¶ 1. Defendant Christopher Messier appeals his conviction in the Windsor Circuit Court of reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct. Defendant presents three issues on appeal: (1) whether 13 V.S.A. § 1025 requires proof of a firearm’s operability; (2) whether defendant was substantially prejudiced when a witness offered testimony at trial regarding defendant’s admission to the witness, the content of which the State never disclosed to defense counsel; and (3) whether defendant was substantially prejudiced when the same witness referred to a prior plea agreement. In sustaining defendant’s conviction, we find that any prejudice arising from the witness’s testimony was cured by the trial court’s prompt
¶ 2. On the evening and early morning of October 5-6, 2002, defendant attended a benefit dance in the town of Sharon, Vermont, with his wife and a friend, Roberta Nason. After four to five hours at the dance, the party of three and another friend, Fay-Ann Manning, returned to stay the night at Nason’s home in South Royalton. Nason went to bed between 1:30 and 2:00 a.m., shortly after their return. Manning stayed up to talk with defendant and his wife for about an hour until defendant, who had been drinking all night, abruptly became angry and went outside. Manning could later hear defendant’s voice among several people yelling outside. The noise eventually woke Nason as well.
¶ 3. Meanwhile, Richard Whitham and David Slater were returning to their cars at Crossroads, a bar in South Royalton, located roughly 100 yards downhill from Nason’s trailer. From the Crossroads parking lot, Whitham heard someone yelling that he wanted to kill Scott Durkee, the bar’s owner. Weeks earlier Durkee and defendant had exchanged words at the Tunbridge World’s Fair; defendant apparently still harbored anger toward Durkee, who several years earlier had asked defendant not to return to Crossroads after repeated disturbances.
¶4. Whitham drove his truck up the hill to investigate and saw someone standing in the bushes with what looked like a gun pointed toward him, so he quickly returned to the bar to report what he had seen. After calling the police, Durkee joined Whitham and Slater in the Crossroads parking lot, where they could see someone moving on the hill above and could hear a man shouting. Whitham and Slater decided to confront the man, and charged up the hill toward Nason’s trailer.
¶5. As they neared the trailer, both men recognized defendant, whom they had known for some years. Both recalled that defendant was holding a shotgun, which Slater testified was pointed in. his direction. Slater knocked the gun away from defendant, and the men fought outside the trailer until someone from Crossroads yelled that the police were on their way. Slater and Whitham left before the police arrived. After speaking briefly with Durkee, the troopers drove to Nason’s home, where they found defendant hiding under the trailer. Once inside, they discovered a shotgun, which Manning and Nason identified as the firearm defendant had that night.
¶ 6. Defendant was convicted of disorderly conduct and reckless endangerment and acquitted of driving under the influence following a
¶ 7. First, we reject defendant’s argument that the State failed to demonstrate that the gun was operable, as required by 13 V.S.A. § 1025. In 2000, the Legislature amended § 1025 to add the emphasized language to the statute’s last sentence:
A person who recklessly engages in conduct which places or may place another person in danger of death or serious bodily injury shall be imprisoned for not more than one year or fined not more than $1,000.00 or both. Recklessness and danger shall be presumed where a person knowingly points a firearm at or in the direction of another, whether or not the actor believed the firearm to be loaded, and whether or not the firearm actually was loaded.
13 V.S.A. § 1025 (Cum. Supp. 2004) (emphasis added); see 1999, No. 149 (Adj. Sess.), § 3 (adding underlined language).
¶ 8. At this point, some background on our decisions concerning § 1025 is instructive. Under our original construction of § 1025, before the emphasized language above was inserted, whether a firearm pointed at another person was loaded or otherwise operational was irrelevant. State v. Cushman,
¶ 9. In State v. McLaren,
¶ 10. The 2000 amendment explicitly overruled McLaren’s holding requiring the State to prove a gun involved in an alleged violation of § 1025 was loaded in order to obtain a conviction. However, even after the amendment, the statute remains silent as to McLaren’s requirement that the State prove operability. In assessing the import of the amendment, two principles of statutory construction are relevant. First, “[w]e must presume that the Legislature made changes in the law in light of the relevant decisions of this Court, and with knowledge of prior legislation on the same subject.” Thayer v. Herdt,
¶ 11. Second, we are mindful that “[provisions of the original act or section which are repeated in the body of the amendment... are considered a continuation of the original law.,.. Thus, rights and liabilities accrued under the provisions of the original act which are reenacted are not affected by the amendment.” Slocum v. Dep’t of Soc. Welfare,
¶ 12. Accordingly, we must assess defendant’s argument that the district court erred in denying his motion for acquittal in which he argued that the State did not present sufficient evidence of the gun’s operability. In reviewing the trial court’s denial of defendant’s motion for acquittal, we consider whether “the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the State and excluding any modifying evidence, fairly and reasonably tends to convince a reasonable trier of fact that the defendant is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.” State v. Turner,
¶ 13. Here, the State did provide sufficient evidence to support the verdict. Two witnesses testified consistently that they heard the ratcheting noise of the pump action of the gun that night. A state trooper also demonstrated the noise made by the gun’s pump action on the stand. There were shells found in defendant’s vehicle, and the incident took place during hunting season. Moreover, the gun itself was entered into evidence and available for the jury’s inspection. As the State observed, defendant adduced no evidence that the gun was not operable, and the gun was not a rusty antique, like the weapon at issue in Cushman. Further, we agree with the State that nothing in our caselaw dealing with § 1025 suggests that the State must undertake ballistics or other laboratory testing in order to meet its burden on operability. Thus, we reject defendant’s argument that the district court erred in denying his motion for acquittal.
¶ 15. The question before this Court regarding these two statements is whether the trial court committed reversible error when it denied defendant’s motions for a mistrial. The disposition of a motion for mistrial is discretionary, and, as such, a claim of error can be supported only where the trial court’s discretion was either totally withheld, or exercised on clearly untenable or unreasonable grounds. State v. Potter,
¶ 16. The first statement occurred during Slater’s direct examination by the State. After describing the events at Nason’s trailer, the State asked Slater whether he had seen defendant again that night, and Slater confirmed that he had. He testified that defendant came down to the Crossroads parking lot and said that “he was sorry and the gun wasn’t loaded.” Defendant immediately asked for a bench conference, during which he disclaimed any notice of the statement. The State indicated that it had learned of the statement only that morning before trial. Given that time frame, the court concluded that the State’s nondisclosure did not rise to the level of misconduct, and refused to declare a mistrial. Instead, it immediately directed the jury to disregard the statement and excised it from the record. The court later denied defendant’s motion for a new trial on this issue, finding no indication that the State acted out of maliciousness or bad motive, and abiding by the sufficiency of its curative instruction.
¶ 17. The second statement occurred during Slater’s heated cross-examination by the defense. An exasperated Slater testified that he “thought it was over when they sent me a letter saying there was a
¶ 18. Reviewing Slater’s first statement concerning defendant’s undisclosed apology, we conclude that the trial court acted within its discretion when it denied defendant’s motion. Defendant argues that he was substantially prejudiced to the extent that, from the juror’s perspective, his alleged general statement of regret was tantamount to an admission of guilt, and contends that the trial court’s instruction to the jury was insufficient to cure any prejudice arising from the remark. We disagree. Defendant has not demonstrated any incurable prejudice on this issue, and there is no evidence to suggest that the jury did not heed the court’s curative instruction. Further, the second phrase of Slater’s statement — defendant’s alleged statement that the gun was not loaded — could not have caused any prejudice because defendant did not dispute that he brandished a gun during the incident.
¶ 19. We reach the same conclusion -with respect to Slater’s second statement. The inadvertent reference to a prior plea agreement raises a novel issue in our jurisprudence: specifically, whether such a reference should be deemed so prejudicial as to merit a per se rule requiring a mistrial, as defendant suggests, or whether the reference should be reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard, as is the case with other inadmissible evidence. See State v. Jones,
¶ 20. Here, as with the other challenged testimony, the trial court declined to declare a mistrial, but promptly instructed the jury to disregard Slater’s statement. Its decision was a proper exercise of its discretion. In State v. Potter, we held that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the defendant’s motion for a mistrial after a witness indirectly referred to the fact that the defendant may have been incarcerated at some point immediately prior to the incident in question.
¶ 21. Here, the trial court also responded with an immediate curative instruction directing the jury to disregard Slater’s statement about a plea agreement as nonresponsive. Additionally, the statement itself was unsolicited and vague — Slater did not refer to specific terms of any particular plea arrangement, or even that defendant had pled guilty. Furthermore, Slater was obviously mistaken in his belief that the matter was settled by a plea agreement, given that he was testifying in defendant’s criminal trial at the time. Finally, the jury acquitted defendant of one of the charges, indicating that it performed its duty, uninfluenced by Slater’s passing reference. Again, defendant has failed to demonstrate prejudice, and the record does not reflect that the trial court abused its discretion or that the jury disregarded the court’s limiting instructions.
Affirmed.
Notes
By expanding the scope of the crime to include unloaded weapons, the plain language of § 1025 now proscribes conduct that could place the victim in actual danger (if the gun is loaded), or merely apparent danger (if the gun is unloaded). The statute as amended is thus in some tension with McLaren's rationale that the statute is “intended to proscribe conduct which would place the victim in actual danger of death or serious bodily injury, not mere apparent danger.”
