UNITED STATES of America, Appellee, v. Robert D. BLACK, Appellant.
No. 81-5244.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Sept. 28, 1982.
Rehearing Denied Dec. 8, 1982.
692 F.2d 314
Argued May 7, 1982.
William G. Otis, Sp. Asst. U.S. Atty., Alexandria, Va. (Elsie L. Munsell, U.S. Atty., Alexandria, Va., Rosemary E. Glynn, Sp. Asst. U.S. Atty., Washington, D. C., on brief), for appellee.
Before WINTER, Chief Judge, and PHILLIPS and ERVIN, Circuit Judges.
Robert D. Black, an inmate of the Lorton Reformatory, appeals his conviction for assaulting and impeding a correctional officer with a deadly weapon. Assigned as grounds for reversal are (1) the admission of certain evidence which defendant contends was irrelevant and unduly prejudicial, and (2) the jury instruction on the issue of self-defense. Finding that the self-defense instruction was indeed erroneous, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
I.
Black was charged in a single-count indictment under
II.
At trial, the court admitted Officer Henry‘s testimony that Black, after returning to his cell, threw human feces at Henry.1 Defense counsel objected to the introduction of this evidence as irrelevant and unduly prejudicial. The district court, however, ruled the evidence relevant and admissible as “part of the overall scheme of” the crime.
The parties treat the admissibility of this evidence as being governed by Federal Evidence Rule 404(b).2 Black argues that the
We need not choose between these opposing positions, for the fact is that Black was charged with “assault[ing], resist[ing], oppos[ing], imped[ing], intimidat[ing], and interfer[ing] with” Henry in the performance of Henry‘s official duties and with using a knife in so doing. The statute under which Black was charged does not treat use of a deadly weapon as a separate violation but instead as a factor which aggravates the offense of assaulting or interfering with a public officer.3
According to Henry, Black threw excrement in an effort to drive Henry away from Black‘s cell and thereby gain an opportunity to hide the knife. Such conduct, if it occurred, was not merely part of the context of the crime; it was part of the crime itself—a continuing course of interference with Henry‘s execution of his duties.4 Thus, Henry‘s testimony in this regard introduced no “other act,” but rather dealt directly with an ultimate issue of fact. Viewed in this way, Henry‘s testimony is obviously relevant and falls outside the scope of Rule 404(b).
Having determined that Rule 404(b) does not mandate exclusion of Henry‘s testimony, we affirm the district court‘s decision to admit the evidence under Rule 403.5 Black argues that evidence that he threw human feces at Henry was so inflammatory that it should have been excluded even if it was relevant. Under Rule 403, however, relevant evidence is excludible only if its prejudicial effect substantially outweighs its probative value. The balance is for the trial court to strike, and its decision to admit evidence over a Rule 403 objection will be reversed only if it constitutes an abuse of discretion. See United States v. Tibbetts, 565 F.2d 867, 868-69 (4th Cir. 1977).
As noted above, the testimony in question went directly to an ultimate issue of fact. Hence, the probative value of the evidence was high. No doubt, its prejudicial impact was also great. In our view, however, the balance was not so uneven
III.
At the close of the evidence, Black requested an instruction on self-defense.6 Under the requested instruction, the jury would have been required to acquit if it found that the corrections officer employed excessive force and Black responded with an amount of force he reasonably deemed necessary to avoid bodily harm to himself. The court, however, rejected the suggested instruction. It gave instead a charge to the effect that Black was entitled to defend himself with “deadly force” if he reasonably believed that such force was necessary to escape imminent death or serious bodily harm.7 Black argues that the self-defense instruction was erroneous in two respects. First, he contends that the instruction misled the jury by framing the issue in terms of an accused‘s right vel non to use deadly force, whereas the evidence showed merely a threat to use force. Second, he argues that the instruction conditioned the right of self-defense on the presence of an imminent threat of death or serious bodily harm, whereas the law actually provides that one
We agree that the instruction given by the district court was designed for cases of deadly assault and was thus inappropriate in a case involving no more than a threat to use force.8 There was no testimony that Black attempted to kill Officer Henry. All of the witnesses agreed that Black merely brandished the knife and threatened to use it. Hence the district court‘s repeated references to “deadly force” erroneously strayed from the evidence. That error, however, may have been harmless. Precisely because the evidence was so clear that Black only threatened deadly force and did not actually resort to it, a rational juror would not likely have been misled by the court‘s inapposite words. See generally United States v. Nyman, 649 F.2d 208, 211-12 (4th Cir. 1980).
Black‘s second argument is more compelling. The court several times repeated that Black‘s self-defense theory was justified only if he faced “imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm.” Had Black attempted to kill Officer Henry, this instruction would have been correct. But the instruction implied that the lesser force which defendant actually employed could not justifiably have been directed at a threat less grave than death or serious injury. In this respect, the instruction misstated the law. Under the traditional rule, the quantum of force which one may use in self-defense is proportional to the threat which he reasonably apprehends. Professors LaFave and Scott have aptly summarized the governing principle:
In determining how much force one may use in self-defense, the law recognizes that the amount of force which he may justifiably use must be reasonably related to the threatened harm which he seeks to avoid. One may justifiably use nondeadly force against another in self-defense if he reasonably believes that the other is about to inflict unlawful bodily harm (it need not be death or serious bodily harm) upon him (and also believes that it is necessary to use such force to prevent it). That is, under such circumstances he is not guilty of assault (if he merely threatens to use the nondeadly force or if he aims that force at the other but misses) or battery (if he injures the other by use of that force). He may justifiably use deadly force against the other in self-defense, however, only if he reasonably believes that the other is about to inflict unlawful death or serious bodily harm upon him (and also that it is necessary to use deadly force to prevent it).
W. LaFave & A. Scott, Handbook on Criminal Law 392-93 (1972) (footnotes omitted, emphasis partly in original). See Harris v. United States, 364 F.2d 701, 702 (D.C.Cir.1966) (“One who is attacked may repel the attack with whatever force he reasonably believes is necessary under the circumstances ....“). See generally Brown v. United States, 256 U.S. 335, 344, 41 S.Ct. 501, 502, 65 L.Ed. 961 (1921). Under this notion of proportionality, a danger which is not so great as to justify an actual killing in self-defense may nevertheless be serious enough to justify an unexecuted threat to use deadly force. See W. LaFave & A. Scott, supra, at 392 & n.13.
We assume, of course, that the jury followed the instruction laid down by the court. On the basis of the conflicting testimony presented at trial, the jury may have believed that Officer Henry struck Black with a putty knife and that Black reasonably feared bodily injury. Under a proper instruction, they might have concluded that Black‘s threat to use a knife was reasonably proportioned to the danger posed by Henry. The instruction given, however, foreclosed that conclusion. It permitted acquittal only if Black reasonably feared death or serious bodily harm.
REVERSED; NEW TRIAL GRANTED.
JAMES DICKSON PHILLIPS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I would affirm. Agreeing with the majority on all other points, I would hold harmless the error in the charge upon which it reverses this conviction.
There was of course technical error in this charge in the respects correctly identified by the majority opinion. I concede that we must be particularly careful in holding harmless any error made in defining to the jury the substantive elements of a crime or a defense when that error has any logical potential for misleading the jury to the defendant‘s prejudice. And I have no quarrel with the court‘s painstaking mode of analysis. There is no way to assess harmlessness of errors in jury instructions except by assessing their misleading potential in relation to the total context in which they were made and the specific evidence in the case. Ultimately then the estimate of harmlessness or prejudice comes to a judgment call. I accept that the guiding principle for making that judgment call with respect to this non-constitutional error should be whether we believe it “highly probable that the error did not affect the judgment.” R. Traynor, The Riddle of Harmless Error 34-35 (1976). Because I do believe it highly probable that this error did not have that effect here, I simply disagree with the majority on its final judgment call.
Just as the majority concludes that the court‘s erroneous, repeated references to defendant‘s use of “deadly force” was, in total context, harmless because there was no evidence from which actual use of force rather than mere threat of force could be found, so would I find harmless the trial court‘s repeated statements that defendant‘s conduct could only be found justified if he reasonably feared “imminent death or serious bodily harm.” The majority concludes that these references foreclosed any finding by the jury that though defendant could not reasonably have feared death or “serious bodily harm” justifying his retaliatory action, he could reasonably have feared mere “bodily injury” that did.
While there is a certain logic about this in the abstract, I do not believe it could possibly have operated in this way on the evidence in the case. Defendant‘s factual theory of defense was a narrow, simple one—that the correctional officer had actually struck at him with a putty knife and was prepared to do so again. This fact was simply denied by the officer. Only if, preliminarily, the jury accepted this fact—or more properly, given the cast of the proof burden, failed to find beyond a reasonable doubt that it did not occur as specifically asserted—could defendant have prevailed
On the evidence in this case it is not only highly improbable, it is inconceivable to me that a jury which accepted—or was in reasonable doubt so that it must assume—the predicate fact of aggression, striking at defendant with a metal knife, would not also have considered the bodily harm threatened by it “serious.” It is therefore inconceivable to me that the jury‘s rejection of this defense reflected anything other than a rejection of its narrow factual predicate—on which the evidence was flatly contradictory.
As to the existence of that predicate fact there was of course nothing misleading in the charge. The burden of proof to disprove its occurrence was properly placed upon the state under the proper standard. The charge in its totality—though technically erroneous because of its improvident borrowing from the homicidal self-defense section of the form book—sufficiently conveyed, on the evidence in this case, the critical legal principle: that to constitute justifying self-defense, retaliatory action must (1) be based upon a reasonably feared threat of harm and (2) be reasonably proportional to the threat as perceived. Because the original aggressive act specifically relied upon here so obviously threatened “serious” harm if it threatened any, the technical failure of the court to suggest that though the reasonably perceived threat might not be of “serious” harm it might nevertheless have justified defendant‘s retaliatory act here seems to me harmless under the proper test. Obviously so to hold would not condone the giving of such a technically erroneous charge in any but the quite specific situation under review here.
Freed of any concern for a broader precedential effect, or that any general license to use the homicidal self-defense charge in this non-homicidal setting was being given, I would affirm the conviction.
