This аppeal follows a retrial after the voluntary manslaughter conviction of defendant-appellant Gina Antoinette Browner (Mrs. Browner)
1
was reversed by this Court and a new trial ordered for failure to instruct on the lesser included offense of involuntary manslaughter.
United States v. Browner,
Facts and Procedural History
The facts are recounted in detail in our opinion in Browner I and will be summarized here only briefly.
The defendant concedes that on the night of February 7, 1987, she stabbed her husband, United States Army Private First Class Curtis Browner,, once in the left shoulder. The incident took place in their *167 on-base housing аt the Fort Bliss Military Reservation near El Paso, Texas. The knife tip severed the subclavian artery, causing massive bleeding. Mrs. Browner called an ambulance immediately after the stabbing, but the wound ultimately proved to be fatal. Mrs. Browner maintained that the stabbing was an accident and that she merely intended to warn away her allegedly violent husband. Mrs. Browner also raised a claim of self-defense.
In April 1988, a grand jury charged Mrs. Browner with voluntary manslaughter committed in the special maritime and territorial jurisdiction of the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1112.
2
At the close of the evidence after the first trial, defense counsel requested the district court to instruct the jury on involuntary manslaughter, 18 U.S.C. § 1112, as a lesser included offense, but the district court refused. After Mrs. Browner was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced to a five year prison term, this Court upheld her challenge to the denial of the requested instruction, reversing her conviction and ordering a new trial.
Browner I,
At the second trial, the district court gave the involuntary manslaughter instruction. The district court also gave an instruction on assault with a dangerous weapon as a lesser included offense, over Mrs. Browner’s objection. The jury convicted Mrs. Browner of assault with a dangerous weapon and acquitted her of voluntary manslaughter and involuntary manslaughter. This time the death of her husband netted Mrs. Browner a prison sentence of only one year. She is free on an unsecured bond pending the outcome of this appeal.
Mrs. Browner asserts in this appeal that the district court erred by charging the jury, over her objection, on the offense of assault with a dangerous weapon, 18 U.S.C. § 113(c), as a lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter. 3
Discussion
Most courts, state and federal, have adoрted one of three tests to determine when, assuming a proper evidentiary showing, an offense not otherwise specifically charged may be deemed a lesser included offense of another, greater offense charged. See generally
State v. Dordain,
“A more natural, realistic and sound interpretation of the scoрe of ‘lesser included offense,’ in line with our own views on the subject, is that defendant is entitled to invoke Rule 31(c) when a lesser offense is established by the evidence adduced at trial in proof of the greater offense, with the caveat that there must also be an ‘inherent’ relationship between the greater and lesser offenses, i.e., they must relate to the protection of the same interests, and must be so related that in the gеneral nature of these crimes, though not necessarily invariably, proof of the lesser offenses is necessarily presented as part of the showing of the commission of the greater offense.” Id. at 319.
The Ninth Circuit also adopted the inherent relationship test,
United States v. Martin,
The most restrictive approach is the “statutory elements” test. Under this test,
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an offense is not lesser included unless each statutory element of the lesser offense is also present in the greater offense. For this purpose, the comparison of the statutory elements between the lesser and greater offenses parallels the statutory elements analysis conducted under
Blockburger v. United States,
An intermеdiate approach is the “pleading” or “indictment” theory used in several states. This approach allows a jury to consider a lesser offense if that offense is contained within the language of the indictment or information as the means by which the charged greater offense was committed.
See, e.g., Dorsey v. State,
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 31(c) provides in pertinent part: “The defendant may be found guilty of an offense necessarily included in the offense
charged....”
In
Schmuck v. United States,
Assault with a dangerous weapon, 18 U.S.C. § 113(c), requires, as the title of the offense implies, the use of a dangerous weapon as an element of the offense. See
Shaffer v. United States,
Taken as a whole, the language of
Schmuck
indicates that it adopts a strict statutory elements approach to the question of lesser included offenses. In
Schmuck,
the Court quotes with approval the following language from
Giles v. United States,
The government notes that the Seventh Circuit’s en banc opinion in
Schmuck,
prior to the Supreme Court’s consideration of that case, had adopted the elements test while leaving open the question whether in an appropriate case the “terms of the indictment will narrow the scope of the elements to be examined.”
United States v. Schmuck,
In
Schmuck,
the Seventh Circuit, sitting en banc, held that an indictment-based test would be of no assistance to the defendant, who had sought an instruction on odometer tampering as a lesser included offense of mail fraud, because the indictment in any event did not allege all of the elements of odometer tampering. The court explained: “Given the present indictment, however, alleging as one element devising a scheme to defraud purchasers of automobiles with altered odometers, knowingly and willfully causing an odometer to be altered is not
*170
identical to the element of having devised the scheme.”
It appears to us that the defendant in
Schmuck
made at least a colorable showing that he would have been entitled to an instruction on odometer tampering as a lesser included offense under an indictment-based test.
6
Indeed, the government never argued to the contrary before the Supreme Court. Instead, the government there argued
against
adoption of an indictment-based theory. Brief for the United States as Respondent on Petition for a Writ of Certiorari at 8 n. 7,
Schmuck v. United States,
We recognize that
some
of the deficiencies in the inherent relationship test that the Supreme Court pointed out in
Schmuck
would be remedied by an indictment-based test. For example, the inherent relationship test would allow the jury to convict of an offense an element of which was not included within the wording of the indictment, thus placing the defendant’s “right to notice ... in jeopardy.”
At least two Circuits have implicitly rejected the interpretation of
Schmuck
sought by the government here, and none have endorsed it.
United States v. Mena,
We acknowledge, as the government points out, that there is some tension between double jeopardy analysis and the analysis of lesser included offenses for instructional purposes. Traditional
Block-burger
double jeopardy analysis mirrors the statutory elements test used to determine when an offense is lesser included in a greater offеnse for the purpose of a jury instruction. Indeed, courts often cite cases applying the elements test to determine lesser included offenses for jury instructional purposes and double jeopardy purposes interchangeably.
See, e.g., Schmuck,
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We also recognize that although the practice of allowing instructions on lesser included offenses “ 'developed as an aid to the prosecution in cases in which the proof failed to establish some element of the crime charged,’ ”
Schmuck,
Legal rules must be applied equally to all parties. In Schmuck, the statutory elements test allowed the government to preserve its criminal conviction of the defendant in that case. Here, the statutory elements test requires us to reverse a conviction obtained pursuant to a lesser included offense instruction. If the government, only two years after Schmuck was decided, now has second thoughts about the statutory elements test that the Supreme Court adopted at its behest, it must ask Congress or the Supreme Court to modify it. This Court is unable to contravene the plain language of this recent decision of the Supreme Court, obviously intended to clarify the law on the subject, in order to evаluate policy considerations or collateral consequences that we must assume failed to persuade the Supreme Court in that case. 11
Conclusion
The judgment of conviction is
REVERSED.
Notes
. The defendant remarried on January 15, 1988, and is now generally known by her new married name, Gina Antoinette Lyles. We will continue to refer to her as Mrs. Browner in this appeal, as that was her name at the time of the events in question in this case, and that is the name by which defense counsel as well as the government referred to her both at trial and in their briefs on appeal.
. The indictment also charged Mrs. Browner with murder and aggravated assault under state law, Tex. Penal Code §§ 19.02 & 22.02(a)(4), and the Assimilative Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. § 13. The district court dismissed those counts before trial because both types of conduct could have been indicted under federal law. See 18 U.S.C. § 113(c) (assault with a dangerous weapon); 18 U.S.C. § 1111 (murder).
. As we sustain Mrs. Browner’s assertion of error in this respect, we do not address the other claims of error she has raised on the present appeal.
. The American Law Institute’s Model Penal Code has adopted a fourth, distinct approach to the problem. See Model Penal Code § 1.07(4) (Proposed Official Draft 1962). Section 107(4) provides as follows:
"Conviction of Included Offense Permitted. A defendant may be convicted of an offense included in an offense charged in the indictment [or the informatiоn]. An offense is so included when:
"(a) it is established by proof of the same or less than all the facts required to establish the commission of the offense charged; or
"(b) it consists of an attempt or solicitation to commit the offense charged or to commit an offense otherwise included therein; or
"(c) it differs from the offense charged only in the respect that a less serious injury or risk of injury to the same person, property or public interest or a lesser kind of culpability suffices to establish its commission.”
This appears to combine the strict statutory approach with a broader "injury to the same interest” approach.
. At least one court, applying the inherent relationship test, has concluded that assault with a dangerous weapon is a lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter.
State v. Dordain,
. The indictment alleged in pertinent part as follows:
“It was further a part of this scheme that WAYNE T. SCHMUCK would causе the odometer mileage reading to be altered on many of the used automobiles which he intended for resale so that the odometer indicated a mileage reading which was substantially less than the true and correct mileage for that automobile.” Schmuck Petitioner Brief at 29-30.
. The government’s argument that this case is distinguishable from Schmuck because voluntary manslaughter (but presumably not mail fraud) is a “complex" or “compound” offense, for which the Schmuck elements test is not appropriate, is without merit. Schmuck gives no indication that the statutory elements test would not apply to so-called "complex" or “compound” offenses, and, in any event, voluntary manslaughter appears to be no more of a “complex” or “compound" offense than mail fraud.
.In the case of felonies, the grand jury clause of the Fifth Amendment would also be implicated, even though defendant were to receive full notice by a bill of particulаrs or the like.
. The government brings to our attention
United States v. Demarrias,
. Becаuse the question is not before us, we express no view as to whether indictment and prosecution of Mrs. Browner for assault with a dangerous weapon would now be barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause, as interpreted most recently in Grady.
We note, however, that in Grady the prior prosecution resulted in a final conviction. Here, Mrs. Browner has procured the reversal of her assault with a dangerous weapon conviction, which never became finаl, and she has never been acquitted of that offense or acquitted or finally convicted of any lesser offense thereof.
■ The effect of
Grady
in this area may be most evident where following an acquittal under a single count indictment, no lesser included offense instruction having been given, the accused is subsequently charged with another, less serious offense arising out of the same incident which under
Schmuck
would not be a lesser included offense of that charged in the first prosecution but which under
Grady
"conduct” analysis is treated as a part of the offense originally charged. A scenario of this kind suggests that the prosecution would arguably be well advised to charge both such offenses at once, each in a separate count of the same indictment. Even if
Grady
prevented punishment (or conviction) on both counts in that situation — and it is not clear that
Grady
applies where there is only a single prosecution — there would at least be the opportunity for conviction on the less serious offense in the event the jury would not convict of the more serious. Cf.
Ball v. United States,
. If the government has had second thoughts, they may be motivated by Grady. If the Supreme Court wishes to revisit Schmuck because of Grady, it of course is free to do so. We are not.
