State v. Johnson ( 2014 )


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  •                           NOTICE: NOT FOR PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION DOES NOT CREATE
    LEGAL PRECEDENT AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS AUTHORIZED.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,
    v.
    STEPHEN CONRAD JOHNSON, Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CR 13-0417
    FILED 06-19-2014
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Mohave County
    No. S8015CR201200356
    The Honorable Derek C. Carlisle, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
    By William Scott Simon
    Counsel for Appellee
    Mohave County Legal Advocate, Kingman
    By Jill L. Evans
    Counsel for Appellant
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Presiding Judge Randall M. Howe delivered the decision of the Court, in
    which Judge Michael J. Brown and Judge Jon W. Thompson joined.
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    H O W E, Presiding Judge:
    ¶1            Stephen Conrad Johnson appeals his convictions and
    sentences for two counts of aggravated assault, class three felonies and
    repetitive dangerous offenses; one count of misconduct involving
    weapons, a class four felony and non-dangerous but repetitive offense;
    and one count of disorderly conduct involving weapons, a class six felony,
    and repetitive dangerous offense. Johnson challenges the trial court’s
    ruling denying his requested instruction to the jury on self-defense as
    justification to the charged crimes. Johnson also argues the court
    reversibly erred by coercing the jury’s verdicts. Finally, Johnson contends
    the court violated his due process rights by denying his request to
    continue the aggravation and mitigation hearing so he could present
    additional mitigation evidence. For the following reasons, we disagree
    with Johnson’s assertions of error and therefore affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2            The trial evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to
    sustaining the verdicts, 1 reveals the following. Shortly before 11:00 a.m.
    on March 10, 2012, Johnson walked into a truck stop convenience store
    wearing a pulled-up hoodie, sunglasses, and a blue cloth or bandana
    covering his lower face. At trial, the evidence conflicted on whether
    Johnson purchased a bag of candy and either demanded money from the
    cashier saying that he had a gun, or said nothing about the gun and asked
    for a pack of cigarettes. Whatever occurred, however, Johnson was
    confronted by another employee JA, who tried to remove Johnson’s face
    covering. Johnson resisted, pulled out a handgun and pointed it at JA’s
    face. Other customers and employees in the store dropped to the floor and
    scattered upon noticing the gun. A store employee called 911 when she
    learned from the cashier that Johnson was purportedly attempting to rob
    the store.
    ¶3           Johnson ran from the store followed by JA and TV, the
    store’s maintenance manager. JA and TV chased Johnson not to capture
    him, but to “keep him in sight” to assist police in locating him. At some
    point during the foot chase, Johnson turned, pulled out his handgun, and
    fired a “warning shot” before lowering the gun and pointing it at TV, who
    1        See State v. Nelson, 
    214 Ariz. 196
    , 196 ¶ 2, 
    150 P.3d 769
    , 769 (App.
    2007).
    2
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    was approximately forty to fifty feet away. TV believed Johnson was
    going to shoot him. A passer-by, DN, who was in his truck when he
    noticed the chase, joined TV in pursuing Johnson and was next to TV
    when Johnson fired the shot into the air. Police officers subsequently
    intervened and apprehended Johnson.
    ¶4            The State charged Johnson with one count of attempted
    armed robbery and three counts of aggravated assault, one each relating
    to the victims JA, TV, and DN. The State further charged Johnson with one
    count of misconduct involving weapons 2 and disorderly conduct
    involving a weapon. Johnson testified that he covered his face in the store
    because he had been receiving threats to this life, and he was afraid the
    people who made the threats would recognize him in a public place.
    Based on this testimony, Johnson also testified that he pointed the gun at
    JA, someone he claimed not to recognize as a store employee, after she
    tried to pull off his mask and he “realized I couldn’t get away from her,
    [and] I was in fear for my life.”
    ¶5             After the close of evidence, Johnson requested a self-defense
    jury instruction. The court denied the request, concluding that no trial
    evidence supported the proposed instruction because, although the trial
    evidence showed Johnson could have feared for his life based on the prior
    threats he received, no evidence showed that “anybody involved in this
    case . . . engaged in unlawful deadly physical force” against Johnson.
    Immediately after the court’s ruling, defense counsel informed the court
    the self-defense instruction was necessary “[b]ecause that’s what I’m
    going to argue to the jury.” Counsel then argued during closing argument
    that Johnson acted in self-defense, despite the trial court’s refusal to
    instruct the jury on self-defense.
    ¶6            After the jury commenced deliberations, the forewoman
    notified the court that the jury had reached verdicts on three of the counts,
    but was unable to do so on the remaining three counts. With no objection
    from either party, the court instructed the jurors on their apparent
    impasse pursuant to Arizona Rule of Criminal Procedure 22.4. The jury
    continued deliberating and approximately one hour later informed the
    court that “one juror was not fully engaged in the deliberations and is not
    open to discussion.” The jury also asked the court whether “self-defense
    2      Johnson stipulated at trial that, because of prior felony convictions,
    he was prohibited from possessing a firearm and his civil right to possess
    or carry a gun or firearm had not been restored.
    3
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    [is] applicable in all issues in this case[,]” and “Are [JA’s] actions just
    cause for the defendant to draw a gun? Can the issues of self-defense be
    taken into consideration?” The forewoman addressed the court, and
    stated: “I think if we had some clarification on those questions [regarding
    self-defense] . . . perhaps we could [continue further deliberations and
    reach a decision on the charges].” Based on the jury’s apparent confusion
    over the applicability of self-defense to the case, the trial court, over
    Johnson’s objection, instructed the jury on self-defense in a manner
    consistent with Arizona law.
    ¶7            The jury subsequently returned verdicts finding Johnson
    guilty of the aggravated assaults committed against JA and TV and guilty
    of the misconduct involving weapons and disorderly conduct charges.
    The jury could not reach a decision on the charges of attempted armed
    robbery and aggravated assault against DN. At the hearing on mitigation
    and the State’s alleged aggravating factors, Johnson presented the court
    with a Rule 26.5 evaluation report prepared by Dr. S. as evidence of
    mitigation, but requested a continuance so that his investigator could
    interview Johnson at the jail and so that he could present further evidence
    in the form of Dr. S.’s testimony. The court denied the request.
    ¶8            Upon considering and weighing the evidence of aggravation
    and mitigation, the court sentenced Johnson to an aggravated prison term
    of twenty years for his aggravated assault conviction relating to JA to be
    served consecutive to the slightly aggravated sentence of thirteen years’
    imprisonment for the aggravated assault conviction regarding TV. The
    court imposed a mitigated sentence of eight years in prison for the
    weapons misconduct conviction to run concurrently with the thirteen-year
    aggravated assault conviction. Also to run concurrently with these two
    sentences, the court imposed an aggravated term of four-and-a-half years’
    imprisonment for the disorderly conduct conviction. Johnson timely
    appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Self-Defense Instruction
    ¶9            Johnson argues that the court erred in initially refusing to
    give the requested self-defense instruction because the evidence
    supported it. “The decision to refuse a jury instruction is within the trial
    court’s discretion, and this court will not reverse it absent a clear abuse of
    that discretion.” State v. Bolton, 
    182 Ariz. 290
    , 309, 
    896 P.2d 830
    , 849 (1995).
    4
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    ¶10            A defendant is entitled to an instruction on self-defense if
    the slightest evidence of justification exists for his act. State v. Buggs, 
    167 Ariz. 333
    , 335, 
    806 P.2d 1381
    , 1383 (App. 1990). The “slightest evidence” is
    evidence which tends to prove a hostile demonstration which might be
    reasonably regarded as placing the accused in imminent danger of losing
    his life or sustaining great bodily harm. Id.; see also A.R.S. § 13-404(A)
    (“[A] person is justified in threatening or using physical force against
    another when and to the extent a reasonable person would believe that
    physical force is immediately necessary to protect himself against the
    other’s use or attempted use of unlawful physical force.”); A.R.S. § 13-
    405(A) (1), (2).
    ¶11             The record does not indicate that anyone involved in this
    case used or attempted to use unlawful deadly force against Johnson;
    rather, the only evidence of threats to Johnson’s life were from people not
    involved in this case, and those threats occurred before the March 10
    incident. Accordingly, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in failing
    to initially instruct the jury on self-defense. In any event, even if the court
    did err in this respect, any prejudice to Johnson was cured when the court
    instructed the jurors on self-defense after they indicated confusion on
    whether self-defense applied to this case.
    II.    Coercion of Verdicts
    ¶12            Johnson argues that the court’s decision to instruct the jury
    on self-defense coerced the verdicts. He claims that the instruction
    “necessarily put improper pressure on the hold out juror . . . and likely
    influenced that juror to change its position and reject self-defense on at
    least one of the counts.”3
    3       Although Johnson asserts the court’s ruling on this issue
    established a Sixth Amendment violation, he provides no substantive
    argument in support of this assertion. Arizona Rule of Civil Appellate
    Procedure 13(a)(6) requires that an appellant’s opening brief “shall
    contain the contentions of the appellant with respect to the issues
    presented, and the reasons therefor, with citations to the authorities,
    statutes and parts of the record relied on.” Failure to comply with the
    rule’s requirements results in waiver of the argument. See State Farm Mut.
    Auto. Ins. Co. v. Novak, 
    167 Ariz. 363
    , 370, 
    807 P.2d 531
    , 538 (App. 1990)
    (court declined to consider matters for which party failed to comply with
    Rule 13(a)(6)); Modular Sys., Inc. v. Naisbitt, 
    114 Ariz. 582
    , 587, 
    562 P.2d 5
                                STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    ¶13            We review the court’s decision to provide additional
    instruction to the jury regarding self-defense for an abuse of discretion. See
    State v. Kuhs, 
    223 Ariz. 376
    , 384 ¶ 42, 
    224 P.3d 192
    , 200 (2010) (“We review
    a trial court’s response to jurors for an abuse of discretion.”). An abuse of
    discretion occurs when “no reasonable judge would have reached the
    same result under the circumstances.” State v. Armstrong, 
    208 Ariz. 345
    ,
    354 ¶ 40, 
    93 P.3d 1061
    , 1070 (2004). In determining whether the court
    abused its discretion and coerced the jury, we consider “the actions of the
    judge and the comments made to the jury based on the totality of the
    circumstances and [we] attempt[] to determine if the independent
    judgment of the jury was displaced.” State v. Huerstel, 
    206 Ariz. 93
    , 97 ¶ 5,
    
    75 P.3d 698
    , 702 (2003).
    ¶14            Initially, the record does not support Johnson’s assertion that
    the trial court interpreted the jury’s comment regarding the hold-out juror
    “as proof of possible juror misconduct.” Further, Johnson’s contentions
    regarding the purported coercive effect the self-defense instruction had on
    the hold-out juror are speculative. Nothing in the record indicates that the
    court knew that the hold-out juror was not properly deliberating because
    he or she held some erroneous belief regarding the law of self-defense and
    its applicability in this case. Nothing shows that the hold-out juror, or any
    of the other jurors, did not properly understand the instruction.
    ¶15           In any event, Johnson’s argument regarding the coercive
    effect the additional self-defense instruction had on the verdicts fails on
    the merits. In conformance with the comment to Arizona Rule of Criminal
    Procedure 22.4, the court expressly informed the jury in the impasse
    instruction (that directly led to the jury’s request an hour later for
    information on self-defense):
    This instruction is offered to help you, not to force you to
    reach a verdict. . . . We are merely being responsive to your
    apparent need for help. . . . [Y]ou should not change your
    belief concerning the weight or effect of the evidence solely
    because of the opinions of your fellow jurors or for the mere
    purpose of returning a verdict. . . . If you decide . . . [further
    1080, 1085 (App. 1977) (issues deemed abandoned when party “failed to
    state with any particularity why or how the trial court erred in making
    these rulings and simply concludes that error was committed”). We
    therefore deem this specific issue waived and do not address it.
    6
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    assistance is necessary on] issues [of] . . . law . . . advise me
    in writing of whether we can attempt to assist you . . . [in]
    reach[ing] a verdict[.] . . . I do not wish or intend to force a
    verdict.
    ¶16           This instruction clearly indicates that the court’s invitation to
    further deliberate and request assistance if necessary did not lead to
    coerced verdicts when the court provided the self-defense information
    that the jury subsequently desired. See State v. Dunlap, 
    187 Ariz. 441
    , 465,
    
    930 P.2d 518
    , 542 (App. 1996) (finding similar instruction “made it clear
    that the trial court was not pressuring the jurors to sacrifice their
    convictions to reach a verdict”).
    ¶17           Although the court here knew that one juror was holding
    out, nothing in the record indicates that juror favored acquittal on all
    counts or any particular count. And Arizona law does not recognize per se
    coercion when the court knows the numerical split of a jury at impasse.
    State v. Sabala, 
    189 Ariz. 416
    , 418-19, 
    943 P.2d 776
    , 778-79 (App. 1997).
    Finally, the fact the jury deliberated for over two-and-a-half hours after
    receiving the self-defense instruction indicates the instruction did not
    coerce the verdicts. See 
    id. at 420,
    943 P.2d at 780 (thirty minutes of
    deliberating after receiving additional instructions to assist a deadlocked
    jury “suggest that the holdout juror changed position as a result of
    receiving clarifying information not that he or she surrendered ‘honest
    convictions’ due to overbearing pressure from the court.”).
    ¶18           Based on the foregoing, and considering the totality of the
    circumstances – including the parties’ references to self-defense during
    closing arguments, the resulting confusion to the jury regarding the
    application of self-defense to this case, and the jury’s explicit assertion that
    further instructions on self-defense would assist further deliberations—we
    cannot conclude the self-defense instruction displaced “the independent
    judgment of the jury[.]” 
    Huerstel, 206 Ariz. at 97
    5, 75 P.3d at 702
    .
    Accordingly, the court did not abuse its discretion in giving the
    supplemental self-defense instruction. Indeed, under these circumstances,
    the court had a “responsibility to give the jury the required guidance by a
    lucid statement of the relevant legal criteria.” State v. Ramirez, 
    178 Ariz. 116
    , 126, 
    871 P.2d 237
    , 247 (1994) (quoting Des Jardins v. State, 
    551 P.2d 181
    ,
    190 (Alaska 1976), and Bollenbach v. United States, 
    326 U.S. 607
    , 612-13
    (1946)).
    7
    STATE v. JOHNSON
    Decision of the Court
    III.   Court’s Refusal to Continue Mitigation Hearing
    ¶19            Finally, Johnson argues that the trial court denied him his
    due process right to present evidence by refusing to grant his request for a
    continuance of the aggravation and mitigation hearing. We review for an
    abuse of discretion. See State v. Amaya-Ruiz, 
    166 Ariz. 152
    , 164, 
    800 P.2d 1260
    , 1272 (1990) (“The granting of a continuance is within the discretion
    of the trial court, and its decision will only be disturbed upon a showing
    of a clear abuse of such discretion and prejudice to defendant.”).
    ¶20            Here, Johnson did not make an offer of proof about what the
    additionally sought mitigation evidence would be. Thus, he cannot
    challenge the court’s ruling “unless the substance [of the excluded
    evidence] was apparent from the context.” See Ariz. R. Evid. 103(a)(2) (“A
    party may claim error in a ruling to admit or exclude evidence only if the
    error affects a substantial right of the party and . . . if the ruling excludes
    evidence, a party informs the court of its substance by an offer of proof,
    unless the substance was apparent from the context.”). 
    Id. The substance
    of the evidence Johnson sought in a continued hearing is not “apparent
    from the context.” Additionally, Johnson’s request at the hearing was
    untimely. Furthermore, the court did admit as mitigation evidence Dr. S.’s
    report and evidence of Johnson’s abuse as a child, his history of substance
    abuse and mental illness, and his remorse for his actions. As noted, the
    court expressly considered the mitigation evidence that was presented.
    ¶21            On this record, we cannot conclude the trial court acted
    outside its discretion in denying Johnson’s request for a continuance of the
    mitigation hearing.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶22           Johnson’s convictions and sentences are affirmed.
    :gsh
    8