STATE OF NEW JERSEY VS. CHRISTOPHER APARICIO- REYES (16-11-1874, MONMOUTH COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2021 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
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    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-4978-17
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    CHRISTOPHER APARICIO-REYES,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________________
    Argued September 16, 2020 – Decided August 11, 2021
    Before Judges Fuentes, Whipple and Rose.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Monmouth County, Indictment No. 16-11-
    1874.
    Stephanie Lopez, Designated Counsel, argued the cause
    for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender,
    attorney; Stephanie Lopez, on the briefs).
    Mary R. Juliano, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause
    for respondent (Christopher J. Gramiccioni, Monmouth
    County Prosecutor, attorney; Mary R. Juliano, of
    counsel and on the brief).
    PER CURIAM
    Defendant Christopher Aparicio-Reyes was tried before a Monmouth
    County jury and convicted of murdering a woman by strangulation. Defendant
    told the law enforcement agents who arrested him the day after the murder that
    the victim, whom he did not know, came into his bedroom as he was snorting
    lines of cocaine. She took a fifty-dollar bag of cocaine he had just purchased
    and fifty dollars in cash and refused to return them. In response, he assaulted
    her by punching her several times in the face. The victim screamed and fell to
    the ground bleeding. Defendant admitted to law enforcement agents that he
    strangled the victim to silence her screams.
    The trial judge sentenced defendant to life imprisonment with an eighty -
    five percent period of parole ineligibility, and five years of parole supervision,
    as mandated by the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2(a). "Solely for the
    purpose of calculating the minimum term of parole ineligibility . . . a sentence
    of life imprisonment shall be deemed to be 75 years." N.J.S.A. 2C:43 -7.2(b).
    Thus, defendant must serve 64.75 years before he is eligible for parole.
    Defendant was twenty-one years old at the time he committed this crime and did
    not have any prior involvement with the criminal justice system or history of
    juvenile delinquency as a minor.
    A-4978-17
    2
    Defendant raises a number of arguments on appeal. In our view, the
    dispositive substantive argument at issue here concerns the trial judge's
    instructions to the jury regarding defendant's state of mind at the time he
    committed this homicide. Relying on our Supreme Court's holding in State v.
    Warren, 
    104 N.J. 571
    , 579-80 (1986), defendant argues the trial judge
    committed reversible error by not instructing the jury that defendant's self -
    induced intoxication defense did not apply to the lesser included offenses of
    aggravated manslaughter and manslaughter.
    The State urges us to reject defendant's argument based on the following
    three independent grounds: (1) the self-induced intoxication charge the trial
    judge gave to the jury was not inconsistent with the Supreme Court's holding in
    Warren or our decision in State v. Klich, 
    321 N.J. Super. 388
    , 396 (App. Div.
    2005); (2) there was no legal or factual basis to charge the jury to consider the
    self-induced intoxication defense because the evidence presented at trial shows
    defendant was not "intoxicated" as a matter of law at the time he strangled the
    victim; and (3) defendant is barred under the invited error doctrine from
    challenging the language in the self-induced intoxication instructions the judge
    gave to the jury because defense counsel drafted and proposed the charge.
    A-4978-17
    3
    After reviewing the record developed before the trial court and mindful of
    the prevailing legal principles relevant to the arguments raised by defendant in
    this appeal, we reverse and remand this case for a new trial. The self-induced
    intoxication defense charge here contains the same defect that compelled
    reversal in Warren and Klich.       Despite the overwhelming evidence that
    rationally supports the jury's verdict, we discern no legal pathway to affirm. We
    derive the following facts from the testimony of the witnesses who testified at
    trial and from defendant's account of the events that led him to kill the victim,
    as he described them to the detectives who interrogated him.
    I.
    On December 13, 2015, defendant resided in a two-story house located on
    Rockwell Avenue in the City of Long Branch owned by his uncle Octavio
    Aparacio-Carrasco. Defendant occupied one of the four bedrooms located on
    the second floor. Aparacio-Carrasco rented out two of the rooms to defendant's
    friends Candelario Lemus-Vasquez, (a/k/a, Juan Carlos) and Francisco Javier
    Cruz Nolasco.1      Aparacio-Carrasco's mother, who is also defendant's
    1
    We will refer to these two men by their first names in the interest of clarity.
    We will refer to Lemus-Vasquez by his alias "Juan Carlos." No disrespect is
    intended.
    A-4978-17
    4
    grandmother, occupied the fourth bedroom. 2 All of the second floor residents
    shared the bathroom located on that floor. Defendant's uncle resided on the first
    floor of the house with his wife and infant child.
    At around three to four o'clock in the afternoon on December 13, 2015,
    Francisco testified that he returned home from work to get ready for a holiday
    party and found defendant and Juan Carlos were "drinking and using cocaine"
    in Juan Carlos's room. When asked whether he also drank and did drugs with
    them, he responded: "Yes, a little." 3 Francisco testified that he did not know
    what occurred later on that day because he left to take a shower and get ready
    for the holiday party. Juan Carlos and defendant declined his offer to go to the
    party with him.
    Juan Carlos testified that he, defendant and Francisco were drinking that
    afternoon. When asked if they also were "doing any drugs," Juan Carlos testified
    that defendant and Francisco were smoking marijuana and snorting cocaine; he
    claimed he only snorted cocaine. When they ran out of cocaine, defendant called
    someone on the phone and arranged to buy fifty dollars' worth of cocaine.
    2
    Defendant's grandmother was hospitalized at the time this homicide occurred.
    She died sometime thereafter.
    3
    Francisco and "Juan Carlos" testified with the assistance of court-certified
    Spanish-Language interpreters.
    A-4978-17
    5
    Defendant then asked Juan Carlos to pick it up. The prosecutor followed up on
    this point with the following line of questions:
    Q. Why did he ask you to pick up the coke?
    A. He told me that he owed money to the guy and that's
    why he wasn't going.
    Q. And now did that mean that he would – that the
    person would not give the drugs to him because he
    already owed him money?
    A. He owed him money, yes.
    Q. Did you actually go and meet this person?
    A. Yes, I went to pick that up.
    Q. All right. How much money did the cocaine cost?
    A. 50 [dollars].
    Q. Where did the $50 come from?
    A. [Defendant] gave that to me.
    Juan Carlos testified that he first noticed the woman, who was later
    identified as Jennifer Pizzuto, immediately after he bought the fifty-dollar bag
    of cocaine. According to Juan Carlos, Pizzuto followed him until he reached
    the entrance door of the house. As he was about to enter, Pizzuto asked Juan
    Carlos if he could "give her some water." From this point forward, Juan Carlos's
    testimony is materially inconsistent with certain important parts of defendant's
    A-4978-17
    6
    account of his interactions with Pizzuto.     The best way to illustrate these
    inconsistencies is to recite Juan Carlos's testimony verbatim:
    Q. So as you were going back into the house, a woman
    asked you for water, is that correct?
    A. Yeah, she asked me if I could give her water and I
    said yes.
    Q. And then what happened?
    A. Then I told her to wait there, that I was going to go
    and get that because I didn't have water.
    Q. Now, are you still –
    A. Downstairs.
    Q. Were you speaking to her in English or Spanish?
    A. In Spanish, in Spanish.
    Q. Did she speak Spanish?
    A. Yes.
    Q. All right. She was able to communicate with you?
    A. Yes.
    [(Emphasis added)]
    Juan Carlos left the entrance door ajar and walked upstairs to get her
    water; Pizzuto followed him inside and told him she needed to use the bathroom.
    Juan Carlos told her that she could not use the bathroom "because [Aparacio -
    A-4978-17
    7
    Carrasco] will call our attention if we did bring unknown persons." At this point,
    defendant came out from inside his room and told Juan Carlos "give it to me, I
    will speak with her." Juan Carlos testified that
    from that moment I went to my room, I gave him what
    I had with me and then I went to my room and they went
    inside.
    Q. When you say you gave him what you had, do you
    mean the cocaine?
    A. Yes, yes.
    ....
    Q. Did you see her go into [defendant's] room?
    A. Yes.
    Q. Did [defendant] leave the door open or did he close
    it?
    A. He closed it.
    Approximately fifteen to twenty minutes later, Juan Carlos left his room
    to go to the bathroom and
    saw [defendant] at the door. I saw him nervous and
    with blood on his hands. And then I said what
    happened to you, brother. He didn't answer and then he
    closed the door and then I went back to my room. And
    then I went downstairs and I told Octavio [defendant's
    uncle] . . . you should go and see [defendant] because I
    think he got caught by some blood on his hands.
    A-4978-17
    8
    Defendant's uncle testified as a witness for the State. He described what
    transpired when he went to defendant's room in response to Juan Carlos's
    request. Aparicio-Carrasco knocked on defendant's bedroom door; defendant
    yelled out: "hold on, hold on . . . [and] didn’t open the door." When def endant
    finally responded, he only opened the door "like a few inches and then he was
    putting his hands on the wall and then the other one was holding [the] door."
    Aparicio-Carrasco testified this prevented him from seeing defendant's hands.
    He asked defendant to show him his hands, but he did not do so "at the
    beginning." When defendant eventually capitulated, Aparicio-Carrasco saw
    only "some blood on his hands."
    Defendant told his uncle that "he got into a fight with a guy." Aparicio -
    Carrasco told his nephew to wash his hands and returned to his residence on the
    ground floor. Sometime thereafter, he heard defendant going up and down the
    stairs for approximately ten minutes.       When Aparicio-Carrasco returned to
    defendant's room, he only saw a bloody white shirt on the floor. However, he
    noticed that defendant continue to be "very nervous." Aparicio-Carrasco also
    looked inside his mother's bedroom.
    Although he did not find anything suspicious in this initial search of the
    second-floor rooms, Aparicio-Carrasco remained convinced that something was
    A-4978-17
    9
    amiss. His suspicions were piqued when he found the door to Francisco's
    bedroom locked. He called Francisco and confirmed that he had not locked the
    door to his room, and asked him to return to the house so he could open the door
    of his room. Defendant left the residence before Francisco arrived. When
    Aparicio-Carrasco opened the door to Francisco's room, he found Pizzuto's body
    face down on the floor. He closed the door and called the police.
    Long Branch Police Officers, First Aid, paramedics, and crime scene
    detectives from the Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office responded to
    Aparicio-Carrasco's home. The paramedics confirmed that Pizzuto's body was
    cold and without a pulse. She had a visible head wound and multiple lacerations
    on her face and around the area of her mouth. The police officers found a tooth
    underneath her body, a second tooth in the hallway, a partial tooth in the closet,
    and a "clump of hair" and bloody rags on the floor of a bedroom across the hall.
    There was a visible "streak of blood" that extended from Pizzuto's body to the
    pile of rags. The officers also found bloody tissues and a blood-stained towel
    in the bathroom.
    After a fast-paced yet extensive investigation, officers from the Long
    Branch Police Department arrested defendant the following morning. Defendant
    A-4978-17
    10
    waived his constitutional rights under Miranda4 and agreed to answer Detective
    Michael Verdadeiro's questions and describe what occurred inside his bedroom
    that led to Jennifer Pizzuto's death.
    Defendant's answers corroborated, in part, some of the details provided by
    Francisco and Juan Carlos. He confirmed that the three of them were drinking
    beer and using drugs in Juan Carlos's room. When they ran out of cocaine, he
    gave Juan Carlos fifty dollars and asked him to buy a bag of cocaine. He did
    not go himself because he "was having issues" with his dealer. He became
    anxious when Juan Carlos did not rush back with the fifty-dollar bag of cocaine
    and "went outside to check if . . . he was coming." Juan Carlos eventually came
    back "with a woman" defendant did not know.
    At this point, defendant told Detective Verdadeiro:
    I don't know how she . . . went up to my room; she went
    upstairs. [Juan Carlos] brought her upstairs. And I
    said, "So now what? What happened?" And I . . . And
    since that guy was kinda drunk; all drunk
    ....
    4
    After conducting a N.J.R.E. 104(c) hearing on May 9, 2017, the Criminal Part
    denied defendant's motion to suppress incriminating statements he made in the
    course of an interrogation conducted by detectives from the Long Branch Police
    Department and Monmouth County Prosecutor's Office. The motion judge
    found defendant knowingly and freely waived his rights under Miranda v.
    Arizona, 
    384 U.S. 436
     (1966). Defendant does not challenge the Criminal Part's
    determination in this appeal.
    A-4978-17
    11
    Q. He was drunk?
    A. Uhum. Me too. He was too. We all were.
    Q. And all, all drunk.
    A. We were all like that; we were.
    Defendant insisted that he did not know the woman, had never seen her
    before that day, and did not even know her name. He also alleged that he was
    unable to communicate with her because she spoke only in English and he speaks
    only Spanish. He believed she was under the influence of crack because she
    showed him a crack pipe. Defendant also claimed that "she saw [he] had the
    drugs. And my money was in my room. She wanted to take advantage; she took
    it away from me and I told her, I told her. 'Calm down. Give me my money
    back.'" He claimed she stole fifty dollars in cash. Notwithstanding his alleged
    inability to communicate with her, defendant claimed he told her: "You have a
    big problem."
    Defendant made clear that he remembered every detail of what he did to
    the victim the previous day. He told Detective Verdadeiro: "The woman robbed
    me" and "since I was so high and all that, I freaked out." As the following
    colloquy reveals, defendant knew the difference between an alcohol induced
    A-4978-17
    12
    memory gap and an out-of-control violent rage, possibly fueled by snorting
    cocaine:
    [I]t came out of me, it came out of me. Because
    sometimes that happens to me when I am drunk and all
    that . . .
    Q. Uhum.
    A. I already got in trouble here with, with the police
    before; also because I got drunk once.
    ....
    There is a small bend. I was drinking there with some
    friends; but I was really drunk. I woke up here and I
    couldn't remember what I did. They told me I hit some
    cops; I spat on them and all that.
    Q. And, and do you remember what happened in your
    room? Do you remember?
    A. Yes, yes, yes. I remember because I told her . . .
    Yes.
    Q. And you might have been a little drunk . . .
    A. Yes.
    Q. A little high. But you, you . . .
    ....
    You remember everything.
    A-4978-17
    13
    A. That's why I'm telling you, I do remember. What
    happened is that when I, I freaked out and everything
    happened . . .
    Q. Uhum. So what happened, you . . . when that
    happened? What, what? How?
    A. Because she wanted to . . . she started making a
    racket. She was screaming.
    ....
    [S]he was screaming. I told her, "Shut up!" My uncle
    was downstairs.
    My uncle Octavio was downstairs with his daughter. He
    was downstairs.
    Q. Do you think he heard anything?
    A. [I] [d]idn't want him to hear.
    ....
    How could she take it from me if we didn't, didn't,
    we didn't do anything at all?
    Q. Ok. And what happened?
    A. So I, I freaked out and started hitting her.
    Q. With what?
    A. Just with this.
    ....
    Only with the hand.
    A-4978-17
    14
    Q. You hit her . . . where?
    A. I choked her, I believe . . .
    ....
    I choked her, I . . . I squeezed her neck. . . . I am telling
    you, I was hitting her and she was on the floor like this
    . . . what I did, I grabbed her like this. . . . But because
    I was nervous, I squeezed her too much . . .
    [(Emphasis added)]
    The Medical Examiner who performed the autopsy on the victim testified
    that defendant struck her in the face with such force that it knocked out two of
    her front teeth, fractured a third front tooth, and caused multiple lacerations to
    her face. She also had internal injuries that caused hemorrhages on both her
    head and neck.     The Medical Examiner testified that the victim died by
    asphyxiation and described it as
    an alteration of the blood flow up into the brain, as well
    as the blood drainage from the brain. This causes a low
    oxygen state in the brain. Your brain is very sensitive
    to being deprived of oxygen. You will lose
    consciousness relatively quickly. I can't put an exact
    number on it. It could be 15, 20, 30 seconds. It could
    be 45 seconds. But it's on the order of seconds to maybe
    a minute or so.
    If you release pressure, at that point blood will begin
    flowing back to your brain. You should wake back up
    again. It's only if the pressure is sustained past the point
    A-4978-17
    15
    of the brain being irreversibly deprived of oxygen that
    you will no longer regain consciousness.
    ....
    Q. And if hypothetically speaking . . . someone were to
    strangle someone else to stop them from screaming, at
    what point would they lose the ability to scream?
    A. As soon as they were unconscious.
    At the end of the State's case, defendant exercised his constitutional right
    not to testify at trial; defense counsel did not call any witnesses on his behalf.
    Although defendant was indicted on a single count of murder, by purposely or
    knowingly causing the death of Jennifer Pizzuto, the verdict sheet provided the
    jury with the option to find defendant guilty of one of two lesser included
    offenses: aggravated manslaughter 5 or second degree manslaughter. The jury
    deliberated for approximately ninety minutes before finding defendant guilty of
    murder.
    5
    Although aggravated manslaughter is a first degree offense, it does not fall
    within the purview of an ordinary term of imprisonment for a first degree offense
    of ten to twenty years under N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6(a)(1). A person convicted of
    aggravated manslaughter can be sentenced to a term of ten to thirty years
    imprisonment. N.J.S.A. 2C:11-4(c).
    A-4978-17
    16
    II.
    Against this record, defendant raises the following arguments on appeal.
    POINT I
    THE MURDER CONVICTION MUST BE VACATED
    BECAUSE THE TRIAL COURT'S INSTRUCTIONS
    USURPED THE JURY'S FUNCTION THEREBY
    DEPRIVING DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL AND
    DUE PROCESS.
    A. THE TRIAL COURT'S FAILURE TO
    INSTRUCT THE JURY THE MODEL
    JURY CHARGE ON THE EFFECT OF
    INTOXICATION ON THE LESSER-
    INCLUDED OFFENSES CONSTITUTED
    REVERSIBLE ERROR. (Not Raised
    Below)
    B. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN
    INSTRUCTING THE JURY THAT THE
    STRANGULATION      IN    ITSELF
    PERMITTED AN INFERENCE ON
    DEFENDANT'S INTENT TO KILL.
    POINT II
    THE ADMISSION OF BLOOD SP[L]ATTER
    TESTIMONY AND GRUESOME CRIME SCENE
    AND     AUTOPSY        PHOTOGRAPHS    WAS
    NEEDLESSLY         CUMULATIVE,     HIGHLY
    PREJUDICIAL,      AND      OVERWHELMINGLY
    INFLAMMATORY AND SERVED ONLY TO
    INCREASE THE LIKELIHOOD OF A MURDER
    CONVICTION AND DEPRIVED DEFENDANT OF A
    FAIR TRIAL. (Not Raised Below)
    A-4978-17
    17
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR JUDGMENT OF
    ACQUITTAL.
    POINT IV
    THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE ERRORS AT
    DEFENDANT'S TRIAL DEPRIVED HIM OF THE
    RIGHT OF DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR TRIAL.
    (Not Raised Below)
    POINT V
    THE TRIAL COURT'S IMPOSITION OF A LIFE
    TERM UPON A TWENTY-THREE YEAR OLD
    FIRST TIME OFFENDER WAS EXCESSIVE.
    We start our analysis by acknowledging the obvious; defendant does not
    dispute that he killed Jennifer Pizzuto. Indeed, defense counsel made this clear
    in his opening statement to the jury:
    [M]any of the essential facts are not in issue. You see
    some cases are about who did it and trying to find that
    person, and some cases are about trying to find out to
    what extent a person was injured, to what extent the
    person was harmed or what the value of something that
    was taken was.
    This is not that case. Because we know that [defendant]
    caused the death of Jennifer Pizzuto. We know that.
    We know where it happened. We know how it
    happened and under what circumstances it happened.
    [(Emphasis added)]
    A-4978-17
    18
    Thus, as framed by defense counsel, the only factual issue the jury was
    asked to decide was whether the record developed at trial supported the
    application of the self-induced intoxication defense to negate the element of
    "purposeful or knowing conduct" required to convict defendant of murder. The
    record of the charge conference conducted pursuant to Rule 1:8-7(b) shows the
    trial judge discussed the intoxication defense charge, as described in the model
    charge, and all parties agreed to instruct the jury on this issue with the charge
    provided by defense counsel without any modification. The following colloquy
    between the trial judge and counsel confirms this agreement.
    PROSECUTOR: The defense has proposed an
    intoxication instruction, which the State is not
    objecting to, which goes to the defense's arguments
    regarding what the defendant's intent was.
    ....
    THE COURT: In this definition, and we do include
    three types of homicides, we have got murder,
    aggravated, and reckless manslaughter. I have added
    "intoxication" before the latter two, before the
    aggravated and the reckless.
    [Defense counsel], you have had an opportunity to
    review that language?
    DEFENSE COUNSEL: I have, your Honor.
    THE COURT: And the State at this point you concede
    that's an element in this case?
    A-4978-17
    19
    PROSECUTOR: We have no objection to it being
    included, your Honor.
    As proposed by defense counsel, the judge gave the jury the following
    instructions that explained how to consider the defense of self -induced
    intoxication:
    As part of the defense to the charge of murder the
    defendant contends that the State has not proven each
    element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt
    because there is evidence in this case, concerning the
    use by the defendant of drugs and alcohol on December
    13, 2015.
    Generally, a defendant is not relieved of criminal
    responsibility because he is found to have acted under
    the influence of an intoxicating beverage or drugs. The
    general assumption is that every person is normal and
    is possessed of ordinary faculties. The State need not
    prove that the defendant was sober.
    You may consider the evidence as to the defendant's
    consumption of alcoholic beverages or drugs in
    determining whether he was intoxicated to such a
    degree that he was incapable of acting purposely or
    knowingly. Therefore, once there is some evidence of
    defendant's intoxication, the State must prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt that such intoxication did not render
    defendant incapable of acting purposely or knowingly.
    Intoxication under our law means a disturbance of
    mental or physical capacities resulting from the
    introduction of substances into the body.
    In considering the question of intoxication, you should
    carefully distinguish between the condition of mind,
    A-4978-17
    20
    which is merely excited by intoxicating beverage or
    drugs, and yet capable of acting with purpose or
    knowledge, and the condition in which one's mental
    faculties are so prostrated as to deprive one of his will
    to act and ability to reason, thereby, rendering a person
    incapable of acting and thus preventing the person from
    committing the crime charged with the mental state
    required of either purposely or knowingly.
    This distinction is important because as explained,
    whether or not the defense of intoxication applies is a
    factual determination to be made by you.
    You may consider, along with all the other evidence,
    the degree of intoxication in determining whether or not
    the defendant was capable of acting with purpose or
    knowledge to commit the crime charged.
    You will recall that I explained to you the elements of
    murder, one of those elements was that the defendant
    had to act with purpose or knowledge. A person acts
    purposely when it is the person's conscious object to
    cause death or serious bodily injury resulting in death.
    A person acts knowingly when the person is aware that
    it is practically certain that his conduct will cause death
    or serious bodily injury resulting in death.
    All jurors do not have to agree unanimously concerning
    which form of murder is present, so long as all believe
    that it was one form of murder or the other. However,
    for a defendant to be guilty of murder, all jurors must
    agree that the defendant either knowingly or purposely
    caused the death or serious bodily injury resulting in
    death of Jennifer Pizzuto.
    If the State has proven to you beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the defense does not apply and the State has
    proven all of the elements of murder previously defined
    A-4978-17
    21
    for you beyond a reasonable doubt, then you must find
    the defendant guilty of murder. If, however, you
    determine that the State has not proven beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant purposely or
    knowingly caused the death or serious bodily injury
    resulting in death, you must find the defendant not
    guilty of murder and go on to consider whether the
    defendant should be convicted of the crimes of
    aggravated or reckless manslaughter.
    [(Emphasis added)]
    Defendant argues that these instructions constitute plain error because
    they do not make clear to the jury that self-induced intoxication is not a defense
    to the lesser included offenses of aggravated manslaughter and manslaughter, as
    our Supreme Court explained in Warren, 
    104 N.J. at 579,
     and this court
    subsequently applied in Klich, 321 N.J. Super. at 396.      In response, the State
    argues that the record developed at trial shows there is no rational basis to
    support a self-induced intoxication charge. Thus, the State contends, the judge's
    failure to include language that unequivocally states that the self-induced
    intoxication defense does not apply to the two lesser included offenses is legally
    inconsequential.
    An attorney has a professional obligation to place on the record proper,
    timely objections in order to facilitate appellate review. R. 1:7-2. Conversely,
    the trial court has the discretion to "notice any error of such a nature as to have
    A-4978-17
    22
    been clearly capable of producing an unjust result, even though such error was
    not brought to its attention by a party." R. 1:7-5. Appellate courts also have the
    authority to reverse a conviction based on any error "that is clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result." R. 2:10-2.
    In the context of an erroneous jury charge plain error is
    "[l]egal impropriety in the charge prejudicially
    affecting the substantial rights of the defendant and
    sufficiently grievous to justify notice by the reviewing
    court and to convince the court that of itself the error
    possessed a clear capacity to bring about an unjust
    result."
    [State v. McKinney, 
    223 N.J. 475
    , 494 (2015) (internal
    citations omitted).]
    Here, although the jury charge at issue was drafted and proposed by
    defendant's trial counsel, the Court made clear in Warren that "[i]t is the duty of
    the trial court to instruct the jury on the relevant legal principles, 'and counsel
    may justifiably assume that fundamental matters will be covered in the charge.'"
    
    104 N.J. at 578
     (quoting State v. Green, 
    86 N.J. 281
    , 288 (1981)).
    It is well settled that "[b]ecause proper jury instructions are essential to a
    fair trial, 'erroneous instructions on material points are presumed to' possess the
    capacity to unfairly prejudice the defendant." State v. Bunch, 
    180 N.J. 534
    , 541-
    42, (2004), (quoting State v. Nelson, 
    173 N.J. 417
    , 422 (2002)). The trial judge
    has an independent, nondelegable duty to ensure the jury receives accurate
    A-4978-17
    23
    instructions, regardless of the parties' charging requests. State v. Scharf, 
    225 N.J. 547
    , 580 (2016). As an appellate court, we are bound to review the jury
    charges as a whole, "not look at portions of the charge alleged to be erroneous
    in isolation." McKinney, 223 N.J. at 494.
    Intoxication "is not a defense unless it negatives an element of the
    offense." N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8(a). Self-induced intoxication as a defense "means
    intoxication caused by substances which the actor knowingly introduces into his
    body, the tendency of which to cause intoxication he knows or ought to know,
    unless he introduces them pursuant to medical advice or under such
    circumstances as would afford a defense to a charge of crime. . . ." N.J.S.A.
    2C:2-8(e)(2).   "As a matter of policy, however, the drafters of the Code
    concluded that intoxication should not exonerate a defendant from crimes
    involving recklessness." Warren, 
    104 N.J. at 576
    . The Legislature codified the
    public policy in Warren to avoid any lingering doubt: "When recklessness
    establishes an element of the offense, if the actor, due to self-induced
    intoxication, is unaware of a risk of which he would have been aware had he
    been sober, such unawareness is immaterial." N.J.S.A. 2C:2-8(b).
    As in this case, the defendant in Warren did not dispute that he killed the
    victim.   The victim in Warren ended a six-year extramarital romantic
    A-4978-17
    24
    relationship with the defendant when she "threw a caustic substance" at him.
    
    104 N.J. at 573
    . The incident that ended her life occurred approximately one
    month later, as she was driving her eight-year-old son to school. When she
    stopped at a store, the defendant parked his car directly behind hers. As soon as
    she stepped out of her car, the defendant called her to come over. When she
    approached the defendant's passenger-side window, the defendant "fired three
    shots, two of which hit the victim." 
    Id. at 573-74
    . She died from her wounds.
    The defendant "drove away from the scene, but was later apprehended." Similar
    to what occurred in this case, the defendant in Warren gave a statement to the
    police in which he admitted that he shot the victim and boasted that "he carried
    out the shooting with 'military precision.'" 
    Id. at 574
    .
    The defendant in Warren was charged with murder. His defense at trial
    "was that he was so intoxicated at the time of the offense that he was incapable
    of acting 'purposely' or 'knowingly.'" 
    Ibid.
         Again, as was the case here, the
    defendant in Warren did not testify in his own defense. However, his "wife and
    two of his sons testified about his alcoholism and drunkenness on the day of the
    shooting." 
    Ibid.
     According to these witnesses:
    Since 1972, he had been hospitalized several times for
    alcoholism, most recently at a Veterans Administration
    hospital from June 6-9, 1983, a week and a half before
    the shooting. During the day and night before the
    A-4978-17
    25
    shooting, defendant had consumed almost three pints of
    rum and approximately fourteen cans of beer. He went
    to sleep around 11:30 p.m., awoke at 5:30 a.m., and
    before leaving the house between 7:00 and 7:30 a.m.,
    drank a substantial amount of rum as well as a "king-
    size" beer.
    [Ibid.]
    The trial judge's instructions to the jury in Warren on the self-induced
    intoxication defense mirrored the charge the trial judge gave here. Writing on
    behalf on a unanimous Supreme Court, Justice Pollock explained:
    The basic defect in the charge was the failure to relate
    the defense of intoxication to the lesser included
    offenses of manslaughter and aggravated manslaughter.
    ....
    Furthermore, the court should have instructed the jury
    not to consider defendant's intoxication in determining
    whether he consciously disregarded the risk to the
    victim, but to view defendant's conduct objectively, as
    if he were sober, in determining whether he consciously
    disregarded that risk. By failing to instruct the jury that
    it could accept defendant's intoxication as a defense to
    murder and still convict him of manslaughter, the court
    permitted the jury to believe that defendant's
    intoxication prevented a conviction for manslaughter.
    In effect, the court unintentionally prevented
    defendant's conviction on the lesser included offenses
    of aggravated manslaughter or manslaughter, and
    forced the jury to choose between a murder conviction
    and an acquittal.
    [
    104 N.J. at 578
    .]
    A-4978-17
    26
    As we noted earlier in this opinion, Justice Pollock emphasized in Warren
    that the trial court is duty-bound to instruct the jury correctly on all relevant
    legal principles involved in a case. When the trial court fails to explain material
    issues correctly, we are bound to find plain error "even in the absence of an
    objection." 
    Id. at 578-79
    . We confronted equally overwhelming evidence of
    the defendant's culpability in Klich. Writing for this court, our colleague Judge
    Donald Collester, Jr., reached the same conclusion:
    We also cannot accept the argument that the omission
    in the charge was harmless error in light of the strong
    proof of defendant's guilt for murder. Incorrect jury
    instructions are poor candidates for rehabilitation under
    the harmless error doctrine. On the contrary, erroneous
    instructions on matters material to jury deliberation are
    presumed to be reversible error in criminal cases.
    [321 N.J. Super. at 398 (internal citations omitted)]
    Based on the dispositive nature of this error, we need not, and expressly
    do not reach the remaining arguments raised by defendant in this appeal. We
    cannot complete our discussion, however, without noting that this legal error
    could have, and indeed should have been avoided.           The Supreme Court's
    decision in Warren was published thirty-four years ago. Since then, the Court
    has cited or referred to Warren's holding concerning the inapplicability of self-
    induced intoxication to reckless conduct in ten published opinions, most recently
    A-4978-17
    27
    in State v. Baum, 
    224 N.J. 147
    , 162 (2016). This court has cited Warren in fifty-
    three opinions, fourteen published and thirty-nine unpublished.
    We vacate defendant's murder conviction and sentences and remand this
    matter for a new trial.
    Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-4978-17
    28
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-4978-17

Filed Date: 8/11/2021

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 8/11/2021