Lead Opinion
This сase arises out of a basketball court dispute between appellant, Theodore Swann, and the decedent, Steven Crawford. Appellant testified that he thought Crawford was about to draw a gun on him, so he drew first and shot at Crawford, killing him. A self-defense instruction was given, but the trial court refused to instruct the jury on voluntary manslaughter under a theory of imperfect self defense. Appellant was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder.
The principal issue on appeal is whether appellant was entitled to a voluntary manslaughter instruction on a theory of imperfect self-defense. We hold that he was entitled to the requested instruction, but we further hold that the failure to give the requested instruction provides no ground for a new trial on the facts here where appellant was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder.
I.
In early March of 1988, at about four in the afternoon, Crawford and two friends drove to a basketball court to shoot baskets. Appellant arrived soon thereafter, also accompanied by two friends. The two groups watched the basketball game already underway and shot baskets when the game was at the other end of the court.
There was conflicting testimony as to how the argument between Crawford and appellant originated and the progress of events thereafter. Appellant’s version was as follows. Appellant was bouncing a ball which Crawford “tried to penetrate,” causing the ball to hit appellant in the stomach, where he had recently been stabbed, and then to hit his foot.
Appellant asserted that he had a number of reasons for believing that Crawford was going to kill him: (1) appellant had a heightened sense of fear since the stabbing and thus carried the gun to the basketball court because he was afraid of retaliation from his previous attackers; (2) Crawford alluded to appellant’s previous stabbing by saying, “you think you stabbed up now, just watch;” and (3) appellant had heard that Crawford had killed someone with a gun.
II.
We turn to the issue whether the trial court erred in refusing to instruct on voluntary manslaughter under a theory of imperfect self-defense.
A.
The standards for an acquittal on the ground of self-defense in a homicide case are exacting. First, the defendant must havе an actual belief both that he or she is in imminent danger of serious bodily harm or death and in the need to use deadly force in order to save himself or herself. Second, in both cases, in addition to such an actual belief, the defendant’s belief must be objectively reasonable.
In Comber, supra note 6, the en banc court had occasion to explore at some length the basic concepts underlying the crime of voluntary manslaughter. “[I]n all voluntary man-slaughters, the perpetrator acts with a state of mind which, but for the presence of legally recognized mitigating circumstances, would constitute malice aforethought, as the phrase has been defined for purposes of second-degree murder.”
The question then becomes what are legally recognized mitigating circumstances that can justify a reduction from second-degree murder to voluntary manslaughter.
B.
The government does not take serious issue with the foregoing propositions in the abstract. It asserts, nonetheless, that appellant was not entitled to an instruction on imperfect self-defense manslaughter on the facts here. Its principal arguments invoke three distinct grounds.
First, the government argues that the claim of imperfect self-defense should be analyzed under the “adequate provocation” prong of voluntary manslaughter. It notes that in Comber, we said that a voluntary manslaughter instruction is justified “where the killer has been provoked or is acting in the heat of passion, with the latter including fear, resentment and terror, as well as rage and anger.” Comber, supra note 6,
As we understand it, this “provocation” argument focuses upon the requirement in a true self-defense claim that the defendant actually and reasonably believes that his life is in peril. Because the presence of adequate provocation in mitigation analysis to reduce second-degree murder to manslaughter is based solely upon an objective analysis of the factual situation, see CRIMINAL JURY INSTRUCTIONS, supra, Nos. 4.18, 4.19, 4.20, 4.21 (“adequate provocation if his/her action is provoked by conduct that would
While this argument is not without force, we think that an imperfect self-defense claim must be viewed through a different prism. Unlike other aspects of provocation, which can only reduce a homicide to manslaughter, a state of mind arising out of a self-defense situation justifies outright exoneration if reasonable. Because the subjective state of mind required for an imperfect self-defense claim is identical to that required for a true self-defense claim, we can find in the controlling authority no suggestion that an actual, albeit unreasonable, belief that one’s life is in danger cannot serve as a mitigating factor justifying a voluntary manslaughter instruction where also coupled with an actual belief that the force used was necessary in self-defense. Thus, however the emotions of fear and terror unrelated to self-defense may relate to mitigation of second-degree murder where the killing was provoked or the defendant acted in the heat of passion, we think that analysis cannot be controlling on the distinct issue of a killing committed in the actual but unreasonable belief that the defendant is in mortal danger. While fear and terror may be a consequence of that situation, the motivation for the killing stems from the actual, albeit unreasonable, perception of imminent danger to one’s life, and the mitigation issue where a self-defense claim is involved is measured by the actual presence of that state of mind.
Second, addressing the other prong of self-defense, the government argues that even where a defendant has an actual but unreasonable belief that his life is in danger, he cannot invoke the imperfect self-defense doctrine if in response to that belief, he uses excessive force, even if he actually believes that the force used was necessary to save his life. In other words, in the government’s view, the use of objectively excessive force constitutes murder even where the defendant has the actual but unreasonable belief that his life is in danger and that the force he uses is necessary to preserve it.
Again, we see no basis for such a limitation on the doctrine of imperfect self-defense in our case law. As Comber indicates, relying upon previous authority, mitigation to reduce second-degree murder to voluntary manslaughter may arise “when excessive force is used in self-defense or in defense of another.” Comber, supra note 6,
Third, the government argues that appellant has forfeited his right to any imperfect self-defense claim because he voluntarily placed himself in a position likely to provoke trouble. It is, of course, true that self-defense may not be claimed by one who “was the aggressor, or ... provoked the conflict upon himself/herself.” CRIMINAL JURY INSTRUCTIONS, supra, No. 5.16; see Rowe v. United States,
More importantly, we do not understand that such a defendant sacrifices not only the right to a true self-defense acquittal but to a voluntary manslaughter mitigation as well. On the contrary, one of the recognized circumstances in which imperfect self-defense may be asserted is where the defendant plays such a part in bringing on the difficulty. 2 LaFave & Scott, § 7.11(a) n. 4; see Wallace v. United States,
C.
“As a general proposition a defendant is entitled to an instruction as to any recognized defense for which there exists evidence sufficient for a reasonable jury to find in his favor.” Bostick v. United States,
III.
We turn now to the question whether the fact that the appellant was convicted of first-degree premeditated murder renders the trial court’s instructional error harmless.
The jury was instructed on both first-degree murder and second-degree murder, as well as self-defense.
The trial court defined both premeditation and deliberation for the jury in the terms of the then standard instruction 4.21. In particular, with respeet to deliberation, the trial court instructed the jury:
[Deliberation involves giving consideration and reflection upon a preconceived design to kill. In other words, turning it over in the mind, giving it a second thought. Although premeditation, which is the formation of a design to Mll[,] may be instantaneous[,] as [quick] as thought itself, it is necessary that an appreciable time elapse between the formation of the design and the fatal act within which there is, in fact, deliberation.... If one forming an intent to kill does not act instantly, but pauses and actually gives second thought and consideration to the intended act, he has in fact deliberated. It is the fact of deliberation that is essential, rather than the length of time that it may have continued.
Given such an instruction, no jury which believed appellant’s testimony that he had acted with a good-faith belief that his life was in danger and instantly reacted accordingly could have found on the evidence here that he killed the victim with deliberation, that is, with “second thought and consideration.” Appellant testified that he did not run away because he “couldn’t think. It happened real fast.” Appellant stated that when Crawford “made the threat I just pulled out my gun and I shot him,” that he pulled out the gun in less than a second and without a struggle, and that he did not pause between firing the two shots. On the precise facts of this case, premeditation and deliberation cannot reasonably coexist with a finding that the killing was an immediate response to mortal peril. We think it plain in these circumstances that a jury who believed any part of appellant’s story that he acted in self-defense, even if unreasonably, would at most have convicted appellant of second-degree rather than first-degree murder.
Furthermore, the jury wаs well aware of the general role of mitigating or even justify
To establish the third element of the offense, the government must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not injure the deceased in the heat of passion caused by adequate provocation. Now, heat of passion includes such emotions as rage, resentment, anger, terror and fear. Heat of passion may be produced by fear as well as by rage.
A jury instructed that it could not convict appellant of even second-degree murder if it was not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that he did not act out of “terror and fear” surely would not have conviсted appellant of first-degree murder with any semblance of belief in appellant’s claimed self-defense state of mind.
Prior cases in this jurisdiction binding upon us have evinced recognition, albeit in the context of a holding of evidentiary insufficiency, that failure to instruct on a lesser-included offense may be harmless if the jury rejected other lesser-included offenses supported by the evidence. In Belton v. United States,
In reaching our conclusion that there was no reversible error, we again emphasize that the jury’s verdict went beyond second degree murder; this weakens any sense of prejudice from failure to charge manslaughter.
Id. at 208,
We relied upon Belton in Hurt v. United States,
Similarly, in Morgan v. United States,
Significantly here, the jury went beyond a finding of malice and necessarily found as a fact that appellant had committed mur*936 der after premeditation. On this record we can say, without much in the way of speculation, that the jury would have ignored any instruction on manslaughter.
Id.,
Although the picture elsewhere is mixed, we find support for our analysis in several cases from other jurisdictions finding that any error in refusing to give one lesser-included оffense is harmless if the jury verdict rejects other lesser-included offenses which could be supported by the evidence. In State v. Russell Council Judge,
A verdict of murder in the first degree shows clearly that the jurors were not coerced, for they had the right to convict in the second degree. That they did not indicates their certainty of his [appellant’s] guilt of the greater offense. The failure to instruct them that they could convict of manslaughter therefore сould not have harmed the defendant.
Likewise, in State v. Edwards,
We emphasize that our analysis does not encompass the position clearly rejected by Keeble v. United States,
Affirmed.
Notes
. One government witness testified that as the groups were shooting baskets, Crawford shot a basketball which landed on the ground, "taking a bad hop,” and then striking appellant's foot. Another witness for the government testified that after Crawford made a shot, appellant grabbed the ball. Crawford smacked the ball from appellant and the ball hit appellant’s foot.
. One government witness testified that appellant got upset, and Crawford and appellant began bickering about appellant’s sore foot. Then appellant sought an apology from Crawford.
. The government witnesses testified to a different version of events. According to them, when Crawford recognized that the fight was getting more "serious,” he moved tо the other side of the basketball court and leaned against a pole, with his friends at his side. Appellant walked around the basketball court, watching Crawford. Appellant was "running his mouth,” and fumbling with his clothes. One witness testified that appellant said Crawford had smacked the ball out of His hands, to which Crawford responded, "Oh yeah. I'll smack the ball out your hands again if you come over here."
. None of the government witnesses saw Crawford reach for his back pocket.
. There was conflicting testimony as to whether the appellant walked toward Crawford, after the first shot, and then shot him a second time. Two government witnesses testified that appellant stepped forward and fired the second shot. Two government witnesses and the appellant testified that he shot Crawford twice but the shots were in very rapid succession.
. Once there is sufficient evidence to justify a self-defense instruction, the burden is on thе government to disprove self-defense, by meeting its burden of proof negating the defendant’s subjective actual belief or objective reasonableness. Comber v. United States,
. Even in such circumstances a defendant cannot claim self-defense if “the defendant was the aggressor, or if s/he provoked the conflict upon himself/herself.” Criminal Jury Instructions, supra, No. 5.16.
. As Comber points out, the distinction between the two concepts can become a bit murky. Common examples of justified killings are those in warfare or of criminals sentenced to death. Excusable homicides are normally those in self-defense.
. These principles are recognized in the standard instruction relating to mitigating circumstances as they apply to imperfect self-defense:
Mitigating circumstances also exist where a person honestly but unreasonably believes that s/he is acting in self-defense. This may occur when s/he honesdy but unreasonably believes that s/he is in danger of serious bodily injury or when s/he honestly but unreasonably believes that the force s/he uses is necessary to defend him/herself.
Criminal Jury Instructions, supra, No. 4.21. A possible ambiguity in this instruction is that in order to mitigate, the defendant must honestly believe both in the danger and in the necessary force to defend.
. The government also argues that the reasonableness requirement of self-defense persists into voluntary manslaughter, asserting that the imperfect self-defense doctrine does not apply where the defendant's belief as to the need to defend is unreasonable. The government finds support for this argument in North Carolina, see, e.g., State v. McKoy,
The government also challenges appellant’s right to any self-defense instruction at all. We need not decide this issue because even if appellant's belief in self-defense was unreasonable as a matter of law, the jury could have concluded that he actually believed in the need for self-defense and hence find him guilty of voluntary manslaughter. See Part C, infra.
. Taking the two arguments together, the government’s position in substance seems to be that two elements of unreasonableness — belief in the danger and the amount of force necessary to resist it — puts too great a strain upon the mitigation concept. The government cites several cases for the proposition that imperfect self-defense manslaughter is not appropriate where the defendant bоth unreasonably believed himself to be in mortal danger and responded with excessive force. See Ross v. State,
As indicated, we do not find this argument to be persuasive, since the defendant’s subjective state of mind is nonetheless identical to that held by a defendant entitled to an outright acquittal if reasonable in both respects. If any objection should lie to this thesis, it presumably is based upon considerations of proof. A subjective frame of mind can only be determined by various objective factors, and the absence of reasonableness may well cast into doubt the presence of subjective good faith. But juries in a myriad of situations are called upon to make just such judgments of actual mental state.
. The error here does not reach to the constitutional dimension found in Beck v. Alabama, 447 U.S. 625, 637-38,
.We do not understand our decisions dealing with failure to instruct on a defendant’s theory of the case, cited by the dissent, to establish an automatic per se rule for reversal; indeed, Gray v. United States,
. The trial court followed in substance the then-extant juiy instructions for premeditated first-degree and second-degree murder. Criminal Jury Instructions, supra, Nos. 4.21 and 4.23.
. For this reason, we are unpersuaded by appellant’s arguments that the instructions did not require the government to prove absence of mitigation as an element of first-degree murder and that premeditation and deliberation are unrelated to the absence of mitigation.
. Indeed, although the trial court gave no instruction on voluntary manslaughter despite the foregoing instruction with respect to second-degree murder, cf. Bostick, supra, it did instruct the jury that if it was not satisfied that the defendant did not injure the deceased in the heat of passion caused by adequate provocation, then it must find appellant not guilty of second-degree murder.
Appellant did ask the trial court to include in the instructions on first-degree murder that the government had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant did not act in self-defense or with any other reasonable justification or excuse. For the reasons discussed, we think that the instructions as given, taken as a whole, conveyed to the jury the responsibility of the government on the facts here.
. Care must be taken to distinguish cases where the jury was not instructed on at least one lesser-included offense that fit the evidence. Such • cases are not apposite because the jury was not provided with any real alternative between conviction of the greater offense and acquittal. See, e.g., State v. Bowens,
. Logically, of course, since juries are almost always presumed to follow instructions, Richardson v. Marsh,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Today the majority pays lip-service to an exacting standard of criminal law that is well-nigh axiomatic: “[W]hen a defendant requests an instruction on [a] theory of the case” that negates his guilt of the crime charged, and “that instruction is supported by ‘any evidence, however weak,’ an instruction stating the substance of the [defendant’s theory] must be given.” Henderson v. United States,
I.
My colleagues recognize that the evidence in this case was such that appellant’s request for a voluntary manslaughter instruction, under a theory of “imperfect self-defense,” should have been granted, and that the trial court erred in denying that request.
Having found error, the majority undertakes a harmless error analysis which is inappropriate for three reasons: (1) it is legally convoluted in its reliance on inapposite cases, (2) it reaches a conclusion contrary to established law, including the authorities relied upon, and (3) in the factual circumstances of this case, it amounts to appellate speculation.
II.
This court has stated that “the trial court commits reversible error when it refuses to present adequately a defendant’s theory of the defense.” Stack v. United States,
By contrast, in Gray, supra, we held that the trial court erred in failing to give a defense-requested alibi instruction when it was warranted. Rejecting the government’s assertion of harmlessness, we observed that while we need not adopt a per se rule that such failure could never be harmless, we found it difficult to imagine a case where such an error could possibly be harmless.
III.
In the circumstances of the instant case, like those of Gray, supra, we simply cannot use a jury’s verdict to speculatively append the word “harmless” to a trial error. Thus, to the extent that I understand the reasoning of the majority, the error of the trial court (which it confirms) was harmless because the jury convicted appellant of first-degree premeditated murder after having been instructed on the lesser included offense of second-degree murder. This reasoning — that the
In the circumstances of this case, whether we focus on a layman’s predilection, or the logic of law, this reasoning places the cart before the horse. I believe, on the facts of this case, a properly instructed jury should have been required to acquit of first-degree murder unless it found that the government had met its burden of disproving the evidence of the mitigating circumstance of imperfect self-defense (in addition to the justification of self-defense). See Comber, supra,
Whatever our intense, and certainly understandable apprehension of crime, we must not succumb to the temptation of routinely characterizing significant trial errors, which invite jury speculation, as harmless. A new trial may burden our taxpayers (including judges) with additional time and expense but so does the building and staffing of additional prisons for the incarceration of those who have legitimate defenses that cushion the degree of guilt (affecting the length of incarceration) for the crimes with which they have been charged.
I respectfully dissent.
. Trial counsel requested an “imperfect self-defense" manslaughter instruction (which, if accepted by the jury, negates the “malice” necessary to sustain a murder conviction) in reliance on оur decision in Comber v. United States,
. In view of the holding of Comber, I question whether the phrase “rather than second degree murder” should be rephrased as "rather than murder.” See note 6, infra.
. Further, the Belton court noted that trial counsel had failed to advance to the court any factual predicate for the requestеd instruction. The court went on to say that if trial counsel had advanced even the very tenuous theory in support of the instructions that was articulated for the first time on appeal, the trial court "would have been well advised to give the manslaughter instruction.”
.The majority’s reliance on Nelson v. United States,
. To buttress this theory of "belief" that premeditation and dеliberation cannot reasonably exist with an immediate response to mortal peril, the majority points to two brief and insignificant utterances by appellant. The majorhy does not place these utterances in the context of its earlier recitation of appellant’s “version” of the facts which include his prior injury, his fear, and provocation by a threatening victim — presumably the same version which has led us to conclude that the trial court erred in refusing to give the requested instruction.
Although we might conclude on the basis of its verdict that the jury rejected appellant’s claim that he did not reflect before shooting the decedent, we cannot assume that the jury also would have rejected appellant’s contention that he believed (albeit unreasonably) that he was in mortal danger, a factor that would be pertinent in determining whether he acted in imperfect self-defense. See Comber, supra,
My colleagues postulate an additional conclusion they are confident in drawing from this erroneously instructed jury’s verdict, stating
[a] juiy instructed that it could not convict appellant of even second-degree murder if it was not satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt that [appellant] did not act out of “terror and fear" surely would not have convicted appellant of first-degree murder with any semblance of belief in appellant’s claimed self-defense state of mind.
Majority op. at 935. This conclusion is by no means inescapable. To the contrary, if we presume, as we must, that the jury followed its instructions, Richardson v. Marsh,
. Criminal Jury Instruction No. 4.18 (which follows the guidance of our en banc decision in Comber) is the appropriate instruction in a first-degree murder case such as this, where the defendant has requested and the evidence supports instruction on the lesser-included offenses of second-degree murder and imperfect self-defense manslaughter. See Instruction No. 4.18, at 280. According to this instruction, in order to convict a defendant of first-degree murder the jury must find that the government has proved "beyond a reasonable doubt,” see, e.g., Harris v. United States,
The instruction defines mitigating circumstances to include instances in which
a person honestly but unreasonably believes that s/he is acting in self-defense. This may occur when s/he honestly but unreasonably believes that s/he is in danger of serious bodily injury or when s/he honestly but unreasonably believes that the force s/he uses is necessary to defend him/herself.
Instruction No. 4.18, at 282. The notes accompanying the instruction describe the presence of mitigating circumstances as
a partial defense. If the government fails to prove that there were no mitigating circumstances, but proves all other elements of murder, the resulting crime is voluntary manslaughter. As stated in Comber, “[A] homicide constitutes voluntary manslaughter where the perpetrator kills with a state of mind which, but for the presence of mitigating circumstances, would render the killing murder.”
Instruction No. 4.18, at 284-85 (quoting Comber, supra,
