STATE of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Oliver Menard WRIGHT, Petitioner.
State of Washington, Respondent,
v.
Cinque Richard Garrett, Defendant,
Dennis Lamar Bryant, Petitioner.
Supreme Court of Washington, En Banc.
*1028 Jason Brett Saunders, Gordon & Saunders PLLC, Thomas Michael Kummerow, Washington Appellate Project, David Bruce Koch, Christopher Gibson, Nielsen Broman & Koch PLLC, Seattle, WA, for Petitioners.
Andrea Ruth Vitalich, Jeffrey C. Dernbach, King County Prosecutor's Office, Seattle, WA, for Respondent.
MADSEN, J.
¶ 1 In separate proceedings, the State tried Oliver Wright and Dennis Bryant (defendants) for second degree murder, charged as a single count under the statutory alternatives of intentional murder and felony murder based on assault. The jury returned a general verdict of guilt after receiving instructions only on the felony murder alternative. Following In re Personal Restraint of Andress,
¶ 2 We find nothing in the double jeopardy clause that precludes the State from continuing its prosecution of the defendants for second degree murder under the intentional murder alternative. Their second degree felony murder convictions were vacated due to trial error, not insufficient evidence. The defendants were not impliedly acquitted of second degree intentional murder because *1029 their juries had no opportunity to consider their factual innocence of that charge. Finally, we reject the defendants' contention that jeopardy terminated when the jury was discharged without returning an express verdict on the intentional murder alternative. Applying well-established principles applicable to alternative means offenses, we hold the State's failure to submit a jury instruction on intentional murder has no effect on its ability to retry the defendants for that charge.
¶ 3 Because the defendants' convictions were reversed on grounds other than insufficient evidence, and because they have not been expressly or impliedly acquitted of intentional murder, they remain in the same jeopardy as attached at the first trial. Thus, we affirm the Court of Appeals' decisions remanding for retrial.
FACTS
Wright
¶ 4 On April 6, 1993, Oliver Wright killed Aisa Cameron during a drug transaction on a Seattle street. Wright and Cameron had been arguing. Wright put his arm around Cameron's neck, pulled him close, said "Don't you know I shot you?", and then shot him in the chest at point blank range. 1 Videotape Recorded Proceedings (VRP) at 209.
¶ 5 The State charged Wright with one count of second degree murder under RCW 9A.32.050(1)(a) (intentional murder) and.050(1)(b) (felony murder predicated on assault).[1] Clerk's Papers (CP) (Wright) at 150.[2] However, the State proposed jury instructions only on the felony murder alternative. CP (Wright) at 95-96.[3]
¶ 6 Following an off-the-record conference to go over the jury instructions, the court asked the parties whether they wished to enter any objections on the record. Wright did not take exception to the jury instructions. 3 VRP 716.
¶ 7 The jury returned a general verdict of guilt on the second degree murder charge.
Bryant
¶ 8 On August 6, 1994, Dennis Bryant shot Derek Burfect and Jacque Burns in a parking lot following the Seafair parade. Burns died as a result of his injuries. The State charged Bryant with one count of second degree murder under RCW 9A.32.050(1)(a) (intentional murder) and .050(1)(b) (felony murder predicated on assault), using language indistinguishable from that in Wright's case.[4]
¶ 9 As in Wright's case, the trial court instructed the jury only on the felony murder alternative, using the same pattern instructions. Clerk's Papers (Bryant) at 200, 213. Neither the prosecutor nor defense counsel took exception to the jury instructions. The jury returned a general verdict of guilt.
*1030 ¶ 10 The defendants' second degree murder convictions were upheld on direct review. Following this court's decision in Hinton, however, the Court of Appeals granted the defendants' personal restraint petitions and vacated the convictions. In both cases, the State sought to retry the defendants for second degree murder, this time under the intentional murder alternative alone. The trial courts granted the defendants' motions to dismiss the charges on double jeopardy grounds. However, the trial courts ruled the State could retry Wright for first degree manslaughter and Bryant for first degree assault.
¶ 11 Instead, the State successfully moved for discretionary review of the trial courts' rulings at the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals stayed Bryant's case pending its decision in Wright's case. In State v. Wright,
ANALYSIS
¶ 12 The Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall "be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." U.S. Const. amend. V. Article I, section 9 of the Washington Constitution similarly provides, "No person shall be compelled in any criminal case to give evidence against himself, or be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense." These provisions are "`identical in thought, substance, and purpose.'" State v. Ervin,
¶ 13 That a person may not be retried for the same offense following an acquittal is "the most fundamental rule in the history of double jeopardy jurisprudence." United States v. Martin Linen Supply Co.,
¶ 14 However, the double jeopardy clause "'imposes no limitations whatever upon the power to retry a defendant who has succeeded in getting his first conviction set aside'" on any ground other than insufficient evidence because the defendant's appeal continues the initial jeopardy. State v. Corrado,
¶ 15 The double jeopardy clause also embraces a defendant's "`valued right'" to have the charges resolved by a particular tribunal. Arizona,
¶ 16 In this case, the defendants claim they may not be retried for second degree intentional murder because the first trial ended in the functional equivalent of an acquittal. They advance three theories: (1) the reversal of their convictions resulted from insufficient evidence, (2) their juries impliedly acquitted them of intentional murder by convicting them of felony murder, and (3) jeopardy terminated when the trial ended without an express verdict on the intentional murder alternative.
¶ 17 The defendants first assert they cannot be retried for second degree murder because their convictions were reversed for insufficient evidence. They reason the State failed to prove an essential element of the charged offense, i.e. an appropriate predicate felony. Following Andress, second degree felony murder predicated on assault is a "nonexistent crime."[5]Hinton,
¶ 18 In Hall, the State charged the defendant with sexual assault but substituted the charge of incest at the defendant's request. The Montana Supreme Court reversed the defendant's subsequent conviction because sexual assault of a stepchild did not constitute incest under the statute in effect at the time of the crime. On remand, the State retried Hall on the original sexual assault charge. The United States Supreme Court *1032 rejected the defendant's double jeopardy defense, stating:
[R]espondent's conduct apparently was criminal at the time he engaged in it. If that is so, the State simply relied on the wrong statute in its second information. It is clear that the Constitution permits retrial after a conviction is reversed because of a defect in the charging instrument.
Hall,
¶ 19 As in Hall, the defendants' convictions were reversed because the State proceeded under the wrong statute.[6]See State v. Gamble,
¶ 20 In Parker v. Lockhart,
Hall, therefore, at least means this: If the state convicts a defendant under the wrong statute (that is, a statute that does not encompass the defendant's otherwise criminal conduct), and that conviction is overturned on appeal, the Double Jeopardy Clause does not forbid retrial under the correct statute (that is, the statute that makes such conduct criminal), so long as there is sufficient evidence to convict under that statute.
Id. at 725.
¶ 21 That is exactly what occurred here. In Andress, this court held assault cannot serve as the predicate felony for second degree felony murder under the statute as amended in 1975. The decision was based on this court's construction of the language "in furtherance of" and had nothing to do with evidentiary sufficiency. In Hinton, this court characterized conviction of second degree felony murder predicated on assault as a "nonexistent crime," because "[n]o statute established a crime of second degree felony murder based upon assault at the time the petitioners committed the acts for which they were convicted. A conviction under former RCW 9A.32.050 resting on assault as the underlying felony is not a conviction of a crime at all." Hinton,
¶ 22 Because the defendants' convictions were reversed due to the invalidity of the charge, not insufficient evidence, they may be retried for the same offense.
¶ 23 Next, relying principally on Green,
¶ 24 In Green, the United States Supreme Court decided that silence on a charge of murder in the first degree and conviction on the lesser included offense of murder in the second degree implied an acquittal of the greater offense. Id. at 189-90,
*1033 Green was in direct peril of being convicted and punished for first degree murder at his first trial. He was forced to run the gantlet once on that charge and the jury refused to convict him. When given the choice between finding him guilty of either first or second degree murder, it chose the latter. . . . [T]he result in this case need not rest alone on the assumption, which we believe legitimate, that the jury for one reason or another acquitted Green of murder in the first degree. For here, the jury was dismissed without returning any express verdict on that charge and without Green's consent. Yet it was given a full opportunity to return a verdict and no extraordinary circumstances appeared which prevented it from doing so.
Id. at 190-91,
¶ 25 Green is based on two rationales: first, the Court presumed that by convicting the defendant of the lesser offense, the jury actually acquitted him of the greater offense; second, and more broadly, the Court reasoned that jeopardy terminated on the greater charge when the first jury "`was given a full opportunity to return a verdict'" on that charge but instead reached a verdict on a lesser charge. Price v. Georgia,
¶ 26 The defendants argue that both rationales apply to their situation. We disagree.
¶ 27 By its terms the first rationale of Green does not apply. In these cases there was only one chargesecond degree murder. Thus, the juries did not "acquit" the defendants of a greater charge by convicting them of a lesser charge because there was no "greater charge." Further, the juries here were not instructed on the intentional murder theory of second degree murder. As the Court of Appeals stated, "It was critical to the rationale in Green that the first jury `was given a full opportunity to return a verdict' on the charge of first degree murder." Wright,
¶ 28 An "acquittal" is a "`resolution. . ., correct or not, of some or all of the factual elements of the offense charged.'" United States v. Scott,
¶ 29 The defendants also rely on Green's rationale that jeopardy terminated when the jury was discharged without reaching an express verdict on the first degree murder charge and without his consent.[7]
*1034 ¶ 30 However, in explaining this alternative rationale, the Green Court stated, "It is immaterial whether second degree murder is a lesser offense included in a charge of felony murder or not. The vital thing is that it is a distinct and different offense." Green,
¶ 31 Nearly every court addressing the issue has found Green inapplicable when a jury expressly finds the defendant guilty of an alternative means of committing a single offense while remaining silent as to another. See Commonwealth v. Carlino,
*1035 ¶ 32 No Supreme Court case is directly on point. However, several cases suggest that when an individual is prosecuted for committing a single offense that can be committed in multiple ways, jeopardy attaches to the offense as a whole rather than to the particular form in which it is tried, so that if an individual succeeds in getting a conviction set aside, the defendant's "continuing jeopardy" applies to any alternative way of committing the same offense. Thus, an individual is not placed "twice in jeopardy" by retrial on any valid alternative, whether or not the State proceeded under it at the first trial.
¶ 33 In Cichos v. Indiana,
¶ 34 More recently, the Supreme Court affirmed a state court ruling that a jury's silence on an alternative murder charge did not operate as an implied acquittal for purposes of constitutional collateral estoppel. Schiro II,
¶ 35 A defendant charged and tried under multiple statutory alternatives experiences the same jeopardy as one charged and tried on a single theory. The defendant is in jeopardy of a single conviction and subject to a single punishment, whether the State charges a single alternative or several. See State v. Womac,
¶ 36 We reject the defendants' contention that jeopardy terminated when the jury was discharged without an express verdict on intentional murder and without their consent. The constitutional right to an "express verdict" entitles a defendant to a unanimous verdict on the offense charged, not an express verdict on the particular alternative on which the jury relied. State v. Linehan,
¶ 37 Because intentional murder and felony murder are alternative means of committing second degree murder, the "express verdict" to which the defendants were entitled was a verdict on the second degree murder charge, not each charged alternative.
¶ 38 Even if they had secured an express finding that the jury did not unanimously find them guilty of intentional murder, the defendants could not have avoided the burden of retrial. See State v. Ramos,
*1037 ¶ 39 What the defendants complain of, in essence, is the omission of a jury instruction that only could have reduced their chances of obtaining a favorable verdict at the first trial. The juries were allowed to convict the defendants upon finding they caused the victims' death in the course of and in furtherance of committing second degree assault. Had the State proposed an intentional murder instruction, the juries would have been allowed to convict them for causing the death either intentionally or in the course of and in furtherance of committing second degree assault, without necessarily agreeing on which alternative had been proved. Obviously, the respective juries unanimously agreed the defendants caused the death of their victims in the course of and in furtherance of committing second degree assault. Had they been instructed on the intentional murder alternative, the verdict would have been no different even if no juror found beyond a reasonable doubt the murder was committed intentionally. The omission of the intentional murder alternative in no way prejudiced the defendants' ability to secure an acquittal.
¶ 40 In view of the circumstances presented here, we conclude retrying the defendants for second degree murder on the alternative theory of intentional murder does not offend double jeopardy principles.
¶ 41 The reason for barring retrial when a trial ends without a verdict is to protect the defendant's "`valued right'" to have the trial completed by a particular tribunal, and to prevent the State from manipulating the trial process by terminating the proceedings when it appears its case is weak or the jury is unlikely to convict. Crist v. Bretz,
¶ 42 When the circumstances suggest the prosecution's action was motivated by a concern it could not prove its case, retrial is impermissible. For example, in Downum,
¶ 43 But when there is no indication of bad faith, and no likelihood of prosecutorial manipulation, double jeopardy principles are not necessarily offended. Thus, courts find Downum distinguishable when there clearly was no intent to abort the trial because of perceived weaknesses in the State's case. Tateo,
¶ 44 For example, in Somerville, the Court allowed retrial following a midtrial dismissal requested by the prosecutor due to a defective charging instrument. Such an error is not susceptible to the kind of manipulation of the trial process at issue in Downum, as a prosecutor would be unlikely deliberately to plant the seed of a certain reversal by filing a defective indictment.
¶ 45 In this case, there has been no allegation of prosecutorial misconduct or overreaching. Rather, the prosecution simply relied on an apparently valid alternative deemed invalid by a subsequent judicial decision that clarified the felony murder statute. This case presents a scenario much closer to the kind of procedural error that occurred in Somerville than to the inability of the State to go forward with its case, as occurred in Downum.
¶ 46 There is also no basis for inferring the State elected not to instruct on intentional murder because it had been unable to marshal persuasive evidence to prove the charge. On the contrary, the evidence in support of the intentional murder was very strong. The evidence showed that Wright pulled the victim to him, said "Don't you know I shot you?" (1 VRP at 209), placed the muzzle of the gun against the victim's heart, and pulled the trigger. In Bryant's case, the evidence showed that Bryant shot at the victim and that the victim died from a bullet fired from a gun found in Bryant's possession shortly thereafter.
¶ 47 The dissent's principal concern appears to be that a prosecutor could manipulate the trial process by charging a defendant on multiple alternative theories, present evidence on each, then go to the jury on select theories while holding others in reserve.[15]*1039 Dissent at 1044. The dissent's concern is simply unfounded. If the first trial results in either an acquittal or a conviction that is not appealed, the State cannot prosecute the defendant for the same offense on an alternate theory. Cf. Saylor,
¶ 48 Allowing retrial when the State obtains a conviction on an apparently valid legal theory but inexplicably fails to instruct on another charged alternative does not present the State with an unfair opportunity to have a test-run at trying its case. See United States v. Davis,
¶ 49 Regardless of whether all jurors, or none, found the defendants guilty of the intentional murder alternative, they would have stood convicted of second degree murder. Under these circumstances, it is difficult to see how the failure to instruct on intentional murder prejudiced the defendants' right to have the charge resolved at the first trial.
¶ 50 In the dissent's view, the defendants' interest in avoiding the "risk, expense, and anxiety" of retrial outweighs society's interests in holding them accountable for their criminal behavior. Dissent at 1044. The State could have retried the defendants even if the jury had indicated, by special interrogatory, a lack of unanimity on the intentional *1040 murder alternative. See Ramos,
¶ 51 The State's failure to propose a jury instruction on intentional murder neither prejudiced the defendant's ability to obtain a favorable verdict at the first trial nor subjected the defendants to an undue burden of retrial. The burden of undergoing retrial is not a legally cognizable harm for double jeopardy purposes when the defendant has sought a second trial to remedy a legal defect in the first one. See Scott,
CONCLUSION
¶ 52 We hold that no final conviction or prior acquittal prevents the State from continuing its prosecution of the defendants for second degree murder on the alternative means of intentional murder. The defendants' second degree felony murder convictions were reversed due to trial error, not insufficient evidence. The defendants were not impliedly acquitted of second degree intentional murder at their first trial because the jury had no opportunity to consider their guilt or innocence on that offense. The State's failure to instruct the jury on the intentional murder alternative is of no consequence for double jeopardy purposes. Thus, we affirm the Court of Appeals.
WE CONCUR: SUSAN OWENS, CHARLES W. JOHNSON, MARY E. FAIRHURST, JAMES M. JOHNSON, Justices, and BOBBE J. BRIDGE, J. Pro Tem.
SANDERS, J. (dissenting).
¶ 53 "Fear and abhorrence of governmental power to try people twice for the same conduct is one of the oldest ideas found in western civilization."[1]
¶ 54 The State charged Oliver Wright and Dennis Bryant with second degree murder committed either as an intentional murder or a felony murder. Each man was tried, "r[a]n the gantlet"[2] for second degree murder, and fully defended against both alternative means of committing the crime.[3] At the close of evidence, the State tactically decided to instruct the jury only on the felony murder alternative. Thus, the State fully realized its "one, and only one, full and fair opportunity to convict the defendant[s]" for second degree murder.[4] That the State chose to instruct the jury on only one of the two charged alternate means is of no import since defendants were placed in jeopardy for each alternative means and jeopardy terminated on the intentional means when the jury was dismissed without a verdict on that charge.
¶ 55 However, the majority now allows the State to retry the defendants a second time for second degree murder, this time, as last, on the intentional means alternative. But defendants already ran the gauntlet on that exact alternative. Retrial would subvert the double jeopardy clause in the clearest way. Double jeopardy bars a second prosecution *1041 for an alternative means previously charged and tried, yet not submitted to the jury at the election of the prosecution, where the jury was dismissed without the defendants' consent and no mistrial was declared. To hold otherwise allows the State to keep these alternative means "'in a safe for a rainy day'"[5] to repeatedly retry a defendant until a conviction is obtained which sticks on appeal.
¶ 56 It is true, as the majority states at 1030, that retrial is usually not barred when a verdict is reversed for reasons other than insufficiency of evidence. And this verdict was reversed because felony murder predicated on assault is simply not a crime. But there can be no retrial on an alternative which was previously charged and tried, absent a mistrial. See State v. Franco,
¶ 57 Washington's Declaration of Rights demands, "[n]o person shall . . . be twice put in jeopardy for the same offense." CONST. art. I, § 9. The Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution requires, "[n]o person shall . . . be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopardy of life or limb." Washington's double jeopardy clause "is given the same interpretation the Supreme Court gives to the Fifth Amendment." State v. Gocken,
¶ 58 Retrial is barred where jeopardy has attached and terminated. State v. Corrado,
¶ 59 Dismissal of the jury without the consent of the defendant terminates jeopardy just as surely as an acquittal, absent that "manifest necessity" where the trial court properly declares a mistrial. Green v. United States,
*1042 ¶ 60 In Green, the United States Supreme Court held "under established principles of former jeopardy," jeopardy for an offense comes "to an end when the jury [i]s discharged" and no mistrial is declared. Green,
¶ 61 The United States Supreme Court has consistently held jeopardy terminates on a charge where the jury is discharged without the defendant's consent prior to returning a verdict, absent a mistrial. Downum v. United States,
¶ 62 In Terry v. Potter, the Sixth Circuit agreed jeopardy does not continue on alternative means which were charged and tried.
¶ 63 The majority justifies the State's actions by alternately claiming the defendants benefited from the State's choosing to abandon the intentional murder alternative, and that the defendants impliedly consented to *1043 the dismissal of the jury without considering the charge.[11]
¶ 64 The majority opines the defendants benefited when the jury did not deliberate on the intentional murder charge, following the men's trial for intentional murder. But whether a defendant benefited or was harmed by the prior jeopardy is immaterial to double jeopardy analysis. Where an individual was placed in jeopardy for an offense, he may not be placed in jeopardy again. See U.S. CONST. amend. V; CONST. art. I, § 9. This is true even if the prior jeopardy could somehow be seen as beneficial. "What the defendants complain of, in essence,"[12] is not the omission of a jury instruction, as suggested by the majority. Instead they complain of the State's attempt to retry them for an offense for which they were previously tried.
¶ 65 The majority then uses mistrial jurisprudence to support its holding that double jeopardy does not bar retrial on intentional murder. Majority at 1037-38. But as previously stated, there was no mistrial declared here, and so the well-established rules governing mistrials are simply inapplicable.
¶ 66 Moreover, the majority asserts retrial is permissible unless the defendant shows the prosecution was "motivated by a concern it could not prove its case." Majority at 1038. However, the double jeopardy clause protects a "defendant's valued right to have his trial completed by a particular tribunal." Wade v. Hunter,
¶ 67 Apparently the defendants did not express their appreciation for this right forcefully enough for the majority because the defendants did not take exception to the trial court's jury instructions. Majority at 1029, 1035, n. 13 (distinguishing Saylor v. Cornelius,
¶ 68 Furthermore, the defendant "hardly can be faulted for not having done the prosecutor's job." Saylor,
¶ 69 In United States v. Jorn,
¶ 70 To illustrate this point, let us suppose a criminal statute sets forth six alternative means to violate it. Now let us suppose the State charges a defendant with violating the statute in question by every alternative means, trying the defendant for the violation *1044 with strong evidence, but only instructing the jury as to one of the alternative means. As the majority recognizes here, "the State elected not to instruct on intentional murder" despite its assertion the evidence on that charge was very strong. Majority at 1038. Yet, under the majority's reasoning, the State in our hypothetical can force the defendant to stand trial for the same crime up to five additional times should the first conviction be reversed on anything but insufficient evidence. This type of "successive prosecution" is squarely within the prohibition of the double jeopardy clause if anything is.
¶ 71 Finally, the majority describes the dissent's principal concern as the possibility of prosecutorial misconduct. Majority at 1038-40. However, the principal concern in this dissent is not with the prosecutor, but instead with the defendants, and the threat and anxiety they face due to the possibility of unconstitutional retrials. The United States Supreme Court eloquently described this concern:
The underlying idea, one that is deeply ingrained in at least the Anglo-American system of jurisprudence, is that the State with all its resources and power should not be allowed to make repeated attempts to convict an individual for an alleged offense, thereby subjecting him to embarrassment, expense and ordeal and compelling him to live in a continuing state of anxiety and insecurity, as well as enhancing the possibility that even though innocent he may be found guilty.
Green,
¶ 72 Jeopardy for any alternative means terminates when the jury is dismissed without the consent of the defendants absent a declared mistrial, whether there was a verdict or not. Here the jury was dismissed without the consent of the defendants. Jeopardy terminated for all charged alternative means. Double jeopardy bars retrial for the same crime absent "manifest necessity." A strategic decision by the State to instruct on only one alternative means falls well short of that.
¶ 73 I dissent.
WE CONCUR: GERRY L. ALEXANDER, Chief Justice, and TOM CHAMBERS, Justice.
NOTES
[1] In the same information, the State charged Wright with three separate offenses involving different victims. Those charges are not at issue in this appeal.
[2] I of the information alleged that Wright, while committing and attempting to commit the crime of Assault in the Second Degree, and in the course of and in furtherance of said crime and in the immediate flight therefrom, and with intent to cause the death of another person, did cause the death of Jeff Oscar Evans, Jr., aka Aisa Cameron, a human being, who was not a participant in said crime, and who died on or about April 6, 1993;
Contrary to RCW 9A.32.050(1)(a) and (b), and against the peace and dignity of the State of Washington.
CP (Wright) at 150.
[3] The to-convict instruction required the jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt:
(1) That on or about the 6th day of April, 1993, Jeff Oscar Evans, aka Aisa Cameron was killed;
(2) That the defendant was committing or attempting to commit assault in the second degree;
(3) That the defendant caused the death of Jeff Oscar Evans, aka Aisa Cameron, in the course of and in furtherance of such crime, or in immediate flight from such crime;
(4) That Jeff Oscar Evans, aka Aisa Cameron, was not a participant in the crime; and
(5) That the acts which caused the death of the decedent occurred in King County, Washington.
CP (Wright) at 96.
[4] The information alleged additional offenses not at issue in this appeal.
[5] This court has implicitly recognized an Andress-based reversal of a second degree felony murder conviction results from trial error, not insufficient evidence. State v. Daniels,
[6] The dissent finds Hall distinguishable because the State "did not proceed entirely under the wrong statute," but also charged intentional murder, a valid statutory alternative. Dissent at 1040 n. 3. This makes no difference. The invalid charge of felony murder based on assault would have rendered the jury's verdict fatally defective, regardless of whether the jury had been instructed on intentional murder. See State v. Ortega-Martinez,
[7] According to the dissent, we "artificially limit the import of Green[]" by failing to apply this alternative rationale more broadly. Dissent at 1042 n. 9. Analyzing this case as though it involved separate offenses rather than alternative means of committing a single offense, the dissent would hold jeopardy terminated when "`the jury was dismissed without returning any express verdict on that charge and without [their] consent.'" Id. (emphasis omitted) (quoting Green,
[8] The dissent relies on Terry v. Potter,
[9] The elements of the charges were identical, though they carried distinct punishments, with manslaughter being the more serious charge.
[10] In a case decided three years later, the Court held the double jeopardy clause applies to the states via the Fourteenth Amendment. See Benton v. Maryland,
[11] Of course, if appropriate, a defendant may request a unanimity instruction. But failure to give such an instruction results in a new trial, not acquittal, unless there is insufficient evidence to support an alternative. State v. Coleman,
[12] Under the federal constitution, a general verdict of guilty on a single count charging the commission of an offense by alternative means is valid when any single means is sustainable. See Griffin v. United States,
Notes
[13] For the contrary proposition, the defendants rely primarily on Saylor v. Cornelius,
Saylor is distinguishable on the facts, as it involves separate offenses, not alternative means of committing a single offense, and the conviction failed for insufficient evidence, not trial error. Moreover, the defendant in that case proposed the appropriate jury instructions and objected when the court refused to give them. In her thorough and well-reasoned opinion, Judge Becker found Saylor not only factually distinguishable but legally unsound. Wright,
[14] The dissent insists the rules applicable to mistrials are inapposite. The dissent incorrectly states that Green's second rationale (jeopardy terminates when a trial ends without an express verdict, and without defendant's consent) represents a "separate jurisprudence" from the mistrial branch of double jeopardy. Dissent at 1041 n. 7. The rule that jeopardy "attaches" when the jury is impaneled (and thus may "terminate" even when there is no final verdict) applies to all preverdict termination scenarios, whether a mistrial, midtrial dismissal, or other. See Lee v. United States,
[15] The dissent poses the scenario of a prosecutor charging a defendant with violating a statute by six alternative means, going to the jury on only one alternative, and then subjecting the defendant to a succession of five retrials in the event the subsequent convictions are reversed for trial error. Citing no authority, the dissent states such a "successive prosecution" is "squarely within the prohibition of the double jeopardy clause if anything is." Dissent at 1044. Initially, whether retrial is permissible depends on the facts of each case, not speculative, unlikely scenarios of abusive prosecution. Downum,
The double jeopardy clause is not the exclusive source of constitutional protection against successive prosecutions. Both before and after the incorporation of the double jeopardy clause into the Fourteenth Amendment, the Supreme Court addressed challenges to multiple prosecutions and punishments by the states under the due process and equal protection clauses. See Schad,
[16] For this reason, the same court that decided Saylor later found it distinguishable where the State's election to withhold an alternate theory from the jury's consideration would preclude it from reprosecuting on that theory if the first trial results in an undisturbed verdict. See United States v. Davis,
[17] The dissent characterizes the State's conduct as "tactical[]," as though that term has some double jeopardy significance. Dissent at 1044. The important consideration is whether the State's tactics amount to an improper attempt to manipulate the trial process in order to gain some unfair advantage over the defendant. See Oregon v. Kennedy,
[1] Bartkus v. Illinois,
[2] Green v. United States,
[3] Unlike Montana v. Hall,
[4] Richardson v. United States,
[5] State v. Womac,
[6] United States v. Perez,
[7] Moreover, contrary to the majority's claim, we do not rely on mistrial jurisprudence (as there was no mistrial here), but instead understand jeopardy terminates when no mistrial is declared, a separate jurisprudence.
[8] The majority repeatedly characterizes the scenario here, where defendants were tried for both intentional murder and felony murder, as equivalent to trial error. Majority at 1028, 1030-32. This paints the facts with too broad a brush; as aforementioned, the defendants were charged and tried also for intentional murder, a perfectly valid statutory alternative. The majority relies on State v. Daniels,
[9] The majority attempts to artificially limit the import of Green's second rationale by describing it as applying only when a jury "reached a verdict on a lesser charge." Majority at 1033. But the Supreme Court specifically stated the critical facts were whether any verdict was returned on the charge and whether the jury was dismissed. Green,
[10] But see United States ex rel. Jackson v. Follette,
[11] The majority's apologia justifying the State's action can only lead one to believe it comprehends the wrongfulness of the State's action in this case.
[12] Majority at 1035.
