State v. Sinclair ( 2022 )


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  •                            NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    No. 122,441
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS
    STATE OF KANSAS,
    Appellee,
    v.
    PATRICIA E. SINCLAIR,
    Appellant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    Appeal from Douglas District Court; PAULA B. MARTIN, judge. Opinion filed February 18, 2022.
    Affirmed.
    Kasper Schirer, of Kansas Appellate Defender Office, for appellant.
    Jon Simpson, assistant district attorney, Suzanne Valdez, district attorney, and Derek Schmidt,
    attorney general, for appellee.
    Before POWELL, P.J., ATCHESON, J., and RICHARD B. WALKER, S.J.
    PER CURIAM: A jury convicted Patricia E. Sinclair of aggravated battery, and she
    was sentenced to 24 months' probation from a controlling prison term of 24 months. On
    appeal, she raises eight issues, which fall into four categories: (1) the district court's
    aggravated battery and burden of proof instructions and its failure to instruct on defense
    of an occupied vehicle were clear error; (2) the prosecutor erred by misstating the law
    twice and diluting the burden of proof; (3) cumulative error deprived Sinclair of a fair
    trial; and (4) the district court erred by not submitting Sinclair's prior convictions to a jury
    to determine her criminal history.
    1
    Although we find the district court erred when instructing the jury, we conclude
    the error does not require reversal. Although the prosecutor briefly misstated the law
    once, we find the error to be harmless. We likewise hold that cumulative error did not
    deprive Sinclair of a fair trial, and the district court did not err when calculating Sinclair's
    criminal history.
    FACTS
    In October 2016, a fire forced Sinclair to move out of her Lawrence house. By
    mid-March 2017, she was living in her car. In the evenings, she parked on the street
    outside her former house because of her familiarity with the neighborhood. This
    concerned Brad Hoopes, one of Sinclair's former neighbors. Because he believed the
    house fire was not accidental, Hoopes felt Sinclair posed a danger to the neighborhood.
    On the evening of March 20, 2017, Sinclair once again parked on the street near
    her former residence. Hoopes, who had been drinking at dinner, noticed the car around
    8:45 p.m. and went to the car. According to Hoopes, he approached the driver-side door,
    saw Sinclair reclined in the driver's seat, and began knocking on Sinclair's window and
    yelling, "'Why are you still here? What are you doing here?'" Sinclair opened the car door
    and got out holding a hammer. As Hoopes began backing up, Sinclair swung the hammer,
    knocking off Hoopes' glasses and hitting his left wrist. Hoopes said she hit him on the
    back with the hammer several more times as he screamed and searched on the ground for
    his glasses.
    Sinclair's recollection differed significantly from Hoopes' version. According to
    her, she woke up to someone standing by the front passenger door pounding loudly and
    hard on the window. Afraid the person might break the window, leaving her no safe place
    to live, Sinclair reflexively grabbed a hammer, opened the driver's door, and tried to get
    away. In her version, Hoopes came around the car aggressively, grabbed her by the
    2
    shoulder, and threw her to the ground. Sinclair explained that she did her best to defend
    herself, but she denied attacking Hoopes and could not recall hitting him with the
    hammer. After the altercation, Sinclair got back in her car and locked the doors.
    A neighbor, Melissa Warren, also witnessed the altercation. She recounted seeing
    and hearing Hoopes shouting and loudly banging or knocking on Sinclair's passenger
    window. Warren said Sinclair got out of the driver's seat and walked to the back of the
    car, where she met Hoopes, and both started yelling. Sinclair then raised what Warren
    believed was a hammer, and Hoopes fell to the ground and began yelling about his
    glasses. Eventually, Hoopes and Sinclair began struggling on the ground in the middle of
    the street. Warren's friend called police.
    Police arrived shortly after the altercation and separately interviewed Hoopes and
    Sinclair. Although Hoopes was very distressed during his initial interview and had
    trouble remembering details, he explained that Sinclair hit him with a hammer. He also
    stated that both car doors were open, though he later explained that must have occurred
    earlier, and that Sinclair attacked him with a hammer earlier that day. Hoopes also made
    several comments to police, such as, "She's going down tonight. This shit has got to end,"
    and "She finally did the thing that she needed to do." After becoming frustrated, Hoopes
    said, "We have done every single thing that we can think to try and actually get her
    arrested. Every single possible thing. She finally did the thing where she attacked me
    with a hammer and . . . nothing's gonna happen, so, great."
    Officers later talked to Hoopes on his porch, and at that point he explained more
    calmly what had occurred. At the scene, police took pictures of Hoopes' face, glasses, and
    wrist. Police came back the next day and took pictures of the bruises on his back.
    Officers also attempted to interview Sinclair, but at first she would not come out
    of her locked car. She eventually cracked one of her windows and explained that she
    3
    confronted Hoopes with a hammer after he knocked on her window, waking her up and
    frightening her, but she denied hitting Hoopes. Police eventually removed Sinclair from
    the car, arrested her, and placed her in a patrol car. While under arrest, Sinclair stated that
    she should have killed Hoopes and should have made sure his glasses were broken. She
    later added that she should have murdered Hoopes and broken his hand.
    The State charged Sinclair with one count of aggravated battery under K.S.A.
    2016 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C), which it charged under two different theories. The district
    court denied her motion for immunity based on self-defense, and a jury trial was held in
    April 2019. Following the presentation of evidence, Sinclair did not object to the
    proposed jury instructions, and the district court instructed the jury on the burden of
    proof, the elements of aggravated battery, and defense of a person. The parties spent most
    of their closing arguments discussing whether Sinclair acted in self-defense of her person.
    During deliberations, the jury requested the legal definition of "retreat" as used in
    the self-defense instruction. The district court instructed the jury to use the term's
    ordinary meaning. The jury ultimately found Sinclair guilty of aggravated battery. The
    court imposed 24 months' probation with an underlying 24-month prison sentence.
    ANALYSIS
    On appeal, Sinclair raises four categories of issues:
    1. Three alleged jury instruction errors, including omitting an element, failing to
    give an unrequested affirmative defense, and failing to instruct on the State's
    burden of proof regarding affirmative defenses;
    2. three alleged instances of prosecutorial error, one she contends diluted the
    State's burden of proof and two she believes misstated the law;
    3. cumulative error; and
    4
    4. a violation of section 5 of the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights by not
    submitting her prior convictions to the jury to determine her criminal history
    for sentencing purposes.
    We will discuss each of Sinclair's contentions in turn.
    Jury Instructions
    Sinclair first argues the district court committed clear error by providing
    inaccurate instructions on the elements of aggravated battery, by failing to provide an
    unrequested instruction on defense of an occupied vehicle, and by not explicitly stating
    the State's burden of disproving her self-defense claim. After a careful review of the
    record, we find the elements instruction was error, but not clear error. An instruction on
    defense of an occupied vehicle may have been factually appropriate, but any error was
    not clear error. And the court accurately stated the law on the State's burden of proof.
    Appellate courts analyze challenges to jury instructions in three steps. This entails
    a review for (1) preservation, (2) error, and (3) reversibility. See State v. Randle, 
    311 Kan. 468
    , Syl. ¶ 1, 
    462 P.3d 624
     (2020). Under the first step, failure to request or object
    to an instruction does not preclude appellate review, though it does impact the
    reversibility standard. See K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 22-3414(3) (permitting review of
    unpreserved jury instruction challenges for clear error); State v. Chavez, 
    310 Kan. 421
    ,
    Syl. ¶ 4, 
    447 P.3d 364
     (2019) (unrequested jury instruction reviewed for clear error).
    Under the second step, an instruction must be both legally and factually
    appropriate. Randle, 
    311 Kan. 468
    , Syl. ¶ 1. An instruction is proper if supported by the
    case's facts and accurately states the applicable law. See K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5108(c)
    (defendant is entitled to every affirmative defense supported by competent evidence);
    State v. Broxton, 
    311 Kan. 357
    , 361, 
    461 P.3d 54
     (2020). And under the third step, clear
    5
    error requires reversal when an appellate court is firmly convinced the error affected the
    verdict. See Chavez, 310 Kan. at 430. We review the error and reversibility prongs de
    novo. Randle, 
    311 Kan. 468
    , Syl. ¶ 1; Chavez, 
    310 Kan. 421
    , Syl. ¶ 4.
    Sinclair agrees she did not object to the jury instructions she now challenges.
    Thus, any errors in instructing the jury are reviewed under the clear error standard.
    1. The Aggravated Battery Instruction
    Sinclair argues the district court's aggravated battery instruction was legally
    inappropriate because it misstated the law. Noting that aggravated battery requires proof
    of physical contact performed in a rude, insulting, or angry manner, she asserts the court
    committed clear error by omitting the rude manner requirement from one of the charged
    theories. Although the court's instruction was error, we find it was not clear error.
    Sinclair was charged with aggravated battery under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-
    5413(b)(1)(C). That subsection prohibits:
    "knowingly causing physical contact with another person when done in a rude, insulting
    or angry manner with a deadly weapon, or in any manner whereby great bodily harm,
    disfigurement or death can be inflicted." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C).
    The district court's instruction to the jury on the elements which the State had to
    prove read:
    "Instruction No. 9
    "The defendant is charged with the crime of aggravated battery. The defendant
    pleads not guilty.
    "To establish this charge, each of the following claims must be proved:
    6
    "1. That the defendant knowingly caused physical contact to Bradford J. Hoopes
    in a rude, insulting or angry manner with a deadly weapon, a hammer, and
    "2. That this act occurred on or about the 20th day of March, 2017, in Douglas
    County, Kansas.
    "OR
    "1. The defendant knowingly caused physical contact with Bradford J. Hoopes in
    any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be
    inflicted.
    "2. This act occurred on or about the 20th day of March, 2017, in Douglas
    County, Kansas.
    "A 'deadly weapon' is an instrument which, from the manner in which it is used,
    is calculated or likely to produce death or serious bodily injury."
    Because the State asserted two separate theories of aggravated battery, it had to
    prove Sinclair knowingly caused physical contact in a rude, insulting, or angry manner
    either with a deadly weapon or in any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement,
    or death can be inflicted. However, the district court instructed the jury that aggravated
    battery required proof that Sinclair knowingly caused physical contact with Hoopes either
    "in a rude, insulting or angry manner with a deadly weapon, a hammer" or "in any
    manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted." Thus, the
    instruction omitted the "rude, insulting or angry manner" requirement from the State's
    second theory.
    In State v. Green, 
    55 Kan. App. 2d 595
    , 606-09, 
    419 P.3d 83
     (2018), a panel of
    our court held that the phrases "with a deadly weapon" and "in any manner whereby great
    bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted" are synonymous. See 55 Kan. App.
    2d at 606 (citing State v. Ultreras, 
    296 Kan. 828
    , 853-54, 
    295 P.3d 1020
     [2013]). In
    doing so, the panel noted the rude, insulting, or angry manner requirement applied
    regardless of how the physical contact was inflicted. Green, 55 Kan. App. 2d at 607-09.
    Using the rationale of Green, therefore, the jury instruction given in our case on the
    7
    State's second theory is erroneous for omitting the language "in a rude, insulting or angry
    manner."
    The State argues that Green was wrongly decided, based on the aggravated battery
    statute's plain language. This requires statutory interpretation, which appellate courts
    perform de novo. State v. Keel, 
    302 Kan. 560
    , Syl. ¶ 4, 
    357 P.3d 251
     (2015). Courts
    interpret statutes to give effect to the Legislature's intent; this begins by examining the
    statute's plain language. 
    302 Kan. 560
    , Syl. ¶¶ 5-6. When the statute is plain and
    unambiguous, we need not look to legislative history or canons of construction. 
    302 Kan. 560
    , Syl. ¶ 6. But even when the language does not create ambiguity, we may consider
    various provisions of a statute in pari materia to harmonize them. Neighbor v. Westar
    Energy, Inc., 
    301 Kan. 916
    , Syl. ¶ 3, 
    349 P.3d 469
     (2015).
    The word "manner" is used twice in the statute: it prohibits physical contact
    "when done in a rude, insulting or angry manner with a deadly weapon, or in any manner
    whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted." (Emphasis added.)
    K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C). The State splices the statute at the disjunctive "or"
    between "deadly weapon" and "in any manner." It argues that physical contact must be
    performed in a rude, insulting, or angry manner only if a deadly weapon is used; when
    there is no deadly weapon, the contact can be in any manner whereby great bodily harm
    can be inflicted.
    But as the Green court noted, other sections of the statute which use "in any
    manner" counsel against this view. 55 Kan. App. 2d at 607-08. There are two types of
    simple battery: "causing bodily harm" and "causing physical contact . . . when done in a
    rude, insulting or angry manner." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(a)(1)-(2). For aggravated
    battery based on causing bodily harm, the harm must be inflicted "with a deadly weapon,
    or in any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted."
    K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(B), (b)(2)(B). These sections indicate to us that the "in
    8
    any manner" phrase acts as an alternative to using a deadly weapon. Applying that
    interpretation to aggravated battery based on physical contact, the "rude, insulting or
    angry manner" requirement is an element regardless of whether the contact occurs with a
    deadly weapon or in some other way. Thus, applying Green, under either of the State's
    two theories the "rude, insulting or angry manner" element is required.
    Here, the district court's instruction omitted the "rude, insulting or angry manner"
    requirement from the State's second theory of aggravated battery. Because the instruction
    did not accurately state the applicable law on the State's second theory, the instruction
    was legally inappropriate, and the court erred by giving it to the jury.
    Sinclair argues this omission constitutes clear error. She primarily contends that
    the jury could have found the physical contact was not performed in a rude, insulting, or
    angry manner because she responded appropriately to Hoopes' aggression. And Sinclair
    also complains the alleged affirmative defense and burden of proof errors she has
    identified compounded the likelihood of that error. In response, the State notes the
    evidence of Sinclair's angry comments to responding police. The State also contends that
    it lessened the impact of any potential instruction error during closing arguments when
    the prosecutor told the jury the State had to prove Sinclair acted in a rude, insulting, or
    angry manner. We agree with the State that the totality of the evidence before the jury
    shows that there was no clear error in the omission.
    Another way of analyzing the error in the district court's jury instruction on
    aggravated battery is to determine whether the omission of "a rude, insulting or angry
    manner" on the State's second theory created a real possibility that the jury would have
    rendered a different verdict had the omission not occurred. Our Supreme Court has noted
    that the omission of an element of a crime is subject to a harmless error analysis in which
    a reviewing court examines the record to determine whether the omitted element was
    uncontested and supported by such overwhelming evidence that the jury verdict would
    9
    have been the same without the omission. State v. Richardson, 
    290 Kan. 176
    , 182, 
    224 P.3d 553
     (2010). Under this standard, a reviewing court "'asks whether the record
    contains evidence that could rationally lead to a contrary finding with respect to the
    omitted element.'" 290 Kan. at 183 (citing Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 19, 
    119 S. Ct. 1827
    , 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 35
     [1999]).
    After careful consideration, we are convinced that the instruction given by the
    district court on the elements of aggravated battery does not constitute clear error. And
    we also conclude that any error in the omission of "in a rude, insulting or angry manner"
    on the State's second theory of aggravated battery was harmless error under Richardson
    and Neder. Although Sinclair initially denied to police that she struck Hoopes with a
    hammer, overwhelming evidence from the victim's testimony and police photos of
    Hoopes' injuries demonstrate that she did, in fact, strike him. Given Sinclair's subsequent
    statements to police that she should have killed Hoopes and should have made sure that
    his glasses were broken, coupled with her later added comment that she should have
    murdered Hoopes and broken his hand, a jury could easily find that her actions were rude
    or angry.
    Sinclair's reliance on a self-defense theory does not diminish our conclusion. A
    successful self-defense argument only justifies a person's actions, it does not mean the
    person did not commit the underlying crime. In short, we conclude the jury would not
    have returned a different verdict had it been property instructed on the State's second
    theory of aggravated battery.
    10
    2. The District Court's Failure to Instruct the Jury on Defense of an Occupied
    Vehicle
    Sinclair next argues the district court committed clear error by failing to instruct
    on defense of an occupied vehicle. The defense may have been factually appropriate, but
    we believe its omission was not clear error.
    A criminal defendant is entitled to an instruction on any affirmative defense
    supported by competent evidence—evidence that would allow a rational fact-finder to
    reasonably conclude the defense applies. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5108(c). Defense of an
    occupied vehicle is one of those affirmative defenses. It permits nondeadly force "when
    and to the extent that it appears to such person and such person reasonably believes that
    such use of force is necessary to prevent or terminate such other's unlawful entry into or
    attack upon such person's . . . occupied vehicle." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5223(a). This
    requires both a subjective and objectively reasonable belief that an unlawful entry or
    attack either is occurring or will occur and that force is necessary to prevent or terminate
    that conduct. See, e.g., State v. Andrew, 
    301 Kan. 36
    , 44-45, 
    340 P.3d 476
     (2014)
    (interpreting similar language in K.S.A. 21-5221 regarding self-defense). The defense of
    occupied vehicle statute also permits deadly force if a person has a subjective and
    objectively reasonable belief that deadly force is necessary to prevent imminent death or
    great bodily harm. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5223(b). However, subject to exceptions, the
    defense is unavailable to the person who initially provokes the use of force. See K.S.A.
    2020 Supp. 21-5226(c).
    The parties agree an instruction on defense of an occupied vehicle would have
    been legally appropriate. But they dispute whether that instruction would have been
    factually appropriate. To support her subjective belief, Sinclair notes that she feared
    Hoopes would break the car window when banging on it and yelling. Objectively, her
    neighbor—Warren—also stated that Hoopes loudly knocked on the window, and all three
    11
    witnesses—Sinclair, Hoopes, and Warren—explained Hoopes was yelling. The State
    asserts Hoopes' loud banging on the window would not lead a reasonable person to
    conclude he was attacking or trying to enter Sinclair's car. Even if his actions could be
    viewed as an attack, it ended after Sinclair left her car. And she subjectively did not
    believe force was necessary to end the attack; although she eventually defended herself,
    she got out to get away from Hoopes, not to protect her car.
    All witnesses agreed Hoopes approached Sinclair's car and began yelling and
    either knocking or banging on a car window. Hoopes stated he was yelling, "'Why are
    you still here? What are you doing here?'" But they presented three different versions of
    how Sinclair used the hammer. Hoopes stated Sinclair swung the hammer as she got out
    of the car and he was backing up. According to Warren, Sinclair raised the hammer after
    she got out of the car and yelled at Hoopes at the back of her car. And Sinclair explained
    she reflexively grabbed the hammer while trying to run away; she tried to defend herself
    when Hoopes came around the car and threw her to the ground, though she denied using
    the hammer.
    Sinclair's testimony does not reflect a subjective belief that she needed to use force
    to stop Hoopes from attacking her car. She explained that she grabbed the hammer
    reflexively, not to defend her car or herself. She left the car to get away, not to confront
    Hoopes about potentially breaking the window. And when she did use the hammer, it was
    to defend herself after Hoopes threw her to the ground. Under Sinclair's explanation, she
    was defending herself, not her vehicle. Her version does not support an instruction on
    defense of an occupied vehicle.
    Hoopes' and Warren's versions could support a subjective belief because Sinclair
    confronted Hoopes. But a reasonable person would not believe force, especially deadly
    force, was necessary. Hoopes' yelling and banging on the window suggests he was trying
    to get Sinclair's attention. This was certainly rude, but that conduct did not rise to a level
    12
    requiring the use of force to stop him. According to Sinclair and Warren, getting out of
    the car was all that was necessary to stop Hoopes. And it was certainly not necessary to
    use the hammer while leaving the car, as Hoopes testified. No version of testimony
    reflects that using the hammer to defend the car was objectively reasonable.
    Assuming the district court's failure to give a defense of a vehicle instruction was
    error, Sinclair argues the jury would have returned a different verdict had it been
    instructed on the defense. She notes the State would have been unable to disprove her
    defense based on her testimony and Hoopes' lack of credibility. And Sinclair contends the
    jury's request that the court define "retreat" suggests the jury believed she was the initial
    aggressor, precluding her from using force.
    But if Hoopes was the initial aggressor when he attacked the car, Sinclair would
    have acted properly in defending her car. The State notes Warren's version more closely
    matched Hoopes' recollection than Sinclair's version. Sinclair also made less than
    credible statements to the police. And the jury's question about retreat only indicates they
    considered all the instructions.
    Had the jury been instructed on defense of an occupied vehicle, we believe it is
    unlikely it would have rendered a different verdict. To convict Sinclair, the jury had to
    find she used a deadly weapon or acted in any manner that could result in great bodily
    harm, disfigurement, or death. See Green, 55 Kan. App. 2d at 606 (noting terms are
    synonymous). The jury did so, likely because of the hammer. But a person may only use
    deadly force in defense of an occupied vehicle when necessary to prevent imminent death
    or great bodily harm. K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5223(b). For the defense to apply, the jury
    would need to find Hoopes' yelling and banging on the car window created a subjective
    and objectively reasonable belief that Sinclair faced imminent death or great bodily harm.
    13
    Our review of the record does not reveal that those beliefs existed. Sinclair was
    concerned Hoopes would break the window, leaving her with no place to live. And the
    ultimate contact Sinclair alleged—Hoopes grabbing her shoulder and throwing her to the
    ground—does not entail imminent death or great bodily harm. Her use of the hammer
    was disproportionate to the threat Hoopes posed. Sinclair cannot meet the clear error
    standard. We conclude that any error in failing to provide the defense of an occupied
    vehicle instruction does not require reversal.
    3. The Burden of Proof Instruction
    Finally, Sinclair argues the district court erred by providing an incomplete burden
    of proof instruction regarding her affirmative defense. But we find that the instructions as
    a whole correctly stated the applicable law.
    At trial, the district court instructed the jury generally on affirmative defenses,
    stating: "The defendant raises self-defense as a defense. Evidence in support of this
    defense should be considered by you in determining whether the State has met its burden
    of proving that the defendant is guilty. The State's burden of proof does not shift to the
    defendant." This reflected the language of PIK Crim. 4th 51.050 (2017 Supp.). See State
    v. Becker, No. 119,122, 
    2019 WL 1976422
    , at *5 (Kan. App. 2019) (unpublished
    opinion). However, a later supplement to the pattern instructions added the language:
    "The State has the burden to disprove this defense beyond a reasonable doubt." See State
    v. Reese, No. 120,597, 
    2021 WL 69309
    , at *3 (Kan. App. 2021) (unpublished opinion)
    (quoting PIK Crim. 4th 51.050 [2019 Supp.]), rev. denied 
    313 Kan. 1045
     (2021).
    Separately, the court instructed the jury on the State's burden of proof and the specific
    application of self-defense.
    Sinclair argues the district court erred by omitting the most important part of the
    affirmative defense instruction—the State's burden of proof—though it notes that
    14
    information could have been gleaned from other instructions. The State, relying on State
    v. Buck-Schrag, 
    312 Kan. 540
    , 
    477 P.3d 1013
     (2020), asserts the instructions as a whole
    accurately stated the law.
    The same argument—the omission of the State's burden of proof in an affirmative
    defense instruction—was raised in Buck-Schrag. 312 Kan. at 551. There, our Supreme
    Court found an affirmative defense instruction that omitted the State's burden of proof
    fairly and accurately stated the law. The court noted that in State v. Staten, 
    304 Kan. 957
    ,
    964-67, 
    377 P.3d 427
     (2016), the failure to give an affirmative defense instruction was
    error but not clearly erroneous in light of other instructions describing the burden of
    proof. Buck-Schrag, 312 Kan. at 551-52. But the district court in Buck-Schrag's case gave
    an affirmative defense instruction and separately described the State's burden of proof.
    312 Kan. at 552-54. Viewed collectively, the Supreme Court held these instructions
    accurately stated the law. 312 Kan. at 554.
    Just as in Buck-Schrag, the district court in our case gave a general instruction on
    affirmative defenses. It also provided instructions on the State's burden of proof and
    when self-defense applies. Taken together, these instructions accurately stated the law.
    The court did not err.
    Alleged Instances of Prosecutorial Error
    Sinclair argues the State committed prosecutorial error during closing arguments
    by diluting its burden of proof and twice misstating the applicable law. One instance—
    referring to the need to use self-defense in light of imminent deadly force, rather than
    unlawful force—did misstate the law. But the error was brief and harmless. The other
    errors—misstating the law on the affirmative defense concerning an occupied vehicle that
    was not given and diluting the State's burden of proof—were not errors.
    15
    A prosecutor generally has wide latitude to make arguments and pursue a strategy
    to obtain a conviction. But a prosecutor exceeds that wide latitude when those arguments
    or strategies infringe a defendant's constitutional right to a fair trial. When sufficiently
    egregious, an error warrants a new trial. State v. Sherman, 
    305 Kan. 88
    , 109, 
    378 P.3d 1060
     (2016).
    We review allegations of prosecutorial error in two steps. First, we must determine
    whether any error exists. 305 Kan. at 109. A prosecutor errs by misstating the applicable
    law or diluting the State's burden of proof. State v. Thomas, 
    307 Kan. 733
    , 743, 
    415 P.3d 430
     (2018); State v. Pribble, 
    304 Kan. 824
    , Syl. ¶ 6, 
    375 P.3d 966
     (2016). Whether an
    error occurred depends on the context in which the statement was made. State v. Ross,
    
    310 Kan. 216
    , 221, 
    445 P.3d 726
     (2019). Second, we assess the error's prejudice.
    Sherman, 305 Kan. at 109. An error is harmless if the State shows beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the error did not affect the verdict—that is, there is no reasonable possibility of
    prejudice—in light of the record as a whole. 305 Kan. at 109. Although various factors
    may exacerbate or mitigate an error, the primary focus centers on the error's impact on
    the verdict. 305 Kan. at 111.
    1. The Prosecutor's Alleged Misstatements of Law
    Sinclair argues the State misstated the law regarding self-defense and defense of
    an occupied vehicle. The record reveals that the prosecutor did err by briefly referring to
    self-defense as applicable to the threat of deadly force, not unlawful force, but we believe
    the brief mention was harmless. And because the district court did not instruct on defense
    of an occupied vehicle, the prosecutor either did not err or the error was harmless.
    At closing arguments, the prosecutor discussed the subjective and objectively
    reasonable belief requirements for self-defense. After reading the self-defense jury
    instruction and discussing the objective requirement, the prosecutor stated:
    16
    "So even if you believe that Ms. Sinclair honestly believed that she was so
    frightened and was under imminent attack of the threat of deadly force that she needed to
    exit her safe place and go out and confront this attacker by using a hammer, even if you
    honestly believe that, would a reasonable person in the same situation believe that? No
    and heck no." (Emphasis added.)
    The prosecutor then argued how a reasonable person would have behaved in a similar
    situation.
    And during rebuttal, the prosecutor argued that Sinclair got out of her car to attack
    Hoopes, not because she believed Hoopes would break the window. The prosecutor
    stated:
    "If the defendant was afraid that Mr. Hoopes was going to break her car window
    in, she knew she had that hammer. She could use that hammer to defend herself just as
    well inside the car if she honestly believed that Mr. Hoopes, whom she had known for
    years and that there'd never been a history of violence from, was going to enter her car."
    Instead, as observer Warren described the situation, Sinclair got out of the car, and she
    and Hoopes began yelling at each other.
    Sinclair asserts the first argument was a misstatement of the law because self-
    defense is justified to defend against another person's imminent use of unlawful force, not
    deadly force. And the second misstates defense of an occupied vehicle because that
    defense does not require someone to wait until damage has occurred; a person may act to
    prevent or terminate an unlawful entry or attack upon an occupied vehicle. In its
    response, the State argues Sinclair is equitably estopped from raising the occupied
    vehicle defense as grounds for prosecutorial error because she approved the State's
    instructions and did not request that instruction. Sinclair contends the equitable estoppel
    doctrine only applies to civil cases.
    17
    When a person engages in voluntary conduct, equitable estoppel precludes that
    person from asserting rights against another person who relied on that conduct. See
    Steckline Communications, Inc. v. Journal Broadcast Group of Kansas, Inc., 
    305 Kan. 761
    , 769, 
    388 P.3d 84
     (2017) (quoting United American State Bank v. Wild West
    Chrysler Plymouth, Inc., 
    221 Kan. 523
    , 526-27, 
    561 P.2d 792
     [1977]). The doctrine
    applies when "(1) another party induced reliance on certain facts, (2) the party asserting
    estoppel reasonably relied upon those facts, and (3) that party was prejudiced by its
    reliance." Becker v. The Bar Plan Mutual Insurance Co., 
    308 Kan. 1307
    , 1316, 
    429 P.3d 212
     (2018). The facts must arise by the other party's "acts, representations, admissions, or
    silence when it had a duty to speak." Steckline, 305 Kan. at 769 (quoting United
    American State Bank, 
    221 Kan. at 527
    ).
    Whatever the doctrine's extent, it does not apply here. Equitable estoppel concerns
    reliance on certain facts. But Sinclair's failure to raise a legal theory concerns an
    argument, not a fact. That does not mean Sinclair's argument requires reversal; it is
    difficult to imagine a scenario where a prosecutor's misstatement of a law about a legal
    theory not before the jury will prejudice a defendant. But without more thorough briefing
    on whether equitable estoppel applies to criminal cases, we will review any alleged error
    under the prosecutorial error framework.
    The prosecutor's first statement—concerning deadly force—was likely error. The
    prosecutor appears to have misspoken, referring to deadly force instead of unlawful force.
    But we find this lapse to be harmless. The jury instructions correctly stated the self-
    defense standard, the prosecutor had read the standard before making the statement, and
    the statement was fleeting.
    The second statement—discussing Sinclair's ability to defend herself inside the
    car—was not error. The prosecutor was commenting on the sincerity of Sinclair's
    testimony that she believed Hoopes would break the window. But even if it was error as
    18
    misstating the law on defense of an occupied vehicle, any error was harmless; we
    conclude there is no real possibility a jury would have acquitted Sinclair on an
    affirmative defense that was not raised at trial by the defendant.
    2. The Prosecutor's Use of the Word "Believe"
    Sinclair also asserts the State committed prosecutorial error by stating she was not
    entitled to a self-defense instruction if the jury believed Hoopes' account of events. This
    did not dilute the State's burden of proof and was not error.
    During closing arguments, the prosecutor explained that self-defense does not
    apply when someone is the initial aggressor. After describing the discrepancies between
    Sinclair's, Hoopes', and Warren's testimony, the prosecutor stated:
    "Brad Hoopes said, 'The first blow knocked the glasses off my face. I couldn't
    see. I was down on the ground trying to find my glasses.' And, ladies and gentlemen, I
    submit to you that is consistent with the physical injuries on his body, the marks on his
    back, because he was the one down on the ground, with Ms. Sinclair repeatedly striking
    him. And if you believe that is the case, she's not entitled to a self-defense instruction."
    (Emphasis added.)
    The prosecutor went on to argue that if the jury considered self-defense, Sinclair lacked a
    subjective and objectively reasonable belief that self-defense was necessary.
    Sinclair argues the use of the word "believe" diminished the State's burden of
    disproving her affirmative defense beyond a reasonable doubt. But she reads too much
    into the State's word choice. The State was not attempting to dilute its burden of proof. It
    simply highlighted the result the jury should reach if it credited Hoopes' testimony. The
    prosecutor did not err when using the word "believe" during closing arguments.
    19
    Cumulative Error
    Next, Sinclair argues the culmination of these errors deprived her of a fair trial.
    Multiple errors may require reversal if the combined prejudicial effect deprives the
    defendant of a fair trial. State v. Tully, 
    293 Kan. 176
    , 205, 
    262 P.3d 314
     (2011).
    The test for cumulative error is whether the errors substantially prejudiced the
    defendant and denied the defendant a fair trial given the totality of the circumstances. In
    making the assessment, we must examine the errors in context, consider how the district
    court addressed the errors, review the nature and number of errors and whether they are
    connected, and weigh strength of the evidence. State v. Thomas, 
    311 Kan. 905
    , 914, 
    468 P.3d 323
     (2020).
    If any of the errors being aggregated are constitutional, a constitutional harmless
    error test applies, and the party benefitting from the errors must establish beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the cumulative effect of the errors did not affect the outcome. Tully,
    293 Kan. at 205. Where, as here, the State benefitted from the errors, it has the burden of
    establishing the errors were harmless. State v. Akins, 
    298 Kan. 592
    , 600, 
    315 P.3d 868
    (2014).
    Here, we consider the district court's error in jury instruction No. 9 on the elements
    of aggravated battery under the State's second theory, and the prosecutor's erroneous
    closing remark by briefly referring to the self-defense requirement as deadly force instead
    of unlawful force. And the court may have erred by not instructing on defense of an
    occupied vehicle.
    When heightened review for constitutional error applies to one of the
    deficiencies—as it does for the prosecutor's misstatement of the of the law in closing
    argument—that standard governs the cumulative error analysis. As we have noted, the
    20
    State has to convince us beyond a reasonable doubt that the errors did not affect the
    outcome of the trial. State v. Ward, 
    292 Kan. 541
    , 569-70, 
    256 P.3d 801
     (2011).
    After careful consideration we have concluded that these errors did not deprive
    Sinclair of a fair trial. The prosecutor's misstatement of the law in closing argument was
    ultimately harmless; it was both brief and preceded by a correct statement of the law.
    Likewise, the jury instructions on self-defense accurately informed the jury on the legal
    standards it was to apply to the evidence. Evidence indicates Sinclair acted in a rude,
    insulting, or angry manner when hitting Hoopes with a hammer. She likely would not
    have prevailed had a defense of an occupied vehicle instruction been given because her
    force was disproportionate to Hoopes' threat. And these errors were discrete; no error
    compounded another error. In short, we are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt that the
    errors cited by Sinclair did not deprive her of a fair trial. Thus, cumulative error does not
    apply in this case.
    Section 5 of the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights and Criminal History
    Finally, Sinclair challenges the constitutionality of the revised Kansas Sentencing
    Guidelines Act, arguing the failure to submit a prior conviction to a jury violates section
    5 of the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights. But the Act is not unconstitutional under
    section 5, and the court did not err by using Sinclair's prior conviction to determine her
    sentence.
    In State v. Albano, 
    313 Kan. 638
    , 657, 
    487 P.3d 750
     (2021), our Supreme Court
    concluded section 5 does not require prior convictions to be submitted and proven to a
    jury when used to determine a sentence. Rather, determining and imposing a criminal
    sentence falls squarely within the ambit of the trial court judge. 313 Kan. at 657. Here,
    the State was not required to prove Sinclair's prior convictions to a jury. The Kansas
    21
    Sentencing Guidelines do not violate section 5, and the court acted properly when
    considering Sinclair's prior conviction to determine her sentence.
    Affirmed.
    ***
    ATCHESON, J., concurring: Although the majority correctly concludes the Douglas
    County District Court erred by omitting an element of aggravated battery when it
    instructed the jury on what the State had to prove to convict Defendant Patricia E.
    Sinclair, I am not especially enticed by the reasoning behind that conclusion. The
    majority, likewise, undervalues the fundamental harm that sort of error imposes on
    criminal defendants and underplays the especially rigorous analysis required to declare
    the resulting constitutional deprivation harmless. Properly applied, the test for
    harmlessness when a district court fails to instruct a jury on every element of a charged
    crime, nonetheless, does not require the reversal of Sinclair's conviction in light of the
    trial evidence. The other points Sinclair has raised on appeal do not undermine the jury's
    guilty verdict. I concur in the result and, therefore, would affirm Sinclair's conviction and
    sentence. I offer some comments explaining my path to our shared conclusion.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL PROGRESSION
    The trial evidence showed that Sinclair had apparently begun living in her car and
    frequently parked it near the house from which she had been evicted. Sinclair's behavior
    rankled at least some of the people who resided in the Lawrence neighborhood. After
    drinking more than he probably should have one evening, Brad Hoopes walked from his
    house to Sinclair's car and began pounding on the passenger's side window as Sinclair
    apparently dozed in the driver's seat. Sinclair got out of the car. She and Hoopes came
    face-to-face at the rear of the car. A neighbor heard them yelling but couldn't make out
    22
    what they were saying. She saw Sinclair raise and lower her arm and Hoopes fall to the
    pavement. The woman believed Sinclair had something in her hand but could not tell
    what.
    Sinclair was about 70 years old, slight of build—considerably smaller than
    Hoopes—and afflicted with various physical ailments. She was also likely mentally
    unstable, although the record isn't entirely clear about the nature of her instability.
    Sinclair asserted Hoopes knocked her to the ground. But her account doesn't square with
    what the neighbor saw and reported to the police. There is no real dispute that Sinclair
    struck Hoopes with a hammer as they stood behind her car. The initial blow knocked
    Hoopes's glasses off. And he went to the pavement to find them. Sinclair then hit him in
    the back several times with the hammer. She returned to her car and locked the doors.
    Lawrence police officers arrived fairly quickly and obtained recorded statements
    from Hoopes and Sinclair. Hoopes gave a rambling account punctuated with slurred
    words and occasionally fragmented expressions. He told the police the residents had been
    trying to get Sinclair to go elsewhere and he wanted to get her arrested. For her part,
    Sinclair was obstreperous and less than fully cooperative with the police. In speaking to
    the police, she was loud and angry and offered bellicose regrets she had not inflicted
    more serious injuries on Hoopes or killed him. But she also told the police she did not hit
    Hoopes with a hammer. A police officer found a hammer on the driver's side floor of
    Sinclair's car. The State offered the hammer as a trial exhibit. From a photograph in the
    record on appeal, it appears to be a standard claw hammer, consistent with Hoopes'
    description.
    The State charged Sinclair with one count of aggravated battery, a severity level 7
    person felony violation of K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C), on the alternative
    grounds set out in that subsection. The statute, in pertinent part, defines the severity level
    7 forms of the crime this way:
    23
    "(b) Aggravated battery is:
    "(1)(A) [omitted];
    "(B) knowingly causing bodily harm to another person with a deadly weapon, or
    in any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted; or
    "(C) knowingly causing physical contact with another person when done in a
    rude, insulting or angry manner with a deadly weapon, or in any manner whereby great
    bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be inflicted." K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b).
    Depending on the criminal acts and the defendant's intent, aggravated battery can be a
    severity level 4, 5, 7, or 8 offense, with commensurately varied punishments under the
    sentencing guidelines.
    Sinclair testified in her defense at trial. She told the jurors she could not recall
    striking Hoopes with the hammer but did not deny having done so. Sinclair testified the
    banging on the car window frightened her and, as she tried to escape, she and Hoopes met
    at the rear of the vehicle. She and the prosecutor fenced on cross-examination over
    whether she was angry with Hoopes when they came face-to-face. Sinclair characterized
    herself as "terrorized" rather than angry. From opening statement to closing argument,
    Sinclair's lawyer presented the case to the jurors as one of self-defense, effectively
    acknowledging Sinclair had struck Hoopes.
    Instructing juries on aggravated battery can be something of a snake pit, given the
    various ways the crime can be committed and the layers of lesser included offenses that
    may be in play in a particular case. Here, the district court ventured into the snake pit to
    fashion an instruction for the alternative statutory bases for the charge against Sinclair—
    an exercise that required parsing the wording of K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C).
    The district court relied on the then current version of PIK Crim. 4th 54.310 that
    described one way of committing aggravated battery under K.S.A. 2016 Supp. 21-
    5413(b)(1)(C) as a defendant's physical contact with the victim using a deadly weapon
    24
    when done in a rude, insulting, or angry manner and described the other way as
    defendant's physical contact with the victim in any manner whereby great bodily harm,
    disfigurement or death can be inflicted. So, as set out in the majority opinion, the
    instruction the district court provided the jury looked like this:
    "Instruction No. 9
    "The defendant is charged with the crime of aggravated battery. The defendant
    pleads not guilty.
    "To establish this charge, each of the following claims must be proved:
    "1. That the defendant knowingly caused physical contact to Bradford J. Hoopes
    in a rude, insulting or angry manner with a deadly weapon, a hammer, and
    "2. That this act occurred on or about the 20th day of March, 2017, in Douglas
    County, Kansas.
    "OR
    "1. The defendant knowingly caused physical contact with Bradford J. Hoopes in
    any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can be
    inflicted.
    "2. This act occurred on or about the 20th day of March, 2017, in Douglas
    County, Kansas.
    "A 'deadly weapon' is an instrument which, from the manner in which it is used,
    is calculated or likely to produce death or serious bodily injury."
    Neither the prosecutor nor Sinclair's lawyer objected to the instruction as given. The
    district court also instructed the jurors on the law governing self-defense, and Sinclair
    does not complain about those instructions. The jurors returned a general verdict
    convicting Sinclair of aggravated battery, so we have no way of knowing which
    alternative outlined in the elements instruction they relied on.
    25
    LEGAL ANALYSIS
    Although Sinclair raises several issues on appeal, I focus on her challenge to the
    jury instruction on the elements of aggravated battery. This claim has two components.
    First, did the instruction erroneously omit a required element in the second described
    form of aggravated battery? And, if so, did the omission sufficiently compromise
    Sinclair's constitutional right to a fair trial to require reversal of the guilty verdict? I
    address those questions and then comment briefly on other points on appeal.
    Instruction was Erroneous
    I agree with my colleagues that the aggravated battery instruction should have
    required the jury to find that Sinclair's physical contact with Hoopes was done in a rude,
    insulting, or angry manner under each of the alternative charges and not just under the
    one entailing the use of a deadly weapon. But I find the reasons they advance for their
    conclusion here, reciting those offered in State v. Green, 
    55 Kan. App. 2d 595
    , 606-09,
    
    419 P.3d 83
     (2018), to be largely unconvincing.
    Rather, I am principally persuaded the instruction was erroneous based on a
    comparison of the statutory language criminalizing similar, though identifiably different,
    conduct in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(B) and K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-
    5413(b)(1)(C). The Legislature classified the conduct proscribed in each subsection as
    severity level 7 crimes. That's significant here because crimes grouped in the same level
    are statutorily and, thus, legislatively "considered to be relatively equal in severity."
    K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-6807(a). As I have said, severity level, along with a particular
    defendant's criminal history, corresponds directly to the presumptive punishment fixed in
    the sentencing guidelines. In a very real sense, then, the severity levels assigned crimes
    reflect a legislative determination of their comparative moral and legal blameworthiness
    or, in a word, wickedness.
    26
    So K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(B) criminalizes causing bodily harm to a
    person with a deadly weapon or in a manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement,
    or death could result. It does not require any sort of rude, insulting, or angry behavior.
    Conversely, K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C) criminalizes physical contact in the
    same way—with a deadly weapon or in a manner whereby great bodily harm,
    disfigurement, or death could result. Causing mere physical contact with a person
    necessarily should be considered less blameworthy or wicked than inflicting bodily harm
    on him or her. For the crimes outlined in those two subsections to be of comparable
    severity, then, the physical contact proscribed in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C)
    must be accompanied by rude, insulting, or angry behavior whether accomplished with a
    deadly weapon or in a manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement, or death might
    result. Otherwise, causing physical contact with or bodily injury to a person would be
    equally blameworthy, so long as each was done in a manner whereby great bodily harm,
    disfigurement, or death might result. That outcome is facially and logically difficult to
    justify standing alone and becomes much less tenable when the same cannot be said of
    physical contact and bodily injury involving the use of a deadly weapon. The language in
    K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C) obviously requires physical contact with a deadly
    weapon to be done in a rude, insulting, or angry manner to be treated as an aggravated
    battery, while K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(B) does not put the same condition on
    bodily harm done with a deadly weapon. The added condition also must apply to the
    other physical contact criminalized in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C), maintaining
    the parity in blameworthiness and presumptive punishment.
    What we have in K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C), then, is a statute that in
    part criminalizes "physical contact with another person when done in a rude, insulting or
    angry manner. . . in any manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement or death can
    be inflicted." The phrasing may itself be an aggravated battery of the English language.
    Statutes, however, need not be mellifluous or idiomatic and quite often are neither; they
    27
    have to be comprehensible. And K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5413(b)(1)(C) meets that
    standard. It is neither vague nor ambiguous.[*]
    [*] A jury instruction setting out that element would not need to replicate the
    somewhat disjointed expression in the statute. Instructions must accurately state the law,
    but they need not do so by borrowing verbatim language from statutes or judicial
    opinions. Those sources often will be poor substitutes for plain English lay jurors may
    find significantly more informative and digestible. See State v. Weaver, 
    198 Wash. 2d 459
    , 466, 
    496 P.3d 1183
     (2021) (standard for clarity in jury instruction higher than for
    statute); United States v. Delaney, 
    717 F.3d 553
    , 555-56 (7th Cir. 2013) (use of "abstract
    and archaic" statutory language in jury instructions "must be confusing"); State v.
    Hutchens, No. 119,661, 
    2020 WL 1329181
    , at *17-18 (Kan. App.) (Atcheson, J.,
    concurring in part and dissenting in part) (risk in crafting jury instructions with language
    lifted directly from judicial opinions), rev. denied 
    312 Kan. 897
     (2020). Jurors could be
    informed they would have to find a defendant "knowingly caused physical contact with
    [the alleged victim] in a rude, insulting, or angry manner whereby great bodily harm,
    disfigurement, or death could be inflicted." The language eliminates the clunky and
    largely redundant phrase "in any manner," while retaining the import of the statutory
    element.
    Here, the jurors were never instructed they had to find beyond a reasonable doubt
    (or at all, for that matter) that Sinclair acted rudely, insultingly, or angrily to convict her
    of aggravated battery for menacing Hoopes in a manner whereby she could have inflicted
    great bodily harm or disfigurement or killed him. As far as we know and as we must
    presume from this record, they did just that when they found Sinclair guilty, since the
    uncertainty of a general verdict in a criminal case falls on the State when it comes to the
    legal sufficiency of the jury's determination. See Yates v. United States, 
    354 U.S. 298
    ,
    312, 
    77 S. Ct. 1064
    , 
    1 L. Ed. 2d 1356
     (1957) (verdict should be set aside "where the
    verdict is supportable on one ground, but not on another, and it is impossible to tell which
    ground the jury selected"); State v. Skelton, 
    247 Kan. 34
    , 50, 
    795 P.2d 349
     (1990). The
    jury instruction was legally inappropriate and, thus, erroneous because it omitted an
    element of one of the alternative aggravated battery charges submitted to the jurors. See
    State v. Crum, 
    286 Kan. 145
    , Syl. ¶ 5, 
    184 P.3d 222
     (2008) (upon defendant's not guilty
    plea, prosecution has burden to prove each element of charged crime beyond reasonable
    28
    doubt); cf. State v. Wilkerson, 
    278 Kan. 147
    , 158, 
    91 P.3d 1181
     (2004) (Although several
    of the jury instructions could have been "improved," the instructions, taken as a whole,
    correctly state the law and, thus, did not prejudice the defendant.).
    Error Implicated Sinclair's Constitutional Rights
    The omission of an element of the charged crime from an instruction and, thus,
    from the jurors' consideration compromises a defendant's fundamental rights in several
    related ways. First, the error degrades the United States Constitution's Sixth Amendment
    right to jury trial, since the jurors cannot consider what they have never been told to
    consider. Cognate constitutional rights to a unanimous verdict and proof of guilt beyond a
    reasonable doubt also necessarily go by the wayside. Ramos v. Louisiana, 590 U.S. ___,
    
    140 S. Ct. 1390
    , 1397, 
    206 L. Ed. 2d 583
     (2020) (Sixth Amendment right to unanimous
    jury verdict in criminal cases incorporated through Due Process Clause of Fourteenth
    Amendment to United States Constitution and, therefore, applicable, to State
    prosecutions); In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364, 
    90 S. Ct. 1068
    , 
    25 L. Ed. 2d 368
     (1970)
    (constitutional due process requires government to prove beyond a reasonable doubt
    every fact necessary to convict defendant). In short, many of a criminal defendant's
    essential protections against wrongful conviction are left asunder when a district court
    omits an element of a charged crime from the jury instructions.
    For that reason, the United States Supreme Court has recognized the error to be
    sufficiently pernicious to trigger an enhanced review for constitutional harmlessness.
    Neder v. United States, 
    527 U.S. 1
    , 17, 
    119 S. Ct. 1827
    , 
    144 L. Ed. 2d 35
     (1999). To
    assess the adverse impact when a jury has not been presented with an element of the
    charged crime, the reviewing court should apply the test for constitutional error drawn
    from Chapman v. California, 
    386 U.S. 18
    , 24, 
    87 S. Ct. 824
    , 
    17 L. Ed. 2d 705
     (1967),
    and, therefore, must conclude "'beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained of
    did not contribute to the verdict obtained.'" Neder, 
    527 U.S. at 15
     (quoting Chapman, 386
    29
    U.S. at 24). In doing so, the court has to find the omitted element was "uncontested and
    supported by overwhelming evidence" during the trial to declare the error constitutionally
    harmless. 
    527 U.S. at 17
    .
    The Kansas Supreme Court embraced and applied the Neder test in State v.
    Daniels, 278 Kan 53, 62-63, 
    91 P.3d 1147
     (2004), and again in State v. Richardson, 
    290 Kan. 176
    , 182-83, 
    224 P.3d 553
     (2010). In those cases, the court relied on the rule in
    Neder to inform its review of the challenged elements instructions under the clearly
    erroneous standard because the defendants failed to lodge trial objections. Richardson,
    290 Kan. at 178; Daniels, 
    278 Kan. at 57
    . The stringent requirements outlined in Neder
    for harmless constitutional error in the face of an element omitted from a jury instruction,
    therefore, govern here.
    In a precursor to Neder, the United States Supreme Court held that because the
    defendant failed to object at trial to the omission of an element from the jury instruction
    on a perjury charge, a plain or clear error standard applied. Johnson v. United States, 
    520 U.S. 461
    , 470, 
    117 S. Ct. 1544
    , 
    137 L. Ed. 2d 718
     (1997). The Court found the error to be
    plain but harmless nonetheless, precisely because the evidence bearing on the omitted
    element was "'overwhelming'" and "essentially uncontroverted at trial." 
    520 U.S. at 470
    .
    In Neder, the Court relied on Johnson to support a finding of harmlessness there, despite
    the defendant's objection to the jury instruction, and ultimately applied a comparable test
    in arriving at that conclusion. 
    527 U.S. at 9-10
    . In turn, in Daniels, the Kansas Supreme
    Court specifically incorporated Neder's reliance on Johnson to outline the proper analysis
    of an omitted element claim when the defendant had not objected to the deficient
    instruction at trial. Daniels, 
    278 Kan. at 61
    .
    Without acknowledging the procedural posture of Richardson and Daniels, the
    court has since suggested the Neder test should be "relaxed" under the clear error
    standard in K.S.A. 22-3414(3) when a defendant has not objected to the omitted element.
    30
    State v. Jarmon, 
    308 Kan. 241
    , 244, 
    419 P.3d 591
     (2018). But the Jarmon court applied
    something closely resembling the Neder test despite the lack of the defendant's trial
    objection. 308 Kan. at 245-46 (finding no clear error because evidence about the omitted
    element of a burglary charge—the elements of theft as the underlying crime the
    defendant intended to commit upon entering the building—was "overwhelming and was
    never directly contested"). Although Jarmon did not mention Johnson, it functionally
    used the same test for harmlessness the Court fashioned in Johnson under a plain or clear
    error standard and then transplanted to Neder.
    Majority Fails to Robustly Apply Correct Test for Harmless Error
    The majority pronounces a pallid facsimile of the required harmless error test to
    conclude the omitted element did not compromise Sinclair's constitutional rights bound
    up in a fundamentally fair trial. While ultimately coming to the same conclusion, I offer a
    detailed description of how I arrive there and, I suppose, a more rigorous assessment of
    the rights.
    Applying the proper harmless error analysis—the Neder test—to the trial record, a
    reviewing court could not resolutely conclude the evidence bearing on whether Sinclair
    struck Hoopes in a rude, insulting, or angry manner was both uncontested and
    overwhelming as to each of those conditions. But had the jurors been instructed on that
    element with respect to the alternative aggravated battery charge, they properly could
    have relied on any one of the three to convict Sinclair. So if the trial evidence satisfied
    the Neder test as to one of them, then Sinclair suffered no legal prejudice.
    The record shows the element was contested and subject to conflicting evidence
    on whether Sinclair was angry. In closing argument, the prosecutor told the jurors they
    could conclude Sinclair was angry when she hit Hoopes with the hammer and they ought
    to rely on her demeanor when she spoke to the police immediately after the incident in
    31
    reaching their conclusion. Conversely, Sinclair's lawyer emphasized to the jurors that
    Sinclair acted reasonably and in self-defense to ward off Hoopes.
    While cross-examining Sinclair, the prosecutor sought to develop evidentiary
    ammunition for that aspect of her closing argument. The prosecutor asked Sinclair if she
    was angry when she talked to the police. Sinclair agreed she was angry then because she
    "was a victim and [was] being taken away." In response to another question, Sinclair
    described herself as "terrorized" when Hoopes banged on her car window and as acting
    "to defend myself." Later in the cross-examination, the prosecutor asked Sinclair to agree,
    "You really weren't afraid of Mr. Hoopes; you were angry with him." But Sinclair
    demurred and replied, "I was afraid of Mr. Hoopes." The questioning of Sinclair coupled
    with the prosecutor's closing argument amply showed the issue of her demeanor—
    specifically whether she acted angrily when she engaged with Hoopes—was contested
    and subject to disputed evidence.
    But the same may not be said of whether Sinclair acted rudely when she struck
    Hoopes with the hammer. Neither Sinclair's lawyer nor the prosecutor argued to the
    jurors about whether Sinclair acted rudely. And they did not question Sinclair or the other
    witnesses about the rudeness. Still, the trial evidence that Sinclair used the hammer on
    Hoopes was for all intents and purposes uncontroverted. Hoopes testified she did, and he
    had bruises on his back and an abrasion on his nose corresponding to the blows he
    described. The neighbor's observations from her porch were consistent with Sinclair
    hitting Hoopes with a hammer while the two were standing at the rear of the car.
    Although Sinclair denied hitting Hoopes when she spoke to the police, she also made
    contradictory declarations to them about wishing she had inflicted greater harm on him.
    At trial, Sinclair never denied hitting Hoopes with the hammer and simply told the jurors
    she could not remember if she had. Moreover, Sinclair's lawyer tried the case on a self-
    defense theory that necessarily rested on a legal justification for the hammer blows rather
    than a factual denial of them.
    32
    The district court thoroughly instructed the jurors on self-defense—Sinclair does
    not suggest otherwise. The jurors found insufficient evidence of self-defense to raise a
    reasonable doubt about Sinclair's guilt. Self-defense amounts to a privilege or
    justification for conduct, typically the use of force, that otherwise would be unlawful and
    likely criminal. See Estate of Randolph v. City of Wichita, 
    57 Kan. App. 2d 686
    , 696, 
    459 P.3d 802
     (2020). The jury's collective rejection of Sinclair's assertion of self-defense
    necessarily means Sinclair's contact with Hoopes was unprivileged or, in other words,
    without legal justification. And that conclusion is unaffected by the omitted element of
    the aggravated battery charge. We, therefore, may consider the legal and factual
    ramifications of the jury's determination.
    In turn, the undisputed facts coupled with the jury's rejection of Sinclair's claim of
    self-defense establish her conduct in striking Hoopes with the hammer necessarily would
    have been rude. By common definition, "rude" means "discourteous" or "unmannerly."
    Webster's New World Dictionary College Dictionary 1270 (5th ed. 2016) (defining
    "rude"). That meaning applies here. See State v. Baumgarner, 
    59 Kan. App. 2d 330
    , 334-
    35, 
    481 P.3d 170
     (2021) (words in statute generally should be given their ordinary
    meaning). In tandem, the undisputed evidence and the jury's determination on self-
    defense show that Sinclair came face-to-face with Hoopes at the rear of her car and
    without any legal justification or excuse hit him once in the face with a hammer and at
    least several more times in the back. Such unprivileged physical contact is definitionally
    rude. During the trial, that point was never contested (in contrast to whether Sinclair
    acted angrily).
    Consistent with Neder, Richardson, and Daniels, those circumstances also show
    Sinclair suffered no prejudicial constitutional harm when the jurors were not instructed
    on the rude, insulting, or angry element of aggravated battery in the alternative charge
    based on physical contact in a manner whereby great bodily harm, disfigurement, or
    death might be inflicted. Filtered through the jury's unassailable rejection of self-defense
    33
    as creating even a reasonable doubt about Sinclair's legal justification for striking
    Hoopes, the undisputed and overwhelming trial evidence—establishing that Sinclair did,
    in fact, hit Hoopes with a hammer—depicted rude conduct. So as to what happened
    between Sinclair and Hoopes at the rear of her car, the element omitted from the jury
    instruction amounted to harmless error notwithstanding the interlocking constitutional
    rights implicated by the omission.
    Sinclair's Remaining Issues on Appeal
    ⦁ For the first time on appeal, Sinclair complains the district court should have
    instructed the jury on the privileged use of force to prevent an "attack upon" or "unlawful
    entry" into an occupied vehicle under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5223. Because Sinclair did
    not request the instruction at trial, we review for clear error. The instruction would not
    appear to be factually appropriate. When Sinclair struck Hoopes, her car was unoccupied.
    She was the only person who was in the car when Hoopes pounded on the window, and
    she got out before they confronted each other. Had Sinclair rolled down the window and
    swung the hammer at Hoopes while she remained in the car, the instruction presumably
    would have been appropriate.
    ⦁ Again, for the first time on appeal, Sinclair challenges the instructions the district
    court used to inform the jurors how they should consider self-defense as an affirmative
    defense to the aggravated battery charge. She contends the then-current pattern
    instructions the district court used failed to fully explain that self-defense evidence
    merely had to raise a reasonable doubt about her guilt to require an acquittal. The Kansas
    Supreme Court foreclosed this argument in State v. Buck-Schrag, 
    312 Kan. 540
    , 553-54,
    
    477 P.3d 1013
     (2020), especially when we review for clear error.
    I have been critical of how the pattern instructions addressed affirmative defenses
    and in particular self-defense in aggravated battery cases. They failed to clearly tell the
    34
    jurors that if they entertained a reasonable doubt about guilt based on the defense, they
    should return a not guilty verdict. See State v. Staten, No. 108,305, 
    2015 WL 423644
    , at
    *23-24 (Kan. App. 2015) (unpublished opinion) (Atcheson, J., concurring), aff'd 
    304 Kan. 957
    , 
    377 P.3d 427
     (2016). But the Kansas Judicial Council committee charged with
    drafting the pattern jury instructions for criminal trials recently revised PIK Crim. 4th
    51.050, the general instruction on affirmative defenses, to add this sentence: "The State
    has the burden to disprove this defense beyond a reasonable doubt." PIK Crim. 4th
    51.050 (2020 Supp.). The change accurately reflects the statutory treatment of affirmative
    defenses in criminal cases under K.S.A. 2020 Supp. 21-5108(c) and represents a
    laudatory giant step toward fully and fairly informing jurors on how to assess those
    defenses. See Buck-Schrag, 312 Kan. at 553 (suggesting jury instruction on affirmative
    defenses "[a]rguably . . . could have been clearer" with such language).
    ⦁ Sinclair has also asserted prosecutorial error in closing argument, sought reversal
    based on cumulative trial error, and challenged how her criminal history has been
    determined. I agree with my colleagues that Sinclair has failed to establish any basis for
    relief on those grounds and join in the majority opinion's disposition of them.
    35