UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. John Charles POOLE, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 07-7080
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Oct. 31, 2008
545 F.3d 916
Whether this Court‘s holding in Empire Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. Guaranty National Ins. Co., 868 F.2d 357 (10th Cir.1989), that an MCS-90 endorsement only negates limiting provisions in the policy to which it is attached, to render the policy a primary source of insurance coverage, should be reaffirmed, overruled, or modified.
In addressing this general issue, the parties should specifically discuss the merits of the position adopted by most other circuit courts, i.e., that an MCS90 endorsement simply creates a surety obligation and does not otherwise alter the terms of an insurance policy to create or expand coverage.
The supplemental brief shall comply generally with
Within 30 days of service of appellant‘s brief, Appellees Tyner and Shari Yeates may file a response. The same general requirements for briefing shall apply to the appellees’ submission. Appellant Carolina Casualty may submit an optional reply within 14 days of service of the appellees’ brief, not to exceed 10 pages in length.
In addition, due to the governmental interests involved, we direct the clerk of court to forward a copy of this order to the Secretary of Transportation, through counsel for the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration, so that the agency can assess whether to submit a brief amicus curiae per
This matter will be set for oral argument during the court‘s March 2009 term. That session is currently set for the week of March 9-13. The parties will be advised of the exact date and time for argument at a later date.
Robert A. Ridenour, Assistant Federal Public Defender (Julia L. O‘Connell, Acting Federal Public Defender, and Barry L. Derryberry, Research and Writing Specialist, with him on the brief), Tulsa, OK, for Defendant-Appellant.
Linda A. Epperley, Assistant United States Attorney (Sheldon J. Sperling, United States Attorney, with her on the brief), Muskogee, OK, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Before KELLY, McCONNELL, and GORSUCH, Circuit Judges.
GORSUCH, Circuit Judge.
John Poole appeals his conviction for assault resulting in serious bodily injury on the basis that the jury‘s verdict was impermissibly ambiguous. Mr. Poole
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In the jury trial that is the subject of this appeal, the government sought to convict Mr. Poole of assault resulting in serious bodily injury for his role in a May 2006 altercation in Indian country. See
After less than an hour of deliberations, the jury returned a verdict finding Mr. Poole guilty of both assault resulting in bodily injury and simple assault. The district court judge read the verdict form; observed that it did not conform to his instructions; and noted in open court that, despite his instructions, “[t]he jury did go
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We generally review a district court‘s denial of a motion for new trial for abuse of discretion. United States v. Pearson, 203 F.3d 1243, 1274 (10th Cir.2000). While the term is susceptible of different meanings in different contexts, our precedent affords us at least this much guidance in these circumstances: when a jury returns a verdict that is plainly ambiguous or uncertain on its face, the district court has an affirmative duty to “resolve that doubt,” United States v. Morris, 612 F.2d 483, 489 (10th Cir.1979), much as it has a duty to address any other species of plain error, see
At the same time, we have not prescribed any rote formula a district court must follow when faced with a plainly problematic verdict. Instead, we and other courts have noted that a district court has a number of remedial tools at its disposal to clarify an ambiguous or uncertain verdict, including polling the members of the jury or asking them to conduct further deliberations, and we have recognized that different problems may call for different cures. E.g., Morris, 612 F.2d at 489; United States v. Howard, 507 F.2d 559, 562 (8th Cir.1974). Precisely because there may be more than one “right” way to clarify an ambiguous or uncertain verdict, where a party does not believe the district court‘s chosen remedial course is appropriate and issues a contemporaneous objection on that basis, we will simply ask whether, in the end, the district court‘s solution precludes a “reasonable alternative interpretation casting doubt on the jury‘s verdict.” United States v. Ailsworth, 138 F.3d 843, 847 (10th Cir.1998).1
Of course, where a party fails to object to a verdict that is not plainly problematic on its face, or where a party fails to object to the remedial course chosen by the district court to address a verdict either plainly or simply alleged by one party to be problematic, on appeal our review of such complaints is limited to traditional plain error review. See United States v. Taylor, 514 F.3d 1092, 1096 (10th Cir.2008) (while the district court was obliged to
The reasons animating our general rule for circumscribing our review when arguments are raised for the first time on appeal have perhaps particular force here. The central goal of the plain error doctrine is “to encourage timely objections,” United States v. Dominguez Benitez, 542 U.S. 74, 82 (2004), so that the district court is “clearly on notice” of alleged problems while they can still be cured without the necessity of an appeal and new trial, United States v. Fabiano, 169 F.3d 1299, 1303 (10th Cir.1999). In a case like this one, if a party alerts the district court to latent ambiguities in a verdict, that court often can simply and quickly cure the ambiguity by means of a poll, ordering further deliberations, or perhaps otherwise. Likewise, if a party objects to the particular remedial measures employed by the court in response to an allegedly problematic verdict, the district court can easily change course and add to or modify its remedial efforts while the jury is still present. If a party does not raise an objection before the jury is discharged, however, the opportunity for such simple and efficient solutions is permanently lost when jurors walk out the courtroom door.3
In the case before us, Mr. Poole appears to suggest that the district court committed legal error by failing to take any remedial measures in response to a verdict plainly ambiguous or uncertain on its face. See Br. at 8 (“Some action was required on the part of the district court to resolve the ambiguity and uncertainty.“). In essence, he suggests we face here a case of completely unaddressed plain error. We cannot agree for two reasons.
First, the jury‘s verdict did not contain the sort of plain ambiguity or uncertainty necessary to trigger the district court‘s affirmative
Mr. Poole responds with an interesting possibility. What if, he asks, a jury returned guilty verdicts on both the charged offense and a lesser included offense, not because it believed the government proved all the elements of both offenses, but because of a compromise in which some of the jurors found the defendant guilty of the charged offense and some found him only to be guilty of the lesser offense? For purposes of this appeal, we assume the plausibility of such a scenario. But, even so, we do not see how it is a problem plainly apparent from the face of the verdict, such that the district court had an independent obligation to clarify it. By counsel‘s own description of the problem, it is at most a latent one, lurking behind, not evident in, the (apparently consistent) verdict delivered by the jury. And, in such circumstances, when a party is concerned about such a latent defect, it is incumbent on that party to raise the issue contemporaneously and request a remedy it believes appropriate to correct the problem it alleges. Here, however, Mr. Poole did not do so, and the district court can hardly be faulted for failing to address a putative, but not plain, error never brought to its attention.
Our holding on this score finds confirmation and a direct parallel in Howard. There, a jury convicted the defendant of a charged offense and a lesser included offense, despite instructions, materially identical to those the district court issued here, that the jury should disregard the second offense if it found the defendant guilty of the first. Howard, 507 F.2d at 560-61. As here, the defendant did not object to the verdict as problematic while the jury was still present. Id. at 562. Because the verdict was not plainly problematic and the defendant did not raise his objection that the verdict had a potential latent ambiguity “at the time [the verdict was] rendered,” but instead waited until sentencing to raise it, the Eighth Circuit refused to consider his claim. Id. at 562.
Second, even assuming, counterfactually, that the jury‘s verdict in this case was ambiguous on its face, it is not accurate to suggest that the district court sat on its hands and did nothing. The district court expressly, before the jury and in open court, declared the lesser included simple assault offense a nullity as a matter of law. Having told the jury that its second verdict was a nullity, the court proceeded to poll the jury to ensure that each juror believed that the defendant was guilty of the greater, charged offense. All jurors responded in the affirmative. Finally, the court presented counsel an opportunity to present objections; counsel offered none. Then and only then did the court accept the jury‘s verdict. This simply is not a case, then, where the district court failed to act.
At oral argument before us, Mr. Poole‘s counsel replied that, even if the district court did take some remedial steps, its actions in this case were inadequate. Specifically, he argued that the court‘s poll was ineffective in guarding against the possibility of a compromise
Mr. Poole raised none of these objections to the district court‘s remedial efforts at trial. To the contrary, before the jury was discharged Mr. Poole was expressly given an opportunity to render just such objections and offered none. As we have indicated, in these circumstances—where the district court takes remedial steps and the appealing party levels no contemporaneous objection—we review for plain error. Doing so, we discern none.
As a matter of law, jurors are presumed to understand and follow instructions given to them, and those instructions frequently include words like “nullity” and, to be sure, concepts far more complex.4 This is not to say that jurors always understand every word spoken to them, let alone that courts should eschew attempts to make their instructions more understandable to non-lawyers.5 But it would also be a mistake to view the presumption that jurors understand a term like “nullity” as an evidentiary claim that could be rebutted with evidence that the word was beyond the vocabulary of certain jurors. The presumption is not an evidentiary one, but a legal one. It operates as a rule of law governing the terms by which jury trials are to be conducted in our legal system consistent with the demands of due process. Gacy v. Welborn, 994 F.2d 305, 313 (7th Cir.1993) (“[The presumption] is a description of the premises underlying the jury system, rather than a proposition about jurors’ abilities and states of minds.“). We are neither inclined nor in a position to upset such a bedrock principle of our jury system in this case.
Mr. Poole makes a slightly more salient point when he argues that the poll was insufficient to guard against the sort of compromise verdict he fears because the court asked the jury if “this” was their verdict without specifying what “this” referred to. Specifically, he argues that, when the court asked the jurors if “this” was their verdict, it was not altogether clear whether the court was referring to (i) the guilty verdict on the charged offense alone, the court having declared the lesser included offense a nullity, or (ii) the guilty verdicts on both counts as marked on the verdict form. But we think the chain of events in the courtroom more than made up for any possible grammatical ambiguity about the referent of the demonstrative pronoun, “this.” After all, the district
Finally, we do not agree that the district court was obliged, sua sponte, to direct further deliberations rather than to declare the lesser included offense a nullity and conduct a poll on the greater offense. As we have indicated, a district court has a number of tools in its kit to cure an ambiguous verdict and, in the absence of a contemporaneous objection, we will not second-guess its choice of remedy unless the district court‘s decision was plainly erroneous in the circumstances. Mr. Poole offers us no reason to reach such a conclusion in this case beyond pointing again to potential ambiguity created by the words “nullity” and “this” in the court‘s poll. But, for reasons we have offered, we do not believe the jury‘s verdict, as eventually accepted by the district court after its remedial efforts, can be reasonably understood as suggesting anything other than a unanimous conclusion that Mr. Poole was guilty of assault resulting in serious bodily injury, and that offense alone. Accordingly, we see no error here arising from the district court‘s remedial efforts, let alone reversible plain error. Thus the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Mr. Poole‘s motion for a new trial, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
1 2 3 4 5Nathanael Lutuima Quaresma RIBAS, Petitioner, v. Michael B. MUKASEY, United States Attorney General,* Respondent.
No. 07-9509
United States Court of Appeals, Tenth Circuit
Nov. 4, 2008
* On November 9, 2007, Michael B. Mukasey became the United States Attorney General. In accordance with
