Christapher Batchelor v. State of Indiana
Christapher Batchelor v. State of Indiana
Opinion
Case Summary
[1] Christapher Batchelor appeals his convictions for Level 5 felony battery on a law enforcement officer, Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement, and Class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Issue
[2] The sole issue is whether the trial court committed fundamental error by giving the jury an instruction regarding the definition of "flee" for purposes of resisting law enforcement.
Facts
[3] At about 8:30 p.m. on December 14, 2015, Clay County Deputy Sheriff James Switzer was driving his marked cruiser and saw that Batchelor was driving his truck without wearing a seatbelt. As Deputy Switzer pulled behind Batchelor at a four-way stop in Brazil, he saw Batchelor reach over and put on his seat belt, then signal and turn left. Deputy Switzer activated his lights to initiate a traffic stop, but Batchelor continued driving for one minute and thirty-eight seconds; Deputy Switzer did not immediately activate his siren but did so later at some point. 1 There was a well-lighted gas station at the intersection where Deputy Switzer first activated his lights. Deputy Switzer then followed Batchelor through residential areas, passing a number of street lights and side streets. Batchelor encountered two stop signs while being followed by Deputy Switzer, at which he made complete stops. Batchelor was traveling approximately thirty-five miles per hour in a twenty-five miles per hour zone; Deputy Switzer described Batchelor's speed as not excessive and "more or less appropriate ...." Tr. Vol. III p. 7. Finally, after Deputy Switzer had activated his LED spotlight and shined it on Batchelor's mirrors, Batchelor pulled over into a gravel parking area on the side of the road.
[4] Batchelor started to get out of his truck as Deputy Switzer got out of his cruiser. Deputy Switzer ordered Batchelor *300 to get on the ground and he complied. Deputy Switzer intended to arrest Batchelor for resisting law enforcement. However, Batchelor resisted Deputy Switzer's attempt to handcuff him. Two other officers then arrived on the scene as backup. Batchelor continued struggling with Deputy Switzer and the other two officers. During the struggle, Batchelor kicked Deputy Switzer in the chest, throwing him into Batchelor's truck. Batchelor could not be subdued and arrested until two more backup officers arrived on the scene. Because of this altercation, Deputy Switzer injured his ankle and had to miss three months of work recovering. One of the back-up officers jammed his finger during the altercation, and another sustained a black eye.
[5] The State charged Batchelor with Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement for fleeing from Deputy Switzer, one count of Level 6 felony battery on a police officer for kicking and injuring Deputy Switzer, and two counts of Class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement with respect to Batchelor's resisting arrest by two of the back-up officers. The State later combined the two Class A misdemeanor charges into one charge. Batchelor did not testify or present evidence during his jury trial. During closing statements, Batchelor's attorney argued that he did not flee Deputy Switzer in light of there not being a high-speed chase, the fact that it was nighttime and raining, and that the gravel parking area where he stopped was "a good and safe place to pull over ...." Id. at 109. 2
[6] The State requested and the trial court gave the following instruction:
A person who fails to stop his vehicle promptly "flees" law enforcement when the person attempts to escape from law enforcement or attempts to unnecessarily prolong the time before the person must stop. It is an issue in this case whether the Defendant attempted to escape or unnecessarily prolonged the time before stopping. The burden is on the State to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that:
(1) The defendant acted with the intent to escape, or
(2) A reasonable driver in the Defendant's position would not have felt unsafe under the facts of this case to come to an immediate halt, or
(3) That if a reasonable driver in the Defendant's position would have felt unsafe to come to an immediate halt, the driver would have come to a halt sooner.
App. Vol. III p. 71. Batchelor did not object to this instruction. The jury found Batchelor guilty as charged on all counts, and the trial court entered judgments of conviction and sentenced him accordingly. Batchelor now appeals.
Analysis
[7] Batchelor contends the trial court erroneously instructed the jury regarding the "fleeing" element of resisting law enforcement.
3
We review a trial court's decision to give or refuse a jury instruction for an abuse of discretion.
Hernandez v. State
,
*301
whether the substance of the tendered instruction is covered by other instructions which are given.' "
[8] Because Batchelor did not object to the instruction at issue, his claim is waived, and he must demonstrate the existence of fundamental error before we may reverse.
See
Pattison v. State
,
[9] Indiana Code Section 35-44.1-3-1 provides that it is a Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement for a person to use a vehicle to "knowingly or intentionally ... flee[ ] from a law enforcement officer after the officer has, by visible or audible means, including operation of the law enforcement officer's siren or emergency lights, identified himself or herself and ordered the person to stop ...." The key issue in this case with respect to the Level 6 felony resisting charge was whether Batchelor "knowingly or intentionally" fled from Deputy Switzer when he waited one minute and thirty-eight seconds to pull over after Deputy Switzer first activated his emergency lights. At trial, Batchelor emphasized the lack of any evidence that he drove unsafely or at an excessive rate of speed before pulling over, while the State emphasized the absence of any apparent safety reason for Batchelor not to have pulled over sooner. Batchelor did not testify at trial.
[10] There is no statutory definition of the word "flee" in the Indiana Code. In
Cowans v. State
,
[11] The defendant was convicted of resisting law enforcement by fleeing in a vehicle. On appeal, the defendant sought reversal because the trial court denied his request to instruct the jury on the defense of "mistake of fact"; he claimed his belief that he could continue driving until he found what he believed to be a safe place stop was a "mistake of fact." This court held that the trial court properly refused that instruction, agreeing with the State that this purported defense would at best be a "mistake of law," not a "mistake of fact."
Cowans
,
[12] In dicta, this court went on to "address some of the underlying issues of this case, which are likely to reoccur for other citizens of Indiana. Cowans is far from alone in his belief that motorists are allowed to drive to a safe location after being ordered to stop by flashing police lights."
*302
It also noted that in
Woodward v. State
,
[13] Focusing on the phrase "without adequate justification" in the
Woodward
opinion, the
Cowans
panel stated "that a person with an 'adequate justification' might have some discretion to choose the location of a stop. Clearly, it cannot be the case that a driver must slam his brakes and come to an immediate stop or else face felony prosecution."
Cowans
,
[14] The opinion also recounted a Black's definition of "flee from justice" as meaning, " 'Removing one's self from or secreting one's self within jurisdiction wherein offense was committed to avoid arrest; or concealing one's self therein, with intent, in either case, to avoid arrest, detention, or punishment for some criminal offense.' "
[15] Based on these varying definitions of "flee" or "flight," the
Cowans
opinion stated, "a person who drives to a location of greater safety for her or the officer, intending only to be in a location of greater safety, is not 'fleeing' from the police."
Cowans
,
We believe that a defendant charged with resisting law enforcement by fleeing by vehicle would be entitled, if he so requested, to have a jury instruction regarding the definition of the word "flee." This word is an element of the crime that the State is required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt. The definition would explain that a person who is attempting to escape police, or attempting to unnecessarily prolong the time before he is stopped, would be fleeing. The definition should also explain, however, that if a reasonable driver in the defendant's position would have felt unsafe to come to an immediate halt, and if the defendant took reasonable steps to increase the safety of the stop without unnecessarily prolonging the process, then the defendant was not fleeing. In short, the jury instruction would put the question of whether the driver had an *303 "adequate justification" squarely before the factfinder.
[16] The challenged jury instruction in this case largely paralleled this language from Cowans . However, the first thing to note is that Cowans expressly predicated the giving of such an instruction upon the defendant's requesting it; here, the State requested it. On that basis alone, it was erroneous for the trial court to give the instruction where Batchelor did not request it.
[17] The question, then, is whether the instruction was fundamentally erroneous. We conclude that it was in at least one clear respect. In
Hall v. State
,
[18] Here, the resisting law enforcement statute clearly requires proof that the defendant "knowingly or intentionally" fled. See I.C. § 35-44.1-3-1. The challenged instruction, however, allowed the jury to convict Batchelor if the State proved that:
(1) The defendant acted with the intent to escape, or
(2) A reasonable driver in the Defendant's position would not have felt unsafe under the facts of this case to come to an immediate halt, or
(3) That if a reasonable driver in the Defendant's position would have felt unsafe to come to an immediate halt, the driver would have come to a halt sooner.
App. Vol. III p. 71. Although the first part of the language above correctly states the mens rea for resisting law enforcement, parts two and three alternatively allowed a conviction based on what a "reasonable driver" would have done in Batchelor's situation. In other words, parts two and three allowed a conviction if the State proved, essentially, that Batchelor was negligent. Negligence occurs when an actor's conduct falls below that of a reasonable person under like or similar circumstances.
Key v. Hamilton
,
[19] We also do not believe the trial court's general instructions regarding the correct intentional or knowing mens rea for resisting law enforcement were sufficient to correct the plain error in the instruction that purported to give very detailed guidance on the definition of "fleeing."
*304 The prosecutor's argument to the jury also discussed and relied heavily upon this erroneous language. And, the central issue at trial with respect to the resisting law enforcement by fleeing charge was whether Batchelor knowingly or intentionally did so. Although there is no question Batchelor knew of Deputy Switzer's wanting to pull him over, there also is no evidence that there was a "high-speed chase" here. It was for the jury to decide whether such a chase that lasted approximately a minute-and-a-half was a knowing or intentional fleeing by Batchelor, not whether it was something a "reasonable" person would have done. We conclude that this misstatement of the mens rea for a resisting law enforcement conviction was sufficient by itself to make the instruction fundamentally erroneous, mandating reversal of Batchelor's conviction for Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement by fleeing in a vehicle.
[20] There are other problems with the instruction; we need not conclusively determine whether these are fundamental errors, but we point out these errors nonetheless. First, the instruction comes dangerously close to creating an unconstitutional mandatory presumption. A jury instruction that tells the jury that it must infer a presumed fact if the State proves certain predicate facts is a mandatory presumption instruction that relieves the State of its burden of proof in proving all the elements of a crime, in violation of the Due Process Clause of the United States Constitution.
See
Brown v. State
,
[21] Although the instruction here did not expressly tell the jury that it "must" or "should" presume that Batchelor was fleeing if the State proved certain predicate facts, the use of such words is not always necessary to make an instruction an impermissible mandatory presumption instruction.
See
Higgins v. State
,
[22] Another difficulty with the instruction given is that it emphasizes certain evidence-or rather in this case, unduly emphasizes a lack of evidence-and invites the jury to violate its obligation to consider all the evidence. Instructions that single out certain portions of the evidence in such a way are improper, confusing, and misleading.
Marks v. State
,
[23] We realize that our reversal of Batchelor's conviction based on fundamental instructional error may create some tension with this court's opinion in
Cowans
. That opinion dealt with the specific situation of a defendant who claimed not to have pulled over sooner out of fear for his personal safety, its discussion regarding instructing the jury in a similar case was dicta, and giving its recommended jury instruction was incumbent upon the defendant requesting it. It should not have been applied in a dissimilar case where the defendant was not making such a claim and did not request an instruction on that point. To the extent this opinion more generally questions the propriety of the instruction, we do not recognize horizontal stare decisis between decisions made by different panels of this court.
See
In re F.S.
,
Conclusion
[24] We reverse Batchelor's conviction for Level 6 felony resisting law enforcement by fleeing in a vehicle. Because Batchelor has not presented argument as to how this instructional error would impact his convictions for Level 5 felony battery on a law enforcement officer and Class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement, those convictions are affirmed. We remand for further proceedings, i.e. retrial, if the State so elects.
[25] Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
Najam, J., and Mathias, J., concur.
There is a dash cam video of the incident from Deputy Switzer's cruiser, but it lacks audio.
Counsel did not specify the "safety" issue here; rather than a concern for Batchelor's personal safety, it could have been a reference to his not having to pull over on the side of the street and possibly obstruct traffic.
Although Batchelor challenges all three of his convictions on appeal, he does not explain how this alleged instructional error would impact his convictions for Level 5 felony battery on a police officer or Class A misdemeanor resisting law enforcement.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Christapher BATCHELOR, Appellant-Defendant, v. STATE of Indiana, Appellee-Plaintiff.
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published