State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack State v. Gabriel Rodriguez

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedMarch 22, 2021
DocketA-27-19
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack State v. Gabriel Rodriguez (State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack State v. Gabriel Rodriguez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack State v. Gabriel Rodriguez, (N.J. 2021).

Opinion

SYLLABUS

This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor approved by the Court. In the interest of brevity, portions of an opinion may not have been summarized.

State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack; State v. Gabriel Rodriguez (A-27-19) (083008)

Argued September 14, 2020 -- Decided March 22, 2021

PIERRE-LOUIS, J., writing for the Court.

In this appeal, the Court considers whether the trial court erred in not including theft as a lesser included offense to robbery sua sponte in its instructions to the jury.

In June 2014, Hamilton police officers pulled into a parking lot of an abandoned building and found defendants Andrea Dunbrack and Gabriel Rodriguez standing near an unoccupied vehicle. The police observed the victim, N.R., lying on the ground in the fetal position, verbally unresponsive, naked, and bloodied. A small fire was ablaze nearby. N.R.’s clothes were strewn about on the ground and on the front passenger seat of Dunbrack’s car, along with his passport, wallet, and money. A gun stained with N.R.’s blood lay on the driver’s seat, and police later retrieved another gun on Dunbrack’s person. The officers arrested Dunbrack, whose feet had N.R.’s blood on them. Rodriguez fled as police approached, and police later arrested him with N.R.’s cell phone in his pocket. Rodriguez and Dunbrack were charged with robbery, among other offenses, and were tried together.

N.R. testified that Rodriguez approached him at a bar in Trenton and asked him if he wanted a cheap taxi ride home. N.R. accepted the offer. Dunbrack was driving the car, Rodriguez was in the passenger seat, and N.R. sat in back. Dunbrack later stopped the car. Rodriguez then exited, opened the rear passenger door, pointed a gun at N.R., and told N.R. to hand over his money or he would be killed. N.R. testified that as he began giving Rodriguez his wallet and cell phone, Rodriguez hit him in the face with the gun. After being hit, N.R. blacked out. N.R. recalled being told to take off his clothes and testified that he thought he was going to die when Rodriguez pointed the gun at him.

Dunbrack testified that she was in her vehicle when Rodriguez emerged from the bar with N.R., whom she had never seen before. Dunbrack figured Rodriguez and N.R. were going to head to more bars and sat in the back seat with N.R. while Rodriguez drove. According to Dunbrack, N.R. attempted to sexually assault her. Rodriguez then pulled over and attempted to drag N.R. out of the vehicle as the two men began fighting. Dunbrack was unable to explain how N.R.’s possessions ended up in the front passenger seat of her car, how N.R. came to be completely undressed, or how the fire was started.

1 Prior to Dunbrack’s testimony, the court held a charge conference and Dunbrack’s counsel asked the trial judge, “what about lesser includeds?” but did not mention theft. In response, the trial judge advised that, based on the testimony thus far, there was no rational basis for a lesser included charge of theft. The next day, after Dunbrack testified, Dunbrack’s attorney stated at another charge conference that there could be justification charges for self-defense and use of force in the defense of others. Dunbrack’s counsel then raised the potential applicability of “the various levels of assault” and “possibly a theft from a person or a theft in general” if there was some type of justification for the assault. Counsel noted that he “just wanted to throw that out there based on Ms. Dunbrack’s testimony.” The conversation shifted to a discussion of the justification defenses, and Dunbrack’s counsel successfully argued for the inclusion of the defenses in the jury charge. Dunbrack’s counsel never again mentioned the possibility of a theft charge, and Rodriguez’s counsel never suggested that theft should be charged. Both defense attorneys advised the court that they had no objections to the final jury charge.

The jury convicted both defendants on all charges. The Appellate Division reversed and remanded for a new trial, holding that the trial court was obligated to give the lesser included theft charge sua sponte because the facts giving rise to that charge were evident from the record. The Court granted certification. 240 N.J. 139 (2019).

HELD: The Court finds no error, let alone plain error, in the trial court’s omission of a theft charge. Nothing in Dunbrack’s version of the events “jumps off the page” as indicative of theft. Neither Dunbrack nor Rodriguez requested an instruction on theft, and the trial court was not required to scour the record for a combination of facts to justify giving such a lesser included jury charge.

1. A trial court’s determination of whether to include a charge to a lesser included offense is governed by N.J.S.A. 2C:1-8(e). When a defendant requests a charge to a lesser included offense, the trial court is obligated to examine the record thoroughly to determine if there is a rational basis for finding that the defendant was not guilty of the higher offense charged but guilty of a lesser included offense. If a defendant did not request a charge or did not object to the omission of a charge to a lesser included offense, the Court’s appellate review assesses whether the record “clearly indicated” the charge, such that the trial court was obligated to give it sua sponte. In determining whether the facts clearly indicate that a charge should be given, the trial court is not required to scour the statutes to determine if there are some uncharged offenses of which the defendant may be guilty. The trial court is also not saddled with the burden of sifting through the record to find some combination of facts and inferences that might rationally sustain the lesser included offense. The record clearly indicates a lesser included charge if the evidence is jumping off the page. (pp. 17-18)

2. A trial court should only instruct the jury on theft as a lesser included offense of robbery if there is a question whether the defendant’s act of inflicting bodily injury, using

2 force upon another or threatening another with or purposely putting him in fear of bodily injury occurred in the course of committing a theft. The Court discusses State v. Cassady, 198 N.J. 165 (2009), where it held that the trial court properly determined that no rational basis existed for charging theft as a lesser included offense to robbery. In Cassady, the defendant was charged with armed robbery of a bank after he approached a bank teller and passed a note requesting money. When the bank teller did not comply, the defendant raised his voice and jumped over the bulletproof glass window separating the tellers from the customers. The teller testified that she was so scared she thought he would kill her. The Court found that the facts were clear and unequivocal that this was a bank robbery and no rational jury could come to any other conclusion. (pp. 19-21)

3. The Court reviews this matter using the clearly indicated standard because defense counsel did not explicitly request the theft charge. Dunbrack’s counsel’s pondering or “throwing out there” the possibility of several charges can hardly be interpreted as a request for a jury instruction. It should not be incumbent upon the trial judge to sift through the trial transcript to decipher whether musings of counsel at any point throughout the trial could be interpreted as a request for a jury charge. The importance of requiring a clear request from counsel is underscored by considerations of trial strategy. Having secured jury instructions to affirmative defenses, defense counsel could have made the strategic choice to argue for acquittal, as opposed to a lesser charge -- a choice that a sua sponte instruction by the trial court could have thwarted. (pp. 21-24)

4.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Andrea K. Dunbrack State v. Gabriel Rodriguez, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-andrea-k-dunbrack-state-v-gabriel-rodriguez-nj-2021.