Dеfendant appeals from his kidnapping conviction under 13 V.S.A. § 2401, repealed by 1989, No. 293 (Adj. Sess.), § 8. * He contends that the trial court erroneously instructed the jury on the intent required for conviction under § 2401. We agree, and reverse and remand for a new trial.
The trial court’s instructions on intent were as follows:
[T]he State must prove that Mr. Sargent intended to confine Meg Howard. In this regard the State must provе either, one, that Mr. Sargent consciously desired to physically confine Meg Howard against her will, or, second, Mr. Sargent knew or should have known at the time of the incident thаt his actions were almost certain to cause the physical confinement of Meg Howard against her will. This means that to find the Defendant guilty of kidnapping, you must find that he acted knowingly or purposefully with regard to his actions, which constituted forcibly confining the victim, Meg Howard.
It is sufficient for the prosecution to prove either that the Defendant consciously desired the result, or that he knew or should have known that the result is practically certain to follow from his conduct. (Emphasis аdded.)
At the charge conference defendant objected to the “should have known” language. He argued that its inclusion erro *465 neously changed what was properly a subjective inquiry into an objective one. The trial court declined to change the instruction, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty.
Section 2401’s intent requirement was explored in
State v. Audette,
[b]ecause the Legislature could not have intended to subject a person to a possible 25 year jail sentence for negligently or recklessly confining a person against her will, and since statutes should be construed as to avoid absurd or unjust results, we find that 13 V.S.A. § 2401 requires рurposeful or knowing action by defendant to forcibly restrain his victim in cases where the victim is confined against her will.
Audette,
The issue before us today is whether the “should hаve known” language contained in the jury instructions is consistent with Audette’s holding that § 2401 requires that a defendant act purposefully or knowingly. We hold that it is not. While the “should hаve known” language appears in dicta in Audette itself, a closer examination of Audette makes clear that the inquiry into defendant’s intent is a subjective one. Whether a defendant acted knowingly deрends on what his or her state of mind actually was, not what it should have been.
*466
One indication of this is the citation in
Audette
to the Model Penal Code immediately following the enunciation of the “purposeful or knowing” standard.
A further indication that § 2401’s intent inquiry is subjective arises frоm the repeated contrast in
Audette
between “purposefully or knowingly” and “recklessly or negligently.” Section 2401 was interpreted as requiring the higher degrees of сulpability because, as quoted above, “the Legislature could not have intended to subject a person to a 25 year jail sentence for negligеntly or recklessly confining a person against her will.”
Audette,
Finally, Audette's holding that defendant must act purposefully or knowingly to violate § 2401 was not made in a vacuum. This Court has previously found knowledge to be a subjective inquiry. In
State v. Alpert,
The State makes two arguments to the effect that even if § 2401’s intent requirement is subjective, defendant’s conviction should not be reversed. The State’s first argument is that the jury instructions, when considered in their entirety, made apparent that it was defendant’s subjective knowledge that was controlling. The State contends in its brief that “[b]asically the ‘should have known’ language meant that in the absence of direct evidence, the jury could draw reasonable inferences from the facts and circumstances of the case as to [defendant’s] state of mind.” We agree that the jury can and must decide whether they believe defendant’s claim that he “did not know” his actions wеre practically certain to confine the victim against her will by examining the facts and circumstances of the case. Yet this is fundamentally different from deciding whether defendant “should have known” because of the facts and circumstances of the case. The former is deciding whether knowledge existed, while the latter is deciding only whether knowledge should have existed. These are not equivalent. See
State v. Moffitt,
The State’s second argument is that the error in the instructions was harmless because there was overwhelming evidence that defendant acted knowingly. We disagree. Defendant repeatedly testified that he did not know he was holding the victim against her will. He testified that he thought the victim was helping him. A psychiatrist called by defendant opined that defendant’s intent at the time of his actions was to seek help, and that defendant did not know that his actions were almost certain to cause the victim’s confinement. The arresting оffi *468 cer’s report indicated that defendant “was mortified that he even scared [the victim].” Defendant’s case, as presented to the jury, centered on assertions that he lacked the requisite purpose or knowledge. The inclusion in the instructions of “should have known” language requires reversal.
As we reversе on defendant’s first claim of error, we need not reach the remaining issues raised by him.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Section 2401 provided in pertinent part:
A person who, without legal authority, forcibly or secretly confines or imprisons another person within this state against his will . . . shall be imprisoned not more than twenty-five years ....”
The current statutory scheme for kidnapping and unlawful restraint was added by 1989, No. 293 (Adj. Sess.), § 3, and is codified at 13 V.S.A. §§ 2404-2407. Its intent requirement is “knowing.”
