Kay F. Glenn v. United States

420 F.2d 1323, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 120, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11398
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedJuly 23, 1969
Docket22162_1
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 420 F.2d 1323 (Kay F. Glenn v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kay F. Glenn v. United States, 420 F.2d 1323, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 120, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11398 (D.C. Cir. 1969).

Opinion

*1324 SPOTTSWOOD W. ROBINSON, III, Circuit Judge:

Appellant was placed on trial before a jury in the District Court on a single count of housebreaking. 1 The jury, instructed on the elements of housebreaking and of unlawful entry 2 as a lesser included offense, 3 rejected appellant’s insanity defense, returned a one-word verdict of “guilty,” and this single word each of the jurors repeated when polled. Though the verdict thus failed to specify which of the two offenses this finding related to or whether it related to both, no one sought clarification from the jury before its discharge.

The trial judge entered a judgment convicting appellant of housebreaking and sentenced appellant to imprisonment for a term of from three to nine years. That sentence was within limits permissible for conviction of housebreaking but was far in excess of the statutory maximum for unlawful entry. 4 5 Appellant now argues that there was ambiguity in the verdict which rendered it fatally defective,® and with this position we agree.

I

The Constitution provides that “The Trial of all [federal] Crimes, * * * ” unless waived, “shall be by Jury.” 6 To the extent that the evidence is legally sufficient to support conviction, the jury, and the jury alone, ascertains both whether the defendant is guilty and, if so, the crime or crimes of which he is guilty. Manifestly, the judge who allows the jury to rest after finding the accused’s guilt of some unidentified offense and then proceeds to himself determine the offense of which the accused is to be held guilty invades the province of the jury. 7 Appellant’s contention, in substance, is that that is just about what happened in this case.

The Government demurs, arguing that the trial judge, in passing the judgment and sentence under attack, accurately appraised the intent of the jury. To this end, it urges upon us “a strong presumption” that under the circumstances obtaining when the verdict was returned 8 “appellant was found guilty as charged.” 9 Our initial difficulty with this approach is that any sort of presumption as to what an unspecific verdict determines, save in the clearest of cases, is apt to run counter to the well embedded and well justified judicial disinclination to second-guess juries — a disinclination which we ourselves have shared. 10 The courts, rather, have insisted upon definiteness as an indispensable quality of a valid verdict, and have adhered to the rule that a verdict must be set aside if its meaning is unalterably *1325 ambiguous. 11 Our concern heightens beyond the danger point when we realize that the Government would rest appellant’s fate on a presumed premise that in total circumstantial context does not follow as a matter of reasonable certainty. For whatever the efficacy of such a presumption in other situations— areas in which we need not now tread— a careful review of the record before us convinces us that it cannot safely be permitted operation here.

II

The presumption the Government espouses interprets the jury’s general verdict of guilty by ultimate reference back to the indictment alone. This may be an acceptable course where the jury returns a verdict of “guilty as charged,” 12 or merely a verdict of “guilty” where neither the indictment nor the court’s charge to the jury mentions more than one crime, or more than one degree of a single crime. 13 In the case at bar, however, there is nothing to reliably indicate that the jury’s verdict was intended to refer to the indictment rather than to the judge’s charge, which defined for the jury two different offenses. 14 And we perceive no other reason why the indictment, as opposed to the charge, should dictate the reading of the verdict.

In like fashion, scrutiny of the verdict from the vantage point of the charge leads inevitably to speculation. The charge set forth the elements both of housebreaking and unlawful entry but, except for characterizing the latter as “a lesser included offense” of the former — -a term of art the charge left unexplained- — the jury received no guidance as to their interrelationship. The jury was not told that it should consider the lesser offense only if it first concluded that appellant was not guilty of the greater offense. 15 It was not told that any verdict of guilty it reached might relate to one of the two offenses but could not properly relate to both. 16 Nor was it told that on any verdict of guilty all twelve jurors had to find appellant guilty of the same offense. 17

Thus twelve people untutored in the law were left on their own as to such crucial questions as which offense to treat first, whether both had to be treated, and whether all jurors must find the elements of the same offense proven beyond a reasonable doubt. How they answered those questions is central to any attempt to define the meaning of the verdict and, of course, we know not how. And even if we knew that the jurors properly conceived their function, we must indulge in guesswork in any effort to determine the intent behind their verdict. 18 It goes without saying that *1326 that sort of conjecture is an impermissible technique in a system of jurisprudence entitling the accused “to have his guilt found by a jury directly and specifically, and not by way of possible inference.” 19 We hold that the verdict in this case was equivocal, and that the court’s conviction of housebreaking could not be founded upon it.

Ill

There remains for resolution only the question of the disposition that should now be made, a matter to which the parties have spoken. Anticipating, at oral argument, the possibility that the conviction might not stand up, we requested both sides to submit supplemental memoranda articulating their thoughts on the alternatives available in that event, 20 and this invitation both accepted. Appellant seeks the benefit of the doubt generated by the indistinct verdict by advocating a remand for re-sentencing for unlawful entry only. 21 The Government, on the other hand, urges a remand for a new trial, and in our view it has much the better of the argument.

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Bluebook (online)
420 F.2d 1323, 137 U.S. App. D.C. 120, 1969 U.S. App. LEXIS 11398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kay-f-glenn-v-united-states-cadc-1969.