Court Opinion

ID: 4180445
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2017-06-23 16:08:01.926797+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:46:47.920103
License: Public Domain

1                Opinions of the Colorado Supreme Court are available to the
2            public and can be accessed through the Judicial Branch’s homepage at
3              http://www.courts.state.co.us. Opinions are also posted on the
4              Colorado Bar Association’s homepage at http://www.cobar.org.
5
6                                                           ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
7                                                                         June 19, 2017
8
9                                          2017 CO 70
0
1   No. 14SC340, People v. Roman—Jury Instructions—Lesser Included Offenses—
2   Harmless Error.
3
4          The People sought review of the court of appeals’ judgment reversing Roman’s

5   conviction for first degree assault. See People v. Roman, No. 11CA172 (Colo. App. Mar.

6   20, 2014). The trial court instructed the jury on the lesser included offense of second

7   degree assault committed by intentionally causing bodily injury with a deadly weapon,

8   but it denied Roman’s request for an additional lesser-included-offense instruction on

9   second degree assault committed by recklessly causing serious bodily injury with a

0   deadly weapon. The court of appeals reversed, concluding both that the trial court

1   erred in denying Roman’s requested additional lesser-included-offense instruction and

2   that the error was not harmless.

3          The supreme court reverses the judgment of the court of appeals because in light

4   of the evidence presented at trial and the instructions actually provided to the jury,

5   there was no reasonable possibility that the failure to instruct on reckless second degree

6   assault contributed to the defendant’s conviction of first degree assault, and any error in

7   that regard would therefore have been harmless.
1

2

3                       The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
4                         2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203

5                                         2017 CO 70

6                            Supreme Court Case No. 14SC340
7                          Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals
8                            Court of Appeals Case No. 11CA172
9                                         Petitioner:
0                             The People of the State of Colorado,
1                                              v.
2                                        Respondent:
3                                       Darren Roman.

4                                    Judgment Reversed
5                                           en banc
6                                        June 19, 2017
7
8   Attorneys for Petitioner:
9   Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
0   William G. Kozeliski, Assistant Attorney General
1    Denver, Colorado
2
3   Attorneys for Respondent:
4   Douglas K. Wilson, Public Defender
5   Nathaniel E. Deakins, Deputy Public Defender
6    Denver, Colorado
7
8
9
0
1
2
3
4
5
6   JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1     The People sought review of the court of appeals’ judgment reversing Roman’s

conviction for first degree assault. See People v. Roman, No. 11CA172 (Colo. App. Mar.

20, 2014). The trial court instructed the jury on the lesser included offense of second

degree assault committed by intentionally causing bodily injury with a deadly weapon,

but it denied Roman’s request for an additional lesser-included-offense instruction on

second degree assault committed by recklessly causing serious bodily injury with a

deadly weapon. The court of appeals reversed, concluding both that the trial court

erred in denying Roman’s requested additional lesser-included-offense instruction and

that the error was not harmless.

¶2     In light of the evidence presented at trial and the instructions actually provided

to the jury, there was no reasonable possibility that the failure to instruct on reckless

second degree assault contributed to the defendant’s conviction of first degree assault,

and any error in that regard would therefore have been harmless. The judgment of the

court of appeals is therefore reversed.

                                           I.

¶3     Darren Roman was charged with attempted first degree murder and first degree

assault, as the result of an incident in which the mother of his child suffered a knife

wound to her neck and substantial cuts to her hands. He was convicted of first degree

assault and sentenced to imprisonment for fifteen years.

¶4     The uncontested evidence at trial indicated that on June 7, 2009, the defendant

and the victim were involved in a romantic relationship, shared an apartment, and had

a son together. That day, while both individuals were at their home, the defendant

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discovered a series of romantic text messages on the victim’s cell phone between the

victim and another man, some of which discussed the victim’s plans to end her

relationship with the defendant.    At trial, the victim and the defendant provided

substantially different accounts of what happened following this discovery.

¶5    The victim’s testimony at trial and her statements made to the police shortly after

the incident indicated that the defendant reacted angrily upon seeing the text messages

and attacked her with a knife, threatening to kill her, pinning her on her bed, and

slicing her neck. Her statements and testimony further indicated that although she

fought the defendant off, she was unable to fully close the bedroom door against him,

and when he forced the knife through the remaining opening in the doorway, she

grabbed the blade in an attempt to ward off further injury, cutting her hands in the

process. The prosecution also presented medical evidence to the effect that the victim’s

neck wound came dangerously close to cutting her jugular vein or carotid artery, which

might have proved fatal, and that her hand wounds were deep enough to cut tendons,

permanently impairing both her feeling in, and use of, her hands.

¶6    The defendant testified on his own behalf, denying that he attacked or made any

attempt to stab the victim. Instead, he testified that he threatened to kill himself with

the knife he was holding for that purpose, and that it was the victim who taunted and

pushed him, ultimately cutting her hands on the knife while physically attacking him.

The defendant further testified that upon seeing that the victim had cut herself, he

dropped the knife, which she then retrieved and used to stab him in the hand. The

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defendant’s testimony and theory-of-the-case instruction denied that he cut the victim’s

neck or that she suffered any neck wound while he was present.

¶7     The trial court instructed the jury on the charged offenses, as well as the lesser

included offenses, respectively, of attempted second degree murder and second degree

assault committed by intentionally causing bodily injury with a deadly weapon. The

defendant requested and was allowed an instruction embodying his theory of the case,

which largely tracked his own testimony, denying that he caused any injury to the

victim’s neck, indicating that the victim’s hands were injured accidentally when she

pushed him and grabbed the knife he was holding, and indicating further that his own

knife wound was caused by the victim when she picked up the knife and stabbed him

with it. The defendant also tendered, among others, an instruction that presented the

jury with the opportunity, if it were not satisfied that he was guilty of first degree

assault, to find him guilty of either of two additional lesser included offenses. One of

these additional lesser included offenses was an alternate way of committing second

degree assault, by recklessly causing serious bodily injury to another person by means

of a deadly weapon, and the other was third degree assault, committed by negligently

causing bodily injury to another person with a deadly weapon. The trial court denied

this instruction, finding that the evidence did not provide a rational basis to acquit of

the charged offense and still convict of either of these two lesser offenses.

¶8     The jury returned verdicts of not guilty as to either attempted first or second

degree murder. Rather than returning verdicts of not guilty of assault or finding the

defendant guilty of only second degree assault, as its instructions permitted, however,

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the jury returned a verdict of guilty of first degree assault, as charged. Judgment

therefore entered, and the defendant was sentenced for first degree assault.

¶9     On direct appeal, the court of appeals reversed, finding both that the trial court

erred in denying the defendant’s requested instruction on reckless second degree

assault and that the error was not harmless.        With regard to the denial of the

defendant’s requested lesser-included-offense instruction itself, the intermediate

appellate court relied on case law of its own that it considered analogous, as well as

case law from this court concerning lesser-included-homicide instructions, to find that

the defendant’s testimony to the effect that he was holding a knife to threaten suicide

and maintained possession of the knife as a physical altercation occurred with the

victim was enough to provide a rational basis to support a conviction for recklessly

causing the victim’s injuries. With regard to harmlessness, the intermediate appellate

court found that the erroneous denial of a lesser-offense instruction could be harmless

only if the jury found the defendant guilty of a charged offense in lieu of an available

lesser included offense, of which the erroneously denied offense was itself a lesser

included offense.

¶10    The People petitioned for review of the court of appeals’ determination that

denying the defendant’s tendered reckless-second-degree-assault instruction was not

harmless, and the defendant cross-petitioned concerning the denial of his separately

tendered instruction concerning provocation. We granted only the People’s petition for

a writ of certiorari.

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                                             II.

¶11    In Mata-Medina v. People, 71 P.3d 973, 980 (Colo. 2003), we squarely rejected the

contention that the harmless constitutional error standard should apply to the

erroneous denial of a requested lesser-offense instruction, relying in part on

jurisprudence of the United States Supreme Court withholding judgment on that

question except where the error “forces the jury into an all-or-nothing decision between

capital murder and innocence.” Instead, we held that “[w]hen the trial court errs in

failing to give a jury instruction that the defendant requested and to which he was

entitled, the appellate court reviews that error under a harmless error standard.” Id.

Pursuant to this standard, as delineated in Crim. P. 52(a), a defendant is entitled to have

his conviction reversed only if the error affected his substantial rights.

¶12    As we have only recently made clear, substantial evolution of the law governing

reversible error, in both the jurisprudence of this court and that of the Supreme Court,

and especially the Supreme Court’s distinction between structural and trial error, now

fully embraced in this jurisdiction, has led to the conclusion that a trial right impacted

by the error in question can never be classified as “substantial” based solely on the

nature of the error itself. See People v. Novotny, 2014 CO 18, ¶¶ 14–27, 320 P.3d 1194,

1199–203. Rather, a conclusion that a trial error has affected a substantial right of the

defendant can only result from a case specific assessment of the likely impact of the

error in question on the outcome of the litigation as a whole. Id. at ¶ 27, 320 P.3d at

1203. With regard to lesser included offenses in particular, as our finding of harmless

error in Mata-Medina, 71 P.3d at 982–83, had already made clear, the erroneous denial

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of a requested instruction constitutes trial, rather than structural, error, which does not

necessarily affect a substantial right of the defendant and, therefore, does not

necessarily warrant reversal.

¶13      Although Crim. P. 52, defining and prescribing the consequences of both

harmless and plain error, is virtually identical to Fed. R. Crim. P. 52, and although we

have increasingly come to rely on federal standards concerning the nature and

reversibility of particular errors, see Novotny, ¶¶ 19–23, 320 P.3d at 1200–02, unlike the

harmless constitutional error standard, we have never fully adopted the federal

understanding of the appropriate standard for either plain or harmless error, see

Krutsinger v. People, 219 P.3d 1054, 1063 (Colo. 2009).                   With regard to

non-constitutional harmless error, in particular, we have not always articulated our

conclusions in identical terms. Rather than attempt to reconcile any possible disparity

of expression, however, it is enough here that objected-to trial error clearly must be

classified as harmless if there is no reasonable probability, or possibility,1 that it

contributed to the defendant’s conviction. Crider v. People, 186 P.3d 39, 42–43 (Colo.

2008).

¶14      In addition to making clear that the harmless error standard requires an

evaluation of the likely impact of any error on the outcome of the proceeding, we have

1 Unlike the United States Supreme Court, see, e.g., Strickler v. Greene, 527 U.S. 263,
289–91 (1999), this court has generally used the terms “reasonable probability” and
“reasonable possibility” interchangeably with regard to the likely effect of an act or
ruling on the result of a trial, see Krutsinger, 216 P.3d at 1063 (explaining that in Salcedo
v. People, 999 P.2d 833, 841 (Colo. 2000), this court recast, without expressly
acknowledging it, the “reasonable possibility” test for harmless error articulated in a
prior decision as a “reasonable probability” standard).

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also indicated that the question of prejudicial impact cannot be reduced to a specific set

of factors. Id. at 43. While the strength of the evidence supporting a verdict is often an

important consideration, so too is the specific nature of the error in question and the

nature of the prejudice or risk of prejudice associated with it.        Id.   The possible

prejudicial impact of erroneously denying a criminal defendant a lesser-offense

instruction is therefore limited by the rationale and purposes for permitting him to

present the jury with additional options in the first place.

¶15    We have long held that a defendant is entitled to have the jury apprised of his

theory of the case as long as there is any evidence to support it, even if that theory is

highly improbable and finds support only in the testimony of the defendant himself.

People v. Nunez, 841 P.2d 261, 264–65 (Colo. 1992).            Presenting the jury with a

defendant’s explanation of the evidence is considered so integral to his right to present

a defense that we have required trial courts to help craft proper theory-of-the-case

instructions rather than simply reject ones they consider improper. See Nunez, 841 P.2d

at 265; People v. Moya, 512 P.2d 1155, 1156 (Colo. 1973). Depending on the nature of

the defendant’s theory and the evidence supporting it, he may also be entitled to

instructions setting forth the statutory elements of either a crime or defense, permitting

the jury to give effect to his theory by finding him guilty of no more than some less

serious offense or by exonerating him altogether.

¶16    In this jurisdiction, a criminal defendant is entitled to an instruction permitting

the jury to find him guilty of a lesser offense, whether included in the charged offense

or not, where it is supported by the evidence and the defendant wants it. People v.

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Rivera, 525 P.2d 431, 434 (Colo. 1974). In holding as we did in Rivera, we expressed the

conviction that better trials and fairer verdicts would be insured by permitting the jury

to consider and convict of a lesser offense presented by the defendant’s theory of the

case, rather than forcing it to choose between convicting of a greater charged offense of

which it is unconvinced and acquitting the defendant altogether. Id.; cf. Keeble v.

United States, 412 U.S. 205, 212–13 (1973) (finding defendant entitled to a

lesser-included-offense instruction as protection against the risk of wrongful conviction

on the greater charged offense despite some element remaining in doubt). Implicit in

this rationale was not only a concern that juries might otherwise disregard their

instructions and convict of a crime more serious than the one they actually believed to

have been committed rather than acquit altogether, but also a concern that juries should

be given an opportunity, when justified by the evidence, to give effect to a defendant’s

theory that he committed a crime less serious than the one with which he was charged.

¶17    With regard to charges of homicide, at least those including less culpable

homicide offenses distinguishable largely by the mental state of the defendant, we have

identified a third interest in presenting the jury with lesser-included-offense

instructions.   Although the standard of evidentiary support for a lesser-offense

instruction is generally expressed as a rational basis to acquit of the greater and convict

of the lesser offense, with regard to lesser homicide offenses, we have long required that

instructions be given upon request, whenever there is some evidence, however slight,

incredible, or unreasonable, tending to establish the lesser included offense.         See

Mata-Medina, 71 P.3d at 979 (citing People v. Shaw, 646 P.2d 375, 379 (Colo. 1982), and

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Crawford v. People, 20 P. 769, 770 (Colo. 1889)). With regard to this class of offenses,

our holdings have consistently reflected a preference that it be left for the jury, under

proper instructions, to consider the evidence and determine the “grade of crime” of

which the defendant should be convicted, unless the record lacks any support

whatsoever for conviction of that crime. Shaw, 646 P.2d at 380; Read v. People, 205 P.2d

233, 235 (Colo. 1949).

¶18    In Mata-Medina, we addressed the question whether the erroneous denial of a

defendant’s requested instruction on criminally negligent homicide amounted to

harmless error. 71 P.3d at 980–83. Under the circumstances of that case, in which the

jury considered but rejected a reckless manslaughter conviction in favor of second

degree murder, we concluded that the error was indeed harmless for the reason that the

jury necessarily, if only implicitly, rejected conviction of criminally negligent homicide.

Id. at 982–83. The jury’s finding that the defendant caused the death of the victim

knowingly rather than recklessly foreclosed any possibility that it could have found he

did so only by acting with criminal negligence. Id. at 983. In holding as we did,

however, we nowhere suggested that the erroneous denial of a requested

lesser-included-homicide instruction, much less the erroneous denial of other than

homicide lesser-included-offense instructions, could be found harmless only where

guilt of the offense in question had been necessarily rejected by the jury.

¶19    Quite the contrary, although we suggested in Mata-Medina that our precedent

would not permit a finding of harmlessness based solely on a jury’s verdict of guilt on

the charged offense, see id. at 980, we also noted, without disapproval, the holdings of

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other jurisdictions to the effect that any prejudice associated with the erroneous failure

to give a requested lesser-offense instruction would be vitiated by the jury’s rejection of

a comparable lesser included offense and finding of guilt as to the charged offense, id.

at 983 n.9 (citing Commonwealth v. Chase, 741 N.E.2d 59, 66 (Mass. 2001), and

Commonwealth v. Counterman, 719 A.2d 284, 304 (Pa. 1998)). While the rationale of

these holdings in other jurisdictions may be persuasive with regard to the concern that,

in the absence of some comparable lesser-offense option, juries might disregard their

instructions and convict of a charged offense about which they are not fully convinced

rather than acquit altogether, it cannot also vitiate the prejudice flowing from

erroneously depriving the jury of an opportunity to accept and implement the

defendant’s theory that he merely committed a particular lesser offense. Therefore, in

the event that a defendant is erroneously denied a requested instruction presenting the

jury with an option to convict of a lesser included offense according to his theory of the

case, more is required to demonstrate harmlessness than merely the rejection of a

comparable lesser offense.

¶20   In this case, however, it can be fairly determined that there is no reasonable

possibility the defendant was prejudiced by an erroneous rejection of his requested

instruction on reckless second degree assault. By disregarding the comparable lesser

included offense of second degree assault that was actually available to it, the jury

clearly demonstrated that it did not find the defendant guilty of first degree assault

simply because it had no less serious option short of acquittal and despite being

unconvinced of his guilt of that offense. Similarly, there was no reasonable possibility

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the jury could have accepted and implemented the defendant’s theory of the case by

convicting of reckless second degree assault in lieu of first degree assault, had that

option been available to it, for the simple reason that it was never the defendant’s

theory that he committed reckless second degree assault or any other lesser offense of

first degree assault—in both his testimony and his theory-of-the-case instruction the

defendant steadfastly denied causing the victim’s injuries.

¶21     The intermediate appellate court found a rational basis in the evidence to convict

the defendant of recklessly “causing” the victim’s injuries by simply arming himself

with a knife, threatening to kill himself, and maintaining possession of the knife as a

physical altercation occurred with the victim. Whether there was support for this

scenario in the record, and whether evidence of such a scenario could provide a rational

basis to convict the defendant of reckless second degree assault in any event, are

matters not currently before this court. Even assuming the trial court erred in declining

to give the defendant’s requested instruction, in light of both the jury’s rejection of the

lesser included offense of which it had the option to convict and the defendant’s

testimony and theory of the case, there is nevertheless no reasonable possibility that the

defendant was prejudiced by any inability of the jury to implement his theory of the

case.

¶22     The defendant’s testimony and theory-of-the-case instruction unequivocally and

unwaiveringly asserted that he never undertook any voluntary action to either threaten

or stab the victim. As the court of appeals appeared to acknowledge, in order to find

him guilty of nothing more than recklessly assaulting the victim with a deadly weapon,

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consistent with this theory of the case, the jury would be required to reason that by

threatening to kill himself with a knife, the defendant disregarded a substantial and

unjustifiable risk that the victim would challenge him to do so, would physically attack

him, and would cut her own hands and neck on his knife by her own conduct. Whether

it could satisfy the causation element of the crime in any event, in light of the physical

evidence and diametrically opposed accounts of what transpired—neither of which

remotely suggested this scenario—we find there to be no reasonable possibility that the

jury would have engaged in such a chain of reasoning.

                                           III.

¶23    In light of the evidence presented at trial and the instructions actually provided

to the jury, there was no reasonable possibility that the failure to instruct on reckless

second degree assault contributed to the defendant’s conviction of first degree assault,

and any error in that regard would therefore have been harmless. The judgment of the

court of appeals is therefore reversed.

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