RENE ST. PIERRE v. STATE OF FLORIDA ( 2017 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    RENE ST. PIERRE,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D16-1669
    [September 27, 2017]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Seventeenth Judicial Circuit,
    Broward County; Dennis D. Bailey, Judge; L.T. Case No. 12-12960CF10A.
    Jason T. Forman of the Law Offices of Jason T. Forman, P.A., Fort
    Lauderdale, for appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Luke R.
    Napodano, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
    TAYLOR, J.
    Rene St. Pierre appeals his convictions and sentences for burglary and
    misdemeanor battery. He argues that the trial judge erred in failing to give
    the jury a self-defense instruction for the burglary offense. He also argues
    that his attorney was ineffective on the face of the record for failing to
    object to the justifiable use of force instruction given for battery and for
    failing to object to police opinion evidence. We affirm, without comment,
    appellant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims, but we reverse and
    remand for a new trial on the jury instruction issue.
    Appellant and the named victim of the burglary and battery charges
    were neighbors in a four-unit duplex. One night in September 2012, they
    got into a scuffle after their dogs fought in their shared backyard area.
    At trial, there were different accounts of what happened. The neighbor
    testified that he was trying to get his dog back inside his apartment when
    appellant came up behind him and knocked him to the floor. He said
    appellant then stepped inside his apartment and hit him several more
    times. He was not able to defend himself because appellant had left by the
    time he was able to stand up.
    Appellant’s girlfriend testified that she was cooking in the kitchen and
    appellant was grilling in the backyard when the dog fight began. She ran
    outside to see the neighbor kicking appellant’s dog. Appellant approached
    the neighbor, who was standing on the stoop of his apartment. The
    neighbor kicked appellant in the chest, causing the food appellant was
    carrying to fly out of appellant’s hand. The girlfriend turned to put the dog
    inside, looked back up, and saw appellant and the neighbor fighting inside
    the neighbor’s apartment.
    Appellant did not testify, but the jury watched his taped interview with
    the police. During the interview, appellant told police that after the
    neighbor hit him, he hit the neighbor to defend himself. Before the
    encounter, appellant had seen the neighbor kick his dog and push his
    girlfriend. He was at the neighbor’s doorway when the neighbor kicked
    him, which prompted him to defend himself. Appellant said that at some
    point, while defending himself, he may have ended up inside the neighbor’s
    apartment. Appellant had the following two exchanges with the police
    detective on this issue:
    Detective: Yeah, like what I’m saying is, like, what were you
    doing inside the guy’s house?
    Appellant: What was I doing? I didn’t go inside the guy’s
    house.
    Detective: So how did you end up inside the house then?
    Appellant: I don’t know. This all happened right -- this all
    happened right out -- I was cooking a steak. I wasn’t involved
    with this whole thing. I don’t even f****** know. I am so
    confused right now. All I did was tell the truth and now I’m
    sitting here.
    ....
    Detective: What I’m saying is how did you end up inside the
    guy’s house?
    Appellant: I don’t know. I can’t tell you. It all happened right
    there.
    Detective: Right there where?
    Appellant: Right in the doorway of his house. It’s not like I
    ran into his house or anything. I don’t know what -- I don’t
    know what, do you know what I mean, entering his house?
    It’s not like I chased him into his house. It all happened.
    That’s why I don’t understand what you guys are talking
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    about because it all happened right there in the doorway.
    Detective: Right in the doorway?
    Appellant: Yes.
    Detective: What I’m saying is it may have started out there in
    the doorway --
    Appellant: Well, it started outside.
    Detective: Right.
    Appellant: And then it led back in there. And then when I
    came over, that’s when I got kicked. I mean, I don’t know. I
    wasn’t expecting to get kicked, you know, and I was just bold
    kicked and then I remember like a little girl like this
    (demonstrating). And then I defended myself. That’s all --
    that’s all that I can -- that’s all that I know.
    After the incident, appellant was charged by information with burglary
    of a dwelling (Count I) and misdemeanor battery (Count II). During the
    charge conference, his attorney requested that the trial court instruct the
    jury on self-defense as to both the burglary and battery counts.
    Appellant’s attorney argued that the burglary offense was tied to the
    battery offense, such that if the jury found appellant not guilty of battery,
    then his entrance into the neighbor’s house would not be unlawful
    because he was defending himself and happened to cross the neighbor’s
    threshold during the course of his defense. Appellant’s attorney proposed
    the following special instruction:
    In the event that you find the Defendant did not commit the
    offense of battery because he was entitled to the justifiable use
    of non-deadly force, then any entry or remaining upon the
    property of [the neighbor] by the Defendant in the course of
    defending himself would not be considered unlawful.
    The trial court declined to give the requested instruction, noting that it
    was not a correct statement of the law to instruct the jury that if it
    acquitted appellant on the battery charge, then it was required also to
    acquit on the burglary charge. Further, the court found that self-defense
    was not an available defense for the burglary offense because appellant
    did not have a right to pursue the mutual combat into the neighbor’s
    apartment.
    Defense counsel disagreed with the trial court’s ruling that self-defense
    was not a defense to burglary, but offered to modify the language of the
    requested special instruction. The trial court essentially replied that it had
    “already ruled.”
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    Ultimately, the trial court gave the standard self-defense instruction as
    to the battery offense, stating that “[i]f the Defendant was not engaged in
    an unlawful activity . . . he had no duty to retreat and had the right to
    stand his ground and meet force with force, including deadly force, if he
    reasonably believed that it was necessary to do so to prevent death or great
    bodily harm . . . .” However, the court refused to give a self-defense
    instruction on the burglary offense. The jury rejected appellant’s self-
    defense claim on the battery charge and found appellant guilty on both
    counts as charged in the information. The court adjudicated appellant
    and sentenced him to 21.15 months in prison on the burglary charge and
    to time served on the battery charge.
    On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred in refusing to
    instruct the jury on self-defense for the burglary charge, as well as the
    battery charge. Appellant contends that the charges were based on the
    same acts and, thus, were dependent on each other. We agree.
    A trial court’s decision to give a requested jury instruction is generally
    reviewed for an abuse of discretion. Charles v. State, 
    945 So. 2d 579
    , 582
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2006). The trial court’s discretion in criminal cases “is
    rather narrow because a criminal defendant is entitled to have the jury
    instructed on his or her theory of defense, if there is any evidence to
    support this theory,” Davis v. State, 
    922 So. 2d 438
    , 444 (Fla. 5th DCA
    2006), “no matter how weak or flimsy.” See Gregory v. State, 
    937 So. 2d 180
    , 182 (Fla. 4th DCA 2006). “The trial court should not weigh the
    evidence for the purpose of determining whether the instruction is
    appropriate.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Garramone v. State, 
    636 So. 2d 869
    , 870 (Fla.
    4th DCA 1994)); see also Calkins v. State, 
    170 So. 3d 888
    , 890 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 2015) (finding error in the court’s decision that the evidence did not
    support a self-defense instruction). For a defendant to be entitled to a
    special jury instruction, one element the defendant must prove is that “the
    special instruction was a correct statement of the law and not misleading
    or confusing.” Stephens v. State, 
    787 So. 2d 747
    , 756 (Fla. 2001).
    Here, we find that the trial court committed reversible error by ruling
    that self-defense was not an available defense for the burglary charge
    under the circumstances of this case. We need not decide whether the
    trial court properly refused to give the requested special instruction as
    written. Defense counsel requested a self-defense instruction on the
    burglary charge, defense counsel was not tied to the wording of the
    proposed special instruction, and the trial court made it clear that the
    court would deny any self-defense instruction as to the burglary charge
    because the court believed self-defense could not apply to a burglary
    offense. At a minimum, the trial court should have given the standard
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    self-defense instruction for both the battery and the burglary charges,
    rather than just for the battery charge, where appellant’s theory of defense
    was that his possible entry into his neighbor’s apartment was not to start
    a fight but was necessitated by his need to defend himself from an attack
    that had begun outside and continued unabated inside. See Pitts v. State,
    
    989 So. 2d 27
    , 30 (Fla. 2d DCA 2008) (failure to provide a self-defense
    instruction was error where defendant was charged with burglary with
    assault or battery and argued that his entry into the truck and battery
    were necessitated by self-defense because, while defending himself, he lost
    his balance and reached into the truck to grab the driver’s shirt); see also
    Gregory, 
    937 So. 2d at 182
     (failure to provide self-defense instruction was
    error where defendant was charged with burglary with battery and there
    was testimony that the victim first pushed the defendant, who pushed
    back and ended up inside the victim’s apartment after a shoving match).
    Whether appellant’s version of the events was credible or not was a
    question for the jury to decide.
    In Garramone, we explained:
    It is not the quantum or the quality of the proof as to self-
    defense that determines the requirement for giving the charge.
    If any evidence of a substantial character is adduced . . . the
    element of self-defense becomes an issue, and the jury, as the
    trier of the facts, should be duly charged as to the law thereon,
    because it is the jury's function to determine that issue.
    
    636 So. 2d at
    870 (citing Kiernan v. State, 
    613 So. 2d 1362
    , 1364 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 1993) (quoting Kilgore v. State, 
    271 So. 2d 148
    , 152 (Fla. 2d DCA
    1972)).
    Although the state did not charge appellant with burglary with a
    battery, the facts of this case—or, at the least, appellant’s theory of the
    case—suggest that the two charged offenses are so inextricably intertwined
    that they result in the functional equivalent of a single charge, such that
    Pitts and Gregory would be directly on point. The trial court does not weigh
    the evidence in determining whether the instruction is appropriate. See
    Gregory, 
    937 So. 2d at 182
    ; Calkins, 170 So. 3d at 890.
    Much like the defendants in Pitts and Gregory, appellant presented
    evidence indicating that the burglary and the battery were part of the same
    action. See Pitts, 
    989 So. 2d at
    31 n.3 (distinguishing Pitts’ case from
    cases in which the burglary and battery are not a part of the same
    transaction). In short, appellant argued that he committed the battery in
    self-defense and was then required, in self-defense, to continue the battery
    5
    inside the neighbor’s apartment. See Gregory, 
    937 So. 2d at
    182–83
    (finding that evidence that the defendant was first struck and that he
    responded only with the use of non-deadly force entitled the defendant to
    have the jury instructed on his theory of self-defense, and the failure to
    give the requested instruction on the justifiable use of non-deadly force
    was reversible error).
    Appellant next argues the state cannot demonstrate that the error in
    failing to give the self-defense instruction on the burglary charge was
    harmless, because the standard jury instruction given on the battery
    charge erroneously included a duty to retreat and a fatal grammatical error
    that may have caused the jury to reject the self-defense claim as to the
    battery charge. The state responds that any error in failing to instruct the
    jury that justifiable use of force applies to the burglary charge is harmless,
    because the jury received the standard instruction for justifiable use of
    force as to the battery charge. See Vila v. State, 
    74 So. 3d 1110
    , 1113 (Fla.
    5th DCA 2011) (guilty verdict for burglary rendered failure to give self-
    defense instruction for battery harmless). In addition, the state argues
    that the self-defense instruction given for battery was not so
    fundamentally erroneous as to preclude harmless error on the burglary
    charge.
    During the charge conference, the trial court initially said it would
    remove the “no duty to retreat” language from the justifiable use of force
    instruction for the battery offense. Appellant’s counsel asked the court to
    include this language because appellant could argue that he was in his
    own dwelling or residence when he first was kicked.             Ultimately,
    appellant’s counsel agreed to an instruction based on the 2012 version of
    section 776.013, Florida Statutes, which, in pertinent part, included:
    The defendant was not engaged in an unlawful activity. He
    was attacked in a place where he had a right to be. He had
    no duty to retreat and had the right to stand his ground and
    meet force with force if he believed that it was necessary to do
    so to prevent death or great bodily harm to himself or to
    prevent the commission of a forcible felony.
    Appellant’s counsel asked the trial court to read the stand your ground
    version of no duty to retreat, changing the phrase “including deadly force”
    to non-deadly force, but then agreed that the instruction was fine as it was
    because it would include non-deadly force. The court read to the jury the
    following instruction based on section 776.013 regarding the self-defense
    claim on the battery charge:
    6
    If the Defendant was not engaged in an unlawful activity, and
    was attacked any place where he had a right to be, he had no
    duty to retreat and had the right to stand his ground and meet
    force with force, including deadly force, if he reasonably
    believed that it was necessary to do so to prevent death or
    great bodily harm to himself or to prevent the commission of
    a forcible felony. A person does not have a duty to retreat if a
    person is in place where he has a right to be.
    Florida courts have previously noted that the inclusion of the
    extraneous comma after the phrase “including deadly force” is erroneous
    because it suggests that a defendant does not have a right to defend
    himself by meeting force with force unless the victim had threatened him
    with deadly force. See Neal v. State, 
    169 So. 3d 158
    , 164 (Fla. 4th DCA
    2015); see also Talley v. State, 
    106 So. 3d 1015
    , 1017–18 (Fla. 2d DCA
    2013). Furthermore, there is no duty to retreat when using non-deadly
    force. See Hansen v. State, 
    898 So. 2d 201
    , 204 (Fla. 2d DCA 2005) (citing
    Morris v. State, 
    715 So. 2d 1177
    , 1179 (Fla. 4th DCA 1998)). Appellant
    correctly points out that the 2012 version of section 776.012 did not
    require him to prove that he was not engaged in unlawful activity, but this
    was not the section under which appellant’s counsel requested the
    justifiable use of force defense. See Dorsey v. State, 
    149 So. 3d 144
    , 146
    (Fla. 4th DCA 2014). 1
    Although the erroneous battery instructions do not amount to
    fundamental error in this case, the state has not met its burden to show
    that the failure to properly instruct the jury on self-defense for the burglary
    charge was harmless error. “[I]t is appropriate to consider both the
    preserved and unpreserved errors in determining whether the preserved
    error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.” Martinez v. State, 
    761 So. 2d 1074
    , 1082–83 (Fla. 2000). Here, the jury may have rejected the
    self-defense claim for the battery offense because of the extra comma error
    and additional burden imposed on appellant. This, of course, could have
    affected the verdict. See State v. DiGuilio, 
    491 So. 2d 1129
    , 1138 (Fla.
    1986) (noting that under the harmless error test, the burden is on the state
    to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the complained of error did not
    contribute to the verdict, i.e., “that there is no reasonable possibility that
    the error contributed to the conviction”).
    1Appellant claims trial counsel was ineffective on the face of the record for failing
    to object to the justifiable use of force instruction given. We decline to address
    this claim on direct appeal as trial counsel may have had strategic reasons, which
    would be more properly addressed during post-conviction proceedings.
    7
    Accordingly, we reverse and remand with directions for the trial court,
    on retrial, to instruct the jury as to self-defense on the battery and burglary
    charges, consistent with appellant’s theory of defense.
    Reversed and Remanded.
    MAY and CONNER, JJ., concur.
    *        *         *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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