Lepage v. People

2014 CO 13, 320 P.3d 348, 2014 WL 689391
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 24, 2014
DocketSupreme Court Case No. 11SC235
StatusPublished
Cited by535 cases

This text of 2014 CO 13 (Lepage 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
Lepage v. People, 2014 CO 13, 320 P.3d 348, 2014 WL 689391 (Colo. 2014).

Opinion

JUSTICE BOATRIGHT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

1 1 In this appeal, we consider whether the court of appeals correctly applied the presumption of regularity when it determined that the jury did not receive the correct verdict forms. The transcript here shows that the trial judge read the jury the correct elemental instructions and verdict forms, from which it can be inferred that the jury received the correct verdict forms. When the record was certified on appeal, however, one of the verdict forms was stapled to a refused jury instruction that was not given to the jury, raising the inference that the jury may not have received the correct verdict forms. Therefore, inconsistent inferences can be drawn from the record.

1 2 We hold that where the trial court read the correct elemental instructions and verdict form in question to the jury, LePage has not overcome the presumption of regularity by pointing to the order and stapling of the verdict forms in the record and ambiguous statements in the trial transcript. Thus, Le-Page failed to show that the jury did not receive the correct verdict forms. While the court of appeals affirmed the trial court's judgment because it held that failure to give the jury the verdict form for the lesser included offense is not reversible error, we affirm the trial court's judgment because Le-Page did not show that the trial court erred. Therefore, we affirm the court of appeals on other grounds and remand the case to that court to be returned to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

[350]*350I. Facts and Proceedings Below

T3 Petitioner Tyler N. LePage was serving a life sentence at a correctional facility when he was charged with second degree assault for injuring two correctional officers. His case proceeded to a jury trial.

"[ 4 During a conference regarding the jury instructions and verdict forms, LePage asked the trial court to instruct the jury about the lesser included offense of obstruction of a peace officer and third degree assault. The trial judge refused the third degree assault instruction but agreed to instruct the jury about the lesser included offense 1 of obstruction of a peace officer in addition to second degree assault. As the judge compiled the jury instructions, the prosecutor offered to "run downstairs and get a verdict form for the obstruction." The judge refused the offer, stating: "I'm not going to do the verdict forms and things. They don't need to have those-they will take them with them to the jury room, but they don't need them while I read through them." Thus, it appears that the judge did not compile the verdict forms at the same time as he compiled the jury instructions.

15 After compiling the jury instructions, the judge brought the jurors into the courtroom and instructed them. Initially, prior to closing arguments, the judge read the packet of jury instructions to the jury, which included the elemental instructions for second degree assault and the lesser included offense of obstruction of a peace officer. Then, following closing arguments, the judge read the verdict forms for second degree assault and obstruction of a peace officer to the jury. As to the verdict form for obstruction of a peace officer, the judge read the verdict form verbatim:

Jury Verdict Count,. 8. Obstruction of a peace officer. Roman Numeral I. We, the jury, find the defendant, Tyler N. LePage, not guilty of Count 8, obstruction of a peace officer. Roman Number [sic] IL We, the jury, find the defendant, Tyler N. LePage, guilty of Count 3, obstruction of a peace officer.

The judge also instructed the jury foreperson to sign the verdict form that reflects the jury's verdict and to return the other form unmarked. Neither party objected to the manner in which the judge instructed the jury.

T6 After the judge gave the instructions, he swore in the bailiff and stated, "I'll go ahead and give you the original verdicts and the exhibits." The bailiff then escorted the jury to the jury room where the jury began deliberating.

T 7 During its deliberations, the jury asked the court only one question: whether it could view the video of the alleged assault again. At no point did the jury inquire about the jury instructions or verdiet forms or otherwise indicate any confusion regarding the verdict forms.

[ 8 When the jury informed the bailiff that it had reached a verdict, the judge brought the jury back into the courtroom and read aloud the jury's verdiet,. The jury had found LePage guilty of second degree assault, and the foreperson had signed the second degree assault verdict form and left the other verdict form blank. On LePage's request, the court polled the jury by asking each juror whether s/he voted for the guilty verdict. Each juror affirmatively stated that s/he had voted for the guilty verdict for the second degree assault charge. The jury made no other comments. Again, neither party questioned whether the jury received the correct verdict forms.

19 LePage appealed. For the appeal, a clerk compiled and certified the record. The certified record contains an index that the clerk of the court created, followed by the original documents. The relevant portion of the record contains four entries. The index labels for these entries, in the order that they appear in the index, are:

e Jury Instructions-Defendants [sic] Proposed -Refused
e Jury Instructions Used
[351]*351e Jury Verdict Count Two, Assault in the Second Degree-Guilty 2
e Jury Verdiet Count Three, Assault in the Third Degree-Unsigned

The clerk filed one or more documents under each label. Pertinent here, filed under the "Jury Instractions-Defendants [sic] Proposed-Refused" index label are two documents that are stapled together: the jury instruction for third degree assault and an unmarked jury verdict form for "Count Three, Obstruction of a Peace Officer." The verdiet form for second degree assault is filed separately and is labeled: "Jury Verdict Count Two, Assault in the Second Degree-Guilty." The verdict form for third degree assault, which the trial judge refused, is also filed in a separate section and labeled in a similar manner as the verdict form for see-ond degree assault "Jury Verdict Count Three, Assault in the Third Degree-Unsigned."

{10 The clerk transferred the certified record to the court of appeals. After reviewing the filed record, LePage argued to the court of appeals that, based on the order of the documents in the record and the fact that the verdict form for obstruction of a peace officer is stapled to the refused jury instruetion for third degree assault, the jury never received the verdict form for obstruction of a peace officer. LePage argued that this omission required reversal of his conviction.

{11 The court of appeals affirmed the judgment of conviction. People v. LePage, - P.3d , --, No. 09CA0676, 2011 WL 544019, at *1 (Colo.App. Feb. 17, 2011). The court of appeals stated that it must review the record as submitted and assume that it reflects what occurred at trial. Id. at ---, 2011 WL 544019 at *2. It placed the burden on the People to affirmatively show otherwise. Id. The court of appeals concluded, based on the certified record, that the jury did not receive the verdict form for obstruction of a peace officer. Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 CO 13, 320 P.3d 348, 2014 WL 689391, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lepage-v-people-colo-2014.