DocketNumber: NO. PD–0365–16; PD–0366–16
Filed Date: 6/6/2018
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
• Michael Joseph Bien
• on or about the 7th day of December 2012,
• in Brown County
• with intent that capital murder, a capital felony, be committed
• did request, command, or attempt to induce
• Stephen Reynolds
• to engage in specific conduct
• to-wit: kill Koh Box
• for remuneration, and
• that under the circumstances surrounding the conduct of the defendant or Stephen Reynolds, as the defendant believed them to be, would have constituted capital murder.15
The allegations in the indictment for attempted capital murder are:
• Michael Joseph Bien
• on or about the 7th day of December, 2012
• in Brown County
• with the specific intent to commit the offense of capital murder of Koh Box
• did do an act
• to-wit: employ Stephen Reynolds
• by remuneration or the promise of remuneration
• which amounted to more than mere preparation
• that tended but failed to effect the commission of the offense intended.16
As the court of appeals noted, to make its attempt case, the State was required to prove that Appellant actually employed Reynolds to kill Box rather than just requesting that he do so.
To determine whether an offense qualifies as a lesser-included offense, we employ the cognate-pleadings approach.
Here, the act alleged as amounting to "more than mere preparation" under the criminal attempt indictment was the employment of Reynolds to kill Koh Box. This was the same act alleged in the criminal solicitation indictment. To the extent that criminal attempt required a showing of an employment agreement, the act of soliciting that employment in the criminal solicitation indictment was subsumed within the elements necessary to prove criminal attempt under these indictments.
Similarly, both indictments required proof of the intent to commit the offense of capital murder. Criminal solicitation carries with it the requirement that the State prove Appellant believed the conduct he was soliciting would constitute capital murder. Under the pleadings in this case, the State was required to prove that Appellant believed the conduct he was soliciting constituted capital murder. But this element was also subsumed within the greater proof in both offenses that Appellant intended that Reynolds commit capital murder. In this regard the "belief in the circumstances surrounding the conduct" aspect of criminal solicitation is the functional equivalent of the intent to commit capital murder in attempted capital murder.
Finally, the criminal solicitation indictment also required proof that, under the circumstances as Appellant believed them to be, the conduct solicited actually would constitute capital murder.
*187Nevertheless, it has been previously argued that the doctrine of impossibility should not be a defense under the Texas Penal Code.
A natural reading of the text leads us to the conclusion that the State proves the offense of criminal solicitation by proving what a defendant believes the circumstances to be surrounding the solicited conduct and that such conduct would be a crime under those circumstances. The statute does not require the State to prove that those circumstances actually exist. We hold that this element of criminal solicitation was also subsumed within the proof necessary to establish the intent to commit capital murder under the attempted capital murder indictment. Consequently, we reject the court of appeals' determination that under the pleadings in this case, attempted capital murder and solicitation of capital murder were not the same offense under Blockburger .
IV. The Blockburger Rule Controls Here Because There Is No Clearly Expressed Legislative Intent to Impose Multiple Punishments
As the court of appeals held, "the offense of attempted capital murder requires proof that Appellant solicited Stephen Reynolds to kill Koh Box."
That intent is not clear here. There is no express provision that a person who is subject to prosecution for criminal solicitation and criminal attempt may be prosecuted under either or both sections.
*188Though we arrive at the same location by a different path, we ultimately agree with the court of appeals that Appellant was convicted in a single criminal trial of two offenses that are considered the same for double jeopardy purposes.
V. The Appropriate Remedy is to Vacate the Conviction the State Chooses
When a defendant is convicted in a single criminal trial of two offenses that are considered the same for double jeopardy purposes, the remedy is to vacate one of the convictions. In Landers v. State , we set out the "most serious punishment" test for determining which of the same offenses in the double jeopardy context should be retained.
In Almaguer v. State , the Corpus Christi Court of Appeals-faced with a situation in which no tie-breaker worked-followed the suggestion of Presiding Judge Keller in Bigon and remanded the case so that the prosecution could elect the offense of conviction.
Although I authored Landers , the practical impossibility of determining in some cases which offense is really the most serious has convinced me that it would be preferable to simply give the local prosecutor the option to choose which conviction to retain. Making the matter a function of prosecutorial discretion seems to be most consistent with our prior recognition that a prosecutor in this type of situation is entitled to "submit both offenses to the jury for consideration" and receive "the benefit of the most serious punishment obtained." If a subjective decision is to be made, let the local prosecutor who exercised the decision to bring the case make *189it.45
We here do likewise-this is a question to be answered by the prosecutor. Here, the prosecutor has requested that the 3g offense-the criminal solicitation conviction-be retained. This is the offense that was upheld by the court of appeals. We affirm the court of appeals' judgment in whole.
Yeary, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
DISSENTING OPINION
When the same act or conduct violates more than one statutorily defined penal offense, in order to determine whether punishment for both statutorily defined offenses violates double jeopardy, we have said that an "elements" analysis is appropriate.
But the double jeopardy analysis in this case does not end there. Here, the evidence shows that Appellant engaged in conduct on two discrete occasions whereby he approached Stephen Reynolds in an attempt to engage him to commit murder for remuneration: first on December 1, 2012 (which was "on or about the 7th of December, 2012"),
For that reason, the Court errs to affirm the judgment of the court of appeals on an "elements" analysis alone. I would remand the cause for the court of appeals to conduct a "units of prosecution" analysis. Because the parties have yet to brief that facet of the double jeopardy analysis, I would invite the court of appeals to solicit additional briefing. Instead, the Court simply affirms the lower court's judgment, to which I respectfully dissent.
Bien ,
Tex. Pen. Code. § 15.03.
State v. Meru ,
Ex parte Watson ,
McKithan v. State ,
TEX. PEN. CODE § 15.03 (a) ("A person commits an offense if, with intent that a capital felony or felony of the first degree be committed, he requests, commands, or attempts to induce another to engage in specific conduct that, under the circumstances surrounding his conduct as the actor believes them to be, would constitute the felony or make the other a party to its commission.").
This stands in contrast to the offense of criminal attempt where it is immaterial whether the attempted crime is impossible to complete. Chen v. State ,
Chen ,
Lawhorn ,
Chen ,
Bien ,
State's Br. 6 (quoting Garrett v. United States ,
Garrett,
Benson ,
Cf. Tex. Penal Code § 22.04(h) ("A person who is subject to prosecution under both this section and another section of this code may be prosecuted under either or both sections.").
We have previously held that solicitation was meant to capture conduct short of attempt. Schwenk v. State ,
Landers v. State ,
Villanueva v. State ,
Berger v. State ,
Ruth v. State , No. 13-10-00250-CR,
Nickerson v. State ,
Bigon ,
See Blockburger v. United States ,
See Tex. Penal Code §§ 15.03(a) (criminal solicitation) & 15.01(a) (criminal attempt), respectively.
Bien v. State ,
Majority Opinion at 8-13.
See Sledge v. State ,
In Benson , we observed:
Even when the offenses in question are prescribed by a single statute or are otherwise the same under an "elements" analysis , the protection against double jeopardy is not violated if the offenses constitute separate allowable units of prosecution. This latter inquiry involves determining such things as whether there were two murder victims, whether a victim who was assaulted on Monday was assaulted again on Tuesday , or whether multiple kinds of sex acts were committed against a victim. A "units" analysis consists of two parts: (1) what the allowable units of prosecution is, and (2) how many units have been shown . The first part of the analysis is purely a question of statutory construction and generally requires ascertaining the focus or gravamen of the offense. The second part requires an examination of the trial record, which can include the evidence presented at trial .
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