Court Opinion

ID: 9297347
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-30 15:07:57.447022+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:13:25.303769
License: Public Domain

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA
                         In The Court of Appeals

             The State, Respondent,

             v.

             Nyquan Tykie Brown, Appellant.

             Appellate Case No. 2019-001548

                         Appeal From Greenville County
                       Edward W. Miller, Circuit Court Judge

                               Opinion No. 5953
               Heard September 15, 2022 – Filed November 30, 2022

                                    AFFIRMED

             Appellate Defender Lara M. Caudy, of Columbia, for
             Appellant.

             Attorney General Alan McCrory Wilson, Deputy
             Attorney General Donald J. Zelenka, Senior Assistant
             Deputy Attorney General Melody J. Brown, and
             Assistant Attorney General Julianna E. Battenfield, all of
             Columbia; and Solicitor William Walter Wilkins, III, of
             Greenville, all for Respondent.

HEWITT, J.: This is an appeal of a murder conviction. The sole issue is whether
it was error for the circuit court to instruct the jury that it was permissible (but not
required) for the jury to infer malice if the killing occurred during the commission
of a felony.
The charge was straight out of precedent, but a line of cases suggests it may be
improper because it arguably emphasizes a particular fact in evidence—the
commission of a felony. We do not reach that question; we do not hold the charge
was improper. Instead, we hold that if it was error, the error was harmless. The only
dispute at trial was identity, not malice. For that reason, we affirm.

FACTS

Nyquan Brown was indicted for murder, armed robbery, and possession of a weapon
during the commission of a violent crime. Fred Anderson—the victim—was robbed,
shot, and killed in his friend's apartment. Anderson was a known marijuana dealer.

The basic facts were not disputed. Anderson was sitting in the apartment with one
of the women who lived there. Two masked men entered through an unlocked door.
They demanded Anderson give them his marijuana and money. Anderson gave the
men a mason jar containing marijuana and the small amount of money in his pocket.
The men demanded Anderson give them his wallet. Anderson said he did not carry
a wallet.

The intruders allowed the woman sitting with Anderson to go upstairs. She did so,
but after that, she walked part of the way back down the stairs and remained in the
stairwell. She heard commotion and tussling and heard Anderson say he would not
fight the men because one of them had a gun. There were multiple gunshots after
that. The investigation eventually revealed that someone shot Anderson four times
and that two of the shots were likely fatal. There was also testimony of a delay
between the third and fourth gunshots.

No one gave a detailed description of the robbers. The woman who had been sitting
with Anderson saw only one person with a gun before she went upstairs. She said
this person was Black and unusually short. Surveillance footage revealed the men
running into a nearby apartment after the shooting. Footage from before the crime
showed someone coming out of that same apartment and pointing the men towards
Anderson's apartment. An investigator identified that person as Jonathan
Suber-Purry. After giving several inconsistent and false statements, Suber-Purry
identified Brown as one of the men shown on the footage for the police. Phone
records supported this identification.

Police located and arrested Brown, and the case proceeded to trial. The circuit court
gave the following instruction in its jury charge:
             Malice can be inferred if one kills another during the
             commission of a felony. Now, [if] the facts are proved
             beyond a reasonable doubt sufficient to raise an inference
             of malice to your satisfaction, this inference would be
             simply an evidentiary fact to be considered by you, along
             with all the other evidence in the case. And you give it the
             weight that you decide it should receive.

A jury found Brown guilty as to all three indictments.

ISSUE

Was the implied malice instruction burden-shifting or a charge on the facts?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

"An appellate court will not reverse the trial court's decision regarding jury
instructions unless the trial court abused its discretion." Clark v. Cantrell, 339 S.C.
369, 389, 529 S.E.2d 528, 539 (2000). "When reviewing a jury charge for error, an
appellate court considers the charge as a whole; the charge must be prejudicial to the
appellant to warrant a new trial." State v. Stukes, 416 S.C. 493, 498, 787 S.E.2d 480,
482 (2016).

HARMLESS ERROR

While we do not hold that the instruction was error, we think that if it was erroneous,
the instruction was harmless.

"Errors, including erroneous jury instructions, are subject to harmless error
analysis." State v. Burdette, 427 S.C. 490, 496, 832 S.E.2d 575, 578 (2019) (quoting
State v. Belcher, 385 S.C. 597, 611, 685 S.E.2d 802, 809 (2009), overruled on other
grounds by Burdette, 427 S.C. at 504 n.3, 832 S.E.2d at 583 n.3). "In order to find
the error harmless, we must determine beyond a reasonable doubt that the error
complained of did not contribute to the verdict." State v. Kerr, 330 S.C. 132, 144-45,
498 S.E.2d 212, 218 (Ct. App. 1998). "In making a harmless error analysis, our
inquiry is not what the verdict would have been had the jury been given the correct
charge, but whether the erroneous charge contributed to the verdict rendered." Id.
at 145, 498 S.E.2d at 218.
The core dispute in this case was identity—whether the State could prove beyond a
reasonable doubt that Brown was the masked shooter. The evidence was somewhat
limited, including only the description from Anderson's friend (she said the shooter
was short and Black), Suber-Purry's identification of Brown, and phone records
placing Brown's phone near the scene. The defense focused on discrediting
Suber-Purry by highlighting his inconsistent and false statements to police. It also
argued the State was blaming Brown for the crime because Brown happened to be
short.

The point is that nobody disputed the other aspects of this incident, including
whether this killing was unprovoked and deliberate. Nobody disputed there had
been an armed robbery. Nobody argued Anderson's killing lacked malice. While
the State always bears the burden of proving all elements of a crime beyond a
reasonable doubt, we are not persuaded that an instruction about drawing an
inference of malice had any bearing on a case where the undisputed evidence is that
an unarmed victim was shot multiple times after he expressly disclaimed any intent
to defend himself.

FELONY MURDER

We need not go further to resolve this case, but as far as we can tell, this is the first
case that has called on us to apply our supreme court's "elevating a fact" cases to
felony murder.

Jury charges that comment on the facts of a case are not allowed. See S.C. Const.
art. V, § 21 ("Judges shall not charge juries in respect to matters of fact, but shall
declare the law."). A jury instruction is a comment on the facts when it expresses
the court's opinion of a case, thereby imposing the court's belief on the jury in a way
likely to influence it. See Enlee v. Seaboard Air Line Ry., 110 S.C. 137, 146, 96 S.E.
490, 492 (1918) ("The purpose of [prohibiting judges from charging on the facts] is
to prevent the trial judge from intimating to the jury his opinion of the case what
weight or credence should be given to the evidence and participating in any manner
with the jury's finding of fact."); see also State v. Thorne, 237 S.C. 248, 251, 116
S.E.2d 854, 855 (1960) ("Under our Constitution the jury is the exclusive judge of
the facts, and the true meaning and real object is that the jury must be left to form its
own judgment, unbiased by any expressions, or even intimations, of opinion by the
Judge.").

We do not think the charge here is a comment on the facts. The instruction does not
imply the circuit court believed Brown committed armed robbery. It does not
suggest the court was attempting to influence the jury to find malice in this particular
way, nor did it encourage the jury to give evidence of the robbery any special weight.

Recent precedent has directed circuit courts to refrain from giving instructions that
guide juries on the inferences they can draw from evidence or that tells the jury to
consider particular evidence and how to construe it. State v. Cheeks invalidated the
instruction that knowledge of the presence of drugs is strong evidence of intent to
control the disposition or use of drugs. 401 S.C. 322, 328-29, 737 S.E.2d 480, 484
(2013). State v. Stukes invalidated the instruction that the accuser's testimony in a
criminal sexual conduct case need not be corroborated. 416 S.C. 493, 499-500, 787
S.E.2d 480, 483 (2016). Burdette held courts could no longer instruct juries that
they may infer malice from the use of a deadly weapon. 427 S.C. at 501-04, 832
S.E.2d at 582-83. This list goes on. See State v. Stewart, 433 S.C. 382, 391, 858
S.E.2d 808, 813 (2021) (involving an instruction about knowledge or possession of
drugs when drugs are found on property under the defendant's control); Pantovich v.
State, 427 S.C. 555, 562, 832 S.E.2d 596, 600 (2019) (involving an instruction on
good character alone).

We understand these decisions as being driven by the desire to protect the jury's
authority to weigh the evidence and draw inferences from the evidence. The lawyers
are free in argument to suggest how the jury should think about the evidence and
what conclusions they should draw, but the ultimate decision is the jury's to make.

There is a good argument that this charge is meaningfully different from the ones
listed above. Precedent tells us the key feature of felony murder is that the intent to
commit the underlying felony substitutes for the malice element of murder. See
Gore v. Leeke, 261 S.C. 308, 315, 199 S.E.2d 755, 757 (1973). One argument that
this charge is different than the charges that have been recently invalidated is that
felony murder under Gore does not involve the jury using the intent to commit a
felony to infer the malice element of murder. In felony murder, "[t]he law" implies
malice "from proof of the felony." Id.

This view makes sense when considering the rationale of felony murder as aimed at
deterring people from committing felonies that are inherently dangerous. As Iowa's
highest court explained, felony murder is not a "shortcut" to finding malice. State v.
Harrison, 914 N.W.2d 178, 193 (Iowa 2018). There, and (apparently) under Gore,
malice is not an element of felony murder.

Even so, we cannot say this approach to felony murder is the approach that clearly
applies in South Carolina. We have Gore's instruction that the intent to commit a
felony will make murder out of any killing during the felony, but we also have two
burden-shifting cases that say the most the court can charge in a felony murder
situation is that the jury may infer malice from the felony. Lowry v. State, 376 S.C.
499, 506, 657 S.E.2d 760, 764 (2008); State v. Norris, 285 S.C. 86, 92, 328 S.E.2d
339, 342 (1985), overruled by Belcher, 385 S.C. at 612 n.10, 685 S.E.2d at 810 n.10.
These cases state the court cannot tell the jury that it must infer malice or that the
law infers malice.

We may be mistaken, but we were not able to read Gore together with Lowry and
Norris and reach a clear conclusion about how felony murder applies in South
Carolina and what (if anything) a circuit court should charge with respect to that
doctrine. A charge from a case in another jurisdiction seemed to make made good
sense under Gore. That charge said:

             The unlawful killing of a human being, whether
             intentional, unintentional or accidental, which occurs as a
             result of the commission or attempt to commit [the
             underlying felony, which must be a dangerous felony] and
             where there was in the mind of the perpetrator the specific
             intent to commit [that crime] is murder . . . . The specific
             intent to commit [the felony] and the commission or
             attempt to commit such crime must be proved beyond a
             reasonable doubt.

People v. Burton, 491 P.2d 793, 799 n.3 (Cal. 1971) (en banc) (internal references
omitted). While that charge seems to accurately capture "traditional" felony murder
that criminalizes any killing—even an accidental one—occurring during the
commission of a dangerous felony, it seems contrary to Lowry and Norris, which
limited courts to giving a permissive inference charge. It may be that Lowry and
Norris are distinguishable because they were brought as burden-shifting cases, not
as directly addressing whether "malice" is an element of felony murder. Or, it may
be that a permissive inference charge under Lowry and Norris is all the court can
say. If the permissive inference charge is invalid under the "elevating a fact" line of
cases, we wonder what the circuit court can say about felony murder, if anything.
This uncertainty is why we started with harmless error, for as we explained at the
beginning, the parties in this case did not dispute malice, and there is no doubt the
permissive inference charge did not contribute to this verdict.

BURDEN-SHIFTING
Brown argues the permissive inference charge given here was burden-shifting. We
will not dwell long on this argument. As we explained during our discussion of
Lowry and Norris, inference charges are not burden-shifting if they are permissive
and not mandatory. See Lowry, 376 S.C. at 506, 657 S.E.2d at 764 (granting
post-conviction relief because the instruction did not tell the jury it may infer malice
but that it must); Norris, 285 S.C. at 92, 328 S.E.2d at 342 (finding no error with the
instruction telling the jury it could infer malice); see also State v. Wilds, 355 S.C.
269, 277, 584 S.E.2d 138, 142 (Ct. App. 2003) ("In a charge to the jury, the judge
should make clear to the jury that it is free to accept or reject the permissive
inferences depending on its view of the evidence.").

CONCLUSION

For these reasons, Brown's murder conviction and sentence is

AFFIRMED.

KONDUROS and VINSON, JJ., concur.