Lester Giles Panter was convicted by a jury of violating 18 U.S.C.App. § 1202(a)(1), which prohibits convicted felons from possessing firearms. 1 At trial Panter stipulated to a prior felony conviction and to the interstate commerce jurisdictional requirement. His only defense was that he possessed the firearm only momentarily and in self-defense. The district court instructed the jury, however, that neither the length of, nor the reason for, Panter’s possession was relevant. Panter contends here that § 1202(a)(1) does not impose absolute liability and that the jury should have been allowed to consider his self-defense theory. We agree and reverse Panter’s conviction with instructions to the district court to grant him a new trial.
The government disputes Panter’s theory that he possessed the gun only momentarily in self-defense. Evidence was adduced at trial that Panter had purchased the gun for ten or fifteen dollars and owned it for several months before the shooting incident that led to this prosecution. This proof, according to the government, makes Panter’s self-defense claim irrelevant. We would agree if the evidence were uncontroverted. But Panter denies owning the gun, and, because error is alleged in the jury instructions, we must view the facts in the light most favorable to him.
See United States
v.
Young,
Panter was tending bar at the Roadrunner Lounge in Jackson County, Mississippi, on the evening of March 28, 1980. Bud Lins, a convicted murderer, 2 was present and had been drinking heavily. He approached Panter after a brief argument between the two and stated: “Well, you ain’t done me right. I’m going to kill you.” Lins forthwith set out to keep this promise. He brandishied a pocketknife and stabbed Panter in the abdomen. But Panter did not succumb easily; he began to fight back. He soon found himself on the floor beneath his assailant, however, and he reached underneath the bar for a club that he knew was kept there. At this point providence intervened. Panter’s hand fell not upon the intended club, but rather upon a pistol. Three shots subdued Lins, who died the next day.
Immediately after the shooting, Panter placed the pistol on the bar, where it was later found by the police. The gun belonged to an employee named Judy, who later married Panter. He never touched it either before or after the fateful encounter with Mr. Lins.
Panter was arrested for murdering Lins, but a grand jury refused to indict him. *270 Approximately one year after the incident, Panter was charged with possession of a firearm in violation of § 1202(a)(1).
Throughout Panter’s one day trial, the district court frustrated defense counsel’s attempts to demonstrate that Panter’s possession of the gun was in self-defense. 3 At the close of the evidence, the court charged the jury with the following instruction, which was requested by the government:
Title 18, Section 1202(a), Appendix makes it unlawful for a person who has previously been convicted of a felony to receive or possess a firearm. The statute is written in absolute terms, and the fact that possession is momentary or fleeting is immaterial. You should not consider the defendant’s reasons for possession of the firearm as a defense to the offense charged in the indictment.
Inexplicably, the court subsequently charged the jury with this instruction requested by Panter:
If you find the defendant in this case, Lester Giles Panter, gained temporary control of a gun under the circumstances where he was reasonably reacting out of a reasonable fear for the life and safety of himself or others, and if you further find that the defendant did not continue to possess the gun after the emergency conditions had vanished, then you should vote to acquit the defendant.
These instructions are irreconcilable. They espouse diametrically opposing theories of the law. If the government’s charge was erroneous, Panter’s instruction did not cure it. Instructions must be consistent and not misleading. “[A] correct instruction does not cure the error in giving another inconsistent one.”
United States v. Durham,
In sum, Panter testified that he possessed the gun only to defend himself from an armed, convicted killer. The district court instructed the jury to ignore Panter’s claim of self-defense. Thus, we are squarely faced with a question of first impression: Is self-defense a cognizable defense in a prosecution for firearms possession under 18 U.S. C.App. § 1202(a)(1)?
On three previous occasions, we have been urged to address the question whether the existence of exigent circumstances or an emergency is a defense to a firearms possession charge.
United States v. Scales,
The starting point in interpreting § 1202(a)(1) is the language of the statute itself.
See, e.g., Lewis v. United States,
But we must be mindful that “Congress in enacting criminal statutes legislates against a background of Anglo-Saxon common law .... ”
United States v. Bailey,
Bailey
teaches that Congress’s failure to provide specifically for a common-law defense in drafting a criminal statute does not necessarily preclude a defendant charged with violating that statute from relying on such a defense.
5
This conclusion is unassailable; statutes rarely enumerate the defenses to the crimes they describe. The government’s theory of absolute liability ascribes to § 1202(a)(1) an effect “more comprehensive than was contemplated and one inconsistent with our philosophy of criminal law.”
Morissette v. United States,
If the government were to carry the day here, ex-felons such as Panter, when confronted by assailants such as Lins, would find themselves between a rock and a hard place — death being the rock and a federal penitentiary the hard place. 6 Consider this example: Lins draws a gun, rather than his knife, and begins shooting at Panter. If Panter merely disarms Lins and holds him at bay he violates § 1202. We do not believe that Congress intended to make ex-felons helpless targets for assassins. The right to defend oneself from a deadly attack is fundamental. Congress did not contemplate that § 1202 would divest convicted felons of that right.
In sum, we reject the government’s argument that the proscription of § 1202(a)(1) is absolute and admits of no
*272
self-defense exception.
7
We hold today that where a convicted felon, reacting out of a reasonable fear for the life or safety of himself, in the actual, physical course of a conflict that he did not provoke, takes temporary possession of a firearm for the purpose or in the course of defending himself, he is not guilty of violating § 1202(a)(1).
See United States v. Blevins,
We emphasize that our holding protects a § 1202 defendant only for possession during the time he is endangered. Possession either before the danger or for any significant period after it remains a violation. For example, Panter’s self-defense claim will not defeat a showing that he possessed the gun when there was no danger. Thus, if the jury accepts the government’s version of the facts on retrial, today’s decision will provide Panter only temporary solace.
The parties disagree about whether defense counsel filed a timely objection to the government’s requested instruction. We find it unnecessary to resolve that dispute. “[T]he charge, considered as a whole [was] so clearly erroneous as to result in a likelihood of a grave miscarriage of justice.”
United States v. Varkonyi,
The decision of the district court is
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Section 1202 provides in pertinent part:
(a) Any person who—
(1) has been convicted by a court of the States or any political subdivision thereof of a felony, and who receives, possesses, or transports in commerce or affecting commerce, after the date of enactment of this Act, any firearm shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned for not more than two years, or both.
. Lins was out on bond pending the appeal of his murder conviction to the Mississippi Supreme Court.
. For example, when counsel sought to question a government witness about Lins’s propensity for violence, the government’s relevancy objection was sustained, the court stating: “Go along, gentlemen. We’re not trying [a] case [about] this man getting killed. We [are] trying this gun case, only the gun case, nothing else. I’m not interested the least bit in who shot who. I’m just interested in whether this fellow had this gun. That’s all.”
On this appeal, Panter makes separate allegations of error concerning this instance and several similar ones. Because we reverse for erroneous jury instructions, we find it unnecessary to treat these specific allegations in detail. Suffice it to say that Panter must be allowed to develop his self-defense claim fully when he is tried again.
. 18 U.S.C.App. § 1203 exempts from § 1202 liability prisoners entrusted with a firearm by competent authority and ex-felons pardoned by the President or a governor and specifically authorized to possess a firearm. No other exceptions are provided by statute.
. This view is also implicit in
United States v. Agard,
. The maximum penalty for violating § 1202(a)(1) is two years imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Panter was sentenced to prison for two years and fined $5,000.
. The commentators are not altogether agreed about whether the proper label for this defense is self-defense or necessity. One theory is that self-defense is the appropriate defense to any crime committed in defending oneself. The other is that self-defense is available as a defense only to crimes against the person and that necessity is the proper label for other crimes, such as firearms possession. Compare J. Hall & G. Mueller, Criminal Law and Procedure 663 (2d Ed. 1965) with W. Lafave & A. Scott, Criminal Law 391 n.2 (1972). The facts alleged by Panter are sufficient under either rubric.
