Court Opinion

ID: 4416175
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-07-12 09:05:40.851733+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:30:20.845918
License: Public Domain

Michigan Supreme Court
                                                                                            Lansing, Michigan

Syllabus
                                                             Chief Justice:               Justices:
                                                              Bridget M. McCormack        Stephen J. Markman
                                                                                          Brian K. Zahra
                                                             Chief Justice Pro Tem:
                                                                                          Richard H. Bernstein
                                                              David F. Viviano            Elizabeth T. Clement
                                                                                          Megan K. Cavanagh

This syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been                Reporter of Decisions:
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.                  Kathryn L. Loomis

                                             PEOPLE v WALKER

             Docket No. 155198. Argued on application for leave to appeal January 24, 2019. Decided
      July 11, 2019.

               Harold L. Walker was convicted following a jury trial in the Wayne Circuit Court of being
      a felon in possession of a firearm, MCL 750.224f; carrying a concealed weapon, MCL 750.227;
      and possession of a firearm when committing or attempting to commit a felony, MCL 750.227b(1).
      In August 2014, defendant was on parole from a prior felony conviction; conditions of defendant’s
      parole prohibited him from possessing a weapon and from being around alcohol. On August 5,
      2014, police officers saw a group of four individuals drinking beer and listening to loud music near
      a vehicle in Detroit. As the officers approached the group, defendant walked toward the nearby
      house, holding something in the front pocket of his pants that appeared to be heavy. When he
      reached the front porch of the house, defendant threw something into a bush beside the porch; the
      police arrested defendant after they recovered a loaded revolver from the bush. Defendant asserted
      through his own testimony as well as that of a corroborating witness that the witness had earlier
      hidden the gun in the bushes and that defendant had tossed a beer bottle into the bush, not a gun.
      After the jury was picked, the court noted that Juror No. 8 was late, had not called in, and that “bad
      things might happen to that person.” When the juror arrived, the juror was seated in view of the
      other jurors in the area reserved for in-custody criminal defendants before being dismissed from
      the jury. Approximately 75 minutes after it began deliberating, the jury notified the trial court that
      it was deadlocked. The trial court gave a supplemental, ad-lib instruction to the jury (instead of
      the M Crim JI 3.12 deadlocked-jury instruction), sent the jury members to lunch, and twice
      instructed the jury to let the court know if any jurors were failing to follow the instructions or
      failing to participate in deliberations. The jury found defendant guilty of all charges approximately
      90 minutes after resuming deliberations following lunch. Defendant appealed in the Court of
      Appeals, arguing that he was entitled to a new trial because the trial court’s deadlocked-jury
      instruction was impermissibly coercive. In an unpublished per curiam opinion issued December 1,
      2016 (Docket No. 327063), the Court of Appeals, FORT HOOD, P.J., and O’BRIEN, J. (GLEICHER,
      J., dissenting), affirmed, reasoning that, in context, the instruction did not coerce a verdict.
      Defendant sought leave to appeal, and the Supreme Court ordered and heard oral argument on
      whether to grant the application or take other action. 501 Mich. 1088 (2018).

            In an opinion by Justice CAVANAGH, joined by Chief Justice MCCORMACK, and Justices
      VIVIANO, BERNSTEIN, and CLEMENT, the Supreme Court, in lieu of granting leave to appeal, held:
       M Crim JI 3.12 provides model jury instructions that may be used when a jury appears to
be deadlocked. Although every deviation from M Crim JI 3.12 does not constitute error requiring
reversal, the trial court’s ad-lib supplemental instruction omitted nearly every safeguard provided
by the model instruction and crossed the line from appropriately encouraging deliberation to being
unduly coercive: the instruction (1) failed to offer constructive advice to encourage further
deliberation, (2) omitted important safeguards of jurors’ honest convictions, and (3) included
coercive language. In addition, the instruction was delivered in a coercive atmosphere given the
tenor of the proceedings. Taken together, these circumstances impermissibly coerced jurors to
surrender their honestly held beliefs for the sake of reaching a verdict. The Court of Appeals
judgment was reversed and the case remanded for a new trial before a different judge.

        1. When a jury indicates that it cannot reach a unanimous verdict, a trial court may give a
supplemental instruction to encourage the jury to continue deliberating. If a jury indicates that it
is deadlocked after deliberating too short a period for thoughtful deliberation, the trial court may
simply instruct the jury to continue their deliberations. The goal of an instruction to a jury that
cannot reach a verdict is to encourage deliberation without coercing a verdict and to offer
constructive guidance on how to deliberate. In that regard, giving an honest-conviction reminder
tempers the trial court’s simultaneous emphasis on reaching a unanimous agreement. Encouraging
jurors to single out jurors who are not participating when there is no indication that a juror has
refused to deliberate can constitute undue pressure, threats, or embarrassing assertions that would
tend to force a decision or cause a juror to abandon his or her conscientious dissent and defer to
the majority. M Crim JI 3.12, the model deadlocked-jury instruction, balances the goal of
encouraging deliberation without coercing a verdict, but that is not the only instruction that may
be given to a deadlocked jury. In other words, every deviation from the model instruction does
not constitute error requiring reversal. The relevant inquiry—considering the factual context in
which the instruction was given on a case-by-case basis—is whether the instruction given could
cause a juror to abandon his or her conscientious dissent and defer to the majority solely for the
sake of reaching agreement.

        2. Taken together, the trial court’s ad-lib supplemental instruction to the jury was unduly
coercive because (1) the instruction lacked constructive guidance to the jury on how to continue
deliberating and break through the impasse and encouraged an antagonistic relationship among the
jurors when it prompted them to single out any juror who was refusing to deliberate when there
was no indication that a juror had refused to deliberate; (2) the instruction failed to remind the
jurors that they should not give up their honestly held beliefs for the sake of reaching an agreement;
(3) rather than simply instructing the jury to continue its deliberations, the instruction contained
coercive language that telegraphed to jurors that failure to reach a verdict was not an option and
suggested that jurors single out other jurors for refusing to deliberate when there was no indication
that a juror had refused to deliberate; and (4) the trial court’s conduct during the trial telegraphed
that the court would not tolerate a hung jury. In addition, the quick turnaround in arriving at a
guilty verdict after the court’s supplemental instruction suggested that the verdict was coerced.
Therefore, the instruction given not only omitted nearly every safeguard contained in M Crim JI
3.12, but it was administered in a coercive atmosphere. The instruction affected defendant’s
substantial rights and the fairness, integrity, and public reputation of the judicial proceedings by
affecting the jury’s verdict.
        3. The case was assigned to a different judge on remand because, given the trial court’s
interactions with defendant during sentencing, the original trial judge would have substantial
difficulty setting aside her previously expressed views. Reassignment was necessary to preserve
the appearance of justice given the court’s hostility and bias toward defendant, and any waste or
duplication was not out of proportion to the gain in preserving the appearance of fairness.

       Reversed and remanded for a new trial.

        Justice ZAHRA, joined by Justice MARKMAN, dissenting, disagreed with the majority’s
conclusion that the trial court’s supplemental instructions were unduly coercive. The majority’s
holding did not reflect the traditional notion of jury coercion. While the majority acknowledged
that it would have been permissible for the trial court to instruct the jury to continue its
deliberations after it was deadlocked, the two statements relied on by the majority to support its
coercion conclusion ignored the practical realities the trial court faced when the jury indicated it
was deadlocked after deliberating for only 75 minutes. The trial court was uniquely situated to
determine whether the jury needed a break or was at a true impasse, and the court reasonably
concluded that that the jury had not engaged in a meaningful deliberative process that led to an
impasse. Thus, the trial court’s statements were directed at the jury’s failure to engage in full-
fledged deliberation, not its failure to reach a verdict. No reasonable juror would have interpreted
the court’s statements as compelling a verdict by force or intimidation. Instead, the trial court
appropriately gave the jurors a lunch break to help them engage in the deliberative process when
they returned. The trial court’s instruction that the jury should let the court know if any juror was
failing to follow instructions or refusing to participate in the process did not amount to undue
pressure, threats, or embarrassing assertions that tended to force a decision or make a juror abandon
his or her conscientious dissent and defer to the majority. Significantly, the trial court did not
appeal to civic duty or assert that failure to reach a verdict constituted a failure of purpose; the
only requirement imposed by the trial court was that the jurors go to lunch, which did not coerce
one or more jurors to vote to convict. The trial court’s failure to remind the jurors that they should
maintain their honest convictions after the jury suggested it might be at an impasse was not
dispositive of whether the instructions were coercive; the instruction emphasized that the jurors
had not deliberated a sufficient amount of time rather than emphasizing the need to reach a
unanimous verdict, making the honest-conviction reminder unnecessary. Because the jury had
been given a written copy of the court’s final instructions that included honest-conviction
reminders, the trial court’s failure to reiterate that instruction did not transform the instruction to
deliberate after returning from lunch into an unduly coercive one. The trial court did not have to
provide guidance on how to continue deliberating and how to break through the impasse because
it correctly decided that the jury was not truly deadlocked. While the correct inquiry was whether
the supplemental instruction was coercive, the majority’s holding promoted a per se rule that any
departure from M Crim JI 3.12 would necessarily result in the instruction being unduly coercive.
In addition, the majority incorrectly relied on portions of the lower court record that were unrelated
to whether the supplemental instruction was coercive, and those portions did not support its
conclusion that the instruction was coercive. The majority’s conclusion demonstrated that it was
disconnected from the trial-court process because the court’s statements to Juror No. 8, which the
majority relied on to support its ultimate conclusion, exhibited the trial court’s interest in running
a timely and efficient, no-nonsense courtroom; the statements did not signal to the remaining jurors
that they should ignore the jury instructions and, instead, follow the court’s implicit views of the
case. Even if the trial court erred by giving the supplemental instruction, reversal was not required
because defendant failed to demonstrate that the instruction affected the fairness, integrity, and
public reputation of the judicial proceedings. Justice ZAHRA would have affirmed the judgment
of the Court of Appeals.

                                    ©2019 State of Michigan
                                                                            Michigan Supreme Court
                                                                                  Lansing, Michigan

OPINION
                                                   Chief Justice:                 Justices:
                                                    Bridget M. McCormack          Stephen J. Markman
                                                                                  Brian K. Zahra
                                                   Chief Justice Pro Tem:         Richard H. Bernstein
                                                    David F. Viviano              Elizabeth T. Clement
                                                                                  Megan K. Cavanagh

                                                                    FILED July 11, 2019

                             STATE OF MICHIGAN

                                      SUPREME COURT

  PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,

                Plaintiff-Appellee,

  v                                                                 No. 155198

  HAROLD LAMONT WALKER,

                Defendant-Appellant.

 BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH

 CAVANAGH, J.
       At issue in this case is whether the trial court committed error requiring reversal

 when it gave an ad-lib deadlocked-jury instruction. We conclude that it did. The

 instruction given by the trial court lacked constructive advice to encourage further

 deliberation, omitted important safeguards of jurors’ honest convictions, included coercive

 language, and was delivered in a coercive atmosphere. We hold that the instruction crossed

 the line from appropriately encouraging deliberation and candid consideration to

 impermissibly coercing jurors to surrender their honestly held beliefs for the sake of
reaching a verdict. The error was plain, affected defendant’s substantial rights, and

affected the fairness, integrity, and public reputation of the judicial proceeding.

Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand the case to the

Wayne Circuit Court for a new trial. Additionally, in light of the trial court’s conduct

during defendant’s sentencing, we direct that defendant be retried before a different judge.

Because we hold that defendant is entitled to a new trial, we do not address his remaining

issues.

                        I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

          On August 8, 2014, defendant, Harold L. Walker, was charged with being a felon

in possession of a firearm (felon-in-possession) under MCL 750.224f; carrying a concealed

weapon (CCW) under MCL 750.227; and possession of a firearm when committing or

attempting to commit a felony (felony-firearm) under MCL 750.227b(1). At trial, multiple

police officers testified that on August 5, 2014, while on routine patrol in a high-crime

residential area of Detroit, they saw four people standing and drinking beer on a sidewalk

outside a home, near a vehicle playing loud music. As the police officers approached the

group, defendant quickly walked away, holding something that appeared to be heavy in a

front pocket of his pants. When he reached the home’s porch, defendant pulled from his

pocket what looked to the officers like a large-frame revolver and threw it into a bush

beside the porch. The police recovered a loaded revolver from the bush and arrested

defendant. As a condition of his parole from a prior felony conviction, defendant was not

allowed to possess a weapon.

                                             2
         Defendant offered an alternative explanation for the revolver being in the bush.

Darryl Jevon Williams, Jr., lived in the neighborhood and was with defendant on the night

in question. Williams testified that he knew defendant was on parole and that defendant

could not be around guns, so Williams hid his gun in the bush before defendant arrived.

Both Williams and defendant testified that it was a Budweiser beer bottle that defendant

had tossed into the bush and that defendant had tossed the bottle because he could not be

around alcohol while on parole.

         At his trial, defendant presented one witness (Williams) and testified on his own

behalf. The jury began deliberating at 11:19 a.m. At 12:36 p.m., the trial court announced

to counsel that the jury “sent out a note saying that they can’t reach a decision and they’re

deadlocked.” The court stated that, later, if there was another note from the jury, it would

“read the Allen[1] Instruction, but at this point after one hour of deliberations I don’t think,

you know, that they’ve even made a [sic] effort.”

         When the jury reentered the courtroom, the trial court stated that it had received two

notes: one requesting to see the gun (which the trial court noted had already been

accomplished), and one stating, “We are hung and I don’t believe there will be and [sic]

agreement with more time.” The trial court then delivered the following instruction:

                Well, that’s not the way this works. Your [sic] all heard a full day of
         testimony, and you deliberated for what a [sic] hour and fifteen minutes, and
         now you just give up. That’s not the way it works, I’m sending you all to
         lunch, maybe what you need is some time a part [sic] and some nourishment,
         other than candy, to help you all, you know, have clear heads and review the
         evidence that you heard.

1
Allen v United States, 164 U.S. 492; 17 S. Ct. 154; 41 L. Ed. 528 (1896).

                                               3
              Now, if there’s someone among you who’s failing to follow the
       instructions or there’s someone who’s refusing to participate in the process,
       you can send us a note and let us know that and we can address that, but at
       this point I’m not inclined to end your deliberations at this point because you
       had a full day of testimony and you’ve only been at this, discussing it, for
       one hour.

               So I’m going to send you to lunch, maybe sometime [sic] apart will
       help you all to think about things, and then you’ll come back in one hour and
       resume your deliberations. If you have any questions, if there is anything
       that you don’t understand or need clarification on send a note. And again, if
       there’s one among you or two among you, three among you who are refusing
       to follow the instructions or participate in the process you can let us know
       that, too. [Emphasis added.]

       The jury returned a verdict of guilty on all counts at 3:07 p.m., approximately 1½

hours after returning from lunch. The trial court sentenced defendant as a fourth-offense

habitual offender, MCL 769.12, to concurrent prison terms of 46 months to 75 years for

felon-in-possession and CCW, both of which were to be served consecutively to the

mandatory 10-year sentence for third-offense felony-firearm.2

       Defendant filed a claim of appeal in the Court of Appeals arguing, among other

assertions of error, that the trial court’s deadlocked-jury instruction was impermissibly

coercive.   In an unpublished opinion, a divided Court of Appeals panel affirmed

defendant’s convictions. People v Walker, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of

Appeals, issued December 1, 2016 (Docket No. 327063), p 12. In relevant part, the Court

of Appeals majority reasoned that the trial court’s jury instruction “stressed to the jury the

2
  The Court of Appeals remanded to the trial court the ministerial issue of correcting
defendant’s judgment of sentence because the judgment should have provided that his
felony-firearm sentence is to be served consecutively to his felon-in-possession sentence
only, and not consecutively to his CCW sentence. People v Walker, unpublished per
curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued December 1, 2016 (Docket No. 327063),
p 6.

                                              4
importance of engaging in a full-fledged deliberation” and held that, in context, the

instruction did not coerce a verdict. Id. at 4. The dissenting judge concluded that the

instruction was impermissibly coercive and that defendant was entitled to a new trial. Id.

(GLEICHER, J., dissenting) at 1, 5.

       Defendant sought leave to appeal in this Court. Oral argument was scheduled on

whether to grant the application or to take other action, see MCR 7.305(H)(1), on issues

including: “whether . . . defendant is entitled to a new trial based on the trial judge’s

comments to the jury in lieu of the standard ‘deadlocked jury’ instruction, M Crim JI 3.12.”

People v Walker, 501 Mich. 1088 (2018).

                              II. STANDARD OF REVIEW

       “We review de novo claims of instructional error.” People v Kowalski, 489 Mich.
488, 501; 803 NW2d 200 (2011). Because defendant failed to object to the instruction,3

we apply the plain-error rule, which requires that (1) error must have occurred, (2) the error

was plain, (3) the plain error affected substantial rights, and (4) the error resulted in the

conviction of an actually innocent defendant or seriously affected the fairness, integrity or

public reputation of judicial proceedings. People v Randolph, 502 Mich. 1, 10; 917 NW2d

249 (2018); People v Carines, 460 Mich. 750, 763; 597 NW2d 130 (1999). An error is

plain if it is “clear or obvious.” Carines, 460 Mich. at 763. An error has affected a

defendant’s substantial rights when there is “a showing of prejudice, i.e., that the error

3
  The prosecution argues for the first time in its supplemental brief to this Court that
defendant waived any challenge to the instruction by approving of the instruction before it
was given. The prosecution abandoned this theory. People v McGraw, 484 Mich. 120, 131
n 36; 771 NW2d 655 (2009).

                                              5
affected the outcome of the lower court proceedings.” Id. A defendant bears the burden

of persuasion with respect to prejudice. Id.

                                      III. ANALYSIS

         When a jury indicates it cannot reach a unanimous verdict, a trial court may give a

supplemental instruction—commonly known as an Allen4 charge—to encourage the jury

to continue deliberating. People v Sullivan, 392 Mich. 324, 329; 220 NW2d 441 (1974).

The goal of such an instruction is to encourage further deliberation without coercing a

verdict. People v Hardin, 421 Mich. 296, 314; 365 NW2d 101 (1984). See Allen v United

States, 164 U.S. 492, 501; 17 S. Ct. 154; 41 L. Ed. 528 (1896) (“While undoubtedly, the verdict

of the jury should represent the opinion of each individual juror, it by no means follows

that opinions may not be changed by conference in the jury room. The very object of the

jury system is to secure unanimity by a comparison of views . . . .”). “If the charge has the

effect of forcing a juror to surrender an honest conviction, it is coercive and constitutes

reversible error.” Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 334 (quotation marks and citation omitted).

         In Sullivan, this Court adopted a standard deadlocked-jury instruction that has since

been incorporated into our model jury instructions.5 Id. at 341; M Crim JI 3.12. Although

4
    Allen, 164 U.S. 492.
5
    M Crim JI 3.12 provides the following:

                (1) You have returned from deliberations, indicating that you believe
         you cannot reach a verdict. I am going to ask you to please return to the jury
         room and resume your deliberations in the hope that after further discussion
         you will be able to reach a verdict. As you deliberate, please keep in mind
         the guidelines I gave you earlier.

                                               6
the model instruction is an example of an instruction that strikes the correct balance, it is

not the only instruction that may properly be given. The relevant question is whether “the

instruction given [could] cause a juror to abandon his [or her] conscientious dissent and

defer to the majority solely for the sake of reaching agreement[.]” Hardin, 421 Mich. at

314. The inquiry must consider the factual context in which the instruction was given and

is conducted on a case-by-case basis. Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 332-334.

       The disputed factual issue in this case was relatively straightforward—whether

defendant took a gun from his pocket and threw it into a bush where it was recovered by

the police—and the jurors deliberated for only about an hour and fifteen minutes before

              (2) Remember, it is your duty to consult with your fellow jurors and
       try to reach agreement, if you can do so without violating your own
       judgment. To return a verdict, you must all agree, and the verdict must
       represent the judgment of each of you.

             (3) As you deliberate, you should carefully and seriously consider the
       views of your fellow jurors. Talk things over in a spirit of fairness and
       frankness.

              (4) Naturally, there will be differences of opinion. You should each
       not only express your opinion but also give the facts and the reasons on which
       you base it. By reasoning the matter out, jurors can often reach agreement.

               (5) If you think it would be helpful, you may submit to the bailiff a
       written list of the issues that are dividing or confusing you. It will then be
       submitted to me. I will attempt to clarify or amplify the instructions in order
       to assist you in your further deliberations.

             (6) When you continue your deliberations, do not hesitate to rethink
       your own views and change your opinion if you decide it was wrong.

              (7) However, none of you should give up your honest beliefs about
       the weight or effect of the evidence only because of what your fellow jurors
       think or only for the sake of reaching agreement.

                                             7
sending a note stating that they could not reach an agreement. Assuming that this was too

short a period for thoughtful deliberation, a simple instruction to the jury to “continue your

deliberations” would certainly have been permissible. See People v France, 436 Mich. 138,

165-166; 461 NW2d 621 (1990). See also Lowenfield v Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 238; 108 S

Ct 546; 98 L. Ed. 2d 568 (1988) (“Surely if the jury had returned from its deliberations after

only one hour and informed the court that it had failed to achieve unanimity . . . , the court

would incontestably have had the authority to insist that they deliberate further.”).

Although the trial court seems to have recognized that an Allen charge was not yet required,

it nevertheless ventured into Allen-territory with its ad-lib instruction. For the reasons

below, we conclude the instruction given in this case crossed the line from appropriately

encouraging deliberation to being unduly coercive.

       First, the trial court failed to provide the jurors guidance on how to continue

deliberating and how to try to break through the impasse. For example, M Crim JI 3.12(3)

advises jurors that they should “carefully and seriously consider the views of . . . fellow

jurors” and “[t]alk things over in a spirit of fairness and frankness.” M Crim JI 3.12(4)

addresses how jurors might meaningfully engage with one another rather than just stating

their positions: “You should each not only express your opinion but also give the facts and

the reasons on which you base it.” In this case, the only guidance provided by the trial

court was that the jurors needed to get “clear heads.” Significantly, instead of encouraging

the jurors to consider their fellow jurors’ views, the trial court encouraged an antagonistic

relationship among the jurors by prompting them, without elaborating on what it meant, to

report anyone who was “refusing to participate in the process.”

                                              8
       Second, the trial court failed to remind the jurors that they should not give up their

honestly held beliefs for the sake of reaching an agreement. A review of our past decisions

bears out the importance of this honest-conviction reminder, which tempers the court’s

simultaneous emphasis on reaching a unanimous agreement. In People v Engle, 118 Mich.
287, 291-292; 76 N.W. 502 (1898), we ordered a new trial because after the jury indicated

that it was unable to agree on a verdict, the trial court’s deadlocked-jury instruction failed

to state “that the verdict to which [the jury] agreed should be and must be each individual

juror’s own verdict, the result of his own convictions, and not a mere acquiescence in the

conclusion of his fellows[.]” Id. In contrast, this Court has upheld verdicts in cases in

which the instruction given included the honest-conviction reminder. See, e.g., People v

Coulon, 151 Mich. 200, 203-204; 114 N.W. 1013 (1908) (holding that the instruction in that

case was distinguishable from the instruction in Engle, and therefore not erroneous,

because the trial court had instructed that “no juror should yield his well-grounded

convictions or violate his oath; that if upon further consideration a juror cannot

conscientiously yield, of course he ought not to do so”). See also People v Rouse, 477
Mich. 1063 (2007) (reversing the Court of Appeals for the reasons stated in the Court of

Appeals dissenting opinion, People v Rouse, 272 Mich. App. 665, 675-677; 728 NW2d 874

(2006) (JANSEN, J., dissenting), which noted that the trial court had read the standard

instruction, including the honest-conviction reminder, and had “emphasized that no juror

should change his or her honest beliefs simply for the sake of reaching a verdict”); Hardin,

                                              9
421 Mich. at 318 (holding that supplemental instructions were not unduly coercive because

an honest-conviction reminder was given after the challenged instructions).6

       Third, the trial court’s instruction included language that was unduly coercive. The

jury’s note was received approximately one hour and fifteen minutes after the jury began

deliberating.7 Before sending the note, the jury had obviously discussed the case, asked to

see the gun, and at least one juror harbored doubt regarding defendant’s guilt. Because the

jury had already indicated that it was deadlocked, at that point, there was “a greater

6
  We disagree with the dissent that the trial court’s failure to include an honest-conviction
instruction in its ad-lib instruction does not render the ad-lib instruction unduly coercive
because the jury was given an honest-conviction instruction with the final instructions and
a written copy of these instructions was in the jury room during deliberations. The ad-lib
instruction was the last instruction given, and its influence was therefore unmitigated. Cf.
Hardin, 421 Mich. at 318 (noting that “any unwarranted inference by the jury” from the
trial court’s statements was mitigated by those statements having preceded the trial court’s
instruction that no juror should surrender his or her honest convictions for the purpose of
returning a verdict). See also People v Pollick, 448 Mich. 376, 385; 531 NW2d 159 (1995)
(“It requires no special insight to see that there is a greater coercive potential when an
instruction is given to a jury that already believes itself deadlocked. Instructions given to
a jury that has not yet begun to deliberate are less likely to weigh on a dissenting juror, or
to be understood as a request that a particular dissenting juror abandon the view that is
preventing an otherwise unanimous jury from reaching its verdict.”).
7
  Whatever the trial court’s motivation, we disagree with the dissent’s assertion that it was
reasonable for the trial court to conclude that “the jury had not engaged in an earnest and
meaningful deliberative process that led to an intractable impasse.” The jury had
previously sent a note asking to see the gun, presumably because of the prosecution’s
contention that Williams’s description of the weapon was inaccurate (and that his
testimony was therefore not credible). Simply put, the record indicates that the jurors were
following instructions and deliberating. To conclude otherwise on the basis of nothing
more than the duration of deliberations would permit trial courts to fashion ad-hoc
instructions based on nothing more than a hunch that one or more jurors may not be
deliberating in good faith. Our opinion in Sullivan, which encourages courts to use the
model deadlocked-jury instruction, is the better path.

                                             10
coercive potential.” See People v Pollick, 448 Mich. 376, 385; 531 NW2d 159 (1995).

Instead of simply instructing the jury to continue its deliberations after lunch, the trial court

twice admonished the jury that “that’s not the way this works,” telegraphing that failure to

reach a verdict was not an option.8 Furthermore, without an indication that any juror

refused to participate in deliberations or follow directions, the trial court twice asked the

jurors to “let us know that,” signaling to jurors that they should single out their fellow

jurors.   The trial court’s veiled threats were the type of “undue pressure, threats,

embarrassing assertions, or other wording that would tend to force a decision or cause a

juror to abandon his conscientious dissent and defer to the majority.” Hardin, 421 Mich. at

321.9

8
  The dissent describes the trial court’s ad-lib instruction as an “innocuous go-to-lunch
instruction” because the trial court simply wanted to provide the jurors with “nourishment
and an opportunity to clear their heads.” This description ignores the problematic aspects
of the court’s instruction. We disagree with the dissent that “[n]o reasonable juror would
interpret this statement as compelling a verdict by force or intimidation.” First, the dissent
distorts the standard by mistakenly asserting that “coercion” in this context is a term of
ordinary usage as opposed to a term of art. No one alleges that the trial judge used force
to coerce the verdict, and we have yet to find a case that defines “coercion” this way in this
context. Second, we think a reasonable juror, having just informed the judge that the jury
is deadlocked, might interpret the judge’s rejoinder here in terms far more emphatic than a
simple order to eat lunch.
9
  Unlike the dissent, we believe that the ad-lib instruction can be interpreted as an appeal
to the jurors’ “civic duty.” See Hardin, 421 Mich. at 316 (explaining that in People v
Goldsmith, 411 Mich. 555, 561; 309 NW2d 182 (1981), the Court held that “an instruction
that calls for the jury, as part of its civic duty, to reach a unanimous verdict and which
contains the message that the failure to reach a verdict constitutes a failure of purpose, is a
substantial departure . . . because it tends to be coercive”). A reasonable juror may have
interpreted the judge’s comment to mean that failure to reach a verdict was not an option,
i.e., that it was part of the jury’s civic duty to reach a verdict.

                                               11
       Finally, given our review of the record, we are left with a firm conviction that the

tenor set by the trial court contributed to the instruction being unduly coercive.10 As noted

in Sullivan, the coercive nature of the instruction must be evaluated in light of the factual

context of the case. Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 341. We agree with the dissenting Court of

Appeals judge that this instruction was given in “a coercive and despotic atmosphere” that

“likely persuaded dissenting jurors to abandon their principles.” Walker (GLEICHER, J.,

dissenting), unpub op at 4.

       After the trial court gave its ad-lib deadlocked-jury instruction and the jury returned

from its lunch break, the jury returned a verdict in about 90 minutes. This quick turnaround

in arriving at a guilty verdict after the trial court’s supplemental instruction had been given

suggests coercion. Lowenfield, 484 U.S. at 238. Furthermore, earlier that day, the trial court

had made clear to the jury that dissent would not be tolerated and that public humiliation

would be the consequence for anyone who stepped out of line. When the trial court called

the case, it noted that one of the jurors (Juror No. 8) was late and had not called in:

              All right, great. So we’re getting a fifty-five minutes (sic) late start,
       and as you can see one of your jurors never came back. I don’t wanna keep
       you all waiting and keep everybody involved in this case waiting any longer

10
   We disagree with the dissent that what it calls, “comments and methods by which a trial
judge manages the trial,” are irrelevant to an evaluation of “the factual context in which
[the supplemental] instruction is given.” Hardin, 421 Mich. at 315. In fact, our analysis of
whether the three challenged jury instructions in Hardin were unduly coercive opened with
the statement that the issue “is better understood if we set forth, in some detail, the events
that transpired” during deliberations, id. at 302-303, and closed with emphasis on “the tone
and content of the trial court’s language,” id. at 320. All the trial court’s comments during
deliberations in Hardin were relevant in considering the factual context in which the
challenged instructions were given. In this case, the trial court’s conduct throughout the
trial is part of the factual context in which the ad-lib instruction was given.

                                              12
       for someone who may or may not appear. And if that juror shows up then,
       you know, I don’t know, bad things might happen to that person.

              It’s not fair for everyone involved to keep everyone waiting, and I do
       want to thank Juror No. 1, who knew she would be running a little late and
       she called.

              Hopefully, this case will finish today, and you all won’t have to worry
       about coming back tomorrow, but when you don’t come on time it sets
       everybody back, it waste[s] everyone’s time, so it’s important that everyone
       be on time, okay. I’m talking to you guys, okay?

       Juror No. 8 arrived during opening statements and was seated in the place reserved

for in-custody criminal defendants—commonly referred to as the “prisoners’ box”—

during the completion of the prosecution’s case. While we do not suggest that trial judges

should not take steps to ensure that court proceedings begin in a timely fashion, we cannot

discount the effect the trial court’s ominous threat (“[B]ad things might happen to that

person.”) and its heavy-handed treatment of the recalcitrant juror may have had on the

remaining jurors by situating that juror in the “prisoners’ box” in view of the other jurors.11

       We hold that, taken together, the omission of constructive guidance to the jury on

how to deliberate, the omission of an honest-conviction reminder, the addition of coercive

language suggesting that jurors single out other jurors for refusing to deliberate when there

was no indication that a juror had refused to deliberate, and the trial court’s conduct

11
   A better approach, of course, would be for the trial court to address the recalcitrant juror
outside the presence of the other jurors and not situate that person in the “prisoners’ box”
in plain view of the other jurors. The record also shows that the trial court was distracted
during the proceedings. For example, the trial court told trial counsel for both sides to
“[h]old on, I think I’m about to get a new iPhone 6” when the attorneys asked to put a
stipulation on the record. This inattention to the proceedings may have contributed to the
trial court shifting blame to counsel for its own errors, such as when the trial court
dismissively rebuffed defense counsel’s attempts to remedy a mistake the court had made
in restating a witness’s testimony.

                                              13
throughout the proceedings telegraphed that failing to reach a verdict would not be

tolerated; thus, the instruction was unduly coercive. We emphasize that not every deviation

from M Crim JI 3.12 will be erroneous, but the instruction given in this case omitted nearly

every safeguard M Crim JI 3.12 contains; added an unwarranted invitation to single out

dissenters; and was administered in a “coercive and despotic atmosphere,” Walker

(GLEICHER, J., dissenting), unpub op at 4. We hold that the ad-lib instruction affected

defendant’s substantial rights by affecting the jury’s verdict. See Carines, 460 Mich. at

763. We also conclude that that the error was clear and obvious. See id. Finally, in the

greater context of the trial, the instruction seriously affected the fairness, integrity, and

public reputation of the judicial proceedings by affecting the jury’s verdict, and we

therefore exercise our discretion to reverse defendant’s conviction and remand this case to

the Wayne Circuit Court for a new trial.

       We also hold that because of the unprofessionalism and bias displayed by the trial

court against defendant during sentencing, the case must be assigned to a different judge

on remand.12 When determining whether remand to a different judge is required, we

examine the following factors:

       (1) whether the original judge would reasonably be expected upon remand to
       have substantial difficulty in putting out of his or her mind previously-
       expressed views or findings determined to be erroneous or based on evidence
       that must be rejected, (2) whether reassignment is advisable to preserve the
       appearance of justice, and (3) whether reassignment would entail waste and
       duplication out of proportion to any gain in preserving the appearance of

12
  The dissent does not reach this issue, presumably given its conclusion on the instructional
issue. We note, however, that the fairness of the trial court’s sentence was raised by
defendant as a basis for resentencing, independent of defendant’s challenge to the
deadlocked-jury instruction.

                                             14
       fairness. [People v Hill, 221 Mich. App. 391, 398; 561 NW2d 862 (1997)
       (quotation marks and citations omitted).]

See also People v Patton, 497 Mich. 959 (2015) (declining to reassign the case to a new

judge on remand when the Court was not persuaded that the standards set forth in Hill had

been met); Sparks v Sparks, 440 Mich. 141, 163; 485 NW2d 893 (1992) (reassigning the

case to a different judge on remand because the appearance of justice would be better

served with a new judge presiding).

       In this case, the trial court’s behavior at defendant’s sentencing hearing compels us

to reassign this case to a new judge on remand. After defendant indicated at least eight

times during his allocution that he had nothing further to say, the trial judge continued to

bait him, engaging in name-calling (calling him a “clown” six times and a “coward”), with

the exchange escalating to defendant stating, “F--- you,” to which the trial court replied,

“Oh, you wish you could.” The trial court also admonished defendant, suggesting that he

liked being in prison (“Cause that’s what your life shows me, that you like to go to prison.”)

and stated that it would have sentenced him more leniently but for his disrespect toward

the court (“I was inclined to give you the middle of the road, . . . but because you’re so

disrespectful and you just seem to want to go back to prison . . . .”).

       Upon even a cursory review of the sentencing transcript, it is clear to us that the

court would have substantial difficulty setting aside its previously expressed views and that

reassignment is necessary to preserve the appearance of justice given the hostility, bias,

and incredulity directed against defendant by the court.13 Finally, any waste or duplication

13
  Although we do not rely on the sentencing transcript to support our holding regarding
the coercive nature of the court’s deadlocked-jury instruction, our review of the transcript
gives us grave concern about the trial judge’s demeanor and approach in her interactions

                                             15
is not out of proportion to the gain in preserving the appearance of fairness. Defendant

shall therefore be retried before a different judge.14

                                    IV. CONCLUSION

       We reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals and remand this case to the Wayne

Circuit Court for a new trial in front of a different judge. Because we grant a new trial, we

do not address the remaining issues raised by defendant.

                                                           Megan K. Cavanagh
                                                           Bridget M. McCormack
                                                           David F. Viviano
                                                           Richard H. Bernstein
                                                           Elizabeth T. Clement

with this defendant. It is enough, at this point, to say that the trial judge’s conduct was
well outside the bounds of what we consider an appropriate way to conduct a sentencing
hearing—even one involving a difficult person. Had this exchange or one like it occurred
earlier in the trial, there is little doubt it would have called into question whether defendant
was deprived of a fair trial. See People v Stevens, 498 Mich. 162; 869 NW2d 233 (2015)
(holding that because the trial judge’s conduct pierced the veil of judicial impartiality, the
defendant was deprived of a fair trial).
14
   The dissent challenges our trial court bona fides by lamenting our “disconnection from
the realities of the trial-court process.” Such an approach does little to illuminate the issues
in this case and therefore does not warrant a response other than to note that if the choice
is between an ivory tower where the Constitution still holds sway, or an alternative universe
where this judge’s performance during this trial and sentencing is deemed acceptable, we
choose the former.

                                              16
                             STATE OF MICHIGAN

                                     SUPREME COURT

 PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,

               Plaintiff-Appellee,

 v                                                              No. 155198

 HAROLD LAMONT WALKER,

               Defendant-Appellant.

ZAHRA, J. (dissenting).
       I respectfully dissent. In the morning, following a full day of testimony in a

relatively simple case, the jury heard closing arguments, received its final instructions, and

retired to deliberate. After an hour and fifteen minutes of deliberation, the jury indicated

that it had reached an impasse. With no objection, the trial judge informed the jurors that

she did not believe they were truly deadlocked after their brief period of deliberation.

Rather than providing the standard instruction for deadlocked juries, the trial judge sent the

jurors to lunch to afford them nourishment and an opportunity to clear their heads. After

lunch, the jurors resumed deliberations and, after an additional hour and a half of

deliberations, the jury delivered a guilty verdict. Because the innocuous go-to-lunch

instruction was far from being coercive, I discern no basis for reversing the jury’s verdict.
                      I. PERTINENT FACTUAL BACKGROUND

       Absent from the majority’s opinion are the trial judge’s instructions delivered to the

jury following the conclusion of closing arguments, around one and a half hours before the

jury announced it was at an impasse:

              A verdict in a criminal case must be unanimous. In order to return a
       verdict it is necessary that each of you agrees on that verdict. In the jury
       room you will discuss the case among yourselves, but ultimately each of you
       have to make up your own mind. Any verdict must represent the individual
       considered judgement of each [of] you.

              It is your duty as jurors to talk to each other and make every
       reasonable effort to reach agreement. Express your opinions and the reason
       for them, but keep an open mind as you listen to your [fellow] jurors. Rethink
       your opinions and do not hesitate to change your mind if you decide that you
       were wrong. Try your best to work out your differences.

              However, although you should try to reach an agreement, none of you
       should give up your honest opinion about the case just because other jurors
       disagree with you or just for the sake of reaching a verdict.

              In the end, your vote must be your own, and you must vote honestly
       and in good conscious [sic].

       The record reveals that a written copy of these instructions was provided to the jury

for reference during deliberations. The jury retired to deliberate at 11:19 a.m. Roughly an

hour and fifteen minutes later (around 12:36 p.m.), it sent out a note that read, “We are

hung, and I don’t believe there will [be] an agreement with more time.” The trial judge

reconvened court, informed the parties that the jury had declared itself unable to reach a

verdict, and stated her intent to instruct the jurors that they could not simply give up after

an hour. Specifically, the trial judge stated as follows:

               I’ll sent [sic] them to lunch, they’ll be back at 1:35 and I’ll send them
       back in there. That’s it. And if they send another note, you know, they have
       to at least deliberate as long as it took [to] try the case, so. They’ll come back

                                               2
         tomorrow, if they have to, but I’m not prepared to read them the deadlock
         instruction, because I don’t believe that they’ve even attempted to deliberate
         at this point, so. That’s it.

                Now if there’s—if I get another note that indicates that they are
         deadlocked then I’ll read the Allen[1] Instruction, after lunch, but at this point
         after one hour of deliberations I don’t think, you know, that they’ve even
         made a[n] effort. So, I’m gonna bring them out, I’m gonna tell them just that
         and I’m sending to lunch.

                Is there anything else?

         Without any objection, the trial judge instructed the bailiff to bring the jurors into

the courtroom, and after reading their note into the record, she instructed them as follows:

                Well, that’s not the way this works. Your [sic] all heard a full day of
         testimony, and you deliberated for what a[n] hour and fifteen minutes, and
         now you just give up. That’s not the way it works, I’m sending you all to
         lunch, maybe what you need is some time a part [sic] and some nourishment,
         other than candy, to help you all, you know, have clear heads and review the
         evidence that you heard.

                Now, if there’s someone among you who’s failing to follow the
         instructions or there’s someone who’s refusing to participate in the process,
         you can send us a note and let us know that and we can address that, but at
         this point I’m not inclined to end your deliberations at this point because you
         had a full day of testimony and you’ve only been at this, discussing it, for
         one hour.

                 So, I’m going to send you to lunch, maybe sometime [sic] apart will
         help you all to think about things, and then you’ll come back in one hour and
         resume your deliberations. If you have any questions, if there is anything
         that you don’t understand or need clarification on send a note. And again, if
         there’s one among you or two among you, three among you who are refusing
         to follow instructions or participate in the process you can let us know that,
         too.

                Remember you are not to discuss this case, when you are anywhere
         other than in the jury room cause you’re still a juror. So even if you go to

1
Allen v United States, 164 U.S. 492; 17 S. Ct. 154; 41 L. Ed. 528 (1896).

                                                 3
         lunch together some of you, you can not [sic] discuss this case cause you can
         only discuss it when you’re all together and when you’re in the jury room.

         The judge dismissed the jurors for lunch at 12:41 p.m., and they were expected to

return around 1:40 p.m. About one and a half hours later, at 3:07 p.m., the jury returned

with its verdict, finding defendant guilty as charged.

                                II. LEGAL BACKGROUND

         When a jury indicates that it is unable to reach a verdict, the trial court may give

supplemental jury instructions and direct the jury to continue deliberations.2 The textbook

instruction in this context is known as an “Allen charge.”3 The Allen charge is also known

as a “dynamite charge,”4 a “nitroglycerin charge,”5 or a “shotgun instruction”6 because of

2
    See People v Hardin, 421 Mich. 296, 316; 365 NW2d 101 (1984).
3
    Allen, 164 U.S. 492.
4
 As the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit explained in United States v
Berger, 473 F3d 1080, 1089 (CA 9, 2007):

                “The term ‘Allen charge’ is the generic name for a class of
         supplemental jury instructions given when jurors are apparently deadlocked;
         the name derives from the first Supreme Court approval of such an
         instruction in Allen . . . . In their mildest form, these instructions carry
         reminders of the importance of securing a verdict and ask jurors to reconsider
         potentially unreasonable positions. In their stronger forms, these charges
         have been referred to as ‘dynamite charges,’ because of their ability to ‘blast’
         a verdict out of a deadlocked jury.” [Quoting United States v Mason, 658
         F2d 1263, 1265 n 1 (CA 9, 1981).]
5
 Huffman v United States, 297 F2d 754, 759 (CA 5, 1962) (Brown, J., concurring in part
and dissenting in part).
6
    State v Nelson, 63 NM 428, 431; 321 P2d 202 (1958).

                                                4
its ability to rapidly generate a verdict from an otherwise deadlocked jury.7

         A proper supplemental instruction facilitates continued deliberation while avoiding

coercion, but if the supplemental instruction would force a juror to surrender an honest

conviction, the instruction is impermissibly coercive.8 This Court has identified the two

essential hallmarks of a proper deadlocked-jury charge: (1) encouragement of a respectful

discussion in which the jurors consider all views and (2) respect for each individual juror’s

right to disagree. A judge should emphasize “that each juror has to make an individual

judgment”9 and that “no juror need surrender his honest convictions concerning the

evidence solely for the purpose of obtaining a unanimous agreement.”10 “The optimum

instruction will generate discussion directed towards the resolution of the case but will

avoid forcing a decision.”11 Ultimately, an instruction “must be examined in the factual

context in which it is given.”12

         This Court has identified various factors that guide the contextual analysis of

whether a deadlocked-jury instruction is unduly coercive. The trial court’s instruction must

not contain “undue pressure, threats, embarrassing assertions, or other wording that would

tend to force a decision or cause a juror to abandon his conscientious dissent and defer to

7
    Berger, 473 F3d at 1089.
8
    People v Sullivan, 392 Mich. 324, 334; 220 NW2d 441 (1974).
9
    Id. at 337.
10
     People v Goldsmith, 411 Mich. 555, 559; 309 NW2d 182 (1981).
11
     Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 334.
12
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 315.

                                              5
the majority.”13 Additional language will “rarely” be considered a substantial departure if

it “contains ‘no pressure, threats, embarrassing assertions, or other wording that would

cause this Court to feel that it constituted coercion.’ ”14

          The trial judge must also refrain from requiring or threatening to require “the jury

to deliberate for an unreasonable length of time or for unreasonable intervals.”15

Additionally, the trial judge must not state or imply that the jury must reach a decision or

else it has failed.16 In fact, “an instruction that calls for the jury, as part of its civic duty,

to reach a unanimous verdict and which contains the message that the failure to reach a

verdict constitutes a failure of purpose, is a substantial departure . . . because it tends to be

coercive.”17 For example, in People v Goldsmith,18 this Court held that a jury instruction

was unduly coercive because the trial judge stated, “ ‘A jury unable to agree, therefore, is

a jury which has failed in its purpose.’ ”

          The timing of the instruction is a relevant factor in determining whether the

instruction was unduly coercive. That is, no special insight is needed “to see that there is

greater coercive potential when an instruction is given to a jury that already believes itself

13
     Id. at 321.
14
     Id. at 315, quoting People v Holmes, 132 Mich. App. 730, 749; 349 NW2d 230 (1984).
15
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 318-319.
16
  See Goldsmith, 411 Mich. at 561; Lowenfield v Phelps, 484 U.S. 231, 239; 108 S. Ct. 546;
98 L. Ed. 2d 568 (1988), citing Jenkins v United States, 380 U.S. 445, 446; 85 S. Ct. 1059; 13
L. Ed. 2d 957 (1965).
17
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 316.
18
     Goldsmith, 411 Mich. at 558, 561.

                                                6
deadlocked”19 because, at that point, there exists a “minority faction” that is prone to

coercion.20 But if a jury returns from its deliberations after a relatively brief period, the

court would incontestably have the authority to insist that the jurors deliberate further.21

Also, a quick turnaround of a guilty verdict after a supplemental instruction is given to the

jury can be suggestive of coercion.22

                                      III. DISCUSSION

A. THE SUPPLEMENTAL INSTRUCTION DIRECTING THE JURORS TO BREAK
 FOR LUNCH BEFORE CONTINUING DELIBERATIONS WAS NOT IMPROPER
                         OR COERCIVE

          The majority concludes that the supplemental instruction directing jurors to go to

lunch before deliberating further was so unduly coercive that defendant was denied his

constitutional right to a fair trial. I disagree.

          The majority’s holding that the supplemental instruction “crossed the line” does not

accurately reflect the traditional understanding of jury coercion.             The majority

acknowledges that the judge’s direction to the jurors to “continue your deliberations” might

have been a permissible supplemental instruction23 but then cites two specific statements

by the trial judge that the majority concludes were coercive: (1) stating, “[T]hat’s not the

way this works” and (2) twice asking the jurors to “let us know” if one or more jurors were

19
     People v Pollick, 448 Mich. 376, 385; 531 NW2d 159 (1995).
20
     Goldsmith, 411 Mich. at 560 (quotation marks omitted).
21
     Lowenfield, 484 U.S. at 238.
22
     Id. at 240.
23
     Ante at 8; see People v France, 436 Mich. 138, 165-166; 461 NW2d 621 (1990).

                                                    7
refusing to participate or to follow the instructions even though there was no indication that

any juror had refused to participate in the deliberations or to follow the court’s instructions.

The finding of coerciveness from these two phrases is extremely problematic because it

ignores the practical reality the trial judge faced in this situation.24

       Contrary to the majority’s assertion, there was a complete absence of coercive

language in the trial judge’s supplemental instruction. Coercion is commonly understood

as the process of restraining or compelling by force or intimidation.25 In the majority’s

view, the trial judge implied that a failure to reach a verdict would not be tolerated when it

told the jury, “Well, that’s not the way this works.” The pertinent portions of the transcript

suggest that the trial judge was referring to the jury’s failure to engage in full-fledged

deliberation, not its failure to reach a verdict. Notably, the judge continued this statement

as follows:

       You[] all heard a full day of testimony, and you deliberated for what a[n]
       hour and fifteen minutes, and now you just give up. That’s not the way it
       works, I’m sending you all to lunch, maybe what you need is some time a

24
  The trial judge is uniquely situated to size up a jury to determine whether jurors are
merely in need of a respite or truly at a point of impasse. When a trial judge has reason to
believe that a jury has not earnestly and interactively participated in the deliberative
process, it would be imprudent and unwise to read an Allen charge, which, although
sanctioned by this Court and the Supreme Court of the United States, nonetheless features
coercive attributes. In this case, the trial judge reasonably concluded the jury had not
engaged in an earnest and meaningful deliberative process that led to an intractable
impasse. The decision to send them to lunch before having them deliberate again was not
only not erroneous but prudent under the circumstances.
25
   See Merriam Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary (11th ed); Random House Webster’s
College Dictionary (1997). While the majority criticizes the ordinary usage of this term,
as opposed to using “coercion” as a term of art, it offers no alternative definition of
“coercion” to suggest it means anything other than the basic concept of compelling action
by force or intimidation.

                                                8
         part [sic] and some nourishment, other than candy, to help you all, you know,
         have clear heads and review the evidence that you heard.

         Taken in context, a rational and reasonable interpretation of the statement suggests

that the phrase “that’s not the way this works” was in no way coercive. The trial judge

followed these words with the conclusion that a lunch break was needed to provide the

jurors with “nourishment” and “some time a part” to help them “have clear heads and

review the evidence” after they returned to court. No reasonable juror would interpret this

statement as compelling a verdict by force or intimidation. To the contrary, the trial judge

merely afforded the jurors a lunch break to help the jurors engage in the deliberative

process when they returned.

         Similarly, the trial judge’s direction that the jury should let the court know “if there’s

someone among you who’s failing to follow the instructions or there’s someone who’s

refusing to participate in the process” was not coercive.26 To the contrary, this instruction

was sensible. The trial judge expressed the view that the jurors had not engaged in

meaningful deliberation and implied that additional effort by the jury was needed before

an impasse could be declared. Nonetheless, additional deliberation would not be fruitful,

and would in fact be counterproductive, if one or more jurors failed to follow the closing

instruction that jurors “talk to each other and make every reasonable effort to reach

agreement.” The trial judge merely informed the jury that additional deliberation was

necessary and that the judge should be alerted if there was a breakdown in the process.

         Notably, the trial judge did not single out dissenting jurors—rather, she instructed

that further deliberations were not required if there were jurors who refused to engage in

26
     Emphasis added.

                                                 9
the deliberative process. I strongly disagree with the majority’s view that these statements

amounted to “undue pressure, threats, [or] embarrassing assertions . . . that would tend to

force a decision or cause a juror to abandon his conscientious dissent and defer to the

majority.”27 To the contrary, these statements properly reflect the notion that refusal to

follow the final instructions or engage in the deliberative process required by law is

unacceptable.

         It is also significant that the trial judge did not appeal to “civic duty” or assert that

“failure to reach a verdict constitutes a failure of purpose.”28 While the majority believes

that a reasonable juror may have interpreted the judge’s comments to mean “that it was

part of the jury’s civic duty to reach a verdict,”29 the trial judge’s instruction simply focused

on the jury’s short period of deliberation and the need for nutrition and time apart before

further deliberation. Given the majority’s logic, a “reasonable juror” could interpret almost

any judicial instruction as an appeal to his or her civic duty. Thus, the absence of any

actual language appealing to the jury’s civic duty is significant. In all practical reality, the

supplemental instruction facilitated effective deliberation by ensuring that the jurors could

resume deliberations with “clear heads” after eating something nutritious. The only

requirement the trial judge imposed on the jurors was to go to lunch. In so doing, she in

no way coerced one or more jurors to vote to convict.

27
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 321; see Goldsmith, 411 Mich. at 558-561.
28
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 316.
29
     Ante at 11 n 9.

                                                10
          The majority also fails to give adequate consideration to the trial judge’s unique

relationship to these proceedings. That is, the jury indicated it was deadlocked after merely

an hour and fifteen minutes of deliberation; thus, the trial judge, in her unique position,

appeared to have a reasonable basis upon which to disbelieve that the jurors were genuinely

deadlocked. The trial judge’s comments therefore reflect a reasonable degree of skepticism

that the jury had given a real effort at deliberating.30

          The overall effect of the instruction was not to coerce the jury but “to stress the need

to engage in full-fledged deliberation.”31 That is, the “comments were directed toward

generating discussion and fostering resolution of the case . . . .”32 And while the trial judge

did not remind the jurors that they should maintain their honest convictions after the jury

suggested it might be at an impasse, this omission is not dispositive of whether the

supplemental instruction was, taken in context, coercive. As eloquently stated by the

majority, an “honest-conviction reminder . . . tempers the court’s simultaneous emphasis

on reaching a unanimous agreement.”33 In this case, nothing in the trial judge’s instruction

emphasized that the jurors should reach agreement on a verdict. To the contrary, the trial

judge merely emphasized that the jurors had not deliberated a sufficient amount of time.

30
   See Lowenfield, 484 U.S. at 238 (“Surely if the jury had returned from its deliberations
after only one hour and informed the court that it had failed to achieve unanimity . . . , the
court would incontestably have had the authority to insist that they deliberate further.”).
31
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 321.
32
     Id. at 320.
33
     Ante at 9.

                                                11
This is a critical distinction that emphasizes why the “honestly held beliefs” reminder was

not necessary and is therefore not dispositive.

         It is also significant that the jury had a written copy of the court’s final instructions

in the jury room. Those instructions, which were given less than 90 minutes before the

jury announced that it was deadlocked, stressed in various ways the notion that the jurors

are not to give up their “honest belief” during deliberations:

         In the jury room you will discuss the case among yourselves, but ultimately,
         each of you have to make up your own mind. . . .

                                              * * *

               . . . Rethink your opinions and do not hesitate to change your mind if
         you decide that you were wrong. . . .

                                              * * *

                However, although you should try to reach an agreement, none of you
         should give up your honest opinion about the case just because other jurors
         disagree with you or just for the sake of reaching a verdict.

                In the end, your vote must be your own, and you must vote honestly
         and in good conscious [sic]. [Emphasis added.]

Therefore, the trial judge’s failure to once again encourage jurors to maintain their own

convictions did not transform the supplemental instruction to deliberate after returning

from lunch into an unduly coercive one.

         In support of its conclusion that the failure to instruct jurors to maintain their “honest

beliefs” was a fatal omission, the majority relies on People v Engle.34 This Court ordered

a new trial in that case because the jury was not instructed that its verdict had to be the

34
     People v Engle, 118 Mich. 287, 291-292; 76 N.W. 502 (1898).

                                                12
product of each juror’s individual convictions.35 The majority’s reliance on Engle is

misguided. Significantly, the opinion in Engle does not disclose how long the jury

deliberated before declaring they had reached an impasse. Further, the Court’s opinion in

Engle suggests that the jury was never instructed that each juror should maintain his or her

own convictions. This is a significant and critical distinction. But even assuming the Engle

jury did receive such an instruction before beginning deliberations, another meaningful

distinction remains: the Engle jury was instructed that each juror “must . . . try to be

persuaded.”36 Such an instruction tends to force a verdict because it may compel dissenting

jurors to give in to their colleagues’ positions over their own. No instruction or utterance

from the trial judge in the instant case compares to the coercive charge given by the trial

judge in Engle.

           The majority further faults the trial judge for failing to provide the jurors guidance

on how to continue deliberating and how to try to break through the impasse, but these

omissions are also not dispositive. Again, the trial judge reasonably disbelieved that the

jury had put forth a genuine effort in the deliberative process such that they were truly

deadlocked in the first place. Had the trial judge concluded that the jury was actually

deadlocked after their brief deliberation, it would have been necessary for her to guide the

jurors on how to break through the impasse and to instruct the jury in accordance with the

other hallmark features of an Allen charge. But as a threshold matter, this trial judge had

rejected the idea that the jury was deadlocked at that point in their deliberations. And the

35
     Id.
36
     Id. at 291.

                                                 13
judge’s remarks clearly indicate that if the jury had again expressed it was deadlocked after

further deliberation, the judge would have given the Allen instruction. In my view, the trial

judge acted prudently under the circumstances.

         It is also troubling that the Court’s holding promotes a per se rule that any departure

from M Crim JI 3.12 necessarily results in an unduly coercive instruction. This is

inconsistent with this Court’s mandate that each instruction must be examined in its factual

context and that only “substantial departures” from the model instruction constitute error

requiring reversal.37 In this sense, the majority focuses too closely on immaterial omissions

from the model instruction. The inquiry is whether the court’s supplemental instruction

was coercive,38 not simply to what extent it fails to reflect M Crim JI 3.12. Accordingly,

the omissions the majority identifies are not material, and they are, therefore, not

dispositive.

         The majority relies on portions of the lower court record that are wholly unrelated

to whether the supplemental instruction itself was coercive to support its conclusion that

the trial judge’s response to the jury’s note conveyed a coercive message to the jury. This

is no small matter. Never before has this Court determined that judicial actions unrelated

to instructing the jury may render an otherwise innocuous instruction coercive. While it is

true that the instruction must be evaluated in light of the factual context of the case,39 this

context relates to the factual dispute presented to the jury, not the comments and methods

37
     Hardin, 421 Mich. at 313, 315.
38
     Id. at 314; Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 334.
39
     Sullivan, 392 Mich. at 334.

                                               14
by which a trial judge manages the trial. Of greater import, the portions of the record the

majority cites do not support its conclusion that the supplemental instruction was coercive.

       The majority accepts the dissenting Court of Appeals judge’s view that the context

in which the supplemental instruction was given was “a coercive and despotic atmosphere”

that “likely persuaded dissenting jurors to abandon their principles.”40 The majority cites

three instances of the trial judge’s conduct to suggest that “dissent would not be tolerated”

and that jurors who misbehaved would be punished with “public humiliation.” These three

instances of conduct are: (1) her rebuke of an alternate juror who, without notice, arrived

more than an hour late for trial; (2) her reference to receiving a new smart phone during

the trial proceedings; and (3) her disagreement with defense counsel over a minor point

regarding the testimony of one witness. None of this conduct, taken individually or

collectively, supports the notion that the jury was coerced into convicting defendant. The

majority’s analysis of this behavior, and the weight afforded to it in the majority’s analysis,

establishes that the majority has improvidently concluded that the supplemental instruction

coerced the jury into delivering a verdict.

       There is nothing autocratic, intimidating, or tyrannical in regard to the portion of the

proceedings during which the judge was distracted and unable to accept a stipulation

between counsel because she was “about to get a new iPhone 6.” This exchange evinces,

at its absolute worst, a momentary lapse of professionalism. But the exchange does not

contribute a scintilla of evidence toward a finding of a “despotic” or “coercive” courtroom

40
  People v Walker, unpublished per curiam opinion of the Court of Appeals, issued
December 1, 2016 (Docket No. 327063) (GLEICHER, J., dissenting), p 4.

                                              15
environment. The same conclusion applies to the trial judge’s disagreement with defense

counsel regarding the substance of Sergeant Matthew Gnatek’s testimony.41 The trial judge

incorrectly concluded that defense counsel mischaracterized the officer’s prior testimony,

but this error is wholly immaterial. More significantly, in making her ruling, the trial judge

was not disrespectful, domineering, or imperious toward defense counsel. She simply

stated she would not argue the point because she had made her ruling. Nothing in this

exchange suggests that the instruction was coercive, as found by the majority. Having

dismissed these two examples of the coercive nature of the proceedings, the majority is

thus left to hang its claims of “despotism” and “coercion” on the events involving Juror

No. 8.

         We are indeed ruling from an unusually lofty ivory tower wherefrom we second-

guess trial judges who rebuke—even harshly so—jurors who woefully fail to conform to

the requirements of the court. This Court’s disconnection from the realities of the trial-

court process becomes even more troublesome when we conclude, as the majority does

here, that such conduct is evidence that the entirety of the trial was “despotic” and

“coercive.” Chastising a juror who is more than an hour late for trial without even

extending the court the courtesy of calling to explain why that juror cannot timely appear

is within the range of acceptable trial-court conduct. Because the judge’s response was

41
   On direct examination Sergeant Gnatek testified he had observed defendant sprinting
away from the group with whom he was gathered. On cross-examination, defense counsel
asked Sergeant Gnatek to reaffirm that he had observed defendant sprinting away. The
trial judge described this as a mischaracterization of Sergeant Gnatek’s prior testimony.
The judge believed that the officer had testified that defendant had run rather than sprinted
away from the group.

                                             16
appropriate, it is not evidence of the coercive nature of a jury instruction given a day after

Juror No. 8 was rebuked and discharged for being tardy. The trial judge merely displayed

her interest in running a timely and efficient, no-nonsense courtroom. This action cannot

be translated into a signal from the judge to the jurors that they are to act in accordance

with her implicit views of the case.

       With the benefit of hindsight, the majority describes “[a] better approach” to handle

punctually challenged jurors. Regardless of whether the approach described by the

majority is “better,” this Court should not be in the business of second-guessing the manner

by which trial courts handle discourteous jurors who fail to timely appear for service as

ordered by the court. Such jurors are not only disrespectful of their fellow jurors and the

court, they also delay our justice system to the detriment of taxpayers and litigants not only

in the case in which they are serving but also in all other cases on the trial court’s

backlogged docket. While each trial judge may choose to handle such occurrences

differently, the action taken by any given judge rests in the inherent discretion invested in

each judge to manage the courtroom. And even if the remaining jurors perceived the act

of requiring tardy Juror No. 8 to sit in an area of the courtroom normally reserved for

remanded litigants as an act of public humiliation, jurors are fully competent to understand

that even a harsh, but deserved, rebuke to a tardy juror is hardly a directive to the remaining

jurors that they are therefore to ignore the instructions on the law and, instead, subordinate

their decision-making authority concerning matters of guilt or innocence to the implicit

preferences of the trial judge.

       In sum, viewing the supplemental instruction in proper context, I conclude that the

only “coercive” act by the trial judge was requiring the jury to go to lunch before resuming

                                              17
its deliberations. Nothing in the record supports the conclusion that the trial judge

implicitly directed the jurors to return a guilty verdict.

B. DEFENDANT HAS NOT SHOWN THAT THE SUPPLEMENTAL INSTRUCTION
      SERIOUSLY AFFECTED THE FAIRNESS, INTEGRITY, AND PUBLIC
             REPUTATION OF THE JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS

         Even if we were to concede that the trial judge erred by giving the supplemental

instruction, reversal of defendant’s conviction is not warranted because he has failed to

satisfy the plain-error standard of review.42 This standard requires a defendant to establish

that (1) error occurred, (2) the error was plain (i.e., “clear or obvious”), and (3) the error

affected the defendant’s substantial rights.43 But even if the defendant satisfies these three

elements, reversal is warranted only when the error results in either the conviction of an

actually innocent defendant or seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation

of judicial proceedings independent of the defendant’s innocence.44

         The majority’s application of the fourth plain-error prong is deeply concerning: it

summarily concludes that the supplemental instruction “seriously affected the fairness,

integrity, and public reputation of the judicial proceedings by affecting the jury’s

verdict[.]” Simply put, the majority unduly strains the plain-error standard. Even assuming

that the trial judge, in giving the supplemental instruction, committed a clear or obvious

42
  People v Aldrich, 246 Mich. App. 101, 124-125; 631 NW2d 67 (2001) (explaining that
unpreserved claims of instructional error are reviewed for plain error affecting the
defendant’s substantial rights, while the instructions themselves are reviewed in their
entirety).
43
  People v Carines, 460 Mich. 750, 763; 597 NW2d 130 (1999), citing United States v
Olano, 507 U.S. 725, 731; 113 S. Ct. 1770; 123 L. Ed. 2d 508 (1993).
44
     Carines, 460 Mich. at 763.

                                              18
error of law that affected defendant’s substantial rights, there is no basis for reversal under

the fourth requirement of the plain-error standard.

       Neither the fairness nor the integrity nor the public reputation of this trial was

compromised when the trial judge gave the supplemental instruction that the jury should

go to lunch and continue deliberating upon return. The trial judge made it clear from the

outset that she did not believe the jury was indeed deadlocked. She informed the attorneys

that the jury could not deliberate for 75 minutes and simply give up. She informed counsel

of her intent to tell the jurors exactly that. Next, she informed counsel that if it turned out

that one or more jurors was not participating in the jury process, the court would address

that situation. Then, she stated that she was going to send the jurors to lunch. She also

expressed that she would give the Allen instruction if she received another “deadlocked”

note after lunch. Finally, she again reminded the attorneys that she would make these

statements to the jury and then asked if there was anything else to address.

       In providing this explanation, the trial judge essentially provided counsel multiple

opportunities to object and on several grounds. That is, she specifically afforded the

opportunity to object based on the general omission of the Allen charge, the supposedly

coercive statements made to the jury, and on the grounds that she was sending the jurors to

lunch at that time. But no objection was asserted. Without any objection to aid or inform

the trial judge about the substance of defendant’s concerns, the judge brought the jury into

the courtroom and instructed them as she had informed counsel she would. And while the

absence of an objection does not categorically preclude a defendant from establishing plain

error, the absence of objections in this context suggests that any error was certainly not

clear or obvious, considering defense counsel was presented with several grounds upon

                                              19
which to object and was provided a detailed explanation as to what the court was going to

tell the jury. But for the same reasons, even assuming defense counsel missed a clear or

obvious error of law, the trial judge did not come close to compromising the fairness,

integrity, or public reputation of the trial. On these facts, the plain-error standard is not

even close to being satisfied.

                                   IV. CONCLUSION

       This Court’s holding misapprehends the traditional understanding of juror coercion,

fails to recognize the practical realities of trial-court proceedings, and strains the

requirements for reversing a jury’s verdict under the plain-error standard of review. At

most, the trial judge merely required the jury to go to lunch. Nothing said by the trial judge

coerced the jury to convict defendant. Accordingly, I would affirm the judgment of the

Court of Appeals.

                                                         Brian K. Zahra
                                                         Stephen J. Markman

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