Seese v. State

955 So. 2d 1145, 2007 WL 911774
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedMarch 28, 2007
Docket4D05-3695
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 955 So. 2d 1145 (Seese v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seese v. State, 955 So. 2d 1145, 2007 WL 911774 (Fla. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

955 So.2d 1145 (2007)

Carl Ray SEESE, III, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

No. 4D05-3695.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.

March 28, 2007.
Rehearing Denied June 7, 2007.

*1146 Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Paul E. Petillo, Assistant Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.

Bill McCollum, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Georgina Jimenez-Orosa, Senior Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.

FARMER, J.

Carl and Holly dated for 6 or 7 months before she ended their relationship. He was upset about it and kept trying to see her. Holly obtained an injunction prohibiting him from having any contact with her. While he was in jail for violating the injunction, she began receiving collect telephone calls from him. She recorded 5 of his calls. Her phone records confirmed the jailhouse calls. She notified the police, who also overheard his calls and even spoke to him. The calls continued and increased — 14 one day, 18 the next, 34 another. Once he called her every 2 minutes for an extended period of time. In a period of 8 days, he made 90 calls to her. He was charged with aggravated stalking for contacting her in violation of a court order.[1]

In addition to her testimony, the phone records, and police testimony, the recorded calls were played for the jury. His trial defense was that it was all a misunderstanding, not a case of harassment or malicious stalking — it was only a broken heart. On appeal he complains of the failure to instruct the jury on an element of the crime, in spite of his failure to ask for such an instruction, and of the state's closing argument. The state suggests that while this may not have been a fatal attraction, it *1147 certainly was a fateful obsession. We affirm.

The standard jury instructions for criminal cases do not define maliciously in the approved instruction for section 784.048(4). See Fla. Std. Jury Instr. (Crim.) 8.7(b) ("To prove the crime of Aggravated Stalking, the State must prove the following two elements beyond a reasonable doubt . . . (defendant) knowingly, willfully, maliciously, and repeatedly followed or harassed (victim) and (defendant) did so in violation of . . . any [other] court imposed prohibition of conduct toward (the victim). . . ."); Standard Jury Instructions in Criminal Cases (95-1), 657 So.2d 1152, 1154 (Fla. 1995). Notably the defense did not ask for a special instruction on the meaning of the term maliciously.

In closing argument the defense contended that the state failed to prove maliciously. Counsel argued that defendant may have been:

"[d]esperate, hurt, scared, maybe even pathetic, but not malicious. Mr. Seese is begging, he sounds pathetic and he sounds desperate. But he doesn't sound malicious. He's not threatening her, not saying that he's going to hurt her. . . . He doesn't rant. . . . There's no malice in that. . . . Those phone conversations are specifically about moving forward with his life, moving on. There is no malice in Carl Seese's words. There is no malice in his voice. There is no threat to harass her."
. . .
"On those tapes . . . you don't hear any threats. He discusses with [Holly] if she's still planning on moving out of state and if she wants him to postpone the case. . . . From the tone of Mr. Seese's voice on those tapes, from the words that he is saying, there is no malice."

The state argued in closing that it met its burden of proof:

"Let's talk about maliciously. State has to prove that he acted with malice. In other words he acted with . . . bad intent, that he didn't have any good intentions, that there was . . . no good cause for what he was doing. There was no justification. Maliciously.
"Now let's talk about how we've proven that he acted maliciously. Well, for starters, calling her 90 times collect from jail . . . during the hours that he knew — because they had dated before — her schedule, times he knew she was going to be home. . . . That's malicious — calling someone's house. Ninety times is certainly malicious. There is no good intent to that. He's not acting with any justification. . . . "
"You heard the tapes. . . . He heard the desperation in her voice, as you did: `Do you understand me?' She says `stop calling here.' And he'd call right back. Somebody with good intent after someone tells them not to call them, after they know there is a court imposed prohibition against contacting that person, is that person acting with good intention? No, they're acting maliciously. They are acting with malice. Regardless of whether he was desperate or not she told him not to call. He continuously called. The judge told him not to contact her. He continued to contact her. That's malice."

Defendant made no objections to the state's closing argument.

During deliberations, the jury asked for a dictionary. In response, defendant proposed a special instruction, which was approved and given by the court, the sense of which was that any word not specifically defined as part of the jury instructions should be considered by the jury as having *1148 its ordinary, common meaning. The trial court told the jury:

"You must decide this case only on the evidence that has been received during the trial and on the law in which I have instructed you. So, the answer is you cannot have a dictionary or any other outside reference material. However, you're further instructed that any word which was not particularly defined as part of the jury instruction is to be considered by you as having its common and ordinary, everyday meaning."[2]

Not only did defendant make no objection to the court's response, but he in fact requested the very substance of it. Later the jury sent a question seeking "the legal definition of maliciously" and whether it could have the court reporter's notes explaining "what maliciously means per the state attorney" read back. Without objection by defendant and again with his consent, the court responded by telling the jury that:

"Any word which is not specifically defined in the jury instructions you must consider to have its normal, commonplace, everyday understanding of that particular word.
"Maliciously was not specifically defined in the jury instructions, so are you to rely on your own common understanding of the definition of that word. Okay? And to the extent that you thought the state attorney in her closing argument referred to a legal definition that the court would be giving, that was not a correct understanding. I wish we could — can be — more helpful."

The jury returned to its deliberations and found him guilty as charged.

On this appeal defendant now argues that it was fundamental error for the trial court to fail to define maliciously, that the state exploited the omission by arguing a definition prejudicial to his position. The state argues there is no error at all, let alone fundamental error. All the elements of the crime were instructed, it says, and he agreed to the plain and ordinary meaning of maliciously.

Jury instructions are subject to the rule that the affected party must contemporaneously object to an instruction given or, instead, propose the instruction not given. See Fla. R.Crim. P.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
955 So. 2d 1145, 2007 WL 911774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seese-v-state-fladistctapp-2007.