This appeal involves the “all or nothing” rule regarding submission of included offenses to the jury.
Rule 6(3) of the rules of criminal procedure states:
In cases where the public offense charged may include some lesser offense it is the duty of the trial court to instruct the jury, not only as to the public offense charged but as to all lesser offenses of which the accused might be found guilty under the indictment and upon the evidence adduced, even though such instructions have not been requested.
Rule 21(3) states:
Upon trial of an offense consisting of different degrees, the jury may find the defendant not guilty of the degree charged in the indictment or information, and guilty of any degree inferior thereto, or of an attempt to commit the offense when such attempt is prohibited by law. In all cases, the defendant may be found guilty of an offense the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which the defendant is charged.
*69 In this case defendant Charles Morgan was charged with second-degree robbery under section 711.1(1), The Code 1981:
A person commits a robbery when, having the intent to commit a theft, the person does any of the following acts to assist or further the commission of the intended theft or the person’s escape from the scene thereof with or without the stolen property:
1. Commits an assault upon another.
At trial the prosecuting witness testified that Morgan and another individual attacked him and took his wallet, and a second State’s witness gave identification testimony. Morgan testified that he had never seen the prosecuting witness until the trial and that he did not remember the incident. Morgan’s mother gave alibi testimony.
In submitting the case to the jury, the trial court submitted the elements of robbery based on assault but, over Morgan’s protest, refused to submit assault as an included offense. The jury found Morgan guilty as charged. He appealed, raising the included offense issue.
Whether a crime is an included offense involves the legal test (the lesser offense must be legally included in the greater offense) and the factual test (the lesser offense must also be factually included under the evidence in the particular case).
State v. Johnson,
The case involves a head-on collision between two legal principles. Our examination of the authorities persuades us that while Morgan has a persuasive argument, the State has the law on its side.
I. One firmly-grounded general principle in our jurisprudence is that by pleading not guilty, a defendant places all the elements of the charge in issue. This court stated in
State v. Chismore,
The defendant did not testify as a witness in his own behalf, and therefore, as a witness, did not deny the deed; but assuredly he did not admit it. His plea of not guilty cast the burden on the state to prove every essential element of the alleged crime. No single fact put in evidence by the state is to be taken as true simply because it is not disputed upon the witness stand.
See also State v. Lamar,
A defendant can, of course, eliminate an element of the crime from issue by unequivocally admitting it as a witness.
State v. Shepard,
Under the general principle, a reasonable argument can be made that even where the defendant does not cross-examine the State’s witnesses or introduce any evidence of his own, when the major crime contains elements A, B, and C the jury has the right not to believe the evidence on element A, reducing the crime to an included offense consisting of elements B and C.
II. That however is not the way the law of included offenses developed. The principle that a not guilty plea controverts all elements is not strictly applied when courts come to applying the factual test of included offenses. In the included offense setting the courts apply- a principle that when the major offense consists of
*70 elements A, B, and C, the lesser offense consists of elements B and C, and the record does not contain substantial evidence from some quarter controverting element A, the State’s case stands or falls on the major offense. As stated with particular reference to robbery in 4 Wharton’s Criminal Procedure § 545, at 30-31 (12th ed. C. Tor-cía 1976), “If the evidence, in a prosecution for robbery or assault with intent to rob, warrants a conviction for the offense charged, but there is no evidence apart from the robbery evidence which would warrant a conviction for assault and battery, or the evidence indicates that if the defendant is guilty at all he is guilty of only the greater offense, an instruction on the lesser offense need not be given.”
Our own decisions and the decisions generally so hold.
State v. Conner,
Illustrative of substantial evidentiary controversion of the additional element which elevates the crime to the major offense are
State
v.
Donelson,
The present record does not contain substantial evidence controverting any of the elements which elevate this crime from assault to robbery. The trial court was correct in refusing to submit the crime of assault for jury consideration.
AFFIRMED.
