[¶ 1.] At inquiry in this case is whether a trial court must follow fundamental procedures for conducting a jury trial. Although it provided complete written instructions to the jury, the court at the close of the evidence failed to read all the instructions as required by law, including those on the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof. The court also sent out thirteen jurors to deliberate, over the strenuous objections of the State and with the uninformed consent of the pro se defendant. We conclude that these actions created plain error, cumulatively prejudicial to the integrity of judicial proceedings. We reverse and remand for a new trial.
Facts
[¶ 2.] On March 12, 1997, the Sioux Falls Humane Society received a report of starving horses. Officer Dave Bartscher went to investigate. South Dakota was still in the throes of one of its severest winters. Four to six foot drifts extended across the dirt road leading to the pasture where the horses were kept and the ground was snow covered. Bartscher detected no tire tracks or footprints in the snow leading to the area. Inside a corral he found two dead horses and in the pasture, one “extremely thin” filly. In an old tire, the officer saw a small quantity of moldy feed, but he could find no provisions for water. A day later, the surviving horse was retrieved and treated. The two dead horses were autopsied, revealing that neither had any body fat at the time of death. Both died of chronic malnutrition. Lyle Nelson owned the horses.
[¶ 3.] Nelson was charged with three counts of inhumane treatment of animals, in violation of SDCL 40-1-27. Just before trial, he obtained permission from the court to represent himself, and his appointed lawyer was released. During jury selection the judge suggested that an alternate juror be *442 chosen and the prosecutor agreed, so long as the alternate did not participate in deliberations. But the court stated, “I like to have all 13 deliberate.” He then asked the defendant, “I understand that the State would resist. Do you have any objection to having 13 jurors?” The defendant had no objection. Nonetheless, the prosecutor warned the court that its decision may be reversible error. No explanation was given to the defendant about the consequences of having an extra juror.
[¶ 4.] The court read preliminary instructions to the jury, including instructions on the burden of proof and the presumption of innocence. During the trial, Nelson took the stand in his own defense in the middle of the State’s ease in chief. However, it was at Nelson’s suggestion to “save time” that he be allowed to take the stand and respond to the State’s videotape evidence. Nelson was not then informed of his right to remain silent and his right not to testify under the Fifth Amendment. 1 The next day, when Nelson had trouble locating witnesses, he sought a continuance. The court denied the request.
[¶ 5.] At the close of the evidence, the trial court instructed the jury, but did not re-read the preliminary instructions. Thus, the jury did not again hear instructions on reasonable doubt and the presumption of innocence. The court told the jury, “This is the place that I would re-read the preliminary instructions, but to save time just consider that I have read them here and refer to them when you get into the jury room.” He admonished the jury to consider all the instructions as a whole, including the preliminary instructions. The jury was given copies of all the instructions. As the court was sending the jury out to deliberate, the prosecutor asked, “Are you going to discharge the alternate juror?” The court responded, “No. We are going to let them all deliberate together. All 13 are going to deliberate.” After an hour, the jury found Nelson guilty of the three offenses. On each count, Nelson was sentenced to one year in jail, a one thousand dollar fine, and payment of restitution. The sentences on two of the counts were suspended, provided he serve the jail time and pay the fine on the remaining count.
[¶ 6.] Nelson now appeals his convictions, raising these issues: (1) Whether the trial court’s failure to instruct the jury on the presumption of innocence and the standard of proof at the end of the case constitutes plain error. (2) Whether sending thirteen jurors out to deliberate constitutes plain error. (3) Whether Nelson was denied his constitutional right to a fair trial; specifically, whether the trial court’s decision to have Nelson put on witnesses out of order, the court’s urging Nelson to testify during the State’s case, the court’s refusal to grant a continuance for Nelson to locate witnesses, and the decision to allow thirteen jurors to deliberate, was a denial of due process of law. 2 (4) Whether the trial court had subject matter jurisdiction to hear a case involving alleged cruelty to livestock absent compliance with SDCL chapter 40-1. 3
*443 Analysis and Decision
[¶ 7.] To preserve issues for appellate review litigants must make known to trial courts the actions they seek to achieve or object to the actions of the court, giving their reasons. SDCL 23A-44-13. Issues not advanced at trial cannot ordinarily be raised for the first time on appeal.
State v. Henjum,
[¶ 8.] Plain error requires (1) error, (2) that is plain, (3) affecting substantial rights; and only then may we exercise our discretion to notice the error if (4) it “seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceeding's.”
Johnson v. United States,
In reviewing criminal cases, it is particularly important for appellate courts to relive the whole trial imaginatively, and not to extract from episodes in isolation abstract questions of evidence and procedure. To turn a criminal trial into a quest for error no more promotes the ends of justice than to acquiesce in low standards of criminal prosecution.
Johnson v. United States,
Failure to Read All Instructions at Close of Evidence
[¶ 9.] A judge has the duty to fully instruct the jury on the applicable law.
State v. Eagle Star,
After the close of evidence and prior to argument the court shall charge the jury. In charging the jury the court shall instruct as to the law of the ease.... The court, on its own motion or upon the motion of any party, after the jury is selected and sworn, but prior to opening statements, may in its discretion, give general and preliminary instructions to *444 the jury on the conduct of the trial, but not on substantive legal issues.
(emphasis added).
[¶ 10.] In
Eagle Star,
we noted that “[p]rior to hearing all the evidence presented, the trial court is not in a position to fully instruct the jury on the applicable law.”
Eagle Star,
[¶ 11.] Reading a complete set of instructions after the evidence ensures that the jury hears and considers all the applicable law before deliberations. Moreover, reading aloud aids understanding if the court reads the instructions intelligibly. See Veda R. Charrow & Myra K. Erhardt, Clear & Effective Legal Writing 32 (1986)(discussing the importance of drafting jury instructions in a style appropriate for oral comprehension); David Mellinkoff, Legal Writing: Sense & Nonsense 88-89 (1982)(emphasizing that instructions should “speak directly to the jurors”). Repetition by first hearing the instructions and then reading them enhances recall as well as comprehension. See Saul M. Kassin & Lawrence S. Wrightsman, The American Jury on Trial: Psychological Perspectives 146 (1988)(“Preliminary instructions ... are not a substitute for the final charge, but a supplement to it. There is no reason why juries should not be charged twice, in order to ensure the information processing advantages afforded on each occasion.”)
[¶ 12.] Nelson asks us to stamp as error the failure to read to the jury at the end of the case the instructions on the presumption of innocence and the burden of proof. Our statutes are clear on this point: “[T]he court
shall read
its instructions to the jury” at the close of the evidence and before final argument. SDCL 23A-25-4. We interpret the word “shall” as “a mandatory directive” conferring no discretion. SDCL 2-14-2.1. “ ‘This [C]ourt assumes that statutes mean what they say and that the legislators have said what they meant.’ ”
Mid-Century Ins. Co. v. Lyon,
[¶ 13.] When a court materially deviates from the statutory procedures it is bound to uniformly and fairly administer, we must say the court erred. Thus, the first element of the plain error test is established. As for the second element, this case was tried seven months after
Eagle Star
was handed down; trial courts were therefore informed that they must read all jury instructions at the close of the evidence. As the word “plain” means “clear” or “obvious,” we believe the error here was plain.
Olano,
[¶ 14.] The State, relying on
Eagle Star,
argues that overwhelming evidence of Nelson’s guilt was presented; thus, even if the trial court had properly read instructions on the presumption of innocence and reasonable doubt, the jury would have returned a guilty verdict.
See, e.g., United States v. Davilar-Natér,
[¶ 15.] Most courts having wrestled with this question deem it serious error to fail to repeat preliminary instructions at the end of the evidence. We take particular guidance from a line of Arizona cases, all considering criminal appeals from the same trial judge. In
State v. Jackson,
[¶ 16.] In
State v. Kinkade,
[¶ 17.] Eight years later, the Arizona Supreme Court reviewed another criminal case from same trial judge, who apparently continued her practice of not re-reading preliminary instructions.
Johnson,
[¶ 18.] Finally, in
State v. Romanosky,
As noted inJohnson,173 Ariz. at 276 ,842 P.2d at 1289 , the failure to give a reasonable doubt instruction at the end of the case “is not necessarily obviated by furnishing written copies of instructions to jurors, or by the fact that lawyers have argued the instructions in summation.” This trial involved over 25 witnesses. The instructions received by the jury on the first day of trial included only a statement of the basic principle of reasonable doubt without any reference to defined elements of defined crimes. The crimes themselves were undefined until the end of the case, and the jury was not told at the end of the case that the reasonable doubt standard applied to each element of the defined crimes. From our reading of the record, defendant’s only defense was the doctrine of reasonable doubt. The attenuated instruction given at the start of the case was insufficient, given the paramount importance of the doctrine of reasonable doubt. We cannot say the error was harmless in this capital ease.
Id. Because we ought to consider error within the totality of a trial, before deciding whether the failure to re-read critical instructions at the end of the case affected substantial rights, we will next examine the court’s decision to allow thirteen jurors to deliberate.
Thirteen Jurors
[¶ 19.] SDCL 23A-18-2 states: “Juries shall consist of twelve members_” Further, SDCL 23A-20-28 provides in relevant part:
A court may direct that not more than six jurors in addition to the regular jury members be called and impaneled to sit as alternate jurors.... An alternate juror who does not replace a regular juror shall be discharged after the jury retires to consider its verdict.
(emphasis added). This statute unambiguously mandates that alternate jurors be dismissed when the jury begins its deliberations. The trial court’s inclusion of the thirteenth juror in the deliberations clearly violated the law.
Cf. Olano,
Errors Affecting Substantial Rights
[¶20.] Having determined that the court committed plain error in both its instructions to the jury and in the number of jurors allowed to deliberate, we must decide whether these errors affected substantial rights. Each of these errors, standing alone, might not be sufficient to meet the third prong of the
Olano
standard.
Olano,
[¶ 21.] Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
.
See
SDCL 19-2-8 (excepting criminal defendants who take the stand from court’s duty to advise on right against self-incrimination);
State v. Dace,
. Except for the thirteen jurors question, the remainder of this issue lacks sufficient merit for discussion.
. Nelson argues that the trial court did not have subject matter jurisdiction to hear an animal cruelty case absent compliance with SDCL chapter 40-1. Under SDCL 40-1-25, the South Dakota Animal Industry Board administers and enforces matters dealing with livestock, such as horses, including "[m]ethods of investigating reported inhumane treatment...." SDCL 40-1-25(6). SDCL 40-1-27, the statute under which Nelson was charged, states that: "No person owning or responsible for the care of an animal may inhumanely treat such animal. A violation of this section is a Class 1 misdemeanor.” SDCL 7-16-9 provides: “The state's attorney shall appear in all courts of his county and prosecute and defend on behalf of the state or his county all actions or proceedings, civil or criminal, in which the state or county is interested or a party.” When read together, §§ 7-16-9 arid 40-1-27 give the state’s attorney authority to prosecute misdemeanors regardless of who performs the investigation. Nothing in SDCL chapter 40-1 suggests that misdemeanor jurisdiction over mistreatment of animals in South Dakota courts is dependent on some action by the Animal Industry Board. Nelson's claim that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction is meritless.
