State v. Daley

411 A.2d 410, 1980 Me. LEXIS 512
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 21, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 411 A.2d 410 (State v. Daley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Daley, 411 A.2d 410, 1980 Me. LEXIS 512 (Me. 1980).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

After trial de novo in the Superior Court (Oxford County) on appeal from District Court convictions, a jury found defendant guilty of escape from arrest, 17-A M.R.S.A. § 755, and two counts of terrorizing, id. § 210. On appeal to the Law Court he asserts error in the jury instructions as to what constitutes an arrest and challenges the sufficiency of the complaints charging him with terrorizing. 1 We sustain the appeal on the first claim of error but affirm the convictions for terrorizing.

On December 23, 1978, in the town of Fryeburg, there occurred a high-speed *411 chase over five miles of snow-covered highways and back roads. Defendant Martin J. Daley, whose vehicle was being pursued by a police cruiser driven by Officer Ralph Shevlin, finally went off the road and struck a tree. Officer Shevlin stopped his cruiser and approached defendant, who had alighted from his vehicle. Defendant then shouted obscenities at the officer, threatening to kill him.

Standing some six to twelve feet from defendant, Shevlin stated, “You are under arrest.” When defendant asserted that Shevlin could not arrest him for motor vehicle violations, the officer ordered defendant to place his hands over his head. Defendant instead placed his hands in his pockets, and Shevlin drew his pistol and again ordered defendant to place his hands above his head. This time defendant stepped back, turned, and ran.

After a brief foot chase, Shevlin succeeded in subduing defendant and placed him in handcuffs. On the way to the police cruiser, defendant repeated his death threat to Shevlin and made similar threats to Deputy Sheriff Earl Hill, who had arrived on the scene.

I.

Defendant was charged by complaint with violating 17-A M.R.S.A. § 755, 2 in that he left “the official custody of [Officer] Shevlin, after having been placed under arrest.” 3 Defendant alleges error in the presiding justice’s jury instructions as to what constitutes an arrest, a necessary element of the crime with which he was charged. He contends that where, as here, the officer had not gained physical control of the prospective arrestee, there must be evidence of the latter’s submission to the officer’s authority. The State responds that in the instant circumstances no showing of submission is necessary, it being sufficient that the officer had the present power to assert control over defendant.

In discussing the crime of “breaking arrest” under 17 M.R.S.A. § 1405 (1965), 4 the predecessor to section 755, the Law Court identified the four elements of an arrest to be: (1) an intention on the part of the arresting officer “then and there to make the arrest” “under a real or pretended authority”; (2) a communication of that intention by the arresting officer to the one whose arrest is sought; (3) an understanding of that intention by the person who is to be arrested; and (4) “the actual or constructive seizure or detention of the person to be arrested by the one having the present power to control him.” State v. Powers, Me., 386 A.2d 721, 727 (1978). Specifically addressing the fourth element in-order to elucidate the distinction between actual seizure and constructive seizure, the court in Powers quoted other recent Maine cases for the proposition that:

To constitute an arrest there must be either a physical seizure of the person by the arresting officer, or a submission to his authority and control.

*412 Id. (emphasis added). The court went on to explain:

It is true that merely saying to a person — you are under arrest — without an effective physical restraint of the person concomitant with the proclamation will not constitute an arrest of the person. On the other hand, these same words— you are under arrest — are sufficient to effect an arrest of the person, if the person to be arrested is in the presence and power of the officer and in consequence of the communication submits to the officer’s restraint. In this latter instance, however, if, instead of submitting, the person flees from the officer, there would be no arrest until the officer had laid hold of the person.

Id. at 728.

In his charge to the jury the presiding justice correctly outlined the first three elements of arrest; and then as to the fourth element he told them:

There has to be an actual or constructive seizure or detention of one person by another officer [sic] having the present power to control the person arrested.

He then instructed as follows:

Now, in some states . . there are cases that . . . say . that to place a person under arrest there ha[s] to be more than just telling him he [is] under arrest, there ha[s] to be some touching to signify he [is] under control, touching. That, I am telling you, is not a mandatory element in the State of Maine
[I]f all of the other elements of an arrest are present a constructive arrest is made, even though an officer may not actually control the person sought to be arrested, when the officer who has the present power to control the person confronts the person and teiis him he is under arrest.

(Emphasis added) That instruction was plainly inadequate, if not outright erroneous. In failing to inform the jurors of the requirement of a submission (however brief) to the officer’s authority, the justice left them to speculate as to the meaning of the term “constructive seizure.” They may even have understood that the fourth element could be satisfied merely by evidence of the officer’s present power to control.

Since Shevlin had not physically seized defendant, the case for the jury came down to a very close factual question — whether defendant’s conduct in response to Shevlin’s statement, “You are under arrest,” constituted a submission to the officer’s authority. Without an adequate instruction requiring the jury to address that question of submission, it is distinctly possible that they convicted defendant without properly finding all the elements of an arrest. Therefore, the judgment of conviction for escape from arrest must be vacated. See State v. Boisvert, Me., 236 A.2d 419, 423 (1967); State v. Greenlaw, 159 Me. 141, 148-49, 189 A.2d 370, 374 (1963).

We reject the argument advanced by the State that the enactment of section 755 effected a redefinition of the term “arrest” such that the previously distinct crimes of “breaking arrest” (i. e., escape from arrest) and “resisting apprehension” (/. e., resisting arrest) under 17 M.R.S.A. § 1405 — which were distinguished by

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Bluebook (online)
411 A.2d 410, 1980 Me. LEXIS 512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-daley-me-1980.