OPINION
James Richard Ricks was convicted in the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (2006), possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and was sentenced to 180 months’ imprisonment. At trial, the district court denied Ricks a jury instruction on a justification defense because the court did not believe the defense was available in this Circuit. Recognizing its legal error post-trial, the district court nonetheless denied Ricks’ motion for a new trial because it found that Ricks had not presented sufficient evidence to warrant the instruction. We find that the district court’s decision at trial to deny the instruction was not justified by either the law or the facts, because a reasonable trier of fact could have found that Ricks’ possession was justified. We therefore reverse Mr. Ricks’ conviction.
I.
In determining the sufficiency of the evidence to support a criminal defendant’s request for a jury instruction on a theory of defense, “the testimony most favorable to the defendant should be accepted.”
United States v. Al-Rekabi,
On the night of December 15, 2005, Ricks’ partner, Clarence Blue, returned to their shared apartment after having disappeared for several days. Ricks noticed immediately that Blue was acting erratically — walking strangely and talking incoherently. Realizing that Blue had a gun in his hand, Ricks ran up to him, pinned him against the wall, and hit the gun out of his hand. Ricks then picked up the gun, removed the clip, and threw the gun and the clip in different directions. When Ricks stepped away from Blue, Blue ran out the door. Although Ricks shouted after him,
After Blue left, Ricks retrieved the gun and clip from where he had thrown them and, without returning the clip to the gun, placed the pieces on top of a dresser, underneath some clothes, in the bedroom he and Blue shared. Ricks then went back into the living room and began to watch television. Fifteen to thirty minutes later, Blue returned to the apartment, this time accompanied by two police officers. According to Ricks, the officers asked repeatedly whether there was a gun in the house. Although Ricks did not respond immediately, he finally acknowledged that there was a gun in the house and took the officers into the bedroom, where he retrieved the gun and the clip and turned them over to the police. After Ricks admitted to a prior felony conviction, the officers took him into custody as a convicted felon in possession of a firearm.
At trial, Ricks’ counsel argued that Ricks was entitled to a jury instruction on a justification defense. Initially, the district court agreed with counsel that, if a justification defense were available in this Circuit, the evidence that had been presented would have been “sufficient ... to warrant the instruction.” (J.A. 177.) However, because the court found that the Fourth Circuit had never concretely recognized a justification defense to violations of the felon-in-possession statute, 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (2006), it ultimately denied the instruction. Ricks was convicted on August 9, 2006.
While Ricks was awaiting sentencing, we published our decision in
United States v. Mooney,
Ricks timely filed an appeal with this Court, in which he argues both that the district court’s mid-trial decision not to allow a justification instruction was reversible error and, in the alternative, that its denial of his motion for a new trial was an abuse of discretion.
II.
“[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.”
Mathews v. United States,
At Ricks’ trial, the district court concluded that this Circuit had never explicitly recognized a justification defense and thus no jury instruction on that defense needed to be given. Ricks contends that this was reversible error because the instruction “ ‘(1) was correct; (2) was not substantially covered by the court’s charge to the jury; and (3) dealt with some point in the trial so important, that failure to give the requested instruction seriously
The district court concluded that a justification defense was not available as a matter of law in this jurisdiction because no prior controlling Fourth Circuit case law had explicitly recognized such a defense. Indeed, though a number of our decisions have hinted at the availability of the defense, our
pre-Mooney
case law has hardly been a font of clarity on the matter.
See, e.g., United States v. Crittendon,
Now, in Mooney's wake, the government and Ricks apparently agree that the district court erred in finding that the defense was not available as a matter of law.
{See
Gov’t Br. at 8 (“[T]he district court’s initial reasoning — that
Perrin
and
Crittendon
did not allow a justification defense in this Circuit — appears to have been a legal error .... ” (internal citation omitted)).) As
Mooney
explains, because justification is a common-law defense, “ ‘Congress’ failure to provide specifically for [it] in drafting a criminal statute does not necessarily preclude a defendant charged with violating the statute from relying on [that] defense.’ ”
Although the government concedes that the court’s reasoning on the general availability of the justification defense was erroneous, it argues that the district court’s decision at trial to deny the justifi
In Crittendon, we laid out the elements that a defendant would have to satisfy to be entitled to a justification instruction:
[T]he defendant must produce evidence which would allow the factfinder to conclude that he:
(1) was under unlawful and present threat of death or serious bodily injury;
(2) did not recklessly place himself in a situation where he would be forced to engage in criminal conduct;
(3) had no reasonable legal alternative (to both the criminal act and the avoidance of the threatened harm); and
(4) a direct causal relationship between the criminal action and the avoidance of the threatened harm.
Applying Crittendon at trial, the district court reasoned:
I think there is [sic] sufficient facts if believed by the jury that would show that — Mr. Blue was believed, that he brought the gun to the house in an agitated state; that at the door there was a confrontation between Mr. Blue and the defendant and that the defendant took the gun from Mr. Blue. And prior to taking the gun, he would have been in a present threat of such a nature as to induce a well-grounded fear of death or serious bodily injury [Crittendon factor (1) ].... If Mr. Blue is believed, Mr. Ricks was just at the home that Mr. Blue had not been to for a number of days and so did not recklessly place himself in a situation where he would be forced to possess the gun [Crittendon factor (2) ]. And at that point would not have had a reasonable legal alternative other than to struggle with Mr. Blue [Crittendon factor (3) ]. And that there’s a causal relationship between the possession and the elimination of the risk [Crittendon factor (4) ].
(J.A. 185-86.)
Notwithstanding this, the government would now have us take the position that the district court took in its post-trial order denying Ricks’ motion for a new trial. In that order, the district court about-faced and found that the evidence did not in fact support a justification instruction. While the court acknowledged that Mooney made clear that justification was an available defense in this Circuit, it went on to find that Ricks could not satisfy the third prong of the Crittendon test. The district court accepted that Ricks was arguably in imminent danger at the time he disarmed Blue, but it concluded that Ricks continued to possess the gun after that point although he “had other reasonable alternatives to continued possession of the gun.” (J.A. 335.)
It is true that, after disarming Blue, Ricks briefly retook possession of the gun. Apparently understanding the gun to belong to Blue, Ricks picked up the gun and the clip from the floor and brought them to the bedroom he and Blue shared, where he placed them underneath some clothes on the dresser. As the government points out, courts have found that even such fleeting possession can be enough to show actual possession for purposes of § 922(g) liability.
See, e.g., United States v. Adkins,
Perhaps recognizing that Ricks’ brief actual repossession of the gun might still be covered by a justification defense, the government also argues that Ricks constructively possessed the gun from the time he placed it on the dresser until he turned it over to the police. But “[wjhen the government seeks to establish constructive possession under § 922(g)(1), it must prove that the defendant intentionally exercised dominion and control over the firearm, or had the power
and the intention
to exercise dominion and control over the firearm.”
United States v. Scott,
We agree with the government that “a defendant seeking a justification instruction must produce evidence that he took reasonable steps to dispossess himself of the weapon once the threat entitling him to possess it abated.” (Gov’t.Br.10). We disagree, however, that Ricks has not met this burden. The evidence presented permits the conclusion that, after Ricks disarmed Blue, he took immediate steps to
Apparently reading our decision in
Mooney
as support for its position, the government implies that Ricks did not act reasonably to dispossess himself of the gun because he did not immediately turn it over to the police.
3
In
Mooney,
we found that the defendant would have been able to satisfy prong three of the
Crittendon
test because the evidence showed that after he disarmed his intoxicated ex-wife, “[t]he trajectory of Mooney’s actions all pointed toward handing over the gun to the police.”
In many cases, a defendant’s options for reasonable dispossession of a firearm may include turning the gun over to the authorities, but that is not the only option, and ultimately, the reasonableness of the defendant’s course of conduct is a question for a jury. For purposes of determining the propriety of a jury instruction on justification, we need only see whether there is sufficient evidence for a jury to conclude that the defendant’s actions were reasonable, and we find that there was sufficient evidence here.
III.
Having found that the district court committed reversible error by denying Ricks a jury instruction on justification at trial, we need not consider whether the district court abused its discretion in denying Ricks’ motion for a new trial. Ricks’ conviction for violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) is hereby reversed.
REVERSED
Notes
.
See United States v. Hillian,
. Intent is an element of a § 922(g)(1) charge, whether possession is being proved with evidence of actual or constructive possession.
Scott,
. The government also suggests that a reasonable alternative would have been to leave the apartment, rather than retrieve the gun and place it on the dresser. However, Ricks was under no obligation to leave his own home simply to avoid being in the vicinity of a firearm. Section 922(g)(1) may, as the government puts it, "place[] a high burden on felons-in-possession seeking legal justification” (Gov't Br. 29), but it does not create criminal liability for a convicted felon who simply lives with someone who possesses a firearm. Moreover, it might well have been dangerous for Ricks to leave the gun on the floor where an upset Blue could easily have accessed it had he returned to the apartment.
