James v. People

2018 CO 72, 426 P.3d 336
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 17, 2018
DocketSupreme Court Case 16SC81
StatusPublished
Cited by518 cases

This text of 2018 CO 72 (James v. People) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James v. People, 2018 CO 72, 426 P.3d 336 (Colo. 2018).

Opinion

CHIEF JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 James sought review of the court of appeals' judgment affirming his conviction for possession of methamphetamine. Upon realizing that it had failed to discharge the alternate juror before the jury retired to deliberate, the district court recalled and dismissed the alternate; instructed the jury to continue on with deliberations uninfluenced by anything the alternate may have said or done; and denied the defense motion for dismissal or mistrial. The court of appeals concluded that the trial court's error in allowing the alternate juror to retire with the jury and *337 the juror's presence for part of the deliberations were harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and after rejecting James's other assignments of error, affirmed his conviction.

¶2 Because the evidence supporting the defendant's guilt of the lesser offense of possession, the only offense of which he was convicted, was overwhelming and was in fact never seriously challenged, the district court's failure to recall the alternate for approximately ten minutes amounted, under the facts of this case, to harmless error. The judgment of the court of appeals is therefore affirmed.

I.

¶3 Dustin James was initially charged with two counts of distribution of a controlled substance, one count of possession with intent to manufacture a controlled substance, and one count of possession with intent to distribute a controlled substance, all but the last of which were dismissed before trial. He was acquitted of the charged offense of possession with intent to distribute methamphetamine but was convicted of the lesser offense of possession. He was sentenced to three years of intensive supervised probation.

¶4 At trial, the People presented evidence to the effect that the defendant was present at a house upon which the police executed a search warrant. With regard to the lesser offense of possession, of which the defendant was actually convicted, the evidence indicated that the police also searched a car the defendant had been seen driving and found a handgun in the console and a backpack in the back seat containing the defendant's identification and twenty grams of methamphetamine. An investigator testified that the defendant told him, after being Mirandized, that the handgun and everything inside the backpack were his. The defense rested without presenting evidence and did not offer a theory of the case instruction.

¶5 Shortly after the jury retired to deliberate, the district court realized that it had not discharged the alternate and immediately called him back. In response to questioning by the court and counsel, the alternate indicated that during the approximately ten minutes he was in the jury room, he had agreed to serve as the foreperson and the jury had taken a preliminary vote to get the sense of the group. He also indicated that the jury was just beginning to discuss the elements of the charges when he was recalled by the judge.

¶6 After allowing the alternate to leave, the court also recalled the entire jury to the courtroom, explained its mistake in not stopping the alternate from retiring with the other jurors, and instructed the jurors to continue on with their deliberations, uninfluenced by anything the alternate had said or done. It then entertained and denied the defendant's motion for either dismissal or a mistrial. After accepting the jury's verdicts and determining that neither counsel wished to have the jury polled, the court itself queried each juror individually whether his or her verdict was uninfluenced by any discussion with the alternate. Each juror answered that the alternate had not influenced his or her verdict.

¶7 On direct appeal, the court of appeals affirmed, finding, as relevant to the issue before this court, that although the defendant had a constitutional right to a jury of twelve and a verdict reached in secrecy, and although those rights were implicated by the presence of the alternate, in this case the error was nevertheless harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. In reaching this conclusion, the intermediate appellate court reasoned that the district court's instruction to the jurors that they were not to be influenced by the alternate's words or actions, in conjunction with the individual statements of the jurors affirming that their verdicts were in fact not influenced by the alternate, eliminated any reasonable possibility that the error affected the verdict.

¶8 We granted the defendant's petition for a writ of certiorari on the question whether the court of appeals erred in finding the alternate's participation harmless.

II.

¶9 Some thirty-five years ago, in People v. Boulies , 690 P.2d 1253 (Colo. 1984), this court addressed, for the first and only time in a *338 criminal prosecution, the effect of the presence of an alternate juror in the jury room during deliberations. In that case, the trial court had instructed the jury that the alternate, or "thirteenth juror," would be permitted to go in and listen but not voice her opinion or vote unless a vacancy occurred among the remaining twelve jurors. Id. at 1254-55 . No objection was registered at that time or upon return of the jury's guilty verdict, but by motion for postconviction relief, pursuant to Crim. P. 35(c), the defendant later sought a new trial on the ground, among others, that an unauthorized person was present in the jury room during deliberations. Id. at 1254 . The district court agreed and ordered the defendant entitled to a new trial. Id. at 1255 .

¶10 On appeal by the People, this court found, in reliance on a state constitutional right to a twelve-person jury and existing United States Supreme Court jurisprudence concerning a defendant's entitlement to a jury verdict reached in secret, that the presence of an alternate during jury deliberations sufficiently impinged upon the defendant's constitutional right to a jury trial to create a presumption of prejudice that, if unrebutted, would require reversal. Id. at 1255-56 (citing Colo. Const. art. II, § 23 and Clark v. United States ,

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Bluebook (online)
2018 CO 72, 426 P.3d 336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-people-colo-2018.