Case Information
*1 FOR PUBLICATION
APPELLANT PRO SE: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: WAYNE CAMPBELL GREGORY F. ZOELLER Pendleton, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
JUSTIN F. ROEBEL Deputy Attorney General Indianapolis, Indiana IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA WAYNE CAMPBELL, )
) Appellant-Petitioner, )
) vs. ) No. 13A05-1304-PC-201 ) STATE OF INDIANA, )
) Appellee-Respondent. )
APPEAL FROM THE CRAWFORD CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable Larry R. Blanton, Special Judge Cause No. 13C01-0606-PC-3 January 28, 2014 OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
BARNES, Judge
Case Summary Wayne Campbell appeals the denial of his petition for post-conviction relief (“PCR petition”), which challenged his convictions for two counts of attempted murder and one count of Class B felony burglary. We affirm.
Issues The issues before us are:
I. whether Campbell’s trial counsel was ineffective in the manner in which he conducted voir dire; and II. whether trial counsel was ineffective for failing to object to a supplemental instruction given to the jury during its deliberations.
Facts On direct appeal, we described the evidence most favorable to Campbell’s convictions as follows:
On November 15, 1991, Campbell purchased approximately twenty-two acres in Crawford County, and used the land primarily for hunting and camping. To access his property, Campbell used a private road that passed through the properties of his neighbors, Jean and Alva Kincaid (collectively, the Kincaids), and Don Mattox. This easement ran directly between the Kincaids’ house and garage. Sometime in January 2000, Campbell moved into a trailer on the land. Almost from the beginning, various altercations occurred among the Kincaids, Mattox and Campbell regarding the use of the easement. For instance, on one occasion, Alva installed metal speed bumps across the easement, claiming that Campbell had been speeding across his property. Alva and Mattox also began running ATVs down the easement, placing ruts in the road. At some point, Alva allegedly blocked the road to Campbell’s residence with a truck and a tractor. The situation worsened to the point that *3 Alva and Campbell sought—and obtained—protective orders against one another.
On November 7, 2001, Campbell hunted on his property and went into town to have supper at a restaurant. When Campbell returned, he noticed that several rocks were lying in the road. Upon closer examination, Campbell observed that shards of glass had been attached to the rocks. Campbell then picked up a rock and threw it at the Kincaids’ garage. Alva told Jean to call the police, whereupon Alva picked up his gun, went outside, and confronted Campbell. Campbell then grabbed his shotgun and fired into the air.
At some point, Campbell pointed his gun at Alva and ordered him to drop his weapon. Instead, Alva tried to grab Campbell’s gun. However, Campbell immediately hit Alva several times in the head with the barrel of the shotgun. During the altercation, Campbell bent the barrel of the shotgun and also broke the stock. As a result of the attack, Alva’s skull was fractured, causing major brain damage. Alva is currently unable to talk and is in need of constant medical care. Immediately after striking Alva, Campbell proceeded to the Kincaids’ house where he kicked in the door and encountered Jean. At that time, she was talking with a State Police officer on the telephone. Campbell grabbed the telephone and tossed it to the ground. Jean then ran to the porch and Campbell followed. He hit Jean in the face with the shotgun and struck her four or five more times while she was on the porch, rendering her unconscious. Jean’s injuries included two broken facial bones, a puncture wound, bruises, swelling and broken teeth. Campbell then fled the scene in his vehicle.
Shortly thereafter, Jean regained consciousness and walked to the garage where she observed Alva laying on the floor in a pool of blood. Jean then drove to a neighbor’s house, where she reported that Alva was dying.
Hours later, Campbell returned to the Kincaids’ house armed with three guns that he had retrieved from his parents’ house, where he encountered several police officers. At that time, the officers suspected Campbell was involved in the *4 altercation with the Kincaids. One of the officers yelled that Campbell was armed and all drew their guns on Campbell and ordered him to drop his weapon. Throughout a standoff that lasted nearly thirty minutes, Campbell never fully complied with the officers’ commands. To be sure, Campbell refused to submit to a pat down search, and he continued shouting and being uncooperative.
At some point, while several officers were pointing their guns at Campbell, Detective Philip Stowers of the Indiana State Police Department asked, “what is going on?” Campbell then described the events, whereupon he inquired into the Kincaids’ condition. Campbell commented that he must have “really f* * * *d them up,” that he wished he had raped Jean, and that it was his hope that both of the Kincaids would die. Eventually, the officers rushed Campbell where they were able to subdue and handcuff him.
Campbell was initially charged with two counts of attempted murder on November 9, 2001. A jury trial commenced on July 30, 2002, but, on August 5, 2002, the jury informed the trial court that it was unable to reach a verdict, and a mistrial was declared. Thereafter, on August 29, 2002, the State refiled the charges, adding two additional counts: Burglary Resulting in Bodily Injury, a class A felony, and Battery, a class C felony. However, the State dismissed the battery charge and filed an amendment to the Burglary Resulting in Serious Bodily Injury charge.
Then, on January 27, 2003, the State charged Campbell with Battery, a class C felony, and Aggravated Battery as a class B felony under different cause numbers. Trial by jury was held under the various cause numbers from June 2, 2003, through June 10, 2003. The State did, however, dismiss one of the battery counts on the first day of trial.
In the end, Campbell was convicted of two counts of attempted murder, burglary resulting in bodily injury, a class A felony, aggravated battery, a class B felony, and battery as a class C felony. At the sentencing hearing that was conducted on July 10, 2003, Campbell was sentenced to forty-five year consecutive sentences on each count of attempted murder with five years of each sentence suspended. Campbell was also *5 ordered to serve a forty-year sentence for burglary resulting in serious bodily injury to be served concurrently with the attempted murder sentences. The trial court then merged the battery and aggravated battery convictions with the attempted murder convictions, thus sentencing Campbell to an aggregate term of ninety years with ten of those years suspended.
Campbell v. State,
On direct appeal, we held that double jeopardy principles required Campbell’s conviction for Class A felony burglary resulting in bodily injury to be reduced to a Class B felony. Id. at 719. We rejected Campbell’s arguments regarding an alleged Miranda violation, the sufficiency of the evidence, and the appropriateness of his sentence. Our supreme court granted transfer for the limited purpose of revising Campbell’s aggregate sentence to seventy years via an unpublished order, and the United States Supreme Court denied certiorari.
Campbell subsequently filed a pro se PCR petition, which was amended four times. Among other claims, Campbell asserted that trial counsel was ineffective in two respects: (1) by engaging in improper voir dire during jury selection; and (2) by failing to object to a jury instruction regarding the definition of “intentionally” that was given during deliberations in response to a jury question requesting “the definition of intent.” Trial Tr. p. 993. The post-conviction court denied Campbell’s petition, and he now appeals pro se. [1]
Analysis
*6
PCR proceedings are civil in nature, and a defendant bears the burden of
establishing his or her claims by a preponderance of the evidence. Smith v. State, 822
N.E.2d 193, 198 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005), trans. denied. A defendant appealing the denial of
a PCR petition is challenging a negative judgment. Ward v. State,
To meet the appropriate test for prejudice, the petitioner must show that there is a
reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s unprofessional errors, the result of the
proceeding would have been different. Id. “A reasonable probability is a probability
*7
sufficient to undermine confidence in the outcome.” Strickland
,
For example, we attempted burglary. You are going to break into someone’s house and steal their stuff. So, the law of intent would say first of all, (inaudible) you were intending to break into that house. And then secondly, that is not good enough. A lot of things we intend to do, or like to do, or want to do is not a crime. You have got to couple it with action (inaudible). So, if you break into someone’s house and let’s say they prove that intent, you told all your friends you were going to break in there. You heard they had a million dollars and you were going out there to break in. All the witnesses come to Court to say that’s true. So they got the intent element proved. But then, you park your car outside the house. You get scared and drive away. How many people think that is a substantial step so that you would be guilty of attempted burglary?
Id. at 72-73. Campbell also takes issue with trial counsel asking prospective jurors whether they believe it would be attempted murder to fire a gun at someone’s head and miss.
Proper voir dire examination may include questions designed to disclose the
prospective jurors’ attitudes towards the offense charged and to uncover preconceived
ideas about defenses the defendant intends to use. Steelman v. State
,
We disagree with Campbell. The bar on suggesting the existence of unintroduced
(or non-existent) prejudicial evidence during voir dire has usually been applied to
prosecutors, and even then only in cases where the hypothetical “bore a striking
resemblance to the facts of the case at hand.” Robinson v. State,
Here, by contrast, the purported hypotheticals given by trial counsel were clearly just that—hypotheticals intended to explore the prospective jurors’ views on defenses to be used. They bore only tangential similarities to the actual case and the evidence adduced at trial. As trial counsel explained during the post-conviction hearing, he was attempting to find jurors who would be receptive to a claim of self-defense by not having a narrow view of when self-defense could be invoked, and he was attempting to find jurors who would require the State to produce more evidence of a substantial step in order to convict Campbell of attempted murder than other jurors might require. Also, contrary to Campbell’s claim, the hypotheticals did not incorrectly suggest that Campbell was going to pursue a defense of abandonment; instead, they explored the jurors’ understanding of the substantial step requirement for attempt crimes. We cannot say trial counsel performed below an objective standard of reasonableness in the manner in which he conducted voir dire. To hold otherwise would be tantamount to hyper-regulation and second-guessing of trial counsel’s strategy and tactics, a task we cannot and should not undertake.
II. Supplemental Jury Instruction Next, we address Campbell’s argument that the trial court erred in giving the following instruction to the jury when it asked for a definition of “intent” during its deliberations:
A person engages in conduct “intentionally” if, when he engages in the conduct, it is his conscious objective to do so. If a person is charged with intentionally causing a result by his *10 conduct, it must have been his conscious objective not only to engage in the conduct, but to cause the result.
Trial Tr. p. 998. The jury had not previously been instructed on the definition of “intent” or “intentionally.” Campbell does not present a cogent argument that the trial court could not give a supplemental instruction of the definition of “intentionally” during deliberations but does argue that the second sentence is a misstatement of the law and trial counsel should have objected to it being given.
The above instruction, including the second sentence, is from Indiana Criminal
Pattern Jury Instruction 9.05. The first sentence is a verbatim recitation of the statutory
definition of “intentionally” found in Indiana Code Section 35-41-2-2(a). Regarding the
second sentence, this court stated in Johnson v. State,
We cannot conclude trial counsel was ineffective for not objecting to the instruction.
Regarding reasonable performance, trial counsel indicated at the post-conviction hearing
that he doubted any objection to the instruction would have been fruitful because it was a
pattern instruction.
[2]
Pattern jury instructions are given preferential treatment during
litigation, though they have not been formally approved by the Indiana Supreme Court.
Clay City Consol. School Corp. v. Timberman,
*12
We also believe Campbell failed to prove any prejudice resulting from this
instruction being given. Although we have noted some potential for confusion from the
second sentence of the instruction as far as shifting the State’s burden of proof, in the
present case if any such confusion existed it plainly should have been alleviated by other
instructions given to the jury that emphasized the State’s burden of proof. For example,
the jury was instructed, both in preliminary and final instructions, “The fact that a charge
has been filed, the Defendant arrested and brought to trial is not to be considered by you
as any evidence of guilt.” Trial App. p. 553. Other given instructions clearly emphasized
the State’s burden of proof beyond a reasonable doubt, the presumption of innocence
enjoyed by Campbell, and that Campbell was not required “to prove or explain anything.”
Id. at 559. When considering the efficacy of jury instructions, we must consider them as a
whole and in reference to each other, not in isolation. O’Connell v. State,
Conclusion Campbell failed to establish that he received ineffective assistance of trial counsel with respect to either the manner in which voir dire was conducted or in the failure to object to the supplemental jury instruction defining “intentionally.” We affirm the denial of Campbell’s PCR petition.
Affirmed.
ROBB, J., and BROWN, J., concur.
Notes
[1] Campbell’s fourth amended PCR petition raised a number of issues other than the two we have mentioned, but he does not make any argument regarding them on appeal.
[2] Trial counsel also indicated that the second sentence could be read as increasing, not decreasing, the State’s burden of proof, with respect to it having to prove a defendant’s conscious objective to cause a result, not merely to engage in conduct.
