Dodds v. State

997 P.2d 536, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 2000 WL 276042
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 10, 2000
DocketA-7086
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 997 P.2d 536 (Dodds v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dodds v. State, 997 P.2d 536, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 2000 WL 276042 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*538 OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Ian Dodds appeals his conviction for first-degree robbery. 1 He contends that the trial judge committed error by failing to have the jury decide whether the State had proved the corpus delicti of robbery. But Dodds did not ask for a corpus delicti instruction, so he must establish plain error to prevail on appeal. As we explain here, the facts of Dodds’s case raise no real issue of coi'pus delicti. Moreover, Alaska law provides no clear answer to the question of whether corpus delicti is to be decided by the trial judge or the jury. For these reasons, we conclude that the trial judge’s failure to instruct the jury on the issue of corpus delicti does not constitute plain error, and we therefore affirm Dodds’s conviction.

Facts of the case and the challenged jury instruction

On the night of September 6, 1997, two men broke into a Fairbanks residence and robbed the homeowners. One week later, the police questioned Ian Dodds about this crime, and Dodds confessed that he was one of the robbers.

At Dodds’s ensuing trial for first-degree robbery, the State introduced evidence of Dodds’s confession. Accordingly, Dodds’s attorney asked the trial judge to give Criminal Pattern Jury Instruction 1.24, which discusses whether a defendant’s out-of-court statement should be categorized as an admission or a confession:

A statement made by a defendant other than at the defendant’s trial may be either an admission or a confession.
An admission is a statement by a defendant which by itself is not sufficient to warrant an inference of guilt but which tends to prove guilt when considered with other evidence.
A confession is a statement by a defendant which discloses intentional participation in the criminal act for which the defendant is on trial and which, if believed, proves the defendant’s guilt of that crime.
You are the exclusive judges as to whether an admission or a confession was made by the defendant and if the statement is true in whole or in part. If you should find that such statement is entirely untrue, you must reject it. If you find that it is true in part, you may consider that part which you find to be true.
Evidence of an oral admission of the defendant ought to be viewed with caution.

Even though Dodds asked for this instruction, he now claims that the trial judge committed plain error in giving it. The error in the instruction, Dodds contends, is the way it describes a defendant’s confession.

According to the instruction, a confession is “a statement by a defendant which discloses [the defendant’s] intentional participation in the [crime charged] and ivhich, if believed, proves the defendant’s guilt of that crime.” (emphasis added) Dodds argues that this italicized language misstates the doctrine of corpus delicti because it suggests that a defendant’s confession, standing alone, may be sufficient to prove a defendant’s guilt.

The proof required by the corpus delicti 'rule

Dodds insists that, even without request, the trial judge was obliged to instruct the jury that Dodds’s confession was not sufficient to prove his guilt unless the State presented substantial independent evidence corroborating the confession. In particular, Dodds argues that the trial judge committed plain error when he neglected to tell the jury that they could not convict Dodds unless the State presented substantial independent evidence tending to establish that Dodds was, in fact, one of the robbers.

Under the doctrine of corpus de-licti, a criminal conviction can not rest on an uncorroborated confession. 2 But Dodds’s argument misapprehends the corpus delicti rule. While corpus delicti requires independent evidence that the charged crime oc *539 curred, it does not require independent evidence that the defendant participated in that crime.

Generally speaking, to prove that a • defendant has violated a criminal statute, the government must establish (1) the occurrence of the injury, loss, or other harm specified in the statute, and (2) the defendant’s culpable participation in causing this injury, loss, or harm. 3 The corpus delicti rule requires the State to introduce independent evidence of the first factor, but not the second. 4 The Alaska Supreme Court has explicitly adopted this interpretation of the rule. 5

In Dodds’s case, the first factor — the occurrence of the robbery — was amply demonstrated by the testimony of the two victims and was not seriously contested. The primary dispute at trial involved the second factor — whether Dodds participated in the robbery. This dispute raised no issue of corpus delicti.

To qualify as “plain error”, an error must be obviously prejudicial to the fairness of the proceedings. 6 Because Dodds did not dispute the occurrence of the robbery, there was no dispute concerning the existence of the corpus delicti. Therefore, even if it was error to fail to instruct the jury on this issue, the error was not manifestly prejudicial to the fairness of Dodds’s trial. 7

Whether corpus delicti is an issue for the trial judge or the jury

The corpus delicti rule is universally interpreted as requiring the government to lay an evidentiary foundation (by producing corroborating evidence) as a predicate for introducing the defendant’s confession. In its traditional form, the rule may have barred the government from introducing the confession until it first had proved the corpus delicti. 8 Nowadays, courts and commentators generally take the position that a trial judge has the discretion to vary the order of proof — allowing the government to introduce the defendant’s confession before it has introduced the additional evidence that will establish the corpus delicti, so long as the corpus delicti is proved before the government rests. 9 This is the position adopted by the *540 Alaska Supreme Court. 10

But, leaving aside the order of proof, another question remains: Is corpus delicti purely a rule specifying the evidentiary foundation that must be laid for admission of the defendant’s confession at a criminal trial? Or is corpus delicti

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Related

State v. Cardenas-Flores
Washington Supreme Court, 2017
Shayen v. State
373 P.3d 532 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2015)
Leggett v. State
320 P.3d 311 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2014)
Langevin v. State
258 P.3d 866 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 P.2d 536, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 2000 WL 276042, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dodds-v-state-alaskactapp-2000.