State v. Galindo ( 2023 )


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    1        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2   Opinion Number: __________________
    3   Filing Date: December 4, 2023
    4   NO. S-1-SC-38585
    5   STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
    6         Plaintiff-Appellee,
    7   v.
    8   IGNACIO GALINDO,
    9         Defendant-Appellant.
    10   APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY
    11   Angie K. Schneider, District Judge
    12   Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender
    13   Luz C. Valverde, Assistant Appellate Defender
    14   Santa Fe, NM
    15   for Appellant
    16   Hector H. Balderas, Attorney General
    17   Walter M. Hart, III, Assistant Attorney General
    18   Santa Fe, NM
    19   for Appellee
    1                                         OPINION
    2   BACON, Chief Justice.
    3   {1}   In this direct appeal, Defendant-Appellant Ignacio Galindo (Appellant) seeks
    4   reversal of the district court’s denial of a self-defense jury instruction. Appellant
    5   claims that the evidence introduced at trial is sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt
    6   as to whether he acted in self-defense, thus warranting the relevant instruction. In
    7   denying the requested instruction, the district court pointed to acts by Appellant
    8   supporting that he was the first aggressor. A jury found Appellant guilty of first-
    9   degree murder contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-2-1(A)(1) (1994), felony murder
    10   contrary to Section 30-2-1(A)(2), and eleven other charges.
    11   {2}   Central to this issue is whether Appellant’s firing of a gunshot through an
    12   open window constituted an objectively reasonable response to the actions of Kristen
    13   Rodriguez and Victim Daniel Martinez while they were inside Rodriguez’s
    14   residence. Applying the defense-of-habitation doctrine, we conclude that
    15   Appellant’s response was not objectively reasonable and accordingly affirm the
    16   district court’s denial of the requested self-defense instruction.
    17   I.    BACKGROUND
    18   {3}   Appellant and Rodriguez began a relationship in 2011 and had two children
    19   together but were living separately at the time of the relevant events, which occurred
    1   in Alamogordo on the night of August 16-17, 2018.
    2   {4}   Appellant testified that earlier on August 16 he had learned of Rodriguez’s
    3   relationship with Victim. Appellant admitted at trial that he sent multiple “angry”
    4   texts to Rodriguez during that day including “Found out ur fucking Daniel..hes dead
    5   tonight.”1 Rodriguez testified that she shared that text with Victim and that they
    6   discussed its content.
    7   {5}   It is uncontested that, just before midnight at an Allsup’s Convenience Store,
    8   Appellant and Victim encountered one another unexpectedly and exchanged
    9   antagonistic words, resulting in Victim striking Appellant in the face. Rodriguez
    10   testified that Victim told her about the encounter on the phone while driving back
    11   from the Allsup’s and told her that he would not return right away because Appellant
    12   was following him. Rodriguez testified that she turned off the lights in her residence
    13   and hid by the couch until Victim returned.
    14   {6}   Appellant testified to committing the following acts after driving to
    15   Rodriguez’s residence soon after 1:00 a.m. In order to “disable” their vehicles and
    16   “just to be an ass,” Appellant sprayed expanding foam into the tailpipe of
    1
    Testifying on redirect and responding to a question about the meaning of this
    text, Appellant stated, “To be honest, I was just threatening [Victim] . . . just really
    to scare him.” Appellant then clarified that he did not mean it literally and that his
    intent was not to confront and kill Victim.
    2
    1   Rodriguez’s vehicle and onto the door handle of Victim’s vehicle. Appellant then
    2   “knock[ed]” or “pound[ed]” on Rodriguez’s front door, followed closely by
    3   Rodriguez “yelling for [Appellant] to leave . . . , basically screaming for [Appellant]
    4   to leave, [and that] the police [had been called].” Appellant testified that he “just
    5   wanted to hear from [Rodriguez’s] own mouth that she was messing around again
    6   and we were done” and that he knew Victim was inside but “didn’t really have
    7   anything to say to him.” Appellant then moved around the residence to Rodriguez’s
    8   master bedroom window and knocked thereon “to see if I could get her to come out.”
    9   Appellant then went to the living room window near the front door where he broke
    10   and removed part of the accordion-style panel of the air conditioner in that window. 2
    11   During these events, Appellant and Rodriguez “were arguing,” Rodriguez was
    12   “telling [Appellant] to leave,” Appellant “was just yelling back at her that she needs
    13   to come outside and talk to [him],” and the two “were both screaming at each other.”
    14   {7}   Appellant testified that through the opening he had just caused in the window,
    2
    Additionally, Rodriguez testified and Appellant does not contest that “once
    [Appellant] broke the piece off the AC unit, he reached in and pulled the curtains
    over.”
    3
    1   he saw Rodriguez holding a handgun (Glock)3 and saw Victim take it from her and
    2   take a step toward the door, at which point Appellant “kinda backed up [behind the]
    3   brick wall” between the front door and the front window. Appellant testified that he
    4   “heard a ‘pop’ which sounded like a gunshot.”4 Appellant then pulled out his gun
    5   and “didn’t look into the window but . . . reached around and . . . shot through the
    6   window inside the apartment.” Appellant testified that he “carr[ies] a firearm all the
    7   time,” that he was unable to see through the curtain but “kinda panicked really when
    8   [he] heard the shot,” and that he “didn’t know whether they were shooting the gun
    9   at [him] and [so he] pulled out [his] gun and . . . shot back.” Appellant testified that
    10   after firing the shot he left immediately in his truck, knowing that he had “fired inside
    11   the house . . . , but [he] did not know that anybody was hurt.”
    12   {8}   At the conference on jury instructions, the district court heard arguments
    13   regarding Appellant’s tendered modification of UJI 14-5171 NMRA (“Justifiable
    3
    Rodriguez testified that she took the Glock out of the hallway closet
    “[b]ecause somebody was trying to break into my house, someone that had text me
    a very disturbing text, and just everything I been through with him; I was scared, I
    was terrified, I was very terrified . . . [of Appellant].”
    4
    The State argues that, apart from this testimony by Appellant, “there was no
    evidence any gun other than [Appellant’s .380 handgun] had been fired that night.”
    In response, Appellant points to “evidence at trial that while the Glock magazine
    held fifteen 9 mm rounds, only fourteen rounds were in the magazine once it was
    found.”
    4
    1   homicide; self-defense.”). Appellant’s tendered instruction included,
    2         The killing is in self-defense if:
    3         1. There was an appearance of immediate danger of death or great
    4         bodily harm to [Appellant] as a result of Kristen Rodriguez arming
    5         herself with a handgun and handing such gun to [Victim] who was
    6         heading toward the front door as [Appellant] was right outside such
    7         front door and [Appellant] heard what he believed to be a shot fired.
    8   The State argued under State v. Lucero, 
    1998-NMSC-044
    , 
    126 N.M. 552
    , 
    972 P.2d 9
       1143, that Appellant’s actions—his threatening text, breaching the front window,
    10   and refusing to leave after being told to do so—established that he was the first
    11   aggressor and thus was not entitled to a self-defense instruction. See id. ¶¶ 6-9.
    12   Defense counsel argued that Appellant’s testimony showed he was not the first
    13   aggressor because he arrived merely to talk and removed his holstered firearm only
    14   as a result of seeing Rodriguez and Victim’s drawn weapon and then hearing a shot.
    15   The district court denied the instruction in large part based on Appellant’s
    16   threatening text and his “additional steps” after being told to leave.
    17   {9}   A jury found Appellant guilty on all charges, and he was sentenced to life plus
    18   twenty years and six months, less three days. Appellant timely appealed to this
    19   Court, which has exclusive jurisdiction over “[a]ppeals from a judgment of the
    20   district court imposing a sentence of . . . life imprisonment.” N.M. Const. art. VI, §
    21   2.
    5
    1   II.    DISCUSSION
    2   {10}   On appeal, Appellant argues that the district court’s denial of his tendered
    3   self-defense instruction “deprived the jury of its fact-finding function and violated
    4   [his] rights to due process, to present a defense and to a jury determination on every
    5   element of the offense.”
    6   A.     The Issue Was Preserved
    7   {11}   At the outset, we note the State’s assertion that Appellant did not preserve this
    8   issue for appeal, as “[t]he self-defense instruction requested by [Appellant] . . .
    9   contained no limiting provisions relevant to [the] right of defense of habitation of
    10   Victim and [Rodriguez] and thus constituted an incorrect statement of the law.” In
    11   response, Appellant argues that the court understood his position regarding self-
    12   defense and that defense of habitation was not raised below as a requirement to be
    13   included in the instruction.
    14   {12}   On this point we agree with Appellant’s citation of Gallegos v. State, in which
    15   this Court held that a flawed but minor modification of an otherwise correct uniform
    16   jury instruction was sufficient for preservation purposes where it “alert[ed] the mind
    17   of the court” to the challenged question of law. 
    1992-NMSC-014
    , ¶¶ 3-6, 
    113 N.M. 18
       339, 
    825 P.2d 1249
     (citing “SCRA 1986, 5-608(D)”⸻the 1975 amendment,
    19   identical to the current Rule 5-608(D) NMRA). The Gallegos Court concluded that
    6
    1   the “‘correct written instruction’” requirement of Rule 5-608(D) “must be read in
    2   light of the purpose of the Rule, which is to allow the court an opportunity to decide
    3   a question whose dimensions are not open to conjecture or after-the-fact
    4   interpretation.” 
    1992-NMSC-014
    , ¶ 6. Applying Gallegos here, the record is clear
    5   that for preservation purposes, the mind of the district court was sufficiently alerted
    6   to Appellant’s claim of error by the tendered self-defense instruction, and we do not
    7   address this issue further.
    8   B.     Standard of Review and the Law of Self-Defense
    9   {13}   In State v. Baroz, this Court provided the following statements of law
    10   regarding the denial of a self-defense instruction:
    11                 The propriety of denying a jury instruction is a mixed question
    12          of law and fact that we review de novo. When, as in this case, a
    13          challenge to the jury instructions has been preserved, we review for
    14          reversible error. Failure to instruct on self-defense when there is a
    15          sufficient quantum of proof to warrant it is reversible error. We do not
    16          weigh the evidence but rather determine whether there is sufficient
    17          evidence to raise a reasonable doubt about self-defense.
    18                 A defendant is only entitled to jury instructions on a self-defense
    19          theory if there is evidence presented to support every element of that
    20          theory. An instruction on self-defense requires evidence that (1) the
    21          defendant was put in fear by an apparent danger of immediate death or
    22          great bodily harm, (2) the killing resulted from that fear, and (3) the
    23          defendant acted reasonably when he or she killed. We have described
    24          the first two requirements as subjective in that they focus on the
    25          perception of the defendant at the time of the incident. In contrast, the
    26          third requirement is objective in that it focuses on the hypothetical
    7
    1          behavior of a reasonable person acting under the same circumstances
    2          as the defendant.
    3                Where there is enough evidence to raise a reasonable doubt in
    4          the mind of a juror about whether the defendant lawfully acted in self-
    5          defense such that reasonable minds could differ, the instruction should
    6          be given. When considering a defendant’s requested instructions, we
    7          view the evidence in the light most favorable to the giving of the
    8          requested instructions.
    9   
    2017-NMSC-030
    , ¶¶ 13-15, 
    404 P.3d 769
     (text only) 5 (citations omitted). Regarding
    10   the objective, third required element of self-defense, “[t]he law simply does not
    11   recognize any right to an acquittal based on a wholly unreasonable claim of a self-
    12   defense justification for taking the life of another.” State v. Rudolfo, 2008-NMSC-
    13   036, ¶ 20, 
    144 N.M. 305
    , 
    187 P.3d 170
    .
    14   C.     Under the Defense-of-Habitation Doctrine, Rodriguez’s and Victim’s
    15          Conduct Was Lawful and Thus Appellant’s Responsive Use of Deadly
    16          Force Was Not Objectively Reasonable
    17   {14}   Appellant argues that the relevant instruction was warranted because he
    18   presented sufficient evidence of each of the three elements of self-defense to raise a
    19   reasonable doubt thereof. First, regarding his subjective fear, Appellant points to his
    20   testimony that when “[l]ooking through the window, he saw [Rodriguez] pull the
    5
    The “text only” parenthetical as used in this opinion indicates omission (for
    enhanced readability) of all of the following nontextual marks that may be present
    in the source text: brackets, ellipses, and internal quotation marks.
    8
    1   Glock, he then saw [Victim] reach for it and [in response Appellant] stepped back
    2   [behind the brick wall]. Hearing what he believed to be a shot, he panicked and
    3   pulled his gun from its holster.” Second, regarding the killing resulting from his
    4   subjective fear, Appellant points to his testimony “that when he heard the shot, he
    5   panicked and fired through the [partially obscured] window.”
    6   {15}   Third, regarding whether his use of deadly force was objectively reasonable,
    7   Appellant argues that “[t]here was sufficient evidence from which a properly
    8   instructed jury could have found [Appellant] acted reasonably when he fired his
    9   gun.” He argues that his actions before Rodriguez armed herself—going “to the
    10   house to ‘mess with’” Rodriguez, vandalizing the vehicles, and “bang[ing] on the
    11   windows yelling for [Rodriguez] to come out and talk with him”—did not rise “to
    12   the level of deadly force.” Appellant points to “the defense evidence in support of
    13   the instruction”—seeing Rodriguez “pull the Glock,” seeing Victim “take it from
    14   her and step toward the front door,” and hearing a shot—as “sufficient to raise a
    15   reasonable doubt as to whether using deadly force was reasonable under the
    16   circumstances.”
    17   {16}   Based on the foregoing, Appellant argues that “it was for the jury to decide
    18   whether . . . his actions were reasonable under the circumstances” and that “the
    9
    1   court’s failure to instruct the jury on . . . in essence, the only contested question . . .
    2   violated [Appellant’s] Sixth Amendment rights to present a defense.”
    3   {17}   In response, the State argues that the two subjective elements of self-defense
    4   are not sufficiently supported by Appellant’s “mere belief [that] he heard a ‘pop’
    5   that sounded like a shot.” Without citing the record, the State further asserts that
    6   Appellant’s “testimony reflected his own uncertainty as to [who] had fired the
    7   alleged shot, . . . did not [include] anyone having pointed the gun at him . . . [, and]
    8   indicate[d] that his action was fueled by reasons and emotions other than fear.”
    9   However, these allegations do not demonstrate that Appellant lacked fear or that
    10   Appellant did not fire the fatal shot in response to that fear. We conclude that the
    11   evidence of Appellant’s testimony was sufficient to support the two subjective
    12   elements of self-defense.
    13   {18}   Regarding the objective third element, the State argues that no reasonable
    14   juror could have concluded under the defense-of-habitation doctrine that the conduct
    15   of Victim and Rodriguez to which Appellant testified was unlawful, and thus the
    16   State maintains that Appellant was not entitled to a self-defense instruction. The
    17   State argues, “Under the evidence presented, Victim and [Rodriguez] reasonably
    18   believed that [Appellant’s] intention in pursuing an assault upon [Rodriguez’s]
    19   residence was to commit a violent felony upon one or more occupants of that
    10
    1   residence[, and therefore] even potentially deadly conduct on the[ir] part . . . was
    2   lawful as defense of habitation.” The State quotes State v. Boyette, 2008-NMSC-
    3   030, ¶ 15, 
    144 N.M. 184
    , 
    185 P.3d 355
    , for the proposition that defense of habitation
    4   “‘gives a person the right to use lethal force against an intruder when such force is
    5   necessary to prevent the commission of a felony in [that person’s] home.’” See also
    6    id. ¶ 21 (clarifying that “the term ‘felony’ in the defense of habitation context is
    7    properly limited to those felonies involving violence”). The State also cites
    8    persuasive sources for the proposition that, relevant to Victim’s status in Rodriguez’s
    9    residence, the “right of defense of habitation extends to guests.”
    10   {19}   The State cites State v. Southworth, 
    2002-NMCA-091
    , 
    132 N.M. 615
    , 
    52 P.3d 11
       987, as a case involving comparable circumstances that “addressed the role of the
    12   lawfulness of a victim’s conduct in relation to a claim of self-defense.” In
    13   Southworth, the victim came out of her house and fired a shotgun over the
    14   defendant’s head in conjunction with yelling at him to leave her property. Id. ¶ 4.
    15   The defendant took the shotgun from the victim, and the victim testified that the
    16   defendant then beat her with the weapon. Id. The two had previously been involved
    17   in a romantic relationship, and the victim testified that she was afraid of the
    18   defendant, who had been drinking prior to arriving. Id. ¶¶ 3-4. The defendant
    11
    1   claimed self-defense predicated on a right to stand his ground but was convicted of
    2   aggravated battery and criminal trespass. Id. ¶¶ 6-9.
    3   {20}   The State points to Southworth’s proposition, id. ¶ 14, that the self-defense
    4   privilege only applies where a defendant’s use of force is in response to unlawful
    5    force. The State quotes the Southworth Court’s related conclusion, id. ¶ 15, that a
    6    separate jury instruction was required regarding “whether [the victim] ‘was entitled
    7    to use potentially deadly force against [the defendant] because, if [the victim] was
    8    justified in using potentially deadly force against [the defendant], [the defendant]
    9    had no right to stand his ground.’”
    10   {21}   As discussed next, we agree with the State’s reading of our defense-of-
    11   habitation precedent, approve the Southworth Court’s application thereof to the
    12   lawfulness of the use of force by the owner or householder of a residence, and
    13   confirm that the lawfulness of such use of force extends as well to a guest.
    14   {22}   New Mexico caselaw is clear that an inhabitant of a dwelling is entitled to
    15   significant latitude in the use of force in defense of habitation. Boyette, 2008-NMSC-
    16   030, ¶¶ 17-21 (“[D]efense of habitation justifies killing an intruder who is assaulting
    17   the defendant’s home with the intent of reaching its occupants and committing a
    18   felony against them . . . [and] allows one to kill to prevent an intruder’s forced
    19   entry.”); State v. Couch, 
    1946-NMSC-047
    , ¶¶ 28-30, 
    52 N.M. 127
    , 
    193 P.2d 405
    12
    1   (Defense-of-habitation doctrine “gives the householder the right to kill the
    2   aggressor, if such killing is necessary or apparently necessary to prevent or repel the
    3   felonious aggression . . . [and] gives the householder the right to meet force with
    4   force, [where] an attack upon a dwelling, and especially in the night, the law regards
    5   as equivalent to an assault on a . . . person.” (internal quotation marks and citation
    6   omitted)); State v. Bailey, 
    1921-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 30, 
    27 N.M. 145
    , 
    198 P. 529
     (“[I]f
    7   the assault upon the habitation is for the purpose of reaching and committing a felony
    8   upon the dweller therein, or [a family member], this justifies resistance to the extent
    9   of killing, if necessary to prevent the felony.”).
    10   {23}   The Southworth Court correctly applied our precedent and the uniform jury
    11   instructions on defense of habitation in reaching the conclusion that a householder
    12   is “entitled to use deadly force” if the householder “ha[s] a reasonable fear” that a
    13   trespasser intends to commit a felony at that home “and if a reasonable person would
    14   have used such force.” 6 
    2002-NMCA-091
    , ¶ 16; see UJI 14-5170 NMRA
    15   (instructing that killing in an attempt to prevent a felony in the householder’s home
    We note that, notwithstanding this conclusion, the relevant question in
    6
    Southworth was properly submitted to the jury where facts essential to determining
    the lawfulness of a householder’s use of deadly force were disputed. See 2002-
    NMCA-091, ¶¶ 15, 19. Here, in contrast, the facts necessary for determining the
    lawfulness of Rodriguez’s and Victim’s actions are uncontested or were provided by
    Appellant’s own testimony.
    13
    1   is justified if “[a] reasonable person in the same circumstances as the [householder]
    2   would have acted as the [householder] did”); Couch, 
    1946-NMSC-047
    , ¶ 28 (“[T]he
    3   law of defense of habitation and the resistance to the commission of a felony thereon
    4   . . . gives the householder the right to kill the aggressor, if such killing is necessary
    5   or apparently necessary to prevent or repel the felonious aggression.”). In addition,
    6   we recognize and approve the proposition that “[t]he defense-of-habitation privilege
    7   may be invoked by a servant or guest of the owner as well as by the owner.” 1 Jens
    8   David Ohlin, Wharton’s Criminal Law § 14:12 (16th ed. 2021).
    9   {24}   It follows logically that if a householder or a guest of the householder was
    10   entitled to use deadly force under such circumstances, the trespasser’s use of deadly
    11   force in response to that lawful conduct cannot be objectively reasonable.
    12   {25}   Under uncontested evidence and his own testimony, Appellant committed
    13   provocative acts that constituted a basis for Rodriguez as the householder and Victim
    14   as her guest to reasonably believe that Appellant intended to commit a violent felony
    15   upon one or more of the dwellers in the habitation. See Bailey, 
    1921-NMSC-009
    , ¶
    16   30. These acts include his threatening text of which both Rodriguez and Victim were
    17   aware, knocking or pounding on the front door after 1:00 a.m., yelling in argument
    18   with Rodriguez even after being told to leave and that the police had been called,
    19   knocking on the master bedroom window, and forcibly breaking and reaching
    14
    1   through the living room window. Relevantly, this Court has “determine[d] that
    2   putting one’s fingers behind a window screen affixed to a residential dwelling is an
    3   intrusion into an enclosed, private, prohibited space and constitutes an ‘entry’ for the
    4   purposes of New Mexico’s breaking-and-entering statute.” State v. Holt, 2016-
    5   NMSC-011, ¶ 18, 
    368 P.3d 409
     (citing NMSA 1978, § 30-14-8(A) (1981)).
    6   Appellant’s own testimony established that he “entered” the home, which further
    7   supports the reasonableness of a belief by Rodriguez or Victim that Appellant
    8   intended to commit a violent felony upon one or both of them.
    9   {26}   Under these circumstances, Rodriguez and Victim were legally justified in
    10   their conduct that Appellant alleges. Because their actions were lawful, Appellant’s
    11   responsive use of force in firing a gunshot into the residence cannot constitute an
    12   objectively reasonable act of self-defense. Consequently, evidence was not
    13   presented to satisfy the objective element of self-defense, and the district court
    14   properly denied the self-defense jury instruction. See State v. Gaines, 2001-NMSC-
    15   036, ¶ 5, 
    131 N.M. 347
    , 
    36 P.3d 438
     (“[W]hile an accused is entitled to instruction
    16   on [the accused’s] theory of the case if evidence exists to support it, the court need
    17   not instruct if there is absence of such evidence.” (emphasis, internal quotation
    18   marks, and citation omitted)).
    15
    1   {27}   We recognize that the defense-of-habitation doctrine was not raised below.
    2   However, under the “right-for-any-reason” doctrine, the district court was
    3   nonetheless correct to deny the instruction despite not weighing the defense-of-
    4   habitation doctrine in its determination. See State v. Vargas, 
    2008-NMSC-019
    , ¶ 8,
    5   
    143 N.M. 692
    , 
    181 P.3d 684
     (“Under the [right-for-any-reason] doctrine, we may
    6   affirm the district court’s order on grounds not relied upon by the district court if
    7   those grounds do not require us to look beyond the factual allegations that were
    8   raised and considered below.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    9   Affirming the district court’s decision on defense-of-habitation grounds does not
    10   require us to look beyond the factual allegations considered by the district court
    11   when it considered the self-defense jury instruction and whether Appellant was the
    12   first aggressor. Therefore, it is not unfair to Appellant to apply the right-for-any-
    13   reason doctrine here. See State v. Gomez, 
    2003-NMSC-012
    , ¶ 7, 
    133 N.M. 763
    , 70
    
    14 P.3d 753
     (“While a decision of the trial court will be upheld if it is right for any
    15   reason, we will not rely on this doctrine if doing so would be unfair to the appellant.”
    16   (text only) (citations omitted)).
    17   {28}   Because we conclude that Appellant was not entitled to a self-defense
    18   instruction based on the defense-of-habitation doctrine, we do not consider the
    19   parties’ arguments concerning Appellant’s status as first aggressor.
    16
    1   D.     Appellant’s Other Arguments Are Without Merit
    2   {29}   Appellant also argues that his earlier altercation with Victim at Allsup’s
    3   supports a finding of reasonableness of Appellant’s fear of Victim by a properly
    4   instructed jury, “since [Victim] had recently demonstrated he was willing to use
    5   force.” Appellant cites State v. Branchal, 
    1984-NMCA-063
    , ¶ 24, 
    101 N.M. 498
    ,
    6   
    684 P.2d 1163
    , for the proposition that courts may consider, in addition to events at
    7   the time of the incident, “history between a defendant and the victim which raises a
    8   reasonable doubt about whether a victim’s actions placed a defendant in fear of
    9   imminent great bodily harm at the time of the alleged self-defense.” However,
    10   Appellant overstates the similarity between this case and Branchal in which an
    11   extensive history of violent and threatening conduct by the victim “was sufficient to
    12   raise an issue of fact with respect to the elements of a self-defense claim.” Id. ¶¶ 22,
    13   24. Here, in contrast, the record reflects a mutual altercation between Appellant and
    14   Victim that resulted in a single punch—a very different degree of contextual history
    15   that is not sufficient to transform Appellant’s later use of deadly force into
    16   objectively reasonable conduct.
    17   {30}   Appellant also argues, quoting State v. Coffin, 
    1999-NMSC-038
    , ¶ 12, 128
    
    18 N.M. 192
    , 
    991 P.2d 477
    , that “‘[a] person may act in self-defense against multiple
    19   attackers acting in concert . . . to the extent that each accomplice poses an immediate
    17
    1   danger of death or great bodily harm.’” In Coffin, the defendant asserted a theory of
    2   self-defense that both alleged assailants in a liquor store parking lot “posed an
    3   immediate threat of death or great bodily harm, that he feared death or great bodily
    4   harm and shot them as a result, and that he acted as a reasonable person would have
    5   acted in the same circumstances.” Id. ¶ 13. However, we conclude that Coffin is
    6   inapposite, as the issue here is whether a reasonable person would act as Appellant
    7   did in the same circumstances, regardless of whether that conduct responded to a
    8   single threat or “alleged concerted action.” See id. Lawful conduct by Rodriguez or
    9   Victim is not transformed into illegal use of force by virtue of their acting together.
    10   Accordingly, this argument fails.
    11   III.   CONCLUSION
    12   {31}   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    13   {32}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    14
    15                                           C. SHANNON BACON, Chief Justice
    16   WE CONCUR:
    17
    18   MICHAEL E. VIGIL, Justice
    18
    1
    2   DAVID K. THOMSON, Justice
    3
    4   JULIE J. VARGAS, Justice
    5
    6   BRIANA H. ZAMORA, Justice
    19
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 12/4/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/4/2023