United States v. Norvell Moore , 763 F.3d 900 ( 2014 )


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  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 13-2905
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    NORVELL MOORE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 10 CR 896-1 — John F. Grady, Judge.
    ARGUED APRIL 3, 2014 — DECIDED AUGUST 19, 2014
    Before POSNER, FLAUM, and ROVNER, Circuit Judges.
    ROVNER, Circuit Judge. A jury convicted Norvell Moore of
    using or carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of
    violence, see 18 U.S.C. § 924(c)(1)(A), but was unable to reach
    a verdict on the predicate crime of violence itself: taking a
    motor vehicle by force or intimidation with the intent to cause
    death or serious bodily harm, see 18 U.S.C. § 2119. Because the
    district court improperly solicited a partial verdict from the
    2                                                  No. 13-2905
    jury before jurors indicated that no further deliberations would
    be useful, and because we cannot rule out the possibility that
    this error may have resulted in a premature verdict on the
    section 924(c) firearm charge, we vacate Moore’s conviction on
    the section 924(c) charge. We leave in place Moore’s additional
    conviction for being a felon in possession of a firearm, see 18
    U.S.C. § 922(g)(1), which was unaffected by the error in
    soliciting a partial verdict and which Moore does not chal-
    lenge.
    I.
    Moore left his home on the morning of July 14, 2010, armed
    with a loaded, nine-millimeter Taurus semiautomatic pistol, in
    search of a car to steal. An acquaintance had offered him $5,000
    for a high-end automobile. Moore took public transit to
    Chicago’s northwest side and walked about for an extended
    period of time—at one point entertaining second thoughts and
    nearly abandoning the enterprise—until he reached a shopping
    center at the intersection of Foster and Harlem Avenues, where
    he spotted Cheryl Heliotis getting into her husband’s 2005
    BMW. Thinking to himself that “it didn’t get any easier than
    this,” R. 162 at 18, Moore decided that he had found his mark.
    Moore approached the open driver’s side window of the
    BMW, and, according to Heliotis, pressed his gun to her temple
    and instructed her to get out of the car. Panicked, Heliotis
    remained where she was in the front seat, begging Moore not
    to take the car. Moore repeated several times his demand that
    Heliotis step out of the car, and (again, according to Heliotis)
    threatened to shoot and kill her if she did not. Ultimately,
    when Moore reached into the vehicle and opened the door,
    No. 13-2905                                                     3
    Heliotis bolted from the car and ran, screaming for help, back
    to the store where she had just been shopping for pet supplies.
    Moore sped off in the BMW. Heliotis was able to flag down
    a police officer, and a radio alert for the stolen car was issued.
    Other officers in the area soon spotted the car and gave chase.
    After colliding with two other vehicles, Moore abandoned the
    car and attempted to escape on foot. He was unsuccessful.
    Moore was apprehended in a parking lot and taken back to the
    scene of the carjacking, where Heliotis identified him. On the
    driver’s seat of the abandoned BMW, police found a bag
    containing Moore’s gun, along with photocopies of his birth
    certificate and Social Security card. They also discovered a shirt
    that Heliotis had seen Moore wearing when he took the car
    from her.
    After being advised of his rights, Moore agreed to speak
    with Chicago Police Detective John Broderick and subse-
    quently to Assistant State’s Attorney Suzanne Sanders. The
    latter interview was memorialized in a written statement that
    Moore signed. Moore disclosed that he had been searching for
    a foreign, high-end automobile to steal in order to claim the
    $5,000 his acquaintance had offered him for such a car. He
    admitted having stolen Heliotis’s BMW toward that end, and
    he admitted that he was armed when he did so. Moore
    insisted, however, that he never pointed the gun at Heliotis,
    and he denied that he had any intent to shoot or harm her.
    According to Moore, when he approached Heliotis, he admon-
    ished her not to scream, asked her politely to exit the vehicle,
    and displayed the gun to her when she did not immediately
    comply.
    4                                                     No. 13-2905
    A grand jury returned a three-count indictment against
    Moore. Count One charged Moore with the federal offense of
    carjacking, i.e., taking a motor vehicle by force or intimidation,
    with the intent to cause death or serious bodily harm, in
    violation of section 2119. Count Two charged him with using
    or carrying a firearm during and in relation to a crime of
    violence, in this case carjacking, in violation of section 924(c).
    And Count Three charged Moore with possessing a firearm,
    having previously been convicted of a felony, in violation of
    section 922(g)(1). Moore pleaded not guilty to all three charges.
    After the district court denied Moore’s pretrial motions
    (including a motion to dismiss the indictment as untimely
    under the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3161, et seq., and a
    motion to suppress his post-arrest statements), the case was
    tried to a jury.
    The central and only material dispute at trial, as the parties
    agree, was whether Moore committed the carjacking with an
    intent to cause death or serious bodily harm to Heliotis if she
    did not cooperate. See Holloway v. United States, 
    526 U.S. 1
    , 
    119 S. Ct. 966
    (1999). There was no real dispute that Moore was
    armed, that he approached Heliotis and showed her his gun,
    that he instructed her to get out of the car, and that he stole the
    car when she ran for help. The defense strategy was to cast
    doubt on Heliotis’s testimony that Moore had put a gun to her
    head and had threatened to shoot and kill her if she did not get
    out of the car. Moore’s written post-arrest statement admitted
    only that he showed the gun to Heliotis when she initially
    refused to leave her car and represented that he had repeatedly
    asked Heliotis to “please get out of the car.” R. 162 at 18.
    During cross-examination, Moore’s counsel (mostly without
    No. 13-2905                                                     5
    objection by the government) elicited concessions from the
    detective and prosecutor who interviewed him that they had
    found Moore to be cooperative, credible, and non-evasive; that
    he appeared sincere as to certain specific aspects of his account;
    and that the prosecutor had made no written note of any
    apparent effort on Moore’s part to minimize his conduct. The
    defense also highlighted certain inconsistencies in the accounts
    of the incident that Heliotis had given over time, as well as the
    fact that Heliotis had been able to flee with her purse despite
    Moore’s instruction that she leave it in the car.
    In its final instructions, the court advised the jury with
    respect to the carjacking charge set forth in Count One of the
    indictment, that “[i]ntent to cause death or serious bodily harm
    includes an intent to cause the victim death or serious bodily
    harm if he or she does not comply with the defendant’s
    demand.” R. 163 at 41; R. 92 at 9 (Government’s Proposed
    Instruction No. 8). The court had rejected an alternative
    instruction proposed by the defense, which conveyed the same
    substantive point about intent using different language: “In
    other words, ‘the government [must] prove beyond a reason-
    able that the defendant would have at least attempted to
    seriously harm or kill the driver if that action had been
    necessary to complete taking of the car.’” R. 94 at 2 (Defen-
    dant’s Proposed Instruction No. 2) (quoting 
    Holloway, 526 U.S. at 12
    , 119 S. Ct. at 972).
    The jury began its deliberations shortly after 11:00 a.m. on
    the third day of trial, immediately after counsel made their
    closing arguments and the court gave the jury its final instruc-
    tions. At around 6:00 p.m., after seven hours of deliberations,
    the court summoned the jury into the courtroom to inquire
    6                                                   No. 13-2905
    whether jurors preferred to keep deliberating or break for the
    evening and return the following morning. The foreperson
    advised the court that the jury preferred to continue its
    deliberations. At 8:22 p.m., the judge received a note indicating
    that the jury now wished to cease its deliberations for the day
    and return late the following morning. Signed by the jury
    foreman, the note read in full:
    We would like to end for the day. Everyone is tired
    and we are not making progress.
    If possible we would like to begin deliberations [at]
    11:30 a.m. Friday. Some people will not get home
    tonight until after midnight.
    R. 107; R. 167 at 56.
    The district judge advised the parties that he intended to
    ask the jury whether it had reached unanimous agreement as
    to any count of the indictment; if it had, the judge planned to
    take a partial verdict on that counts. The judge indicated that
    he would also inquire whether, as to any counts on which the
    jury remained undecided, whether further deliberations would
    be useful. Both parties expressed concern about the judge’s
    declared course of action. The government’s counsel objected
    to the court’s plan altogether, noting that the jury had indi-
    cated its wish to continue deliberations on the following day
    and arguing that the jury should be permitted to do so without
    interruption. Defense counsel was more concerned with the
    court’s intention to ask jurors whether further deliberations
    would be useful as to any count that remained unresolved; he
    was worried that polling the jury on that subject might
    inappropriately reveal the degree of division among the jurors
    No. 13-2905                                                     7
    and put pressure on any dissidents. Beyond that concern, he
    agreed with the court’s stated intentions. After hearing counsel
    out, the district judge remained committed to his plan to assess
    the status of jury deliberations and take a partial verdict on any
    count as to which the jury had reached agreement. “Well, I am
    going to proceed as I suggest over the objections of those of
    you who made an objection.” R. 167 at 58. The jury was
    summoned into the courtroom for that purpose.
    In response to the court’s inquiry, the jury foreperson
    indicated that jurors had reached agreement as to some counts
    of the indictment. The court advised the jury that it should
    complete the verdict form as to the counts upon which it had
    reached unanimous agreement. The court also inquired of the
    jurors whether they believed that further deliberations would
    be useful on any count or counts as to which they remained
    divided. It received a mixed response to that question. The
    foreperson viewed the prospect of reaching unanimity as
    unlikely: “My best judgment is no.” R. 167 at 59. But when the
    court asked whether anyone else on the jury disagreed with
    that assessment, another juror raised his hand and said that he
    “wouldn’t exclude the possibility altogether” of reaching a
    unanimous verdict. R. 167 at 60. In view of the latter response,
    the court indicated that deliberations on the outstanding count
    or counts would be allowed to continue. The court instructed
    the jury to return to the jury room and fill out the verdict form
    as to any counts on which it had agreed. Before the jury retired
    for that purpose, the foreperson posed a question to the court:
    THE FOREPERSON: Question?
    8                                                 No. 13-2905
    THE COURT:             Yes.
    THE FOREPERSON: One of the counts was multi-
    faceted. There was four ele-
    ments to Count One. In the
    event that we reached una-
    nimity on one, two or even
    three of those, should we
    indicate that or does —
    THE COURT:             No.
    THE FOREPERSON: — just don’t indicate that
    anyway.
    THE COURT:             You have to reach unani-
    mous verdict on all elements
    of a count.
    THE FOREPERSON: Okay.
    THE COURT:             Three out of four is no good.
    THE FOREPERSON: Okay.
    THE COURT:             Okay?
    All right. Go ahead and return to
    the jury room.
    R. 167 at 60–61.
    The jury shortly thereafter returned a verdict form indicat-
    ing that it had reached unanimous verdicts of guilt on Counts
    Two and Three of the indictment, but had not arrived at a
    verdict on Count One. Because a finding that Moore had
    committed the carjacking offense charged in Count One was an
    No. 13-2905                                                    9
    element of the weapons offense charged in Count Two, it was
    immediately apparent to the court and to the parties that there
    was a potential problem with the jury’s decision to convict
    Moore on Count Two when it had not yet reached a verdict on
    Count One. The following discussion ensued between the court
    and counsel (Mr. Mitchell for the defense and Mr. Jonas for the
    prosecution):
    THE COURT:           It strikes me that the guilty ver-
    dict on Count Two is prema-
    ture. What do counsel think
    about that?
    MR. MITCHELL:        Judge, the instruction on Count
    Two did not define the
    elements of federal carjacking
    as part of Count Two, it just
    simply said carjacking as in
    Count One. So for them to
    think that all they have to find
    is that he actually stole the car
    as a carjacking without the four
    elements it makes it possible to
    have a Count Two guilty ver-
    dict without a Count One.
    So it is unclear from my under-
    standing that they had to also
    find all four elements in Count
    Two for the carjacking as they
    did in Count One. And I think
    because those four elements
    10                                        No. 13-2905
    were not mentioned as part of
    Count Two, they didn’t think it
    applied.
    THE COURT:   Well, there was no objection to
    the clarity of the instruction,
    and it didn’t occur to me that
    there was any lack of clarity.
    My own view is that one of the
    elements of Count Two is a
    finding of guilty on Count One.
    Mr. Jonas, what do you think?
    MR. JONAS:   Judge, I think we’d like to re-
    search it, frankly. I mean, our
    understanding is you can have
    inconsistent verdicts that don’t
    require or — that are not re-
    versible.
    THE COURT:   Oh, I’m not talking about re-
    versible or —
    MR. JONAS:   Understood.
    THE COURT:   What I am thinking about is
    sending the jury back for fur-
    ther deliberations on Count
    Two. And I think your idea of
    research is a good one.
    No. 13-2905                                             11
    Let’s find out about this, and be
    ready at 11:30 tomorrow morn-
    ing to decide what to do.
    MR. MITCHELL:   But again, Judge, I think for
    clarification, and again if you
    look at the instruction you
    gave for Count Two, it says a
    guilty finding of carjacking as
    alleged — that he actually did
    the carjacking as alleged in
    Count One, but it doesn’t say
    that those four elements are the
    same.
    And so if they are hung on
    Count One, they should have
    also been hung on Count Two.
    It makes no sense.
    THE COURT:      Well, I think I agree with you.
    MR. MITCHELL:   Okay. So I was just asking if
    you want to clarify or [give] a
    clarifying instruction to make
    sure that they understand that
    that was the basis for which
    they would have had to find
    Count Two.
    THE COURT:      That’s what I am thinking I
    should do.
    MR. MITCHELL:   Yes, Judge.
    12                                                 No. 13-2905
    R. 167 at 62–64. Defense counsel urged the court to give the
    jury a clarifying instruction on the interrelationship between
    Counts One and Two that evening, before the jury was
    released for the day, but the court demurred, indicating that it
    wished to research and contemplate the situation before taking
    action. The jury was therefore released for the evening without
    further instruction.
    On the following morning, the court announced to the
    parties that, after further consideration and research, it had
    tentatively concluded that no further deliberations and no
    supplemental instructions were warranted with respect to
    Count Two. The court observed that the evidence was suffi-
    cient to support the guilty verdict on that count, and any
    inconsistency between the jury’s ongoing inability to reach a
    verdict as to Count One and its finding of guilt on Count Two
    did not call into question the validity of the verdict on the
    latter count.
    Initially, neither party agreed with the court’s announced
    intent to accept the verdict on Count Two. The government
    agreed with the court, in principle, that any inconsistency
    between the jury’s guilty verdict on Count Two and its
    indecision as to Count One did not necessarily call into
    question the validity of the verdict on Count Two, nor did it
    suggest that the jury must have misunderstood the court’s
    instructions on Counts One and Two. Nonetheless:
    Having said that, what we propose, because of …
    the taking of the partial verdict, which is not usual,
    I guess, to make everything clean, and so we don’t
    have to try this case again, we propose sending the
    No. 13-2905                                                     13
    jury back to deliberate all over again on all three
    counts, and just say, you know, putting aside last
    night, we want you to deliberate on Counts One
    through Three, and then when you’re done, return
    a verdict without any further instruction.
    R. 168 at 5–6. The court rejected outright the idea of sending
    both Counts Two and Three back to the jury for deliberation,
    although it remained open to the possibility of ordering further
    deliberations on Count Two. With its proposal to have the jury
    continue deliberations on all three counts rejected, counsel for
    the government, recognizing that the reasons for the jury’s
    partial verdict could not be known, now conceded that “we
    just have to accept and live with the jury’s verdict.” R. 168 at 9.
    For his part, defense counsel again argued that the jury’s
    decision to convict Moore on Count Two, without having
    agreed that he had committed the predicate crime of violence
    in Count One, presented the possibility that jurors had misun-
    derstood the court’s instructions on these counts. That was
    why, defense counsel explained, he believed the court should
    have given the jury a clarifying instruction the night before,
    and why he believed that the court should deliver such an
    instruction before the jury’s deliberations on Count One
    resumed. Defense counsel also felt himself compelled at this
    juncture to move for a mistrial based on how the court’s
    inquiry into the status of the jury deliberations had unfolded
    the prior evening.
    [M]y concern, and as I mentioned to my client, is
    that I think because of the way it transpired, I have
    to move for a mistrial because in this case the fore-
    14                                                 No. 13-2905
    man in open court, prior to any verdict being an-
    nounced on any of the counts, indicated that they
    were hung.
    I think by having them do a piecemeal verdict, the
    Court pierced totally unintentionally into the delib-
    eration process to see where they were, whether we
    thought it was just on Count Two and Three, not
    just Two, but I think it was inappropriate, Judge.
    And then to ask the jurors to determine, after the
    foreman said that they were hung or could not
    reach, and one person to raise their hand, again it
    began to show where the deliberations were. And I
    think that that, Judge, was improper, especially now
    given what we know about what the deliberations
    and the problems that they are having, given the
    verdict forms that they signed.
    R. 168 at 8.
    Having heard the parties out, the district court denied
    Moore’s motion for a mistrial, declared its intent to accept the
    partial verdict on Counts Two and Three, and allowed the jury
    to resume deliberations on Count One without any supplemen-
    tal instruction.
    After several hours of additional deliberations, the jury
    foreman advised the court by way of a note that the jury was
    divided 11 to 1 in favor of conviction on Count One and would
    be unable to arrive at a unanimous verdict. The court sum-
    moned the jury into the courtroom and inquired whether there
    was any disagreement with the notion that further delibera-
    tions were unlikely to result in a unanimous verdict. No juror
    No. 13-2905                                                   15
    spoke up. At that point, the court supplied the jury with a new,
    clean verdict form that asked for its verdict on all three counts
    of the indictment and had the jury complete it. The jury
    returned verdicts of guilt on Counts Two and Three, but wrote
    “impasse” as to Count One. R. 110. After polling the jury to
    confirm the unanimity of its verdicts on Counts One and Two,
    the court formally entered findings of guilt on the latter two
    counts, declared a mistrial on Count One, and, on the govern-
    ment’s motion, dismissed Count One without prejudice.
    Moore subsequently filed a motion for a new trial pursuant
    to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 33, emphasizing the
    inconsistency between the verdict of guilt on Count Two and
    the lack of a verdict on the predicate charge in Count One. The
    court denied the motion.
    At sentencing, the court ordered Moore to serve consecu-
    tive terms of 120 months on each of Counts Two and Three, for
    a total sentence of 240 months, a term substantially below the
    lower limit of the 360 months- to-life range advised by the
    Sentencing Guidelines.
    II.
    Moore pursues three issues on appeal: (1) whether, in light
    of the jury’s inability to reach a verdict on the carjacking
    charge, the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s guilty
    verdict on Count Two, given that the commission of a crime of
    violence—here, carjacking—is an essential element of the
    section 924(c) charge; (2) whether the district court abused its
    discretion in refusing Moore’s proposed jury instruction
    regarding the intent element of the carjacking offense; and (3)
    16                                                      No. 13-2905
    whether the district court abused its discretion in denying
    Moore’s motion for a new trial.
    Our focus will be on the third of these issues: the denial of
    the Rule 33 request for a new trial on Counts One and Two of
    the indictment. Whether the interest of justice warrants a new
    trial is a discretionary decision that we review with an appro-
    priate degree of deference. See, e.g., United States v. Berg, 
    714 F.3d 490
    , 501 (7th Cir. 2013). Here, because we find that the
    court erred in inviting a partial verdict before the jury indi-
    cated that further deliberations would be fruitless as to any
    unresolved counts, we vacate the verdict on Count Two and
    remand for a new trial.
    The close relationship between Counts One and Two sets
    the backdrop for our analysis. In order for a defendant to be
    guilty of using or carrying a firearm during and in relation to
    a crime of violence as proscribed by section 924(c), he must
    have committed all of the acts necessary to be subject to
    punishment for the crime of violence. United States v.
    Rodriguez-Moreno, 
    526 U.S. 275
    , 280, 
    119 S. Ct. 1239
    , 1243 (1999);
    see also, e.g., United States v. Sandoval, 
    347 F.3d 627
    , 633 (7th Cir.
    2003). Thus, in order for the jury to convict Moore on the
    section 924(c) charge in Count Two, it was required to find that
    all four elements of the predicate crime of violence
    —carjacking—had been established beyond a reasonable
    doubt. Three of those four elements were all but conceded, but
    the defense did challenge the notion that Moore, in taking the
    car from Heliotis, had the intent to kill her or do her serious
    harm. Indeed, that element was the principal focus of the
    defense case. And the jury foreman’s question of the
    judge—whether the jury should indicate if it agreed to some
    No. 13-2905                                                                17
    but not all elements of Count One—suggests that the defense
    may have raised doubt in the minds of at least one juror on
    that element. If, as the foreman’s inquiry suggests, the jurors
    were divided as to that element (or any other) of Count One,
    then logically the jury was undecided not only as to Count One
    but as to Count Two, which required the jury’s unanimous
    finding that all four elements of Count One had been proven
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
    In this regard, we are not so concerned with the fact that the
    jury instruction as to Count Two did not repeat the individual
    elements of the Count One carjacking offense,1 as we are with
    the evident possibility that the jury, for whatever reason,
    overlooked the fact that its inability to render a verdict as to
    Count One indicated that it was not prepared to render a
    (partial) verdict on Count Two either. The district court itself
    recognized the problem when it described the jury’s verdict on
    Count Two as “premature.” R. 168 at 62. And, in particular, we
    are concerned with the possibility that the court’s decision to
    solicit a partial verdict contributed to the problem.
    But before we proceed further, we must address the
    government’s contention that Moore waived any objection to
    1
    The court gave the Seventh Circuit pattern instruction for a section
    924(c)(1)(A) offense, which required the jury to find beyond a reasonable
    doubt that Moore had committed the carjacking offense as charged in Count
    One. R. 163 at 41–42; see SEVENTH CIRCUIT PATTERN CRIMINAL JURY INSTRUC-
    TIONS (2012 ed. as revised Feb. 2013) at 235. Most if not all circuits frame
    their pattern instructions similarly. See 2A Kevin F. O’Malley, Jay E. Grenig,
    & William C. Lee, FED. JURY PRAC. & INSTR. § 39:18 (5th ed. updated through
    Aug. 2014) (setting forth model instruction as to section 924(c)(1)(A) offense
    and collecting pattern instructions from various circuits).
    18                                                    No. 13-2905
    the district court’s decision to ask the jury for a partial verdict,
    which is based on Moore’s acquiescence to the court’s declared
    intent to ask the jury about the status of its deliberations and to
    ask for a verdict on any count or counts that it had thus far
    resolved. Gov. Br. 27 n.2. Although Moore’s counsel did raise
    a concern about the court’s plan, it was focused on the prospect
    of exposing any division among the jurors while deliberations
    were ongoing; there was no objection to asking the jury
    whether it had reached agreement on any count and, if so, to
    render a verdict on that count. By contrast, the government’s
    counsel did object, unequivocally, to this aspect of the court’s
    proposed course of action, indicating its preference that
    deliberations be allowed to continue undisturbed; to that
    extent, the court was given an opportunity to reconsider before
    it asked the jury to return a partial verdict. Moreover, once the
    partial verdict had been returned, both the defense and the
    prosecution urged the court to have the jury resume delibera-
    tions on Count Two, and Moore’s counsel unequivocally, if
    belatedly, voiced concern about the court’s intrusion into the
    jury’s deliberative process. At that juncture, the court had the
    opportunity to have the jury resume deliberations on Count
    Two (if not Count Three, as the government also
    suggested)—with or without a supplemental instruction
    reminding the jury of the relationship between Counts One
    and Two, as Moore requested—rather than accepting the
    verdict on Count Two as final. The court chose the latter
    course. Under these circumstances, we believe that Moore
    preserved his right to challenge the partial verdict on appeal,
    and we move on to the merits of the argument.
    No. 13-2905                                                    19
    We may assume that had the jury, in its own time, ex-
    hausted its ability to reach a verdict on all counts, and an-
    nounced that it was deadlocked on Count One but unanimous
    as to Counts Two and Three, its verdict as to Count Two would
    be sustained, just as it almost certainly would have been
    sustained had the jury decided to acquit Moore on Count One
    but convict him on Count Two. Either of those scenarios would
    present the same inconsistency with which we are confronted
    here, given the relationship between the two counts. Nonethe-
    less, as the cases recognize, such an inconsistent verdict could
    be chalked up to jury mistake, compromise, or lenity; and
    typically the guilty verdict will stand (so long as the evidence
    is sufficient to support it) notwithstanding an inconsistent
    verdict on a related offense, even if conviction on the latter
    offense is a predicate to conviction on the former. United States
    v. Powell, 
    469 U.S. 57
    , 65, 
    105 S. Ct. 471
    , 476–77(1984); Dunn v.
    United States, 
    284 U.S. 390
    , 393–94, 
    52 S. Ct. 189
    , 190–91 (1932);
    United States v. Askew, 
    403 F.3d 496
    , 501 (7th Cir. 2005). This is
    how the government views the state of affairs here, and how
    the district court ultimately viewed matters when it decided to
    accept the verdict on Count Two rather than giving the jury a
    supplemental instruction and/or asking the jury to continue its
    deliberations on Count Two. But this case does not conform
    with the more typical scenario.
    What happened here, and what is the source of our
    concern, is that the court invited a partial verdict while
    deliberations remained ongoing and before the jury indicated
    that it was truly deadlocked as to any count. Recall that when
    the jury first asked to be released for the evening because the
    hour was growing late, “[e]veryone is tired[,] and we are not
    20                                                    No. 13-2905
    making progress,” R. 107; R. 167, the jury did not declare that
    it was at an impasse as to any charge; on the contrary, it is clear
    from the jury’s note that it wished to resume its deliberations
    late the following morning. As long as all counts of the
    indictment remained on the deliberating table, the jury might
    have realized that its disagreement as to Count One logically
    foreclosed a verdict on Count Two. However, once it was
    asked by the court whether it had reached agreement as to any
    count, and its verdict as to Counts Two and Three were
    solicited and accepted by the court, the jury lacked the ability
    to revisit Count Two. We acknowledge, of course, that when
    the foreman was questioned by the court, he indicated that the
    jury had reached agreement as to certain counts, and the jurors
    confirmed their unanimity when they completed the verdict
    form and rendered verdicts as to Counts Two and Three.
    Again, however, we cannot be sure either that the jury appreci-
    ated the inconsistency at the time it rendered a verdict on
    Count Two, or that the jury might not have realized the
    inconsistency and acted differently had a partial verdict not
    been invited by the court.
    Of course, Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 31(b)(2)
    expressly authorizes a jury in a single-defendant case to return
    a partial verdict on any counts as to which it has agreed.
    Whether and when to advise the jury that it may return a
    partial verdict as the rule permits, and at what point during
    deliberations it is appropriate for the court to accept a partial
    verdict, are necessarily discretionary and fact-dependent
    decisions. See United States v. Durham, 
    645 F.3d 883
    , 893–94 (7th
    Cir. 2011) (responding to jury inquiries); United States v.
    Degraffenried, 
    339 F.3d 576
    , 580–81 (7th Cir. 2003) (responding
    No. 13-2905                                                       21
    to jury note declaring impasse); United States v. Heriot, 
    496 F.3d 601
    , 608 (6th Cir. 2007) (accepting partial verdict); United States
    v. Patterson, 
    472 F.3d 767
    , 780–81 (10th Cir. 2006) (instructing
    jury on option of returning partial verdict), cert. granted, j.
    vacated, and remanded on other grounds, 
    555 U.S. 1131
    , 
    129 S. Ct. 989
    (2009); United States v. Benedict, 
    95 F.3d 17
    , 19 (8th Cir. 1996)
    (accepting partial verdict).
    When a jury indicates that it has reached a verdict as to
    some counts of an indictment (or defendants, in a multiple-
    defendant case), but has deadlocked as to others, a responsive
    instruction that, in a neutral fashion, lays out the options
    available to the jury—including the option of returning a
    partial verdict, if it so chooses—is appropriate. See United States
    v. DiLapi, 
    651 F.2d 140
    , 146 (2d Cir. 1981); see also 
    Patterson, 472 F.3d at 780
    ; United States v. LaVallee, 
    439 F.3d 670
    , 691 (10th Cir.
    2006); United States v. Black, 
    843 F.2d 1456
    , 1463 (D.C. Cir. 1988);
    see also United States v. D’Antonio, 
    801 F.2d 979
    , 983 (7th Cir.
    1986) (emphasizing importance of content-neutrality in judge’s
    response to jury’s first indication of possible deadlock) (citing
    United States v. Thibodeaux, 
    758 F.2d 199
    , 203 (7th Cir. 1985) (per
    curiam)). A judge is not required to inform the jury in every
    case that it may return a partial verdict, nor does he become
    obliged to do so at the first sign of disagreement among the
    jurors. See United States v. Dakins, 
    872 F.2d 1061
    , 1064 (D.C. Cir.
    1989). But when deliberations have grown long relative to the
    length of the trial and the number and complexity of the
    charges, and the judge is advised and convinced that there is
    a genuine impasse among the jurors as to one or more charges,
    certainly it is within his discretion to advise the jury that a
    partial verdict is among its options. E.g., 
    DiLapi, 651 F.2d at 22
                                                       No. 13-2905
    146–47; cf. United States v. Vaiseta, 
    333 F.3d 815
    , 818–19 (7th Cir.
    2003) (district court did not abuse its discretion in taking partial
    verdict on six of seven counts after confirming that jury was
    genuinely deadlocked on remaining count).
    This is, however, delicate ground on which the judge must
    tread very carefully. See 
    Heriot, 496 F.3d at 608
    ; United States v.
    Wheeler, 
    802 F.2d 778
    , 781 (5th Cir. 1986). A premature inquiry
    into whether the jury has reached a verdict as to at least some
    charges, or an unprompted, mid-deliberations instruction
    informing the jury that it has the option to return a partial
    verdict, may impermissibly intrude upon the jury’s delibera-
    tive process. See 
    Benedict, 95 F.3d at 19
    ; 
    DiLapi, 651 F.2d at 146
    –47. The jury should be permitted to structure its delibera-
    tions as it wishes; and whether to return a partial verdict, and
    if so at what point during its deliberations, are questions that
    in the first instance are for the jury itself to answer. 
    Patterson, 472 F.3d at 780
    –81; 
    DiLapi, 651 F.2d at 146
    . Absent the jury’s
    declaration that it is deadlocked as to one or more charges,
    asking the jury whether it has reached agreement as to any
    charge or giving the jury a supplemental instruction that it can
    return a partial verdict, might be construed by the jury as a
    hint from the court that it is taking too long to render a verdict.
    See 
    Patterson, 472 F.3d at 780
    –81. And where, as here, the jury
    indicates (whether on its own initiative or in response to the
    court’s inquiry) that it has reached agreement as to some but
    not all charges, an invitation to deliver a partial verdict poses
    the risk that the jury will “premature[ly] conver[t] … a tenta-
    tive jury vote into an irrevocable one.” 
    Benedict, 95 F.3d at 19
    ;
    see also 
    Heriot, 496 F.3d at 608
    ; 
    DiLapi, 651 F.2d at 147
    ; 
    Wheeler, 802 F.2d at 781
    . Jurors may not realize that in delivering a
    No. 13-2905                                                     23
    partial verdict, they are foreclosing to themselves any further
    consideration of the charges included in that verdict. Locking
    in a partial verdict may thus deprive the jury of “the opportu-
    nity to gain new insights concerning the evidence” as it bears
    on a count or a defendant as to which a partial verdict has been
    rendered, 
    DiLapi, 651 F.2d at 147
    , and “deprive the defendant
    of ‘the very real benefit of reconsideration and change of mind
    or heart,’” 
    Benedict, 95 F.3d at 19
    (quoting United States v.
    Taylor, 
    507 F.2d 166
    , 168 (5th Cir. 1975)). Prematurely bringing
    jury deliberations to an end as to some counts while delibera-
    tions on others continue is “particularly troubling” when one
    of the outstanding counts is closely related to a count on which
    the jury is asked to render a partial verdict. 
    Benedict, 95 F.3d at 20
    .
    We have said that it is “probably inadvisable” for a court,
    on its own initiative and without any indication that the jury is
    deadlocked as to one or more counts, to inform the jury that it
    may render a partial verdict. United States v. Peak, 
    856 F.2d 825
    ,
    828 (7th Cir. 1988). This case illustrates why that is so. The
    partial verdict solicited by the court included a guilty finding
    on the section 924(c) charge while the jury was still deliberating
    the predicate offense of carjacking. Because the jury’s partial
    verdict was solicited before the jury had indicated that there
    would be no point to further deliberations—and, indeed,
    deliberations on Count One would continue for several more
    hours before a deadlock was finally declared—we have no way
    of knowing whether the jury would have remained unanimous
    as to Moore’s guilt on Count Two had that count not been
    removed from deliberations by the court’s solicitation of a
    partial verdict. We could, as the government urges us to do,
    24                                                   No. 13-2905
    resort to stock presumptions—that the jury understood and
    followed the instructions as to the elements of Counts One and
    Two, and opted to convict on the firearm charge but not the
    predicate crime of violence out of lenity or compromise, for
    example—to paper over the inconsistency and sustain the
    verdict on Count Two. See 
    Powell, 469 U.S. at 66
    –67, 
    68–69, 105 S. Ct. at 477
    –78, 478–49. But it is one thing to rely on such
    presumptions when jury deliberations have been allowed to
    run their full course without interruption, and another when
    it is the court’s intrusion into that process to solicit a partial
    verdict that may be responsible for the inconsistency. The
    court’s decision to ask for a partial verdict, when the jury had
    not yet finished its deliberations as to the undecided count nor
    indicated that it was deadlocked, needlessly injected uncer-
    tainty into the verdict on Count Two.
    In Benedict, 
    95 F.3d 17
    , our colleagues in the Eighth Circuit,
    voicing the same concerns that we have here, concluded on
    comparable facts that reversal of a defendant’s conviction was
    required. The defendant in Benedict had been charged with
    both conspiring to steal post office property and with the
    substantive offense of aiding and abetting the theft of post
    office property, among other crimes. During deliberations, the
    jury advised the court that it had reached a verdict as to three
    of the four charges but was divided on the remaining charge.
    Over defense objection, the court instructed the jury to render
    a verdict on the three counts it had resolved; its partial verdict
    included a guilty finding on the substantive charge of aiding
    and abetting the theft of post office property but no verdict on
    the conspiracy charge. Deliberations continued on the conspir-
    acy charge (with the court rejecting a defense request that the
    No. 13-2905                                                    25
    jury be instructed to continue deliberations on the aiding and
    abetting charge as well) but culminated in a deadlock and a
    declaration of a mistrial on that count. On appeal, the Eighth
    Circuit held that it was error for the court to instruct the jury
    to render a partial verdict while deliberations were ongoing as
    to the conspiracy charge. “It is improper for a trial court to
    intrude on the jury’s deliberative process in such a way as to
    cut short its opportunity to fully consider the evidence,” the
    court stated. 
    Id. at 19.
    Neither party had requested a partial
    verdict, nor had the court given that choice to the jury along
    with an admonition that any partial verdict would be final as
    to the counts included in that verdict. 
    Id. at 20.
    Instead, the
    district court had acted unilaterally in a manner that resulted
    in a finding of guilt on an aiding and abetting charge that was
    interconnected with the conspiracy charge on which the jury
    was still deliberating. 
    Id. [I]t is
    particularly troubling that the outstanding
    charge of conspiracy to commit post office theft was
    so closely related to the substantive theft offense for
    which the jury announced a guilty verdict and to
    which the jury was not permitted to return during
    the remaining deliberations. It is difficult to imagine
    that the jury could continue to deliberate on the
    conspiracy charge without reweighing the evidence
    with respect to the substantive offense where, as
    here, the government’s evidence on both counts was
    virtually the same. …
    
    Id. The court
    therefore concluded that the district court had
    abused its discretion in instructing the jury to return a partial
    verdict before it had completed its deliberations on a closely
    26                                                    No. 13-2905
    related count; the guilty verdict on the substantive charge of
    theft therefore could not stand. 
    Id. We need
    not address whether the problem would have
    been corrected had the court, as it was initially inclined, asked
    the jury to continue deliberations on Count Two, with or
    without a supplemental instruction reminding the jurors that
    Moore’s guilt as to the carjacking charge in Count One was an
    element of the section 924(c) charge in Count Two. Cf. United
    States v. Ruffin, 
    129 F.3d 114
    , 
    1197 WL 701364
    , at *3 (2d Cir.
    Nov. 10, 1997) (unpublished, nonprecedential decision) (noting
    that district court, in advising deadlocked jury that it had
    option to render partial verdict, reminded jury that one charge
    was a necessary predicate of another). The court decided not to
    pursue that course, and instead accepted the verdict on Count
    Two as final.
    Because the actual rationale underlying the jury’s verdicts
    (and lack thereof ) are typically not the proper subject of
    judicial inquiry, see Fed. R. Evid. 606(b); Tanner v. United States,
    
    483 U.S. 107
    , 116–127, 
    107 S. Ct. 2739
    , 2745–51 (1987); Gacy v.
    Welborn, 
    994 F.2d 305
    , 313 (7th Cir. 1993), we will not and
    cannot know why the jury convicted Moore on Count Two
    without reaching agreement on the predicate offense in Count
    One. See 
    Powell, 469 U.S. at 66
    , 105 S. Ct. at 477; 
    Askew, 403 F.3d at 501
    . But we cannot discount the possibility that the jury
    rendered a verdict on Count Two prematurely, without
    appreciating that its finding of guilt was logically irreconcilable
    with its continued division on the predicate offense. This is the
    very possibility that the district court itself recognized when
    the partial verdict was first returned. Nor can we rule out the
    No. 13-2905                                                      27
    possibility that had the jury been permitted to continue its
    deliberations on all counts, without interruption and without
    the court’s solicitation of a partial verdict, the jury in weighing
    the evidence that bore on Count One as well as Count Two
    might have perceived the inconsistency and realized that it had
    not, in fact, reached agreement as to all elements of the section
    924(c) offense.
    For these reasons, we believe that the district court abused
    its discretion when it instructed the jury to return a partial
    verdict while deliberations were ongoing and in denying
    Moore’s request for a new trial. Moore is entitled to a new trial
    on Count Two. Moore has not asked for a new trial on Count
    Three, and for good reason. His guilt on Count One was not a
    predicate to his conviction on the felon-in-possession charge
    set forth in Count Three. Indeed, the elements of the felon-in-
    possession charge were all but conceded by the defense. See
    R. 163 at 27 (defense closing argument: “Count Three, that’s an
    easy one.”). The error in soliciting a partial verdict therefore
    did not taint the verdict on Count Three.
    III.
    Because the district court erred in soliciting a partial verdict
    from the jury before it had indicated that it was deadlocked as
    to one or more counts of the indictment, we conclude that the
    court abused its discretion in denying Moore’s subsequent
    motion for a new trial as to Count Two. We therefore VACATE
    Moore’s conviction on Count Two, AFFIRM his conviction on
    Count Three, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent
    with this opinion. Circuit Rule 36 shall not apply on remand.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-2905

Citation Numbers: 763 F.3d 900, 2014 WL 4065700, 2014 U.S. App. LEXIS 15964

Judges: Posner, Flaum, Rovner

Filed Date: 8/19/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/5/2024

Authorities (20)

United States v. Eugene Wheeler, Freddie Strauder and ... , 802 F.2d 778 ( 1986 )

United States v. Verbickas , 439 F.3d 670 ( 2006 )

United States v. Bryan Wilson Taylor , 27 A.L.R. Fed. 636 ( 1975 )

United States v. Donald Thibodeaux , 758 F.2d 199 ( 1985 )

United States v. Hector Sandoval , 347 F.3d 627 ( 2003 )

Dunn v. United States , 52 S. Ct. 189 ( 1932 )

United States v. Darius Vaiseta , 333 F.3d 815 ( 2003 )

United States v. Frederick Degraffenried , 339 F.3d 576 ( 2003 )

United States v. Cleo Patterson , 472 F.3d 767 ( 2006 )

United States v. Wayne S. Dakins , 872 F.2d 1061 ( 1989 )

United States v. James D'Antonio , 801 F.2d 979 ( 1986 )

United States v. Durham , 645 F.3d 883 ( 2011 )

United States v. Anthony Dilapi and Benjamin Ladmer , 651 F.2d 140 ( 1981 )

John Wayne Gacy v. George Welborn, Warden, Menard ... , 994 F.2d 305 ( 1993 )

United States v. Ulice Askew , 403 F.3d 496 ( 2005 )

United States v. Fred B. Black, Jr., (Two Cases) , 843 F.2d 1456 ( 1988 )

United States v. Heriot , 496 F.3d 601 ( 2007 )

United States v. Derek Edward Benedict , 95 F.3d 17 ( 1996 )

Tanner v. United States , 107 S. Ct. 2739 ( 1987 )

United States v. Rodriguez-Moreno , 119 S. Ct. 1239 ( 1999 )

View All Authorities »