Court Opinion

ID: 9376046
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-01 18:02:34.626947+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:03.922534
License: Public Domain

Cite as 2023 Ark. App. 119
                   ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
                                       DIVISION II
                                       No. CR-22-225

                                                Opinion Delivered March   1, 2023

 JOHN MITCHELL                           APPEAL FROM THE POLK COUNTY
                               APPELLANT CIRCUIT COURT
                                         [NO. 57CR-18-174]
 V.
                                                HONORABLE CHARLES A.
                                                YEARGAN, JUDGE
 STATE OF ARKANSAS
                                  APPELLEE REVERSED

                         WENDY SCHOLTENS WOOD, Judge

       John Mitchell brings this interlocutory appeal from the Polk County Circuit Court’s

order denying his motion to dismiss a charge of first-degree murder and its included offense

of second-degree murder. On appeal, he argues that his retrial on these offenses is barred by

double jeopardy. We agree and reverse.

       On August 11–13, 2020, Mitchell was tried before a Polk County jury for the first-

degree murder of his neighbor, Don Smith. Mitchell testified in his own defense and did

not dispute that he killed Smith. He testified he had done so in self-defense.

       The court instructed the jury on first-degree murder and gave the transitional

instruction that also allowed the jury to consider the lesser-included offenses of second-

degree murder and manslaughter. The court informed the jury, “You may find the
Defendant guilty of one of these charges, or you may acquit him outright.” Consistent with

these instructions, the jury was given a verdict form that required it either to convict on one

of the three homicide offenses or to acquit on all of them.

       During deliberations, the jury informed the court it was deadlocked. The court

instructed the jury to continue its deliberations, emphasizing the importance of reaching a

verdict. The jury did so, but it later sent a note to the court indicating that it was deadlocked;

it had voted unanimously against first- and second-degree murder and could not reach a

unanimous decision on manslaughter.

       In light of the note, defense counsel told the court, “I have to make some type of

argument that they have found Mitchell not guilty of murder one, and not guilty of murder

two, and they are only locked on manslaughter.” The prosecuting attorney asserted that it

was unknown how the jury arrived at a deadlock and that “it’s straight up or down a mistrial,

or not.” Defense counsel then suggested that the jury fill out verdict forms finding Mitchell

not guilty on the two murder offenses. After additional discussion, the court concluded that

it had to declare a mistrial. Defense counsel suggested that the court poll the jury on first-

and second-degree murder, and the State said, “Okay. Let’s go ahead, and do that.”

       The jury was then brought into the courtroom. The court asked the jury foreperson

if the jury was deadlocked, and she confirmed that it was. The court then polled the jurors,

and each confirmed that the jury was deadlocked. The court asked the foreperson if the jury

unanimously voted not guilty on the first- and second-degree murder charges. The foreperson

said yes. The court again polled the jurors, all of whom individually confirmed that their

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votes for both charges were not guilty. The court asked the foreperson if the jury could come

to a unanimous verdict on manslaughter, and the foreperson said it could not.

       Defense counsel requested that verdict forms be signed for the two murder offenses.

The State responded: “Your Honor, I don’t have an objection to them signing a verdict form

. . . they’ve been polled, and they’ve confirmed it.” The court granted the defense’s request

for signed verdicts.1 The court declared a mistrial on manslaughter. The court then sent the

jurors back to the jury room so that the foreperson could complete the verdict forms. After

the jury returned to the courtroom, the court read the verdict forms aloud: “[W]e, the jury,

find beyond a reasonable doubt that John Mitchell is not guilty of the charge of murder in

the first degree. With respect to the charge of murder in the second degree, we the jury, find

John Mitchell not guilty.” The court once again asked the jurors if they agreed with the

verdicts, and the jurors collectively affirmed that they did. The court then discharged the

jury, and the proceedings concluded with counsel and the court scheduling a pretrial date

for Mitchell’s retrial. On August 18, the not-guilty verdict forms as to first- and second-degree

murder—signed by the foreperson—were filed with the clerk.

       The State filed an amended criminal information on September 11, 2020. The first-

degree-murder charge was among the charges. Mitchell subsequently filed a motion to

dismiss any homicide charge greater than manslaughter on double-jeopardy grounds.

       1
        Because the verdict form that had been given to the jurors did not allow individual
findings of not guilty on first- and second-degree murder, the State prepared new verdict
forms.

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Mitchell argued that the polling of the jurors and their completed verdict forms constituted

an acquittal of first- and second-degree murder. Citing Blueford v. State, 2011 Ark. 8, 370

S.W.3d 496, the State responded that a trial ending in a hung jury is not the equivalent of

an acquittal for purposes of establishing double jeopardy. This was so, the State argued,

because Arkansas does not recognize partial verdicts.

       After a hearing, the circuit court denied Mitchell’s motion, finding that no final

judgment had been entered acquitting him of first- or second-degree murder because the case

had ended in a mistrial. In the circuit court’s view, a partial verdict rendered in a case that

ends in a mistrial cannot implicate double jeopardy. The court’s written order to that effect

was entered on September 17. This appeal followed.

       On interlocutory appeal of the denial of a motion to dismiss on double-jeopardy

grounds, this court reviews the case de novo. Blueford, 2011 Ark. 8, at 5, 370 S.W.3d at 499.

Any factual determinations underlying the circuit court’s decision are afforded deference

and will not be reversed unless clearly erroneous. Id., 370 S.W.3d at 499. The ultimate

decision by the circuit court that the defendant’s protection against double jeopardy was not

violated is reviewed de novo, with no deference given to the circuit court. Id., 370 S.W.3d at

499. A double-jeopardy claim may be raised by interlocutory appeal because if a defendant

is illegally tried a second time, the right would have been forfeited. Id., 370 S.W.3d at 499.

       Both the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 2, section

8 of the Arkansas Constitution require that no person be twice put in jeopardy of life or

liberty for the same offense. Blueford, 2011 Ark. 8, at 6, 370 S.W.3d at 500. These

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constitutional provisions protect criminal defendants from being subjected to a second

prosecution for the same offense after an acquittal of that offense. Id., 370 S.W.3d at 500.

This protection is also found in Arkansas Code Annotated section 5-1-112(1)(A)(b)(i) (Repl.

2013). An acquittal is “a resolution, correct or not, of some or all of the factual elements of

the offense charged.” United States v. Martin Linen Supply, 430 U.S. 564, 571 (1977), quoted

in State v. Martin, 2017 Ark. 64, at 7, 512 S.W.3d 617, 621. For purposes of double-jeopardy

analysis, the Supreme Court has described a judgment of acquittal as “a jury verdict of not

guilty.” United States v. Scott, 437 U.S. 82, 91 (1978). Whether based on a jury verdict of not

guilty or on a ruling by a court that the evidence is insufficient to convict, a judgment of

acquittal terminates jeopardy and bars retrial. Id.

       These provisions, however, do not prevent the State from retrying a defendant after

its first attempt to obtain a conviction has ended in a mistrial due to jury deadlock. Blueford,

2011 Ark. 8, at 7, 370 S.W.3d at 500. In that instance, the jury’s inability to reach a final

decision is considered a manifest necessity that permits the declaration of a mistrial and

continuation of the initial jeopardy that commenced when the jury was first empaneled.

Because the declaration of a mistrial following a hung jury does not terminate jeopardy with

a verdict of acquittal, a second trial will not place the defendant in jeopardy for a second

time in violation of the Double Jeopardy Clause. Richardson v. United States, 468 U.S. 317,

323 (1984); Blueford, 2011 Ark. 8, at 7, 370 S.W.3d at 500.

       Mitchell argues that, despite the declaration of a mistrial in his case, the jury acquitted

him of first- and second-degree murder, and double jeopardy prevents retrial on those

                                                5
offenses. In support of his argument, Mitchell principally relies on Blueford and Basham v.

State, 2011 Ark. App. 384.

       Blueford was charged with capital murder, and his jury was instructed to consider

that charge and three lesser-included offenses of first-degree murder, manslaughter, and

negligent homicide. During deliberations, the jury twice informed the circuit court it was

deadlocked. Upon questioning by the circuit court, the jury foreperson reported that the

jury had voted unanimously against capital murder and first-degree murder and had voted

“nine for, and three against” manslaughter. 2011 Ark. 8, at 3, 370 S.W.3d at 498. Each time,

the circuit court instructed the jury to continue its deliberations. Following the second

instruction, Blueford’s counsel asked the court to submit new verdict forms to the jurors for

the offenses on which they had unanimously voted. The State objected on the grounds the

jury was still deliberating and had not yet made any findings. The court denied Blueford’s

request. The jury ultimately failed to reach a verdict, and the circuit court declared a mistrial.

Id. at 4, 370 S.W.3d at 499.

       Blueford’s trial was rescheduled, and he filed motions asserting that the foreperson’s

announcement in open court that the jury had unanimously found him not guilty of capital

and first-degree murder was an acquittal that precluded his retrial on those charges. Id., 370

S.W.3d at 499. The circuit court denied the motions. It acknowledged the jury’s explicit,

unanimous vote finding Blueford not guilty of the two murder offenses but concluded they

were not findings or verdicts as intended by the law and that the mistrial had been entered

because the jury was unable to complete its deliberations. Id., 370 S.W.3d at 499.

                                                6
       On appeal to the Arkansas Supreme Court, Blueford’s argument was premised on

the standard transitional jury instruction given to Arkansas juries when they consider

criminal offenses involving lesser-included offenses. In his view, this instruction told the jury

it could not consider his guilt on the lesser-included offense of manslaughter until it had

found him not guilty on the greater offenses. He contended that because the jury was

deadlocked on the lesser-included offense of manslaughter, its announcement of unanimous

votes against capital and first-degree murder constituted an acquittal. 2011 Ark. 8, at 5–7,

370 S.W.3d at 499–500.

       The supreme court discussed the general rule that a mistrial due to a deadlocked jury

is not an event that prevents retrial on double-jeopardy grounds. Id. at 7, 370 S.W.3d at 500

(citing Richardson, supra). It further explained that the foreperson’s oral announcement of

the jury’s unanimous votes did not constitute an acquittal, as Blueford had argued, because

it did not bear the hallmarks of finality since there was no verdict or judgment of acquittal

entered of record. 2011 Ark. 8, at 7–8, 370 S.W.3d at 500–01. For these reasons, our

supreme court rejected Blueford’s argument that the transitional instruction and the jury

foreperson’s announcement in open court of unanimous votes of not guilty had resulted in

an acquittal of capital and first-degree murder.

       In Blueford v. Arkansas, 566 U.S. 599 (2012), the Supreme Court of the United States

affirmed the decision. The Supreme Court observed that nothing in the jury instructions

prohibited jurors from revisiting a prior vote after they had resumed deliberations, even for

the greater offenses against which the jury had already unanimously voted. Id. at 607–08. It

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was for that reason that the foreperson’s report on the jurors’ votes prior to the end of

deliberations “lacked the finality necessary to amount to an acquittal on those offenses, quite

apart from any requirement that a formal verdict be returned or judgment entered.” Id. at

608.

       In Basham, 2011 Ark. App. 384, Basham was charged with first-degree murder, and

the jury was instructed on that offense and was given the transitional instruction that allowed

it to consider the lesser-included offenses of second-degree murder and manslaughter. The

foreperson informed the circuit court that the jury was deadlocked, and the court asked the

foreperson to write the status of the jury’s deliberations on paper. He wrote “11 2nd degree

[and] 1 not guilty by mental defect.” 2011 Ark. App. 384, at 2. The jury resumed

deliberations and later informed the court that there still was no unanimous decision. The

court declared a mistrial, dismissed the jury, and entered the jury’s note in the record. Before

his retrial, Basham filed motions to dismiss. On the bases of the transitional jury instruction

and the note indicating the jury had dropped down from first-degree murder to consider

second-degree murder, Basham argued that the jury had implicitly acquitted him of the

greater offense. The circuit court denied the motions, and Basham repeated his argument

on appeal. Id. at 3–4.

       Basham’s argument was premised on Green v. United States, 355 U.S. 184 (1957), in

which the Supreme Court held that a conviction on a lesser offense impliedly acquits a

defendant of the greater offense. This court rejected Basham’s argument that the note

containing the jury’s hung vote on second-degree murder signified an implicit acquittal on

                                               8
the greater offense. Basham, 2011 Ark. App. 384, at 5–7. The court reasoned that Basham’s

case was not analogous to Green because there had been no conviction on second-degree

murder in Basham’s case; therefore, there had been no implied acquittal under Green’s

holding. Id. at 6. This court went on in Basham to explain that jeopardy bars a retrial only

when a defendant has been acquitted by a verdict that is final. Id. This court observed that

there had been no verdict of acquittal duly returned and received in Basham’s case under

the formal practices noted in Blueford and Arkansas Code Annotated section 16-89-126(a)

(Repl. 2005). Basham, 2011 Ark. App. 384, at 6.2 “Basham’s trial ended in a mistrial without

a final verdict entered in the record, and there was no actual verdict of acquittal.” Id. at 6.

       Mitchell argues that Blueford and Basham demonstrate that the formal, final receipt of

a verdict—not the entry of a judgment of acquittal—raises a former jeopardy bar. He points

out that, in contrast with Blueford and Basham, he received verdicts of acquittal for first- and

second-degree murder that were “as actual and complete as possible in Arkansas practice.”

       Mitchell’s case is quite different from the report of the jury’s votes in Blueford and the

written vote in Basham. At the conclusion of the deadlocked proceedings in which the circuit

court declared the mistrial, and without objection by either party, the foreperson

acknowledged in open court that the jury had unanimously voted to find Mitchell not guilty

of first- and second-degree murder; the jurors were polled on their not-guilty votes; and their

       2
        Section 16-89-126(a) provides: “When the jury has agreed upon their verdict, they
must be conducted into court by the officer having them in charge, their names called by the
clerk, and, if they all appear, their foreman must declare their verdict.”

                                               9
signed verdict forms of acquittal were confirmed in open court and entered of record. The

formality and finality of the jury’s verdicts of acquittal on these two murder offenses could

not be clearer, see Ark. Code Ann. § 16-89-126(a), which distinguishes Mitchell’s case from

Blueford and Basham.

       However, as the State argues and as the circuit court observed below when it denied

Mitchell’s motion to dismiss, Arkansas follows the majority rule, which does not permit

partial verdicts in cases where a jury deadlocks on a single charge that includes multiple

degrees of offenses. Blueford, 2011 Ark. 8, at 9–11, 370 S.W.3d at 502. In that instance, a

circuit court may not conduct a partial-verdict inquiry as to the charged offense and the lesser

offenses included within it. Id., 370 S.W.3d at 502.

       This rule is embodied in our standard introductory and transitional jury instructions

that apply to single charges that have multiple lesser-included offenses. AMI Crim. 2d 301,

302. These instructions were addressed in Blueford’s case. Blueford, 566 U.S. at 609–10. And

Mitchell’s jury received the same instructions before its deliberations, along with a verdict

form that allowed it to convict on first-degree murder, second-degree murder, or

manslaughter or to acquit on all three offenses. As construed by the Supreme Court in

Blueford, these instructions allow a jury only two options for its verdict in the case of a single

charge that includes lesser offenses. It may “either find the defendant guilty of one of these

offenses or acquit him outright,” and the jury’s verdict in such a case must be unanimous.

Id. at 603. Therefore, the standard instructions did not allow Mitchell’s jury “to acquit on

some offenses but not others” as a matter of Arkansas law. Id. Accordingly, we hold that the

                                               10
circuit court erred when it deviated from the standard instructions and allowed the jury to

return a partial verdict. The question we must answer at this juncture is whether this legal

error—that yielded an impermissible partial verdict of not guilty on two offenses within a

single charge—voids that verdict so that the constitutional prohibition of double jeopardy

does not apply.

       The State argues that because the circuit court erroneously received a partial verdict,

the not-guilty verdicts are legal nullities and do not prevent Mitchell’s retrial for murder on

double-jeopardy grounds. The State relies on I.K. v. State, 2018 Ark. App. 584, 564 S.W.3d

579, and State v. Brooks, 360 Ark. 499, 202 S.W.3d 508 (2005), for the proposition that “[t]he

result of a circuit court’s action taken in the absence of legal authority to take such action is

a nullity.” These cases, however, concerned judicial actions taken outside of the court’s

constitutional authority—specifically, the court’s amendment of a criminal information in

violation of the separation-of-powers doctrine in I.K., 2018 Ark. App. 584, at 3–4, 564

S.W.3d at 581, and its unconstitutional transfer of a case outside a judicial district in Brooks,

360 Ark. at 504–05, 202 S.W.3d at 512. The State cites no authority that demonstrates a

circuit court’s deviation from the applicable jury instructions and verdict form during jury

deliberations renders a jury’s resulting final verdict null and void. And when considering

whether the Double Jeopardy Clause mandates partial-verdict inquiries, the Supreme Court

in Blueford held it did not and treated the circuit court’s decision about whether to make

such an inquiry as a matter of discretion. Blueford, 566 U.S. at 609–10. While the circuit

                                               11
court’s decision to undertake a partial-verdict inquiry was legal error, it was not an act outside

of the court’s constitutional authority that rendered the jury’s two verdicts null and void.

       Despite the circuit court’s legal error, it followed the formal processes for the

rendering of formal and final verdicts of acquittal on first- and second-degree murder. With

the agreement of the parties, the jurors announced their verdict in open court; they were

polled; and the verdict forms, which were signed by the foreperson and entered on the

record, found Mitchell not guilty of two of the three homicide offenses included in the single

charge. In both form and substance, these verdicts represented the jury’s final decision, as

the trier of fact, that Mitchell was not guilty of first- and second-degree murder. It, therefore,

was an acquittal. See Scott, 437 U.S. at 91; Martin Linen Supply Co., 430 U.S. at 571.

       To conclude that the error that led to these verdicts deprives them of effect under

double-jeopardy principles would be to elevate form over substance. As with any other form

of error that results in acquittal, a defendant may not be retried on an offense for which he

was acquitted. Sanabria v. United States, 437 U.S. 54, 74 (1978) (“[T]here is no exception

permitting retrial once the defendant has been acquitted, no matter how ‘egregiously

erroneous’ . . . the legal rulings leading to that judgment might be.”).

       Therefore, we hold that the circuit court erred when it denied Mitchell’s motion to

dismiss, which sought to prevent his retrial on first- and second-degree murder on double-

jeopardy grounds. Accordingly, we reverse.

       Reversed.

       THYER and BROWN, JJ., agree.

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David R. Raupp, Arkansas Public Defender Commission, for appellant.

Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Christian Harris, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.

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