for the Court:
¶ 1. Twonia Renee Williams was convicted in the Circuit Court of Harrison County, Mississippi, for the murder of Katrina Sergeant. She was sentenced to life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections (MDOC). On appeal, Williams contends that jury instructions S-2A, S-4, and/or S-6 were given in error.
FACTS
¶ 2. In late November, 2009, Twonia Williams ended her three-and-a-half year relationship with Sean Lindsay. According to Williams, she “put [Lindsay] out” of her home due to his continued infidelity. Almost immediately, Lindsay moved in with his new girlfriend, Katrina Sergeant, her three children, and her niece, Stacey McCall.
¶ 3. McCall testified that, around midnight on December 5, 2010, she and Sergeant drove to the gas station in “[Lindsay’s] truck” to purchase “black and mild ... cigars].” Williams’s cousin recognized McCall and Sergeant in Lindsay’s truck and called Williams tо inform her of what she had seen. Williams admitted being upset by this information because she had “just struggled to get the $2000 to get [the truck] paid off so [Lindsay] could get his title.”
¶ 4. Shortly after McCall and Sergeant returned home from the gas station, Williams began calling Lindsay’s phone rеpeatedly. Lindsay placed the calls on speaker phone, and McCall overheard Williams say she was “about to come blow up the house, blow up everybody in there.” Williams continued calling until Lindsay turned his phone off, at which point, she got in her car and drove to Sergeant’s house. According to Williams, she initially was not going to stop, but, as she drove by, she saw the front “door ... fly open” and believed that “[Lindsay] was coming out to talk to her.” However, Sergeant, and not Lindsay, emerged from the front doоr. Williams testified that she parked and exited her car with “the gun in [her] hand,” and that an argument ensued between her and Sergeant. Williams claimed that she told Sergeant she just “wanted to see [Lindsay],” but that Sergeant told her, “you need to leave, you’re not going to tаlk to [Lindsay], you need to leave.” Williams admitted that, at some point in the argument, she shot Sergeant, causing her death.
¶ 5. On July, 26, 2010, Williams was indicted for “willfully, feloniously and without the authority of law killing] and murdering] Katrina Sergeant, a human being, with deliberate design....” See Miss.Code Ann. § 97-3-19(l)(a) (Rev.2006). On February 14, 2012, the jury trial commenced. Williams testified on her own behalf, “... sometime or another I did pull the trigger ... I was arguing with [Sergeant] and I was talking with her with my hand. The gun went off, and I heard it pop and saw [Sergeant] go to the ground.” Despite acknowledging on direct examination that shе “did pull the trigger,” Williams claimed that she shot Sergeant by accident. However, two eyewitnesses contradicted Williams’s claim. McCall testified that she was outside with Sergeant when the confrontation took place, and that Williams raised the gun up to Sergeant’s
¶ 6. Williams was found guilty of murder and sentenced to “life imprisonment in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections.” After hearing, the circuit court denied Williams’s “Motion for New Trial or Judgment Notwithstanding the Verdict (NOV).” Thereafter, Williams filed this “Notice of Appeal.”
ISSUE
¶ 7. On appeal, this Court will consider: Whether the circuit court еrred in granting instructions S-2A, S^4 and/or S-6.
ANALYSIS
¶ 8. The jury instructions at issue read, in pertinent part:
[A] person is presumed to have intended the natural and probable consequences of his voluntary and deliberate acts. (Instruction S — 4.)
“[D]eliberate design” may be inferred through the intentional use of any instrument which based on its manner of use is calculated to produce death or serious bodily injury. (Instruction S-2A.)
[I]f wounds are inflicted upon a person with a deadly weapon in a manner calculated to destroy life then intent may be inferred from the use of the weapon. (Instruction S-6.)
(Emphasis added.)
¶ 9. “Jury instructions are generally within the discretion of the trial court and the settlеd standard of review is abuse of discretion.” Bailey v. State,
¶ 10. Williams was indicted for “deliberate design” murder pursuant to Mississippi Code Section 97-3-19(1)(a). “[Deliberate design connotes an intent to kill.... ” Brown v. State,
¶ 11. Williams admits that she shot and killed Sergeant. Her defense at trial was that the shooting was an accident, and, therefore, she lacked the requisite intent to be found guilty of “deliberate design” murder.
¶ 12. Williams relies primarily on the United States Supreme Court’s hоldings in Sandstrom v. Montana,
¶ 13. This Court has condemned similar presumptive instructions. In Tran v. State,
¶ 14. The State counters that, when the instructions are read as a whole, S — 4 did not shift the burden of proof. Specifically, the State directs this Court to instructions C-3, C-6, S-8 and S-10. C-3 instructed the jury that Williams was “presume[d] ... innocent” and that the “State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt” that Williams was “guilty of every material element of the offense.” C-5 instructed the jury, in pertinent part, “not to single out any certain ... instruction and ignore others. The order in which these instructions are given has no significance.... ” S-8 allowed the jury to find Williams not guilty based on “accident or misfortune,” and S-10 encompassed the lesser-included offense of manslaughter.
¶ 15. But Sandstrom and Francis addressed and rejected the very arguments presented by the State. In addition to the еrroneous instruction, the Sandstrom “jury was instructed generally that the accused was presumed innocent until
¶ 16. Comparing the instructions reveals an additional conflict. S-4 conflicts with instruction S-9. S-9 stated, “[t]he Court instructs the jury that an intentional act cannot be excused under the doctrine of accident or misfortune.” When S-4 and S-9 are read together, а reasonable juror may have determined that the shooting could not have been an accident because “[Williams was] presumed to have intended the natural and probable consequences of [her] ... acts” and “an intentional act cannot be ... [an] accident_”
¶ 17. Additionally, the State argues that instruction S-4 did not emplоy the mandatory terms “shall” or “will,” and, therefore, merely created a permissive inference for the jury. Yet, the absence of “shall” or “will” does not automatically render S-4 permissive. Rather, we consider the distinctive differences between “infer” аnd “presume.” “Infer” is defined as “to conclude from certain premises or evidence.” Webster’s II New College Dictionary 567 (2001). By this definition, a jury may not make an inference without evidence adduced at trial to support that inference. However, S-4 did not employ “infer,” but instead usеd “presume,” which is defined as “to assume to be true without proof to the contrary.” Webster’s II New College Dictionary 875 (2001). “Assume” is analogous to “presume” and “stress[es] the arbitrary acceptance as true of something which has not yet been proved.” Webster’s Dictionary of Synonyms 646 (1942). As a presumption is accepted as true -without proof to the cоntrary, it follows that the burden was shifted to the defendant to provide proof.
¶ 18. The Sandstrom Court addressed the contention that the instruction merely created a permissible inference and stated, “[this] argument[ ] need not detain us long ... [,]” for “Sandstrom’s jurors ... were not told that thеy had a choice, or that they might infer that conclusion; they were told only that the law presumed it.” Sandstrom,
¶ 19. S-2A and S-6 clearly illustrate the distinction in which the jury is given guidance on what it may infer from the evidence adduced at trial. In contrast tо S-4, S-2A and S-6 explicitly used the phrase “may be inferred.” In addition to including the permissive “may,” the instructions allow the jury the discretion to reach a conclusion only if evidence has been presented to support that conclusion, thus creating a true permissive inference. Francis,
¶ 20. S^l is practically indistinguishable from the burden-shifting instructions condemned in Sandstrom and Francis and the instruction which relieved the prosecution of its burden of persuasion condemned in Tran. In contrast to the permissive inference established by S-2A and S-6, S-4 created a mandatory presumption which could allow a conviction based upon a presumption as opposed to evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, S-4 was given in error.
¶ 21. Having found error, this Court may consider whether such error was harmless. “Error is harmless if it is clear beyond a reasonable doubt that it did not contribute to the verdict.” Conley v. State,
CONCLUSION
¶ 22. The circuit court erred in granting instruction S-4, and such error cannot be considered harmless in this case. Therefore, we reverse Williams’s conviction and sentence and remand the case to the Circuit Court of Harrison County for a new trial consistent with this opinion.
¶ 23. REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The gun used was a Rossi .357 magnum revolver. Beall testified that the gun requires fifteen-seventeen pounds of trigger pressure to fire when the hammer is unbooked. If the hammer is cocked, the gun requires two to two and a half pounds of trigger pressure to fire.
. Consistent with this defense, Williams received two separate manslaughter instructions and an instruction on accident or mistake.
. Along with the two instructions noted in Sandstrom, jurors in Francis also were instructed on ‘'misfortune or accident.”
