State v. Phillips , 2017 NMSC 19 ( 2017 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 12:54:56 2017.06.26
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2017-NMSC-019
    Filing Date: May 15, 2017
    Docket No. S-1-SC-35881
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    CLIVE PHILLIPS,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    David Williams, District Judge
    The Hastings Law Firm
    Mark A. Earnest
    Albuquerque, NM
    Law Office of Theresa M. Duncan
    Theresa M. Duncan
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellant
    Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    Maris Veidemanis, Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellee
    OPINION
    CHÁVEZ, Justice.
    {1}     This case addresses the procedure for determining whether a jury is deadlocked. A
    jury is deadlocked or “hung” on a crime when the jurors cannot unanimously agree on a
    verdict of guilty or not guilty for that crime. If the jury is deadlocked on a crime, the
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    defendant may be retried for that crime without violating constitutional protections against
    double jeopardy. Conversely, double jeopardy protections prevent a retrial when the jury
    has rendered a verdict. It follows from these basic precepts that when a jury is unable to
    reach unanimous agreement on an open count with lesser included offenses, the judge must
    poll the jury and clearly establish on the record on which offense in the count the jury was
    deadlocked. The defendant may be retried on the offense on which the jury was deadlocked
    and any lesser included offenses. Importantly, the judge must confirm that the jury did not
    unanimously agree that the defendant was not guilty of one or more of the included offenses
    because the constitutional protection against double jeopardy precludes the State from
    prosecuting the defendant for such offense(s) since the jury’s unanimous agreement on a
    verdict of not guilty constitutes an acquittal. If the judge fails to clearly establish on the
    record the offense(s) on which the jury was deadlocked, all but the lowest offense must be
    dismissed and the dismissed offense(s) cannot be retried.
    {2}     In this case, the jury announced that it was hung on Count 1, which required it to
    consider whether Defendant Clive Phillips was guilty of first-degree premeditated murder,
    second-degree murder, or voluntary manslaughter. The district court then polled the jurors.
    During the poll, seven jurors stated that the jury had unanimously agreed Phillips was not
    guilty of first-degree murder, but five jurors indicated the jury was unable to reach a verdict
    on that crime. The only verdict form given to the jury that exclusively referred to first-
    degree murder was the guilty verdict form, so there is no written record of whether the jury
    had acquitted Phillips of that crime or deadlocked during deliberations. The district court
    determined that the jury was hung on first-degree murder. We hold that the judge failed to
    clearly establish on the record whether the jury deadlocked on first-degree murder, and
    therefore Phillips can only be retried on the lowest offense in Count 1, which is voluntary
    manslaughter. We reverse the district court and remand to dismiss the first- and second-
    degree murder charges with prejudice.
    BACKGROUND
    {3}     Phillips shot his former girlfriend and shot and killed his friend after discovering
    them in bed together at the home they all shared. The State prosecuted Phillips for a number
    of crimes, and seven counts were submitted to the jury after trial, including Count 1, which
    contained the crimes of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and manslaughter. The
    jurors did not enter a verdict on Count 1.
    {4}     To resolve Count 1, the jury had the option of entering a verdict finding Phillips
    guilty of first-degree murder, second-degree murder, or voluntary manslaughter, or a verdict
    finding him not guilty of all three crimes. Because second-degree murder is a lesser
    included offense of first-degree murder, and voluntary manslaughter is a lesser included
    offense of both first- and second-degree murder, the model jury instruction used in this case
    requires jurors to individually consider each greater offense before considering a lesser
    offense. See UJI 14-6012 NMRA; UJI 14-250 NMRA. Under the model jury instruction,
    the jurors first must determine whether they unanimously agree that the defendant is guilty
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    of first-degree murder. UJI 14-250. If they agree that the defendant is guilty, the jury enters
    a guilty verdict for first-degree murder and does not need to consider second-degree murder
    or voluntary manslaughter. 
    Id. If not,
    after reasonable deliberation, the jurors must then
    consider second-degree murder. 
    Id. The jurors
    follow the same procedure with respect to
    second-degree murder and only consider voluntary manslaughter if they cannot unanimously
    agree that the defendant was guilty of second-degree murder. 
    Id. {5} If
    the jurors unanimously determine that there is reasonable doubt that the defendant
    committed any one of the aforementioned crimes, their verdict must be that the defendant
    is not guilty of that crime. 
    Id. The jury
    in this case was not provided with a “not guilty”
    verdict form for each crime. Thus, if the jurors unanimously agreed that Phillips was not
    guilty of first-degree murder, they had no verdict form on which to indicate an acquittal on
    that specific crime because the only “not guilty” verdict form available to the jury on Count
    1 required the jury to unanimously find Phillips not guilty of all three crimes.
    {6}     If the jurors cannot unanimously agree on any verdict for a count with lesser included
    offenses such as Count 1 in this case, the trial court must poll the jurors, beginning with the
    greatest offense, to determine whether they unanimously found the defendant not guilty of
    any individual offense within the count. Rule 5-611(D) NMRA. If the jury has unanimously
    found a defendant not guilty of any offense within the count, the trial court is required to
    enter a verdict of not guilty for the offense and for any greater degree of the offense. 
    Id. {7} The
    jurors in this case deliberated for three days. On the second day of deliberations,
    the jurors sent a note to the court indicating that some jurors believed that Phillips was guilty
    of second-degree murder because the State had proved that there was no sufficient
    provocation, and therefore those jurors were forced to vote against manslaughter. The note
    also indicated that the jurors agreed on all other elements of both offenses and asked the
    court for guidance on how to proceed. The note did not mention whether the jurors had
    voted to acquit Phillips or were deadlocked on first-degree murder. The court replied that
    the jurors had been “given all the procedural instructions.” The jury continued to deliberate.
    {8}     On the third day, after approximately six additional hours of deliberations, the jury
    sent a note to the court reading: “What does it mean if we don’t sign any of the papers on
    Count 1? We are hung.” Concerning Count 1, the jury only received four papers for
    signature. The first was a verdict, which read “We find the defendant guilty of first degree
    murder by a deliberate killing as charged in Count 1.” The second was a verdict, which read
    “We find the defendant guilty of second degree murder an included offense of Count 1.”
    The third was a verdict, which read “We find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter
    an included offense of Count 1.” The fourth and last was a verdict, which read “We find the
    defendant not guilty of Count 1.”
    {9}     Later that afternoon, the court called in the jury, and a juror informed the court that
    the jurors had not reached a verdict on Count 1 and that they would not reach a verdict, even
    with more time to deliberate. With respect to the charges in Count 1, the court asked “so as
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    to none of them, you could not reach an agreement?” to which the juror responded “No,”
    which the court—despite the form of the question—interpreted to mean that the jurors could
    not reach an agreement. A jury poll was therefore required by Rule 5-611(D) to determine
    whether the jury had unanimously voted not guilty as to any offense included within Count
    1.
    {10} The district court polled the jurors to “inquire whether the jury ha[d] truly
    deadlocked on the greater offense of first-degree murder.” As the court began its polling,
    the following colloquy ensued:
    THE COURT: I need to ask each and every one of you the question
    as to whether you have truly deadlocked on the greater offense of first-degree
    murder. I will start with you, Mr. Ashe.
    THE JUROR: So I don't understand how the—
    THE COURT: Yes or no, whether you were deadlocked with regards
    to the greater offense of first-degree murder. You cannot reach a decision as
    to that charge?
    THE JUROR: And the word “deadlock” meaning?
    THE COURT: That you unanimously could not reach a decision with
    your fellow jurors as to that charge.
    THE JUROR: I hate to say the wrong thing, but I believe we did
    reach a decision, and we went down to the next charge; is that correct?
    THE COURT: So with regards to first-degree, you were not
    deadlocked with first-degree?
    THE JUROR: No.
    THE COURT: I’m asking you, Mr. Ashe.
    THE JUROR: No.
    The second juror also indicated that the jury was not deadlocked. The third juror initially
    responded to the question of whether the jury was deadlocked on first-degree murder with
    “I thought we were,” but eventually said no. The next three jurors also answered no.
    {11}   The seventh juror sought further clarification:
    THE JUROR: Can I ask a question? I mean, deadlocked meaning we
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    couldn’t agree?
    THE COURT: Correct. You could not arrive at a verdict.
    THE JUROR: Then, yes, we were deadlocked.
    The next four jurors also answered yes to indicate that the jury was deadlocked on first-
    degree murder. The twelfth juror responded no to the same question. Thus, seven jurors
    indicated that the jury agreed on first-degree murder, which could only mean that the jury
    had agreed that Phillips was not guilty of that crime, but five jurors indicated that the jury
    was deadlocked. However, those five jurors indicated that they were deadlocked
    immediately after being told that “deadlocked” meant they could not agree on a verdict.
    Because the only verdict form offered to the jury for first-degree murder was a guilty verdict
    form, these five jurors could have answered “yes” to reflect that the jury could not agree to
    enter that verdict—finding Phillips guilty of first-degree murder. If this is what the five
    jurors meant by their answers, these answers could be consistent with the other seven jurors
    seemingly saying that the jury agreed that Phillips was not guilty of first-degree murder, for
    which there was no verdict form. Yet another reasonable interpretation of the answers from
    those five jurors is that the jury could not agree that Phillips was either guilty or not guilty
    of first-degree murder and was therefore hung on that crime.
    {12} Despite the jurors’ apparent inability to agree on whether they had disagreed, the
    district court declared that the jury was “split” and “in complete disagreement” on first-
    degree murder. Defense counsel astutely argued that the jurors’ conflicting answers
    indicated that they were confused about the question, and therefore she urged the court to
    clarify the jury’s resolution of the first-degree murder charge. The court responded that it
    had asked a yes-or-no question and could not clarify the jurors’ responses any further, then
    declared a mistrial and reserved the State’s right to retry Phillips on every crime in Count
    1: first-degree murder, second-degree murder, and voluntary manslaughter.
    {13} Phillips brought a motion to dismiss the first- and second-degree murder charges on
    double jeopardy grounds, arguing that the district court had not established a clear record of
    whether the jury had deadlocked on first- and second-degree murder due to the jurors’
    ambiguous responses during the jury poll. The district court denied his motion and held that
    the jury poll demonstrated that the jurors were hung on first-degree murder, and accordingly
    there was manifest necessity for the court’s declaration of a mistrial as to every crime within
    Count 1. Phillips appealed to this Court to challenge the district court’s denial of his motion
    to dismiss.
    DISCUSSION
    {14} The sole legal issue in this case is whether the district court abused its discretion by
    determining that the jurors were hung on first-degree murder based on the jury poll. See
    State v. Wardlow, 1981-NMSC-029, ¶ 13, 
    95 N.M. 585
    , 
    624 P.2d 527
    (applying an abuse
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    of discretion standard to the trial court’s determination that there was no reasonable
    possibility that the jury could agree on a verdict). When jurors are polled regarding their
    verdict, the trial court is under a nondiscretionary duty to clarify any ambiguity in the jurors’
    responses and obtain a clear and unambiguous response from the jury, beginning with the
    highest offense included in the count. See State v. Holloway, 1987-NMCA-090, ¶¶ 13, 16,
    
    106 N.M. 161
    , 
    740 P.2d 711
    (“The responsibility for preserving the right to a voluntary and
    unanimous verdict rests primarily on the trial court. . . . Where a juror’s response indicates
    uncertainty concerning unanimity, a jury poll requires exploration of the uncertainty or
    dissent.” (citations omitted)). The responses from the jurors in this case were ambiguous
    because some jurors indicated that the jury had reached a unanimous agreement on the
    charge of first-degree murder, while others stated that the jury could not unanimously agree
    to enter a verdict for the same charge. The jurors should have given uniform answers as to
    whether they unanimously agreed on the charge or could not agree. Their conflicting
    answers indubitably demonstrated confusion with the district court’s question.
    {15} In the face of juror confusion, the district court possessed significant discretion to
    undertake “proper remedial measures” to clarify the jurors’ ambiguous responses. 
    Id. ¶ 17.
    For example, the district court could have explained that the term “deadlocked” means that
    the jury could not unanimously agree that Phillips either was or was not guilty of first-degree
    murder, and then it could have re-polled the jury. In the alternative, the court could have
    requested not guilty verdict forms for each crime, submitted all verdict forms to the jury, and
    could then have directed the jurors to retire for further deliberations to determine whether
    they unanimously agreed on a verdict for any of the crimes. Rule 5-611(E). We do not
    intend to imply that these were the only methods available to the district court for clarifying
    the jurors’ ambiguous responses during its polling of the jurors.
    {16} However, the district court did not have the option of taking the action it did in this
    case. Without establishing a clear record indicating the crimes on which the jurors had failed
    to reach a unanimous verdict, it was an abuse of discretion for the court to conclude that the
    jury was hung and that there was manifest necessity justifying a mistrial on all of the crimes
    in Count 1. See Holloway, 1987-NMCA-090, ¶ 17 (“This discretion, and the action taken
    by the [trial] court, . . . must resolve any doubt concerning the unanimity of a verdict. . . .
    [T]he verdict should be definite in nature and devoid of any ambiguity.”).
    {17} We have long held that in cases such as this where the record is “silent upon which,
    if any, of the specific included offenses the jury had agreed and upon which the jury had
    reached an impasse,” we must “resolve any doubt in favor of the liberty of the citizen” and
    “dismiss[] upon double jeopardy grounds . . . such offenses on which the record is unclear.”
    State v. Castrillo, 1977-NMSC-059, ¶ 14, 
    90 N.M. 608
    , 
    566 P.2d 1146
    .1 In Castrillo, the
    1
    Although in Wardlow this Court stated that Castrillo was overruled to the extent that
    it was inconsistent with Wardlow, we now clarify that we perceive no inconsistency between
    those cases. Wardlow, 1981-NMSC-029, ¶ 15.
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    defendant was tried by a jury on first-degree murder with second-degree murder and
    voluntary manslaughter as the lesser included offenses. 
    Id. ¶ 1.
    The foreman announced that
    the jury was deadlocked and that there was no purpose in continuing to deliberate. 
    Id. ¶ 14.
    The judge declared a mistrial and then asked the foreman for a numerical split. 
    Id. The foreman
    indicated that the split was nine for acquittal, and responded “Yes” when the judge
    asked, “Nine for acquittal and three for some degree of conviction?” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    The phrase “some degree of conviction” did not clearly establish upon which of the three
    crimes—first-degree murder, second-degree murder, or voluntary manslaughter—the jury
    was deadlocked. 
    Id. ¶¶ 1,
    14. The Castrillo Court noted that the lack of a clear record as
    to whether the jurors disagreed on first- or second-degree murder demonstrated no manifest
    necessity to declare a mistrial, and therefore jeopardy attached to those crimes and precluded
    the State from seeking a retrial. 
    Id. ¶ 14.
    However, the defendant in Castrillo could be
    retried on the least included offense, voluntary manslaughter, because the jury would not
    have been hung had it reached a unanimous decision on manslaughter—it would have
    instead entered an acquittal on the entire count. Id.; see also State v. Garcia, 2005-NMCA-
    042, ¶ 22, 
    137 N.M. 315
    , 
    110 P.3d 531
    (noting that “it would appear to be logically
    inconsistent, if not a logical impossibility” for a jury to simultaneously deadlock on a greater
    offense and acquit on a lesser included offense).
    {18} The same principle applies here because the district court in this case failed to create
    a clear record “as to which of the included offenses the jury was considering at the time of
    its discharge.” Castrillo, 1977-NMSC-059, ¶ 14. This case presents an interesting wrinkle
    because the jury’s note during the second day of deliberations demonstrates that at that point
    in the deliberations it was hung on second-degree murder. However, the note merely
    provides a snapshot of the jury’s thinking partway through deliberations and does not give
    a definitive answer as to its final disposition of each crime within Count 1. See Harrison v.
    Gillespie, 
    640 F.3d 888
    , 899 (9th Cir. 2011) (“Because of the significance of the entire
    deliberative process, the jurors’ preliminary votes in the jury room do not constitute a final
    verdict, even if they are unanimous. Instead, the verdict must be rendered by the jury in
    open court and accepted by the court in order to become final.” (citations omitted)). Indeed,
    the jury’s note would not be sufficient even if it had been sent to the court on the same
    afternoon as the jury poll because once the court conducted the jury poll, the results of that
    poll were the ultimate expression of the jury’s verdict at the time of its discharge. See
    Holloway, 1987-NMCA-090, ¶ 23 (holding that the results of a jury poll superceded any
    contrary verdict determined in the jury room because jurors are free to change their votes and
    register dissent to a previously announced verdict during the jury poll). Here there was no
    clear record of the jury’s decision at the time of its discharge. Thus, constitutional double
    jeopardy protections bar retrial on the first- and second-degree murder charges, but jeopardy
    has not attached to voluntary manslaughter, and the State may retry Phillips for that lesser
    included offense.
    CONCLUSION
    {19}   Because the district court failed to clarify the ambiguous and conflicting jurors’
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    responses during the jury poll, we vacate the district court’s order denying Phillips’ motion
    to dismiss the charges of first- and second-degree murder and remand the case to the district
    court with instructions to dismiss those charges with prejudice.
    {20}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    CHARLES W. DANIELS, Chief Justice
    ____________________________________
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
    ____________________________________
    BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    ____________________________________
    JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Justice
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