United States v. Patrick Heathershaw ( 1996 )


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  •                                    ___________
    No. 95-2571
    ___________
    United States of America,              *
    *
    Appellee,       *
    *    Appeal from the United States
    v.                               *    District Court for the
    *    District of South Dakota.
    Patrick L. Heathershaw,                *
    *
    Appellant.      *
    ___________
    Submitted:    December 12, 1995
    Filed:   April 17, 1996
    ___________
    Before McMILLIAN, JOHN R. GIBSON, and BEAM, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    JOHN R. GIBSON, Circuit Judge.
    Patrick Heathershaw appeals his conviction of theft of government
    property in excess of $100 value, 18 U.S.C. § 641 (1994).      Heathershaw was
    convicted of stealing posts and barbed wire from a fence belonging to the
    Air Force and using the materials to build a fence on land he leased.
    Heathershaw claims that the Air Force built its fence on land he leased,
    that the Air Force fence was a hazard to his livestock, and that he had a
    right to move it to make it safe.      At trial, the district court excluded
    evidence that the fence was on Heathershaw's leasehold, instructed the jury
    that ownership of the land was irrelevant to Heathershaw's intent to steal,
    and   refused   Heathershaw's   requested   claim-of-right   instruction.   We
    reverse.
    Heathershaw is a rancher in the Badlands of South Dakota,
    whose ranch abuts an old Air Force bombing range.1             He is an enrolled
    member of the Oglala Sioux Tribe.       His ranch is on the Pine Ridge Indian
    Reservation, and he leases the land from the Bureau of Indian Affairs and
    the Oglala Sioux Tribe.       The bombing range is no longer in use, but it
    contains unexploded ordnance, and so the Air Force has posted warning signs
    to keep the public off the land.        In 1992, the Air Force built a fence
    around the perimeter of the bombing range.      In 1993, the Air Force received
    an anonymous tip that someone was stealing the fence.                Investigators
    followed up on the tip and found that there were many places where the
    fence was missing.      While the investigators were inspecting the fence on
    June 29, 1993, they encountered Heathershaw, who was building a new fence
    in the area.2
    The investigators asked Heathershaw if he knew anything about the
    fence and he replied that he was part of their fence problem.          Heathershaw
    told the inspectors about problems the Air Force fence was causing him.
    He admitted he had used metal poles from the Air Force fence to build his
    fence and that he had about twenty wooden posts from the Air Force fence
    in   his   pickup    truck.   He   denied   taking   any   barbed   wire,   but   the
    investigators noticed that wire they had seen at the site recently was no
    longer there.       Heathershaw later told an FBI agent that he had used two
    strands of Air Force barbed wire in building one-half mile of fence.
    Heathershaw told the agent that he had lost four calves
    1
    In fact, the land condemned for the bombing range was
    originally part of Heathershaw's ranch.
    2
    All our references to the location of the new fence and the
    old fence must be extremely general because of a defect in the
    record. The government and Heathershaw made almost continuous use
    of a map at trial and most of the testimony refers to colored lines
    and marks on this map. However, no one introduced the map into
    evidence. Heathershaw has appended a black and white copy of the
    map onto his brief, but the copy does not show the colored lines
    and is of such poor quality that it is useless to this court.
    -2-
    because they had wandered onto the bombing range through gaps in the Air
    Force fence and had been unable to rejoin their mothers.    He also said that
    he had lost one of his horses, which became tangled in loose wire from the
    government fence and had to be killed.
    The government indicted Heathershaw under 18 U.S.C. § 641, which
    provides that "[w]hoever embezzles, steals, purloins, or knowingly converts
    to his use . . . any record, voucher, money, or thing of value of the
    United States . . . Shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more
    than ten years, or both . . . ."
    Heathershaw's defense at trial was that the Air Force fence had been
    allowed to fall into disrepair, and that much of it had been knocked down
    by hunters trying to gain entrance to the bombing range and by natural
    forces.   He said that the hunters cut the fence and that loose wire and
    posts were strewn on the ground.       According to Heathershaw, the poor
    condition of the fence rendered it a hazard to Heathershaw's livestock.
    Heathershaw testified that he had picked up posts and wire off the ground
    and used them in building the new fence.
    Heathershaw attempted to develop a related defense that the Air Force
    erroneously located part of the fence on land Heathershaw leased from the
    BIA, and that he had simply relocated the fence on his leased property.
    Heathershaw called as a witness a BIA official who administers the land
    Heathershaw leases.   He offered to prove that the official found "leasehold
    interests in Mr. Patrick Heathershaw within the retained area."    The court
    excluded the evidence, saying that even if the fence was on Heathershaw's
    leasehold, it was not relevant to his intent to steal.
    The court also denied Heathershaw's request for a claim-of-right
    instruction that if Heathershaw had a right to dispose of the fence as he
    did, he lacked intent to steal.    The court rejected the
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    instruction, stating, "The Court rules as a matter of law that the
    defendant did not have a right to dispose of the property as he did."
    During deliberations, the jury asked a question about the ownership
    of the land:   "Is BIA land Government land if so the fence was not stolen
    from the United States Government.   it was just moved? [sic]."   The court
    responded: "You are instructed that the ownership of the land to which the
    fence may have been moved is immaterial on whether or not the government
    has proved beyond a reasonable doubt the elements set forth [in the
    instruction stating the elements of section 641]."      The jury sent back
    another note to the court:   "We agree to the testimony of Mr. Heathershaw
    that he said yes re stealing the poles from the gov't.       There are some
    jurors that believe that he did not intend to deprive the owner of the use
    and benefit of the thing of value or property so taken.     We are having a
    hard time dirtiming [sic] what Mr. Heathershaw's intent was when he stole
    the poles."    The court responded in part:   "The intent which is required
    to constitute a violation of the law charged is the intent to take property
    to a use inconsistent with the government's rights and benefits.        The
    government has the right to determine the use to which it puts its
    property."
    The jury then returned a verdict of guilty.
    On appeal Heathershaw argues that the court erred in excluding his
    evidence that the Air Force fence was on his leasehold and that the court
    directed a verdict on the element of intent by its responses to the jury's
    notes.   He also claims that the court erred in denying his requested claim-
    of-right instruction.
    We must first decide whether the court erred in excluding
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    evidence that the fence was on Heathershaw's leasehold.3      We review the
    district court's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.    See United
    States v. Coney, 
    51 F.3d 164
    , 165 (8th Cir. 1995).
    Heathershaw contends that evidence the Air Force fence was on his
    leasehold is relevant to his claim of right.   Heathershaw cites Morissette
    v. United States, 
    342 U.S. 246
    (1952), arguing that facts showing he had
    a claim of right negate the element of intent to steal.   In Morissette, the
    defendant took shell casings from a government bombing range and sold them.
    He was prosecuted under section 641.     Morissette claimed he believed the
    casings were abandoned property.   The district court instructed that if
    Morissette took the casings off government property without permission, he
    was guilty, and that his claim of abandonment was no defense.   
    Id. at 249.
    The Supreme Court reversed, holding that criminal intent is an element of
    section 641, 
    id. at 273,
    and that Morissette had the right to a jury
    determination of whether he acted with wrongful intent or in the belief
    that the property was abandoned.   
    Id. at 276.
    The district court stated in excluding Heathershaw's evidence about
    ownership of the property:
    Let's assume without necessarily conceding that [Heathershaw
    leased] that whole bombing area, what right does he have, then,
    to remove the fence put there by the owner of the land? What
    right do you have to remove that fence and take the fence for
    his own purposes? Now, there's such things as self-abatement
    of a nuisance under South Dakota law, but that doesn't give you
    a right to
    3
    Heathershaw's brief raises this evidentiary question only as
    a part of his objection to the instructions, not as a separate
    issue; however, we believe the issue is fairly preserved by his
    argument:    "The court's ruling to exclude the evidence and
    testimony regarding Heathershaw's leasehold interest in areas of
    the TIA [Target Impact Area] fenced-in parcels, unfairly denied
    Heathershaw the opportunity to present his defense of claim of
    right to do what he did . . . ."
    -5-
    steal the property, take the property for your own use and
    benefit.
    The district court thus acknowledged the existence of a right of
    self-help to abate a nuisance.          Under South Dakota law, the right is
    codified:
    Any private person may . . . abate . . . any private nuisance
    injurious to him in any manner by removing, or, if necessary,
    destroying that which constitutes the nuisance, without
    committing a breach of the peace or doing unnecessary injury.
    If a private nuisance results from a mere omission of the
    wrongdoer, and cannot be abated without entering upon his land,
    reasonable notice shall be given to him before entering to
    abate it.
    S.D. Codified Laws Ann. § 21-10-6 (Supp. 1995).
    Under this statute it was relevant to Heathershaw's claim of right
    whether the land on which the fence was situated was his land or the Air
    Force's land, because if it was his, he could resort to self-help without
    first giving notice.       Further, if the fence was on Heathershaw's land, it
    would    be   impossible    for   Heathershaw   to   avoid   the   nuisance   without
    curtailing his rightful use of his leasehold; this would certainly bear on
    whether the fence was "injurious" to Heathershaw.
    According to Heathershaw's testimony, it was not only necessary to
    get the old fence out of the way, but also to close off his cattle from the
    danger posed by gaps in the government fence.          Heathershaw testified that
    the Air Force fence was down in many places and the posts "were scattered
    in so many directions that I just went around and picked them up so the
    cattle wouldn't get caught in them anymore."           Heathershaw also testified
    that his purpose in building the new fence was to protect his livestock
    from the hazard created by the Air Force:
    -6-
    My purpose in building that fence was that the government
    created traps that my cattle and horses were caught in every
    day.   I had to construct that fence so that my cattle and
    horses weren't caught in a terrible, terrible trap without
    water.
    Thus, according to Heathershaw, he used the government property only to
    abate the nuisance created by the Air Force.      On this record, whether
    Heathershaw acted to abate the nuisance or to steal the materials was an
    issue of intent for the jury.    Therefore, the court erred in concluding
    that as a matter of law Heathershaw's claim of right under South Dakota law
    was not relevant to the issue of criminal intent.4
    4
    Our research has unearthed several state cases in which a
    defendant's claim of right based on abatement of a nuisance was
    offered as a defense to criminal charges. In Holleman v. City of
    Tulsa, 
    155 P.2d 254
    (Okla. Crim. App. 1945), a defendant was
    charged with malicious mischief because he walked up to his
    neighbor's house and tore up a sign which he alleged to be a
    nuisance. His defense was that he was abating a nuisance, under a
    statute similar to the South Dakota nuisance statute. The court
    rejected his claim-of-right defense because there was no evidence
    he gave any notice before entering on the neighbor's property. In
    Moran v. State, 
    316 P.2d 876
    (Okla. Crim. App. 1957), a defendant
    successfully interposed a claim-of-right defense to malicious
    mischief charges where he removed a fence his neighbor placed on
    the defendant's property. The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals
    overruled Moran in McDaris v. State, 
    505 P.2d 502
    (Okla. Crim. App.
    1973). It is unclear whether McDaris meant to do away with the
    requirement of specific intent to harm the property owner in
    malicious mischief cases or to do away with the claim-of-right
    defense. If it is the former, McDaris has no bearing on this case,
    because the specific intent for malicious mischief is irrelevant to
    section 641 theft. If it is the latter, McDaris would be contrary
    to Morisette v. United States, 
    342 U.S. 246
    (1952), which permits
    a claim-of-right defense to section 641 theft.
    Finally, in State v. Moore, 
    255 S.E.2d 709
    (Ga. 1979), a
    defendant was convicted of criminal trespass for driving his truck
    through a gate that he claimed wrongfully closed off his right-of-
    way.   The Georgia Supreme Court held that the Georgia statute
    authorizing use of force to defend one's property only authorized
    use of force against other people and not against their property.
    This statute is entirely different from the South Dakota nuisance
    statute, and so Moore is not pertinent.
    -7-
    Consequently, the court's exclusion of the evidence of ownership was
    based on an erroneous conclusion about the validity of Heathershaw's
    defense, and was, therefore, an abuse of discretion.   The ruling prevented
    Heathershaw from presenting his theory of defense and so was harmful to his
    case.
    By the same token, it was error for the court to instruct the jury
    that ownership of the land was immaterial.     "An instruction that decides
    a material issue of fact as a matter of law is regarded as a partial
    instructed verdict of guilt and is prohibited."     United States v. Dakota
    Cheese, Inc., 
    906 F.2d 335
    , 338 (8th Cir. 1990) (citations omitted), cert.
    denied, 
    498 U.S. 1083
    (1991).
    A defendant's belief that facts exist which would give him the right
    to dispose of the property negates intent to steal under section 641.   See
    
    Morissette, 342 U.S. at 275-76
    .     Therefore, by instructing the jury that
    it could not consider ownership of the land, which was relevant to
    Heathershaw's claim of right, the court wrongfully denied Heathershaw the
    chance to have the jury decide his guilt.   See 
    Morissette, 342 U.S. at 274
    ("When intent is an ingredient of the crime charged, its existence is a
    question of fact which must be submitted to the jury.").
    On the same reasoning, it was error to deny Heathershaw's claim-of-
    right instruction.      A defendant is entitled to an instruction on any
    recognized defense on which there is sufficient evidence for a jury to find
    in his favor.    United States v. Brown, 
    33 F.3d 1002
    , 1004 (8th Cir. 1994).
    Since we must reverse on the grounds discussed above, we need not
    consider Heathershaw's additional claims of trial error.
    -8-
    A true copy.
    Attest:
    CLERK, U. S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
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