Lead Opinion
OPINION
1. We granted certiorari to the Court of Appeals in this case to address two issues: whether that Court properly overruled State v. Shade,
2. Shade and Carr were properly overruled. The facts of this ease are set out in the Court of Appeals opinion and need not be repeated here. See State v. Olguin,
3. However, because Olguin may have relied on those cases in his decision not to request a special verdict form indicating which alternative crime the jury chose for conviction, we apply this holding prospectively. See Santillanes v. State,
4. The word “person” in Section 39 includes individuals and entities that are not corporations. Olguin argues that his conviction for soliciting a bribe must be set aside because the State failed to prove that the entity he bribed was a corporation. Section 39 provides:
Any member of the legislature who shall vote or use his influence for or against any matter pending in either house in consideration of any money, thing of value or promise thereof, shall be deemed guilty of bribery; and any member of the legislature or other person who shall directly or indirectly offer, give or promise any money, thing of value, privilege or personal advantage, to any member of the legislature to influence him to vote or work for or against any matter pending in ' either house; or any member of the legislature who shall solicit from any person or corporation any money, thing of value or personal advantage for his vote or influence as such member shall be deemed guilty of solicitation of bribery.
The first clause of this section defines bribery. The next two clauses define solicitation of a bribe. A criminal statute or provision should be given a reasonable construction and interpreted in light of the evil it seeks to prevent. State v. Ogden,
5. The jury found beyond a reasonable doubt that Olguin had demanded or received money with an intent to influence his action as a public official. Thus, Olguin’s conviction under Section 39 must be upheld. It was not necessary for the State to prove that the entity from which Olguin solicited a bribe was a corporation. We affirm Olguin’s conviction for soliciting a bribe.
6. Because Olguin now stands convicted of two fourth-degree felonies rather than the original three fourth-degree felonies and one third-degree felony and because of the unusual interrelationship of the charges, we remand this matter to the trial court for the purpose of reconsideration of sentencing.
7. IT IS SO ORDERED.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
Although not raised by the parties, the Court of Appeals identified a potential issue of fundamental error governed by State v. Shade,
I respectfully dissent from this Court’s setting aside of Olguin’s conspiracy conviction. Neither Shade nor Carr was cited or relied upon by Olguin or the State in the briefs before the Court of Appeals. Olguin never complained about the absence of substantial evidence to support one of the two objects of the conspiracy with which he was charged. Olguin argued on appeal, as he did in the trial court, that there was no evidence of an agreement to violate the law — there was nothing more than Nunez’s misunderstanding of Olguin’s role. Because Olguin did not rely on Shade and Carr, I disagree that we should afford him the advantage of the Shade fundamental-error doctrine. I would not, therefore, set aside the conviction for conspiracy.
I would, however, limit any application of Griffin to a holding that the absence of substantial evidence to support one of the two claimed objects of a conspiracy does not constitute fundamental error. That is, I concur with the overruling of the holding in Shade that fundamental error arises from an instruction on a factual alternative for which there is no substantial evidence. If, using this case as an example, lack of evidence to support conspiracy to commit the alternative object of fraud were to have been raised and erroneously ruled upon, then we would decide whether that error was harmless under the facts. Griffin holds that, without regard to the facts, submission of a false alternative is never error.
In Griffin, of course, the defendant did propose that the court instruct the jury that it could consider only the object of the conspiracy for which she conceded there was sufficient evidence, and she proposed special interrogatories asking the jury to identify the object or objects of the conspiracy of which she had knowledge.
