State v. Gartland

694 A.2d 564, 149 N.J. 456, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 180
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 19, 1997
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 694 A.2d 564 (State v. Gartland) 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. Gartland, 694 A.2d 564, 149 N.J. 456, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 180 (N.J. 1997).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This appeal concerns the statutory duty to retreat before resorting to the use of deadly force in self-defense. In this case a woman killed her husband in a bedroom of their home. The jury convicted her of reckless manslaughter. She died while her appeal was pending. Three issues were argued in the case: (1) whether her appeal should be dismissed because it became moot upon her death; (2) whether the trial court erred in instructing the jury under the circumstances that she had a duty to retreat from her separate bedroom before using deadly force; and (3) whether the trial court should have specifically instructed the jury that it could consider the history of spousal abuse to determine (in addition to whether she might have killed in the heat of passion arising from a reasonable provocation) whether she honestly and reasonably believed that deadly force was necessary to protect herself against death or serious bodily injury. From the evidence in the case, a jury could have found the following facts.

I

The killing occurred on February 8, 1993. The jury heard evidence of long-standing physical and emotional abuse inflicted by the victim on defendant. Witnesses portrayed John Gartland as a violent and threatening husband obsessed with jealousy.

On the afternoon of the killing, the Gartlands stopped at a tavern in Newark. There, they began to argue. When the Gartlands returned home at about 5:00 p.m., a neighbor heard Mr. *461 Gartland (John) threaten his wife. Other neighbors heard similar abuse and threats.

The argument continued when John could not find the remote control for the television and accused Ellen of hiding it. Angered, he left the home. When he returned, he renewed the argument about the remote control. Ellen asked him to leave her alone and went upstairs to her bedroom. For over ten years, she and her husband had had separate bedrooms.

Previously, John had left her alone in this room. On this evening, he followed her into her bedroom. She told him to go to bed and to leave her alone. He approached her, threatening to strike her. One of them, the parties dispute which, said “I’m going to hurt you” as he approached her.

Ellen took her son’s hunting shotgun from her bedroom closet. She pointed it at her husband and told him to stop. He said, ‘You’re not going to do [anything] to me because you, bitch, I’m going to kill you.” He lunged at her with his fists clenched. She pulled the trigger. The shotgun blast hit her husband. He stepped into the hallway and fell.

Ellen dropped the gun, called an operator, and asked for an ambulance, saying that she had just shot her husband. She then called her son as well as John Gartland’s son. She told the responding officers that she had feared for her life. She said that she would never forget the look on his face and that he approached her looking “like a devil.”

At trial, the jury had asked twice dining its deliberations for clarification of the court’s charge on self-defense. On both occasions the trial court repeated its initial instructions. The instruction never specifically apprised the jury that it could consider the seventeen years of spousal abuse suffered by Mrs. Gartland in determining whether she honestly and reasonably believed that deadly force was necessary to protect herself against her husband. The trial court used the Model Jury Charge and told the jury that “[a] reasonable belief is one which is to be held by a person of *462 ordinary prudence and intelligence situated as Mrs. Gartland was on February 8,1993.”

Prior to the charge, defense counsel objected to the court’s intent to charge that Ellen had a duty to retreat before resorting to deadly force. Counsel renewed his objection immediately after the charge. Before the first recharge on self-defense, defense counsel again objected. He noted that because Ellen had been in her own room, one that her husband never occupied, he was not a cohabitant and under the law she had no duty to retreat from her own separate dwelling. The trial court ruled that “under the statute, there was a duty to retreat.” The court gave the Model Jury Charge:

And even if you find the use of deadly force was reasonable, there are limitations on the use of deadly force If you find that Mrs. Gartland knew that she could avoid the necessity of using deadly force by retreating from that house, providing Mrs. Gartland knew that she could do so with complete safety, then the defense is not available to her.

The jury convicted Mrs. Gartland of reckless manslaughter. Two jurors later contacted the court describing confusion and indecision in their deliberations. After denying a motion for a new trial, the court sentenced Mrs. Gartland to a five-year term with a mandatory three-years imprisonment under the Graves Act. She was freed on bail pending appeal.

The Appellate Division affirmed the conviction. It found that the instructions had made it clear that the court was not limiting the jury to the actions and words of the decedent on February 8, 1993, and that the court had given the jury sufficient latitude to consider the decedent’s prior mistreatment and physical and psychological abuse of defendant. It also found that the court correctly charged on the statutory duty to retreat before the use of deadly force. Defendant died after her petition for certification was filed. We granted the petition, 146 N.J. 499, 683 A.2d 202 (1996), and reserved decision on the State’s motion to dismiss the appeal.

*463 II

Should the appeal be dismissed because defendant died before her appeal could be heard by this Court?

In State v. McDonald, a dissenting justice reasoned that to' continue the appeal of a deceased defendant would extend a “court’s jurisdiction over criminal defendants beyond the grave. Its appellate grasp [would reach] ‘from here to eternity’!” 144 Wis.2d 531, 424 N.W.2d 411, 415-16 (1988) (Day, J., dissenting).

Chief Justice Heffernan, concurring in the majority’s decision to permit the appeal to continue, wrote:

It may well be, as the dissent suggests, that the defendant in this case is in the hands of God. However, the responsibility for resolving the legal uncertainties left behind is squarely in the hands of this court.
... It is not [the decedent’s] appeal which is moot, as the dissent would have it, but rather [the decedent’s] death which is moot, because [the decedent] did not take the potential errors of our justice system into the grave____ These potential errors remain behind to perplex and confound [the decedent’s] relatives, friends, reputation, and the legal system.
[McDonald, supra, 424 N.W.2d at 415 (Heffernan, C.J., concurring).]

In State v. McDonald: Death Of a Criminal Defendant Pending Appeal in Wisconsin — The Appeal Survives, 1989 Wis. L.Rev. 811, Lynne J. Splitek sets forth the prevailing American rule on the subject:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Fairkings Partners, LLC, Etc. v. Essence L. Daniels
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
State of New Jersey v. Phillip D. Bryant and James Hunter
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
State of New Jersey v. Lance Boone
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2025
State of New Jersey v. Michael N. Tedesco
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
State of New Jersey v. Jessica S. Matrongolo
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
State of New Jersey v. Frank McVey
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
State of New Jersey v. Jergere E. Minaya-Acosta
New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 2024
State v. Isaak
2023 ND 44 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2023)
Lalchan v. United States
District of Columbia Court of Appeals, 2022
State v. Cassidy
197 A.3d 86 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 2018)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
694 A.2d 564, 149 N.J. 456, 1997 N.J. LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gartland-nj-1997.