Appellant appeals his convictions for first degree murder, Section 565.020, RSMo 1986, and first degree burglary, Section 569.020, RSMo 1986. The trial court sentenced Wayne O’Brien (O’Brien) to life imprisonment without the possibility of probation or parole for first degree murder and life imprisonment for first degree burglary. Following sentencing, O’Brien filed a Rule 29.15 motion, counsel was appointed and filed a timely amended motion. The motion court denied relief without an evidentiary hearing. The court of appeals consolidated O’Brien’s post-conviction appeal with his direct appeal, Rule 29.15(1), and affirmed. On O’Brien’s motion, the court of appeals transferred these consolidated appeals to this Court, Mo. Const. Art. V, § 10, and, deciding the case as though on original appeal, we affirm in part and reverse in part and remand.
I.
O’Brien’s principal contention on appeal is that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a judgment of acquittal at the close of the evidence. He claims the State failed to present sufficient evidence to support a conviction for first degree murder. As we are persuaded that he is correct, we address only those other points on appeal that may arise on remand. 1
A.
A challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence to support a finding of guilt is based in the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution.
Jackson v. Virginia,
When properly raised by the defendant, the question of sufficiency arises before the case is put to the jury; the challenge is to the “submissibility” of the case. Therefore, any guilty verdict subsequently rendered by the jury is wholly irrelevant to the question of whether the case was sufficient to go to the jury at all. The Court’s review is limited to determining whether the evidence is sufficient to persuade any reasonable juror as to each of the elements of the crime, beyond a reasonable doubt. To ensure that the reviewing court does not engage in futile attempts to weigh the evidence or judge the witnesses’ credibility, courts employ “a legal conclusion that upon judicial review all of the evidence is to be considered in the light
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most favorable to the prosecution.”
Jackson,
B.
Defendant Wayne O’Brien, age 21, lived with his mother, his brother, Michael, and Daniel Blount. On November 25, 1989, at or around 5:30 p.m., O’Brien and Blount were drinking beer at Sam's Place, a neighborhood tavern. Also in the bar was Sanford Wood, a frequent patron of Sam’s Place. As with any group of “regulars,” everyone in the bar knew everyone else. On this day, Wood was celebrating because he had just come into some money. He bought several rounds of drinks “for the house” and, in doing so, exhibited a large amount of cash.
Drawn by this display, Blount sought O’Brien’s help in robbing Wood. According to O’Brien, Blount told him that, if he would just “lure” Wood outside, Blount would “take care of the rest.” O'Brien agreed and asked Wood to step outside with him. When they left, Blount exited through the tavern’s side door and made his way behind the building and into a narrow walkway, or “gangway,” which led out to the street.
After a brief conversation outside, O’Brien turned to walk away and Wood turned to come back into the bar. A witness inside the bar then saw Wood turn and walk in the direction of the gangway as though he had heard someone call his name. O’Brien told the police that he then saw Blount pull Wood into the gangway, knock him down and reach into Wood’s pockets.
Several minutes later, O’Brien returned to Sam’s Place and asked if anyone had seen Wood. Sam, the owner, said he had not seen Wood but asked O’Brien to check in Tucker’s, another tavern on the same block, because Sam wanted to close and Wood’s coat and change were still on the bar. O’Brien left for a couple of minutes, returned to report that he could not find Wood and then left for home.
Sam asked another patron to check again to see if Wood was at Tucker’s. The patron did so and, on the way to Tucker’s, thought he saw “something” in the gangway but did not stop to see what it was. Returning from Tucker’s, however, this patron heard a “gurgling” sound coming from the gangway and stepped in to investigate. There, he found Wood, barely alive. The medical examiner’s testimony revealed that Wood’s skull had numerous fractures as a result of what were described as “blunt force injuries.” Though the medical examiner testified that the injuries were greater than could have been caused by fists alone, the injuries were consistent with having been inflicted by stomping on the victim’s head as it lay on the concrete of the gangway.
Meanwhile, O’Brien returned to his house for a short time and then went to a friend’s house nearby. Shortly after O’Brien’s arrival, Blount showed up, very nervous and excited. After the door was shut and shades drawn, Blount announced that he had “murdered” someone and displayed some cash that he said he had taken. O’Brien’s friend testified that Blount’s shoes appeared to have blood on them. Blount offered O’Brien some of the money, but O’Brien refused and the two men left to return to their home.
The police, acting on information from the bar’s patrons and using a tracking dog, went to O’Brien’s house where they arrested him. O’Brien gave a statement to the police and was released. Several days later, upon learning that the police were looking for him again, O’Brien turned himself in at the police station. There, he again gave statements which, though not entirely consistent, contained the essential facts set out above.
C.
On the strength of this evidence, the trial court instructed the jury on the following charges:
As to Count I—
*217 a. Murder in the first degree
b. Murder in Second degree (felony murder) based on burglary in the first degree
c. Murder in Second degree (felony murder) based on attempted burglary in the first degree
d. Murder in Second degree (felony murder) based on burglary in the second degree
e. Murder in Second degree (felony murder) based on attempted burglary in the second degree
As to Count II—
a. Burglary in the first degree
b. Attempted burglary in the first degree
c. Burglary in the second degree
d. Attempted burglary in the second degree
The jury returned verdicts of guilty on murder in the first degree and burglary in the first degree.
There are three elements to the crime of murder in the first degree: “A person commits the crime of murder in the first degree if he [1] knowingly [2] causes the death of another person [3] after deliberation upon the matter.” Section 565.020. In the present case, however, the State argued O’Brien’s guilt on the basis that he was an accessory, or an accomplice, to the murder of Woods. On appeal, the State argues that it need only prove that O’Brien aided in Wood’s death with the conscious purpose of causing that death. In support of its position, the State cites
State v. Hunter,
liability as an accomplice for murder first degree requires that one “aid another or others with the conscious object of causing the offense.” Proof of dual intent, that is, both an intent to commit murder after coolly and fully reflecting upon it and an intent purposely to promote the commission of murder is not required to establish accomplice liability for murder first degree. Proof of the latter intent is sufficient.
Id.
at 100. [Citations omitted.]
Hunter
cites
State v. Johns,
Johns,
relying entirely on
White,
affirmed the use of instructions requiring only that the jury find the defendant “acted with the purpose of promoting the commission of first degree murder” and held the failure of the instructions to also require a finding that the defendant “reflected upon this matter coolly and fully” was not error.
Johns,
The unique role of premeditation in the law of accomplice liability was clarified in
State v. Ervin,
a first-degree murder instruction premised on accessory liability must ascribe deliberation to the defendant. And where the State’s theory is accomplice/accessory liability, the jury must also find that the defendant had a purpose to aid another in the commission of the crime.
Id.
at 923. [Emphasis added, citations omitted.] This is so because it is the element of deliberation that sets first degree
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murder apart from all other forms of homicide. Both second degree murder and first degree murder require that the act be intentionally done. Only first degree murder requires the cold blood, the unimpassioned premeditation that the law calls deliberation. Only where the defendant himself harbors this most despicable mental state does society inflict its severest punishments. Thus, in
Ervin,
the Court made clear that, while the act of homicide may be imputed to an accessory, the element of deliberation may not be.
Ervin,
Therefore, for the State to have made a submissible case on first degree murder, it must have introduced evidence from which a reasonable juror could conclude beyond a reasonable doubt that (1) O’Brien committed acts which aided Blount in killing Wood, (2) it was O’Brien’s conscious purpose in committing these acts that Wood be killed, and (3) O’Brien committed these acts after coolly deliberating on Wood’s death for some amount of time, no matter how short.
The State’s case falls far short of this standard. There is evidence that O’Brien aided Blount in the commission of the robbery of Wood and that O’Brien understood and intended that his acts would have that effect. Additionally, there is evidence that Blount killed Wood and that he did so during the course of the burglary. There is no evidence, however, from which any juror could reasonably infer that O’Brien intended Wood's death, let alone that O’Brien coolly deliberated Wood’s fate.
It is properly said that it will be presumed that a person intends the natural and probable consequences of his acts.
State v. Hammonds,
Here, however, there was no deadly weapon used and, for all the evidence tells us, the instruments of Wood’s death were Blount’s feet. Assuming that Blount killed Wood intentionally, and such is the reasonable inference when the evidence shows that the victim was stomped to death, we hold that the evidence was insufficient to impute this intent to O’Brien. Absent an agreement to kill Wood, or O’Brien’s knowledge that Blount was going to commit the robbery using a deadly weapon, there is simply no basis for attributing to O’Brien an intent to kill Wood.
Deliberation, like most elements of mens rea, must ordinarily be proved through proof of the circumstances sur
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rounding the killing.
State v. Gilmore,
In each of these cases, however, the defendant personally caused the death of the victim. Thus, the circumstances of the killing could reasonably be used to show the defendant’s own premeditation. Where the defendant is simply an accessory and does not participate in the act of killing, any inferences which may be raised by the manner in which the victim was killed cannot serve to prove the defendant’s premeditation. Where an accomplice has been found guilty of first degree murder, the evidence of the defendant’s own actions must be sufficient to support an inference of his having premeditated upon the eventual death of the victim.
See Isa,
In the present case, the State presented no evidence from which a reasonable juror could infer that O’Brien had deliberated upon Wood’s death. The only circumstances shown by the State are (1) that O’Brien lured Wood out of the tavern for the purpose of aiding in robbing him, (2) that O’Brien saw Blount grab Wood and drag him into a darkened alley, and (3) that O’Brien then sought to “cover his tracks” by returning to the tavern to “look for” Wood. This evidence comes almost exclusively from O’Brien’s own statements to the police and, the State argues, it need not be believed. While this is certainly true, the State fails to offer any contrary evidence in its place.
Moments before the jury retired to deliberate, the State summarized its argument, stating:
We don’t know for sure what the defendant did, but we do know he was involved in this crime. We do know that don’t we, because he sits up there and tells you some cocking [sic] bull story *220 about how it happened, and we know it’s not the truth....
Simply because a defendant’s self-serving statements may not be credible does not give the jury license to speculate on what happened when there is nothing else to go on. Certainly, the jury was not required to believe O’Brien, but neither was it permitted to invent a version of facts— unsupported by any evidence—that fits the crimes charged. In short, the State failed to produce sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror could conclude that O’Brien intended the death of Wood after having coolly deliberated upon that outcome. O’Brien’s conviction for first degree murder must be reversed.
D.
The State’s evidence, however, was sufficient to support the submission of the other charges to the jury. O’Brien does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction for first degree burglary. Similarly, there was evidence from which the jury could have concluded that Wood died in the course of the burglary for which O’Brien was convicted. Therefore, the evidence was sufficient to warrant the submission of the case on felony murder instructions. 2
Where a conviction of a greater offense has been overturned for insufficiency of the evidence, the reviewing court may enter a conviction for a lesser offense if the evidence was sufficient for the jury to find each of the elements and the jury was required to find those elements to enter the ill-fated conviction on the greater offense.
Cf. Morris v. Mathews,
In the present case, however, this is not possible. Here, the State did not submit, and as discussed above could not submit, this case to the jury on straight second degree murder. Though the case was properly submitted on a charge of second degree felony murder, the jury did not reach the issues raised by that charge because it was improperly allowed to find O’Brien guilty on the charge of first degree murder. Therefore, even though the jury found O’Brien guilty of the first degree burglary, it did not find—because it was not required to find—that Wood’s death occurred as a result of that burglary. We decline to infer this critical fact and, therefore, remand this case for a new trial on the charge of felony murder. On the other hand, given that no substantial challenge has been raised concerning O’Brien’s conviction for first degree burglary, that conviction is affirmed.
II.
At oral argument, appellant raised concerns that a remand for a new trial on second degree felony murder in this case would violate double jeopardy. Though neither briefed nor extensively argued, we are compelled to address this issue as it is sure to be raised in the court below.
Initially, it should be noted that the state constitutional double protections are not invoked. Article I, Section 19, by its express terms, is limited to situations in which the defendant has been “once acquitted by a jury.” Here, though his first degree murder conviction is reversed, a jury has not acquitted O’Brien. Therefore, protections from retrial, if any, must stem from the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitu
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tion, made applicable to proceedings in state courts through the Fourteenth Amendment by
Benton v. Maryland,
Double jeopardy is not offended by the retrial of a defendant who has succeeded in having his conviction overturned on appeal.
United States v. Ball,
This logic, however, does not apply in the present case. Here, O’Brien is not to be tried again for the same crime but, rather, the lesser offense of second degree felony murder.
In
Burks,
the insufficiency in the government’s case went to the defendant’s sanity at the time of the crime.
Id.
at 3-4,
In the present case, O’Brien is no worse off for having to go to the jury on a charge of felony murder as that is exactly what would have happened at his first trial but for the error of the trial court in instructing on first degree murder. Retrial in this case does not violate double jeopardy principles, and we remand for that purpose.
3
Cf. State v. Parker,
III.
Finally, we consider the other matters that may arise on retrial. First, O’Brien alleges error in the trial court’s allowing Officer Stittum to testify that, at one point in his interrogation of O’Brien, he interrupted O’Brien and told him that he was lying. O’Brien contends that this constitutes impermissible “opinion evidence” as to the ultimate question before the jury and that its admission violated his right to a fair trial. Reading Officer Stittum’s testimony and the challenged statement in context, we hold that its admission was not error. The witness was not telling the jury that, in his opinion, the defendant is a liar. Rather, the witness was describing the give-and-take of his interrogation of O’Brien. As the trial court aptly noted in response to O’Brien’s “opinion” objection:
Well, I don’t think that’s the thrust of this. I think he is saying what he said to [O’Brien] at the time he’s getting or taking the statement from him, which then I would assume is the reason for or the cause for the additional remarks if there *222 are any in the statement and gives color as to why these additional statements or remarks are made.
Second, O’Brien’s final allegation of error is a well-worn attack on MAI-CR3D 302.04, the “reasonable doubt” instruction. This attack, misguidedly based on
Cage v. Louisiana,
IV.
O’Brien’s conviction and sentence on Count II, first degree burglary, are affirmed. Because the State’s case is constitutionally insufficient to support a finding that O’Brien purposefully aided in the killing of Wood after coolly premeditating on Wood’s death, however, O’Brien’s conviction for first degree murder is reversed. The case is remanded for a new trial on the charge of second degree felony murder.
Notes
. O’Brien has not briefed any of the allegations of error raised in his Rule 29.15 motions. To the extent that the claims reach the conviction for first degree burglary, we consider them abandoned and thus affirm the motion court’s denial of relief. To the extent O’Brien’s claims challenge his conviction for first degree murder, they are rendered moot by our decision reversing that conviction and remanding for a new trial.
. Though O’Brien was charged with first degree murder, an instruction on second degree felony murder as a lesser offense is permissible where there is evidence to support an acquittal of the greater offense and a conviction of the lesser offense. See Sections 556.046.1(2) and 565.025.-2(l)(a), RSMo 1986. The legislature’s classification of second degree felony murder as a lesser offense under first degree murder does not mean, however, that it is also a lesser-included offense of first degree murder. As felony murder requires proof of an element—death in the course of a felony—that first degree murder does not, the former cannot be a lesser-included offense of the latter.
. In
State v. Johnson,
