ON REHEARING EN BANC
A key part of any criminal jury trial is the trial court’s instruction to the jury setting forth the elements of the offense of which the defendant stands accused. Occasionally, as in the proceeding on appeal, the trial court will omit an essential element, and the omission is not called to the court’s attention by either party. 1 The issue now before us en banc is what consequence should ensue when the omission is first raised at the appellate level as an asserted ground of reversible error. We hold that in such circumstances, the omission will not be the cause for a reversal at least where, as here, the relevant facts are so closely related that no rational jury, shown by its verdict to have found the facts necessary to convict the defendant under the instructions as given, could have failed, if fully instructed on each element, to have found in addition the facts necessary to comprise the omitted element.
I
The facts are set forth at length in the panel opinion,
White was indicted for one count of theft, eleven counts of forgery, and eleven counts of uttering. Each forgery count in the indictment specifically stated that it related to “a bank check having a value of $250 or more,” and bore a photostatic copy of the check in question. Each uttering count incorporated by reference the copy of the check set forth in the related forgery count.
At the trial, the checks themselves were introduced into evidence. Furthermore, the verdict form, sent to the jury room, specified with respect to each check its exact amount. The jury recorded on that form a verdict of guilty on all counts.
II
The difficulty leading to this en banc rehearing arose because of an oversight in the instructions by the trial court to the jury; viz., the failure to make any mention of the need for the jury to make a finding that each of the allegedly forged or uttered checks was or purported to be of a value of $250 or more.
The relevance of this omission flowed from the provisions of the statute defining the offenses of forgery and uttering. Those provisions in effect create a three-level hierarchy of offenses based upon the types of writings involved or the value of those writings. The highest level, providing for a maximum fine of $10,000, 10 years imprisonment or both, applies to, inter alia, forgeries of written instruments which purport to have a value of $10,000 or more. D.C.Code § 22-3842(a) (1989). The intermediate level covers written instruments which have or purport to have a value of $250 or more, and provides for a maximum fine of $5,000 or five years imprisonment. Id. § 22-3842(b). Finally, there is a lowest “catchall” level applying to all forgeries, and providing for a maximum fine of $2,500 or three years imprisonment. Id. § 22-3842(c).
The indictment charged White with violations of the intermediate level of forgery, citing § 22-3842(b), and the trial court’s judgment and commitment order found the defendant guilty of the offenses charged. Although appellant made no objection at trial to the instructions as given, she now claims on appeal that the failure to instruct the jury on the need to make a finding that the value of each check was $250 or more was per se reversible “plain error,” precluding a valid conviction under § 3842(b).
The panel of this court which first heard the appeal agreed, deeming itself bound by the panel decision in
Kind v. United States,
Ill
In
Kind,
appellant was convicted of possession of a prohibited weapon, in violation of D.C.Code § 22-3214(b) (1989). The case proceeded under the theory that the prohibited weapon was, as the subsection provides,
5
a “knife with a blade longer than 3 inches.” However, the trial court simply instructed the jury that it should convict if it found first, “the defendant possessed a knife, and second, at the time he possessed the knife he had the specific intent to use it unlawfully against any other — against another person.”
We deemed ourselves bound by existing case law 6 establishing that “the failure to instruct the jury on every essential element of the crime is per se reversible ‘plain error,’ notwithstanding a defendant’s failure to object to the instructions as given.” Id. at 295. We identified the Sixth Amendment right to a trial by jury as the underpinning of the doctrine. We also noted the “element of centrality” of the requirement of knife length, part of the statutory definition of the crime itself. Accordingly we reversed the conviction and remanded for a new trial.
Likewise, the panel in the case before us concluded that “[pjlainly the required minimum dollar value of the instruments is as much a ‘central’ or ‘core’ element of the intermediate level of forgery as the required minimum knife length was in the
Kind
offense,”
White, supra,
The
Kind
court found controlling the decision in
(Arthur) Byrd v. United States,
However, the limited nature of the scope of the per se reversibility rule was demonstrated by two later cases. In
United States v. Gilbert,
The existence of these somewhat divergent lines of authority was, indeed, recognized by the panel in the case before us.
White, supra,
The somewhat cloudy nature thus evidenced of our existing jurisprudence on per se reversibility for instructional omissions, when coupled with holdings over the past twenty years by other courts, including the Supreme Court, with respect to the consequences of trial court instructional error, have led us to this en banc sitting.
IV
The problem before us is one that is little remarked outside of the realm of appellate law specialists and courts. 10 The broad question is simply stated but often answered with difficulty: when an appellate court finds that an error has occurred in a criminal trial, what should the consequences of that error be, and in particular, should the conviction appealed from be set aside and a new trial ordered? 11
It is “the Supreme Court’s oft-repeated directive that a criminal defendant has a right to a fair trial, not to a perfect one.
See, e.g., Ross v. Oklahoma,
*874
The strictest standard, of course, is that of per se reversal, in which the actual effect of the error upon the trial proceedings is not considered at all. While at one time it might have been thought that any constitutional violation during the course of a trial should entitle the defendant to a new trial, the Supreme Court in its landmark decision of
Chapman v. California,
Where an error is not of constitutional dimension, a less exacting standard is applied. There, an error will be considered grounds for reversal where the appellate court “cannot say, with fair assurance, after pondering all that happened without stripping the erroneous action from the whole, that the judgment was not substantially swayed by the error.”
Kotteakos v. United States,
Finally, there is the so-called “plain error” standard. This standard is invoked in circumstances where the defendant has failed to object at trial to the error complained of on appeal. In such circumstances, the asserted error will be grounds for reversal only if it is “so clearly prejudicial to substantial rights as to jeopardize the very fairness and integrity of the trial,”
Watts v. United States,
The reasons for the application of a stringent standard for reversal in the absence of objection at trial were cogently set forth in
Watts, supra,
The obvious reason for requiring that objections to instructions be made before the jury retires is to afford the trial court an opportunity to correct any instructional defect and thereby avoid error which otherwise might necessitate a new trial. In order to discourage the intentional withholding of objections by defense counsel, errors not objected to at trial are unreachable on review unless they fall within the purview of the plain error rule. Under that standard, the error complained of must be so clearly prejudicial to substantial rights as to jeopardize the very fairness and integrity of the trial.
We have in a number of subsequent cases rearticulated the plain error standard and its rationale.
See, e.g., Harris v. United States, supra; Irick v. United States,
*875 With this background, we turn to a consideration of the proper standard to be applied in the circumstances presented here.
V
A
We turn to recent Supreme Court decisions for its current teaching as to when constitutional error is per se reversible and when such error may be subjected to some form of harmless error test. 14
Since its decision in
Chapman v. California, supra,
the Supreme Court has “repeatedly reaffirmed the principle that an otherwise valid conviction should not be set aside if the reviewing court may confidently say, on the whole record, that the constitutional error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Delaware v. Van Arsdall,
“Our application of harmless-error analysis in these cases has not reflected a denigration of the constitutional rights involved. Instead ... [t]he harmless-error doctrine recognizes the principle that the central purpose of a criminal trial is to decide the factual question of the defendant’s guilt or innocence ... and promotes public respect for the criminal process by focusing on the underlying fairness of the trial rather than on the virtually inevitable presence of immaterial error. Cf. R. Traynor, The Riddle of HARMLESS ERROR. 50 (1970) (‘Reversal for error, regardless of its effect on the judgment, encourages litigants to abuse the judicial process and bestirs the public to ridicule it.’)”.
Rose, supra,
The Court noted, however, that “[d]e-spite the strong interests that support the harmless-error doctrine ...
Chapman
recognized that some constitutional errors require reversal without regard to the evidence in the particular case.”
Id.
As examples, it mentioned the
Chapman
citations of eases finding per se reversible error in the complete denial of the right to counsel and adjudication by a biased judge.
15
With respect to these examples, the Court commented: “This limitation recognizes that some errors necessarily render a trial fundamentally unfair.... Without these basic protections [a trial before an impartial judge with counsel] a criminal trial cannot reliably serve its function as a vehicle for determination of guilt or innocence.”
Rose, supra,
The next year, in
Pope v. Illinois,
In 1989, in
Carella v. California,
Justice Scalia, writing for himself and three other members of the Court, expanded upon his view of the meaning and application of the harmless error doctrine in this context. He noted that in the usual case, the determination of harmlessness is made by consideration of the trial record as a whole in order to decide whether the fact supported by improperly admitted evidence was in any event overwhelmingly established by other evidence. However, he asserted, this test is improper in dealing with instructional error, because, as noted in
Sandstrom,
the problem of mandatory conclusive presumptions is not only that it conflicts with the overriding presumption of innocence, but also that it “invades the factfinding function which in a criminal case the law assigns solely to the jury.”
Carella, supra,
Last term, in
Yates v. Evatt,
— U.S. -,
Finally, we take note of the Court’s latest pronouncement on the circumstances in which per se error will be found. In
Arizona v. Fulminante,
— U.S.-,-,
We think several conclusions may fairly be drawn from these cases: first, that the Supreme Court has refused to apply a rule of per se reversal in all cases of instructional error, even those affecting core elements of the charged offense, and second, that in fashioning a harmless error standard, it is not unprepared under all circumstances to consider what a “rational jury” would do. In particular, we think the Court would place the question of incomplete or inaccurate jury instructions within the category of errors in the trial process itself, rather than that of structural defects involving basic protections without which no criminal punishment may be regarded as fundamentally fair.
*878 B
Our companion federal appellate court came to much the same conclusion in its recent holding of
United States v. North,
Several recent cases from the other circuits have likewise rejected any per se reversal for erroneous or omitted jury instructions. In
United States v. Kerley,
It concluded that “[w]e prefer the statement by the Second Circuit that
‘in gener
*879
al,
failure to instruct the jury on an essential element of the offense constitutes plain error.’
United States v. Golomb,
In sum, we think it fair to say that the present trend in recent federal circuit court decisions is to reject any per se rule for instructional error on the elements of the crime. In addition to the above cases,
see, e.g., Hennessy v. Goldsmith,
VI
From this survey of recent case law, we conclude that
Kind, supra,
Here, the indictment was specific in identifying the checks in question, to the point of physically incorporating them through photostats into the indictment form. Each of the checks was introduced into evidence. There was not a shred of testimony which suggested that the offenses were committed with any other checks. Every one of the cheeks was in an amount in excess of $250, a fact never contested although plainly relevant by the terms of the indictment. We think it indisputable on this record that “no rational jury” could have found that “the writing in question was falsely made or altered by the defendant,” as the instructions required, and not found that that “writing in question” was or purported to be of a value in excess of $250.
The judgment below is accordingly
Affirmed.
Notes
. The trial court failed to inform the jury that in order to convict the defendant of the "intermediate” level of forgery charged, it must find that each check in question "is or purports to be ... a written instrument having a value of $250 or more." D.C.Code § 22-3842(b)(3) (1989).
. This opinion was formally vacated, as is the normal rule, by our order granting the petition for rehearing en banc.
. The employer, who was disabled, rarely visited the bank himself. Instead, when he needed money, he would write a check to himself on his business account, and have White cash it and deposit the money in his personal account. Blank checks were kept in an office for which only four people, including appellant, had keys. Tellers at the bank, who were familiar with White because of these banking activities on behalf of her employer, identified White as having cashed the eleven checks in question. White in her testimony acknowledged that she believed she had cashed the checks in question but claimed she had either deposited the money in her employer’s personal account or brought the money back to him.
. White also argued before the panel that the cumulative impact of three asserted trial court errors required a reversal for a new trial, and that in any event, the forgery and uttering convictions should merge. The panel concluded there was no merit in these arguments,
. The relevant text of the subsection reads:
(b) No person shall within the District of Columbia possess, with intent to use unlawfully against another, "[a] ... knife with a blade longer than 3 inches.”
. A panel of our court is bound by all prior panel decisions, which can be overruled or modified only by the court sitting en banc. Similarly binding are decisions of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit decided prior to February 1, 1971.
M.A.P. v. Ryan,
. The
Byrd
case was followed in
Jackson v. United States,
.The appellate court indicated it was indifferent whether lack of authority is considered a separate element of the offense or a part of the element of falsity.
. Judge J. Skelly Wright, the author of the opinion in Byrd, was a member of the panel.
. The classic work on the subject remains that of the late chief justice of California. R. Tray-nor. The Riddle of Harmless Error (1970).
. The problem is not unique to criminal appeals, but the law of reversible error has been most fully developed in that context, perhaps because of the significant constitutional overtones.
.In
Allen,
we included an extensive quote from
United States v. Mechanik,
. This standard has of course been set forth in a myriad number of our cases.
See, e.g., Harris
v.
United. States,
. There is a certain overlap in the relevant cases between concerns over the proper allocation of responsibilities between court and jury, which bears upon the failure to give an instruction or the removal by the trial court of an essential element of the crime from jury consideration, and concern over the related but conceptually distinct requirement that the prosecution must prove by evidence every essential element of the charged crime.
In re Winship,
. It also mentioned the example of introduction of a coerced confession, a ground of per se reversible error subsequently rejected in Arizona v. Fulminante, supra.
. In
Rose v. Clark,
as in the case before us, there was no directed verdict, and the jury right was not "altogether denied.” Rather, there was constitutional error in instructing on presumptions, in violation of
Sandstrom v. Montana,
. That portion of the Rose v. Clark opinion reads: "In many cases, the predicate facts conclusively establish intent, so that no rational jury could find that the defendant committed the relevant criminal act but did not intend to cause injury. In that event the erroneous instruction is simply superfluous: the jury has found, in Winship's words, ‘every fact necessary’ to establish every element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt." Id. (emphasis in original) (citations omitted).
. The answer to this inquiry comes, not from a subjective inquiry into the jurors’ minds, but rather from an analysis of the instructions given to the jury and the presumption that jurors follow instructions. As the Court later noted, "the terms of some presumptions so narrow the jury’s focus so as to leave it questionable that a reasonable juror would look to anything but the evidence establishing the predicate fact in order to infer the fact presumed."
Id.
— U.S. at-,
. The Court did not advert to the fact that appellant had made no objection at trial in this capital case. On a previous appeal, the disputed issue was whether the state court could refuse to apply a presumption decision retroactively.
Yates v. Aiken,
. The opinion distinguished three
pre-Carella
cases relied upon by the dissent, noting that in none of them "was the undisputed fact found by the trial judge a logical prerequisite for the jury's finding of the other elements of the crime_”
. Another circumstance where an erroneous instruction may not result in reversible error is where the defendant admitted the requisite factual basis for that element.
Carella,
. In
State v. Teel,
*879 As the Tennessee Supreme Court noted, a conflict of authority exists concerning the availability of harmless error analysis in this situation. Several courts of appeal have held that error resulting from a failure to give proper instructions on the essential elements of an offense cannot be harmless. Hoover v. Garfield Heights Municipal Court,802 F.2d 168 , 175-79 (CA6 1986); United States v. Howard,506 F.2d 1131 , 1133-34 (CA2 1974); United States v. Gaither,440 F.2d 262 , 264 (CADC 1971). Others have held that harmless error analysis can apply. Redding v. Benson,739 F.2d 1360 (CA8 1984), cert. denied,469 U.S. 1222 ,105 S.Ct. 1210 ,84 L.Ed.2d 352 (1985); Bell v. Watkins,692 F.2d 999 , 1004 (CA5 1982). The depth of this conflict underscores the importance of the question. Both considerations counsel for a grant of certiorari.
. We must come to a similar conclusion with respect to any such assertions contained in (Arthur) Byrd v. United States, supra, and Jackson v. United States, supra, upon which Kind rested.
. We do not reach any questions of reversibility vel non in cases of instructional omission which do not meet the test utilized here.
