State v. Jane Doe (2021-38) ( 2023 )


Menu:
  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 49095
    In the Interest of: JANE DOE (2021-38), )
    Juvenile Under Eighteen (18) Years of Age.
    )
    -----------------------------------------------------------
    )
    STATE OF IDAHO,                         )
    )                       Boise, February 2023 Term
    Petitioner-Respondent,               )
    )                       Opinion filed: April 19, 2023
    v.                                      )
    )                       Melanie Gagnepain, Clerk
    JANE DOE (2021-38),                     )
    )
    Respondent-Appellant.                )
    _______________________________________ )
    Appeal from the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of
    Idaho, Elmore County, Brent Ferguson, Magistrate Judge, and Gerald F.
    Schroeder, Senior District Judge.
    The decision of the district court is affirmed.
    Eric D. Fredericksen, State Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for Appellant.
    Andrea Reynolds argued.
    Raúl R. Labrador, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for Respondent. Mark Olson
    argued.
    ________________________________
    BRODY, Justice.
    Jane Doe appeals the district court’s decision upholding the magistrate court’s judgment
    that Doe committed the offense of battery—placing Doe within the purview of the Juvenile
    Corrections Act. Doe argues that the magistrate court erred by using and applying the self-
    defense law reflected in Idaho Criminal Jury Instructions 1517 and 1518, instead of Idaho Code
    section 19-202A, Idaho’s “stand your ground” statute. Doe contends that the statute’s legal
    standards differ from Instructions 1517 and 1518, and that the statutory standards should have
    been applied to her self-defense claim. For the reasons set forth below, we disagree. The “stand
    1
    your ground” statute codifies aspects of Idaho self-defense law that have existed for over 100
    years at common law, without abrogating those aspects it left uncodified. Thus, the district court
    did not err in upholding the magistrate court’s use and application of the pattern instructions,
    which presumptively reflect the elements of self-defense at common law. We affirm.
    I.   FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    In October 2020, Doe was walking to school with her girlfriend (“Girlfriend”) when a
    confrontation ensued between Doe and Doe’s ex-girlfriend (“Ex-Girlfriend”). Doe testified that
    Ex-Girlfriend first approached Doe aggressively and got “in her face” but did not make physical
    contact. The magistrate court, sitting as the factfinder at the later evidentiary hearing, found that
    after this event, Doe then pushed Ex-Girlfriend, punched her, pushed her again, and then
    punched her again.
    Doe, Girlfriend, and Ex-Girlfriend “had a troubled history prior to this incident.” Doe and
    Ex-Girlfriend had a history of violence during their prior dating relationship. In addition, Ex-
    Girlfriend’s brother had been (prior to the underlying incident) charged with a sexual assault of
    Girlfriend. Ex-Girlfriend later testified that she had “hard feelings” against Girlfriend because of
    the sexual assault allegations brought against her brother, and because Girlfriend was in a
    relationship with Doe. Ex-Girlfriend admitted that, during a phone call between her and Doe the
    day before the underlying incident, Ex-Girlfriend referred to Girlfriend using derogatory
    language.
    A few weeks after the October 2020 incident, the State filed a petition under the Juvenile
    Corrections Act, alleging Doe fell within the purview of the Act for committing a misdemeanor
    battery (in violation of I.C. § 18-903) against Ex-Girlfriend. Doe denied the allegation and, two
    months later, the magistrate court held an evidentiary hearing under the Act pursuant to the Idaho
    Juvenile Rules. During the hearing, Ex-Girlfriend and Doe testified, and Doe claimed her use of
    force against Ex-Girlfriend was in self-defense. After closing arguments, the magistrate court
    made findings, and orally ruled that the State had proven its case of battery and had disproven
    two elements of Doe’s self-defense claim—all beyond a reasonable doubt. Thus, Doe fell within
    the purview of the Act and the magistrate court set the matter for sentencing.
    In ruling on Doe’s self-defense claim, the magistrate court referred to Idaho Criminal
    Jury Instructions 1517 and 1518, the pattern jury instructions on self-defense and reasonable
    force. Nothing in the record shows that Doe, or the State, filed a motion for a pre-evidentiary
    2
    hearing to argue for, or propose, any particular version of Idaho’s self-defense law for the
    magistrate court’s use and application at the evidentiary hearing. Furthermore, at the evidentiary
    hearing, Doe did not contemporaneously, or subsequently, object to the magistrate court’s
    reference to and application of Instructions 1517 and 1518 to Doe’s self-defense claim.
    Doe timely appealed to the district court and argued that the magistrate court erred
    because the self-defense law reflected in Instructions 1517 and 1518 was “upended” when the
    legislature, two years prior to Doe’s evidentiary hearing, passed a “stand your ground” statute:
    Idaho Code section 19-202A. In other words, Doe argued the statute rendered Instructions 1517
    and 1518 “obsolete[.]” In response, the State argued, among other things, that Doe failed to
    preserve her argument for appeal, and that there was no error by the magistrate court because the
    statute does not differ from common law self-defense.
    Sitting in its appellate capacity, the district court upheld the magistrate court’s decision,
    and affirmed the judgment. The district court first determined that Doe did not preserve her
    assignment of error. From this, the district court concluded that fundamental error review
    applied, but reversal was not warranted because there was no “error” at all. Even if an error
    occurred, the court concluded any error in using and applying Instructions 1517 and 1518 instead
    of the statute did not constitute fundamental error. Doe timely appealed to this Court.
    II.   STANDARD OF REVIEW
    “When this Court reviews the decision of a district court sitting in its appellate capacity
    over a [magistrate] court, we examine the [magistrate] court record to determine whether
    substantial and competent evidence supports the [magistrate] court’s findings of fact and whether
    its conclusions of law follow from those findings.” Int. of Doe, 
    168 Idaho 389
    , 390, 
    483 P.3d 932
    , 933 (2020) (alterations added). As to findings, “[i]f the district court affirmed the magistrate
    court’s decision, and the magistrate court’s findings are supported by substantial and competent
    evidence, this Court affirms the district court as a matter of procedure.” Matter of Est. of
    Hirning, 
    167 Idaho 669
    , 675, 
    475 P.3d 1191
    , 1197 (2020). The interpretation of statutes and
    other questions of law are reviewed de novo. State v. Burke, 
    166 Idaho 621
    , 623, 
    462 P.3d 599
    ,
    601 (2020).
    III. ANALYSIS
    Doe’s central argument on appeal is that the magistrate court erred when it used Idaho
    Criminal Jury Instructions 1517 (self-defense) and 1518 (reasonable force) to analyze her claim
    3
    of self-defense—instead of the “stand your ground” self-defense statute, Idaho Code section 19-
    202A. Doe also contends that on intermediate appeal, the district court erred in applying the
    preservation doctrine, and in requiring her to prove this error was “fundamental” when she was
    not required to raise it before, during, or after the magistrate court’s ruling. In response, the State
    contends that the magistrate court did not err, but if it did, the issue was not preserved below;
    thus, relief cannot issue because Doe’s unobjected-to error is not fundamental.
    We agree with Doe that she was not required to object below and that the district court
    erred by requiring her to prove the assigned error was fundamental. Nevertheless, Doe is not
    entitled to relief because the magistrate court did not err. We conclude that Instructions 1517 and
    1518 are consistent with the “stand your ground” statute. Idaho Code section 19-202A simply
    codified aspects of Idaho’s self-defense law that have existed for over 100 years. By the statute’s
    plain language, it does not abrogate or supplant the common law of self-defense in Idaho. Thus,
    the decision of the district court upholding the magistrate court’s judgment is affirmed.
    A. The preservation doctrine does not apply.
    In most contexts, the preservation doctrine provides a “central rule” of appellate review:
    “To properly preserve an issue for appellate review, ‘both the issue and the party’s position on
    the issue must be raised before the trial court[,]’ ” and “so long as this requirement is met, the
    specific legal authorities used to support the position may evolve.” State v. Hoskins, 
    165 Idaho 217
    , 221–22, 
    443 P.3d 231
    , 235–36 (2019) (citation omitted). However, when a defendant
    assigns legal error to a trial court’s conclusions of law after an evidentiary hearing under the
    Juvenile Corrections Act (Idaho Code sections 20-501 to -549), the issue may be considered on
    appeal even though the defendant did not raise it below. In this context, and for the reasons
    discussed below, the preservation doctrine simply does not apply.
    Evidentiary hearings under the Act are the procedural analog of a criminal bench trial.
    See I.J.R. 15(g) (“All issues shall be tried solely before the court.”). When a defendant assigns
    error to how the trial court in fact applied the law at the conclusion of a bench trial, a defendant
    may raise that issue for the first time on appeal. See, e.g., State v. Clark, 
    168 Idaho 503
    , 507, 
    484 P.3d 187
    , 191 (2021) (reviewing de novo the district court’s interpretation and application of the
    term “fresh pursuit” in Idaho Code section 19-705 after a criminal bench trial). Unlike a criminal
    jury trial, an “instruction” conference on the proposed or applicable law—before an evidentiary
    hearing under the Act—is not required. See I.J.R. 21 (excluding Idaho Criminal Rule 30 from the
    4
    procedures under the Idaho Juvenile Rules). The magistrate court does not need to “instruct”
    itself on the law—trial judges are presumed to know the law, and to apply it in making their
    decisions. State v. Leavitt, 
    121 Idaho 4
    , 6, 
    822 P.2d 523
    , 525 (1991).
    In the context of criminal jury trials, the parties are typically required to “file written
    requests that the court instruct the jury on the law as set forth in the request” before the trial
    commences. I.C.R. 30(b)(1). Thereafter, the trial court “must inform counsel of its proposed
    actions on the requested instructions and allow a reasonable time within which to examine and
    make objections outside the presence of the jury to the instructions or the failure to give
    requested instructions.” I.C.R. 30(b)(3) (emphasis added). In this context, the parties—who have
    prior notice of what law will be used and applied—are required to object, with the grounds of
    their objection, before the jury retires to consider its verdict. I.C.R. 30(b)(4).
    On appellate review from a criminal jury trial, if a defendant properly objected to the law
    the jury was ultimately instructed on—thereby preserving any assignment of error—this Court
    applies harmless error review. State v. Adamcik, 
    152 Idaho 445
    , 472, 
    272 P.3d 417
    , 444 (2012).
    One purpose of this preservation requirement is to “prevent[] the litigant from sandbagging the
    court, i.e., remaining silent about his objection and belatedly raising the error only if the case
    does not conclude in his favor.” State v. Perry, 
    150 Idaho 209
    , 224, 
    245 P.3d 961
    , 976 (2010)
    (alteration added) (citation omitted). If a defendant does not object, this Court will still review
    the jury instructions—but for “fundamental error.” 
    Id.
    Notably, a common predicate to both harmless and fundamental error review is “whether
    the jury instruction was erroneous at all.” State v. Medina, 
    165 Idaho 501
    , 507, 
    447 P.3d 949
    ,
    955 (2019). To answer this question, we review jury instructions de novo—not for a perfect
    recitation of law—but to “determine ‘whether, when considered as a whole, they fairly and
    adequately present the issues and state the applicable law.’ ” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Dunlap, 
    155 Idaho 345
    , 364, 
    313 P.3d 1
    , 20 (2013)). “Whether the instruction was erroneous will depend
    upon how a reasonable juror would have interpreted the instruction.” Medina, 
    165 Idaho at 507
    ,
    
    447 P.3d at 955
     (citation omitted). In sum, in the context of a jury trial, at a minimum the parties
    should have prior notice of what law will be used and applied to the facts found, even though the
    jury’s deliberations in applying the law often remain “secret and not subject to outside
    examination[,]” Yeager v. United States, 
    557 U.S. 110
    , 122 (2009) (alteration added).
    5
    Conversely, in the context of an evidentiary hearing under the Juvenile Corrections Act—
    essentially a bench trial—there are no jury instructions; thus, the parties do not necessarily have
    a preview of all aspects of the law the magistrate court intends to apply. A party could move for
    a “pretrial conference” pursuant to Idaho Juvenile Rule 12 to “consider” what law the magistrate
    court should apply, or file a similar motion under Idaho Juvenile Rule 21 (incorporating I.C.R.
    12 and 47 for pre-trial motions). Yet, even if a party did move for such a conference, it still
    cannot know with certainty what law will in fact be used and applied by the magistrate court
    until it has ruled. Moreover, nothing requires a defendant to move for reconsideration before the
    defendant can appeal to district court. See I.J.R. 24; I.C. § 20-528; I.J.R. 21 (incorporating, in
    part, the rules for appeals from magistrate to district court under I.C.R. 54).
    With this recognition of the basic difference between a jury trial and a bench trial, the
    preservation doctrine does not apply to Doe’s appeal where she has alleged the magistrate court,
    during the procedural equivalent of a bench trial, used and applied the wrong law. Thus, Doe’s
    appeal has no preservation problem, and the district court erred by imposing one. For these
    reasons, we do not view Doe’s appeal through the lens of fundamental error review. Rather, we
    simply review the conclusions of law she challenges de novo. See State v. Doe, 
    140 Idaho 271
    ,
    273, 
    92 P.3d 521
    , 523 (2004).
    B. The magistrate court did not err in using and applying Idaho’s self-defense law as
    reflected in Idaho Criminal Jury Instructions 1517 and 1518.
    The pattern jury instructions are presumed to be an accurate statement of Idaho law. State
    v. Bodenbach, 
    165 Idaho 577
    , 586, 
    448 P.3d 1005
    , 1014 (2019). When a jury is charged with the
    pattern instructions, which are often tailored as needed to the facts and charges of each case, we
    consider whether the ultimate instructions “as a whole, fairly and adequately present the issues
    and state the applicable law[.]” 
    Id.
     (alteration added) (citation omitted). Thus, in a jury trial,
    “[w]hether the instruction was erroneous will depend upon how a reasonable juror would have
    interpreted the instruction.” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Skunkcap, 
    157 Idaho 221
    , 227–28, 
    335 P.3d 561
    , 567–68 (2014)). However, because we are reviewing the procedural equivalent of a bench
    trial, it is not enough that the magistrate court’s conclusions of law (albeit through the pattern
    instructions)—be a “fair and adequate” representation of the applicable law. Instead, we review
    the magistrate court’s use and application of the law freely, without the deference given to a
    jury’s deliberative process. See Doe, 
    140 Idaho at 273
    , 
    92 P.3d at 523
    ; State v. Clay, 
    112 Idaho
                                                   6
    261, 263, 
    731 P.2d 804
    , 806 (Ct. App. 1987) (“Jury verdicts occupy an exalted place in our
    criminal justice system.”).
    At the evidentiary hearing, the magistrate court first ruled that the State had proven its
    initial case for battery: Doe willfully used force against Ex-Girlfriend when she “pushed her
    twice, punched her, pushed her again, and then punched her again.” From this, the only issue was
    whether Doe’s use of force was justified, i.e., whether Doe’s use of force was in self-defense. On
    this issue, the magistrate court turned to two pattern jury instructions on self-defense, Idaho
    Criminal Jury Instructions 1517 and 1518, analyzed each, and concluded that the State had
    disproven two elements of self-defense beyond a reasonable doubt.
    First, the magistrate court concluded that Doe had used unreasonable force when she
    continued to strike Ex-Girlfriend, instead of stopping at a “push” to create space when Ex-
    Girlfriend was acting aggressively by “getting in her face.” Second, the magistrate court
    concluded that Doe used force, at least in part, for a motivation other than self-defense: Doe was
    “angry” at Ex-Girlfriend for a perceived slight against Girlfriend. Thus, because Doe’s use of
    force was unjustified, her self-defense claim failed and Doe’s battery against Ex-Girlfriend
    subjected Doe to the purview of the Act.
    Instruction 1517, entitled “Self Defense,” contains 5 elements:
    1. The defendant must have believed that the defendant was in imminent
    danger of bodily harm.
    2. In addition to that belief, the defendant must have believed that the
    action the defendant took was necessary to save the defendant from the
    danger presented.
    3. The circumstances must have been such that a reasonable person,
    under similar circumstances, would have believed that the defendant was
    in imminent danger of bodily injury and believed that the action taken was
    necessary.
    4. The defendant must have acted only in response to that danger and not
    for some other motivation.
    5. When there is no longer any reasonable appearance of danger, the right
    of self-defense ends.
    I.C.J.I. 1517 (irrelevant language omitted) (emphasis added). Doe’s challenge on appeal focuses
    on the two elements of self-defense that the State disproved at the hearing, i.e., elements three
    and four in Instruction 1517.
    7
    According to Doe, elements three and four in Instruction 1517 conflict with, and are
    therefore supplanted by, the self-defense law codified in the “stand your ground” statute, Idaho
    Code section 19-202A. More specifically, Doe argues that the statute differs from these elements
    of self-defense at common law in three ways: (1) “the statute provides that a person is not
    required to ascertain whether a danger is apparent or real before acting”; (2) “the statute permits
    consideration of the person’s knowledge, stating a person may use ‘all force and means which
    would appear to be necessary to a reasonable person in a similar situation and with similar
    knowledge without the benefit of hindsight,’ ”; and (3) “the statute does not require that a person
    exercising her right to defend herself must have acted only in response to the danger presented
    by another, and not with some other motivation.” (Emphasis added.)
    For the reasons below, Doe’s three points are without merit. The “stand your ground”
    statute simply codified aspects of common law self-defense that have existed in Idaho for over
    100 years, without abrogating those portions it left uncodified.
    In 2018, the legislature passed the “stand your ground” statute, and in doing so, explained
    that the “intent” of the statute was to “incorporate provisions of . . . stand your ground provided
    in Idaho case law and jury instructions into certain sections of this chapter[.]” I.C. § 19-201A
    (emphasis added). When the statute is read plainly, as it must be, State v. Smalley, 
    164 Idaho 780
    , 784, 
    435 P.3d 1100
    , 1104 (2019), it does exactly that by codifying aspects of pre-existing
    self-defense law:
    DEFENSE OF SELF, OTHERS AND CERTAIN PLACES. (1) No
    person in this state shall be placed in legal jeopardy of any kind whatsoever
    for protecting himself or his family by reasonable means necessary . . . .
    (2) The defense of self or of another does not require a person to wait
    until he or she ascertains whether the danger is apparent or real. A person
    confronted with such danger has a clear right to act upon appearances such as
    would influence the action of a reasonable person.
    (3) In the exercise of the right of self-defense or defense of another, a
    person need not retreat from any place that person has a right to be. A person
    may stand his ground and defend himself or another person by the use of all
    force and means which would appear to be necessary to a reasonable person
    in a similar situation and with similar knowledge without the benefit of
    hindsight . . . .
    (4) In any prosecution for the unlawful use of force, including deadly
    force, or the attempted or threatened use of force contrary to title 18, Idaho
    Code, the burden is on the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
    8
    the use of force, attempted use of force or threat to use force was not
    justifiable.
    [. . . .]
    I.C. § 19-202A (emphasis and alterations added).
    Doe’s first point—that the statute differs from the common law because the statute
    provides that an actor is not required to ascertain whether a danger is apparent or real before
    acting, and “has a clear right to act upon appearances such as would influence the action of a
    reasonable person[,]”—is meritless. This standard, now codified nearly word for word in
    Section 19-202A(2), was set out over 100 years ago in State v. McGreevy, 
    17 Idaho 453
    , 466–67,
    
    105 P. 1047
    , 1051–52 (1909) (explaining that a person acting in self-defense may “stand his
    ground[,]” with a “clear legal right to act upon appearances such as would influence the action
    of a reasonable person” (emphasis in original)). Thus, on this point, the statute does not change
    or add anything to the common law of self-defense, as already reflected in element three of
    Instruction 1517. See also I.C.J.I. 1518 and 1519 (elaborating on this element).
    Doe’s second point—that the “stand your ground” statute differs from the common law
    because the statute requires imputing the actor’s subjective knowledge onto the “reasonable
    person”—is also without merit. Imputing the actor’s “knowledge” to the “reasonable person” in
    evaluating a claim of self-defense is already part of self-defense law under McGreevy and
    reflected in Instructions 1517 and 1518. In McGreevy, this Court said that self-defense allows
    only reasonable force, i.e., force “a reasonable man would” use under “similar circumstances and
    surroundings[,]” so long as the necessity persists and without judgment “from the theoretical
    standpoint of the man who is resting in both apparent and real safety, confronted by no danger,
    and menaced by no threats or demonstrations of sudden violence and felonious import.” 17 Idaho
    at 466–67, 105 P. at 1051–52. This basic standard is reflected in Instruction 1517, element three,
    where it likewise provides that the “action taken” must be “necessary” from the standpoint of a
    reasonable person “under similar circumstances[.]” I.C.J.I. 1517.
    Moreover, the other instruction used and applied by the magistrate court, Instruction
    1518, elaborates on element three in Instruction 1517, to explain what constitutes “reasonable
    force” and plainly imputes the actor’s “knowledge” onto the “reasonable person” in evaluating a
    claim of self-defense and whether the use of force was reasonable:
    The kind and degree of force which a person may lawfully use in
    self-defense are limited by what a reasonable person in the same situation as such
    9
    person, seeing what that person sees and knowing what the person knows, then
    would believe to be necessary. Any use of force beyond that is regarded by the
    law as excessive. Although a person may believe that the person is acting, and
    may act, in self-defense, the person is not justified in using a degree of force
    clearly in excess of that apparently and reasonably necessary under the existing
    facts and circumstances.
    I.C.J.I. 1518 (irrelevant language in brackets omitted) (emphasis added).
    Thus, the “reasonable force” element in Idaho’s self-defense law, as reflected by element
    three in Instruction 1517, and elaborated on by Instruction 1518, already requires the actor’s
    subjective “knowledge” to be imputed to the “reasonable person.” Contrary to Doe’s position,
    this is consistent with the “knowledge” language in the “stand your ground” statute.
    Finally, as to Doe’s third point—that the “stand your ground” statute differs from the
    common law because it does not reflect the exclusive “motivation” element present in Instruction
    1517 (i.e., element number four)—she is correct, but her point is irrelevant. The legislature has
    the power to abrogate the common law either expressly, or by “implication” when it is “obvious”
    and “cannot be ignored.” Mickelsen v. Broadway Ford, Inc., 
    153 Idaho 149
    , 153, 
    280 P.3d 176
    ,
    180 (2012) (citations omitted). The exclusive “motivation” element reflected in Instruction 1517
    can be traced to McGreevy, where this Court explained that force against another in self-defense
    must be “for that purpose” and not, for example, done in “revenge[,]” 17 Idaho at 466–67, 105 P.
    at 1051–52—i.e., the actor “must have acted only in response to that danger and not for some
    other motivation.” I.C.J.I. 1517.
    Here, the exclusive “motivation” element of self-defense at common law is neither
    expressly, nor implicitly, abrogated by its absence in the “stand your ground” statute, I.C. § 19-
    202A. Although the statute does not mention the “motivation” element, nothing in the statute
    obviously eliminates it, either expressly or by implication. See I.C. § 19-202A. To the contrary,
    and as noted above, the legislature expressly instructed that the statute “incorporate[s]
    provisions of . . . stand your ground” already “provided in Idaho case law and jury
    instructions[.]” I.C. § 19-201A (emphasis and alterations added). The “stand your ground”
    statute reflects the aspects of self-defense law in Idaho that the legislature sought to protect by
    statute—unrelated to, and without effect on, the exclusive “motivation” element of self-defense
    at common law. Thus, Doe’s argument that the “motivation” element reflected in Instruction
    1517 was improperly considered by the magistrate court is without merit.
    10
    In sum, Doe has not shown that the magistrate court erred in referring to and applying the
    pattern jury instructions to her self-defense claim instead of relying solely on the “stand your
    ground” statute, Idaho Code section 19-202A. The statute simply codified aspects of self-defense
    law that have existed for over 100 years and did not abrogate those aspects it left uncodified.
    Because Doe has not shown legal error and does not challenge the magistrate court’s decision as
    unsupported by substantial evidence, the district court did not err in upholding the magistrate
    court’s judgment.
    VI.     CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
    Chief Justice BEVAN, and Justices STEGNER, MOELLER, and ZAHN, CONCUR.
    11