties had a high burden of proof, but it was then given the wrong formula to apply to defendant’s evidentiary burden on the primary issue in the case. At best, taken as a whole, the instructions were confusing and misleading. Long ago we stated,
It is the duty of the court to give the jury the rules of law to guide their deliberations and determinations, and these *426 rules must not be at such cross purposes as to confuse and mislead the jury. If the instructions are contradictory upon the main point in question, how is the jury to know which to follow, or which is a'correct statement of the law?
Hurley v. State,
Thus, given the closely divided psychiatric evidence in this case,
7
and the fact that insanity was the primary defense, we cannot say that beyond a reasonable doubt the error did not contribute to or affect the verdict.
Thomas,
CONCLUSION
We hold, therefore, that the trial court erred in its definition of defendant’s burden of proof, and that the error was fundamental and not cured or rendered “harmless.” The correct instruction would have apprised the jury that the clear and convincing standard is an intermediate standard, between proof beyond a reasonable doubt and proof by a preponderance of the evidence, and that clear and convincing evidence is evidence that makes the existence of the issue propounded “highly probable.”
Neville,
The conviction is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial consistent with this opinion. The disposition of this case makes it unnecessary to consider the other issues raised by defendant.
Notes
. The psychiatrist defined "disassociative state" as "the intellect, the ordinarily rational controlling judging parts of the mind ... gets ... disconnected ... from behavior,” and "[i]t’s a behavior from which ordinary, wise rational judgment has been disconnected.” Reporter’s Transcript, Dec. 9, 1985, at 43-44, 45.
. The
M’Naghten
rule has been the test for criminal insanity in Arizona since 1942, and probably longer.
See State v. Macias,
. The state also cites
Henderson
for the proposition that "[i]t is the rare case in which an improper instruction will justify reversal of a criminal conviction when no objection has been made in the trial court.” Appellee’s Supplemental Answering Brief at 1 (quoting
Henderson,
. Under this formulation, a harmless error is not fundamental. We recognize that some of this court’s decisions have bifurcated the fundamental error analysis into a fundamentalness aspect and a harmlessness aspect.
See Thomas,
.
See also Commonwealth v. Noble,
. Once a defendant raises an affirmative defense such as insanity, it is appropriate for this court to determine whether there was fundamental error in the implementation of that defense. As the state points out, however, complete failure to raise any affirmative defenses at the appropriate time in trial court results in waiver of those defenses.
United States v. Wild,
. We note that this is defendant's second trial on this cause, the first jury being unable to reach a verdict.
. At one time there was a question whether the "contributing to or affecting the verdict” standard applied in all cases.
See
Cameron & Osborn,
When Harmless Error Isn’t Harmless,
1971 LAW & SOCIAL ORDER 23, 27. Justice Cameron’s opinion for this court has settled that question in favor of applying the affecting the verdict standard.
McVay,
