Ramsey v. State

723 N.E.2d 869, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 113, 2000 WL 175378
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 2000
Docket49S00-9801-CR-33
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 723 N.E.2d 869 (Ramsey v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramsey v. State, 723 N.E.2d 869, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 113, 2000 WL 175378 (Ind. 2000).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, Justice.

Defendant Fairlis Ramsey was convicted of attempted murder for shooting his estranged wife in the head. He was also adjudicated a habitual offender. He seeks to have both adjudications set aside on grounds that the jury was not properly instructed on the intent necessary to be guilty of attempted murder. While the instruction was defective, it adequately informed the jury of the law in this regard. As such, we affirm.

This Court has jurisdiction over this direct appeal because the longest single sentence exceeds fifty years. Ind. Const. art. VII, § 4; Ind. Appellate Rule 4(A)(7).

Background

When Marcia Ramsey left her husband, Defendant Fairlis Ramsey, she moved back home with her father, William Washington. On the evening of December 8, 1996, Defendant went to Mr. Washington’s home and asked to speak to Marcia Ramsey, but was told that she was not there. Eventually, Marcia’s father let Defendant into the house.

Marcia came out of her bedroom to talk to Defendant. Defendant asked Marcia when she would move back home but Marcia told him it was too soon to talk. In response, Defendant brandished a handgun, aimed it at Marcia, and told her she was coming home with him. Marcia *871 screamed for her father to come into the room and tried to run away. Defendant fired his handgun and Marcia fell to the floor pretending to have been'shot. Defendant walked over to Marcia, stood over her and fired another shot at her head. The shot grazed Marcia’s head. Defendant then left the house.

Police officers were summoned to the house and found Marcia conscious but bleeding from a gunshot wound to the top of her head. On December 10, 1996, the State charged Defendant with Attempted Murder, 1 a Class A felony, and Carrying a Handgun Without a License, 2 a Class A misdemeanor. Later, on April 14, 1997, the State filed an information charging Defendant as a habitual offender. After finding Defendant guilty of attempted murder and carrying a handgun without a license, the jury also adjudicated Defendant to be a habitual offender.

Discussion

I

Defendant contends that the trial court improperly instructed the jury on the crime of attempted murder. The trial court’s instruction was as follows:

A person attempts to commit murder when, acting with the culpability required for commission of Murder, he engages in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward commission of Murder; which is to knowingly or intentionally kill another human being. The crime of attempted murder is a Class A felony.
To convict the defendant of Attempted Murder under Count I, the State must prove each of the following elements:
1. The defendant
2. knowingly
3. with specific intent to kill
4. engaged in conduct
5. which was a substantial step toward the commission of the crime of Murder; which is to knowingly or intentionally kill another human being.
If the State fails to prove each of these elements, you should -find -the defendant not guilty.
If the State does prove each of these elements beyond a reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant guilty of the crime of Attempted Murder, a Class A Felony.

(R. at 109-10.) 3

A'

Two decades ago, we explained the importance of the defendant possessing the specific intent to kill as a necessary element of attempted murder. Zickefoose v. State, 270 Ind. 618, 622, 388 N.E.2d 607, 510 (1979). We later explained that

[t]he attempt must be to effect the proscribed result and not merely to engage in proscribed conduct. An instruction which correctly sets forth the elements of attempted murder requires an explanation that the act must have been done with the specific intent to kill.

Smith v. State, 459 N.E.2d 355, 358 (Ind.1984) (emphasis added). In 1991, we reaffirmed that attempted murder instructions must include the required mens rea of specific intent to kill. Spradlin v. State, 569 N.E.2d 948, 950 (Ind.1991) (holding *872 that to convict a defendant of attempted murder, the defendant must have intended to kill the victim at the time the defendant took a substantial step toward committing murder).

Not long ago, we observed that “[i]t is the higher sentence range for attempted murder in combination with the ambiguity involved in the proof of that crime that justifies” what has become known as the “Spradlin rule” and “distinguishes other types of attempt prosecutions that involve either stringent penalties, or ambiguity, but not both.” Richeson v. State, 704 N.E.2d 1008, 1011 (Ind.1998) (footnotes omitted). Imposition of the specific intent requirement reduces the risk of a wrongful conviction. See Abdul-Wadood v. State, 521 N.E.2d 1299, 1300 (Ind.1988) (Erroneous attempted murder instruction created a “serious risk of wrongful conviction.”).

We have recently emphasized that Spradlin claim presents the potential for fundamental error. Metcalfe v. State, 715 N.E.2d 1236, 1237 (Ind.1999) (reversing attempted murder conviction on grounds of Spradlin error despite defendant’s failure to object to the instruction at trial). See also Taylor v. State, 616 N.E.2d 748, 749 (Ind.1993), for a strong statement of this principle. 4

B

Here the first sentence of the trial court’s instruction is erroneous. It says: “A person attempts to commit murder when, acting with the culpability required for commission of Murder, he engages in conduct that constitutes a substantial step toward commission of Murder; which is to knowingly or intentionally kill another human being.” (R. at 109.) While the syntax makes the sentence difficult to follow, it indicates that a “knowing” mens rea is sufficient to establish guilt of attempted murder. This error is compounded when the court twice includes the word “knowingly” in its enumeration of the elements of the State’s burden of proof.

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Bluebook (online)
723 N.E.2d 869, 2000 Ind. LEXIS 113, 2000 WL 175378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramsey-v-state-ind-2000.