State v. Joey J. Fowler and Jamil L. Hearns (080880) (Union County and Statewide)

CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 30, 2019
DocketA-5-18
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Joey J. Fowler and Jamil L. Hearns (080880) (Union County and Statewide) (State v. Joey J. Fowler and Jamil L. Hearns (080880) (Union County and Statewide)) 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. Joey J. Fowler and Jamil L. Hearns (080880) (Union County and Statewide), (N.J. 2019).

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. Joey J. Fowler (A-5-18) (080880)

Argued March 25, 2019 -- Decided July 30, 2019

LaVECCHIA, J., writing for the Court.

The Court reviews an Appellate Division judgment that reversed the murder convictions of defendants Joey Fowler and Jamil Hearns for perceived reversible error by the trial court in failing to charge the jury on self-defense, as well as for failing to charge the lesser-included offenses of aggravated manslaughter and reckless manslaughter.

Fowler and Hearns were indicted for first-degree murder and weapons offenses for the fatal shooting of Donnell Johnson in March 2011. Hearns was also indicted for hindering apprehension or prosecution. At trial, the State and defendants advanced starkly different theories about the shooting. The alleged deficiencies in the jury instructions are based on defendants’ version of events, as testified to by Hearns.

Hearns testified that he and Fowler were near a nightclub in Elizabeth around closing time when he saw Johnson and Jones leave a car and approach him. Hearns testified that no one else was in the vicinity at the time. Fowler was around a corner. According to Hearns’s account, Jones demanded that Hearns repay the $5000 he owed Jones. Hearns offered a partial payment, but Jones rejected it and pulled a gun from his waistband and pointed it at Hearns’s stomach. Believing that Jones was about to shoot him, Hearns “grabbed [Jones’s] wrist and his forearm” and “pushed it away,” knocking Jones’s “wrist against [Hearns’s] knee while holding [Jones’s] wrist” with the gun “still in [Jones’s] hand.” According to Hearns’s account the gun fired several times during this struggle. The trajectory of the shots was downward but the bullets ricocheted off the sidewalk in the general direction of Johnson.

The State presented a very different version of events. The State presented testimony that Jones and Johnson were speaking to one another outside the vicinity of the nightclub when Hearns approached them and shot Johnson, essentially point blank, as revenge for Johnson’s participation in a previous assault and carjacking of Fowler.

At the conclusion of the trial, the court held a jury charge conference. The respective attorneys for Fowler and Hearns stated that neither wanted instructions on lesser-included offenses. The judge indicated he did not “see any version of facts that 1 would support an aggravated manslaughter” charge under either party’s version of events. The prosecutor agreed there was no evidence to support a reckless state of mind, and the judge confirmed, “[e]veryone is agreeing, no lesser includeds?” Counsel did not object.

With respect to the other jury instruction issues, Fowler’s counsel asked for a “self-defense slash accident” instruction, acknowledging the court’s observation that “technically this is not a self-defense because Mr. Johnson was an innocent by-stander.” The court stated that “if somebody drafts a paragraph, I would consider putting it into the murder charge,” but indicated that, in its view, Hearns’s testimony did not show self- defense as to Johnson; rather, it would tend to negate the state of mind needed to support the murder charge. No one submitted a paragraph. The court rejected as inapposite the further request by Hearns for a traditional self-defense instruction.

The court instructed the jury that, to reach a guilty verdict for murder, the jury must determine that Hearns caused the victim’s death and did so “purposely or knowingly.” The court noted that defendant’s act must have caused Johnson’s death in a way that was not “too remote, too accidental in its occurrence or too dependent on another’s volitional act” to have a “just bearing on the defendant’s liability.”

Both defendants appealed, arguing that the trial court erred in not instructing the jury on self-defense and lesser-included offenses. 453 N.J. Super. 499, 505-06 (App. Div. 2018). The Appellate Division agreed, determining that the trial court’s omission of a self-defense and lesser-included-offense instructions was prejudicial error. Id. at 507.

The Court granted the State’s petition for certification. 235 N.J. 187 (2018).

HELD: Review of the alleged instructional error must be moored to the facts, and the Court concludes that the omission of the instructional charges was not error under the circumstances of this case. The Court therefore reverses and remands to the Appellate Division for consideration of defendants’ arguments that have not yet been addressed.

1. The mental states of “purposely” and “knowingly” are defined in N.J.S.A. 2C:2-2. To be guilty of murder, a person must “cause[] the death of another human being” purposefully or knowingly. N.J.S.A. 2C:11-2, -3. N.J.S.A. 2C:2-3(b) explains that “the actual result must be within the design or contemplation” of the actor or “the actual result must involve the same kind of injury or harm as that designed or contemplated and not be too remote, accidental in its occurrence, or dependent on another’s volitional act to have a just bearing on the actor’s liability or on the gravity of his offense.” (pp. 16-17)

2. “[T]he use of force upon or toward another person is justifiable when the actor reasonably believes that such force is immediately necessary for the purpose of protecting himself against the use of unlawful force by such other person on the present occasion.” N.J.S.A. 2C:3-4(a). If a self-defense charge is requested and supported by some evidence 2 in the record, it must be given. The plain language of the self-defense statute clearly indicates that it is inapplicable to the factual scenario proffered by Hearns. The statute is not drafted to address force used against third parties, but rather force used against a party who uses force against the defendant. Reviewing the jury charges as a whole, the Court concludes that, had the jury believed Hearns’s version of events, there were ample instructions to lead them to a verdict of not guilty. Although explicitly stating that an accidental death is incompatible with a conviction for murder would not have been an error, the absence of such explication also did not constitute error. (pp. 17-21)

3. Turning to the lesser-included-offense charges, the inquiry here -- when defendants explicitly declined the opportunity to have the court instruct on the lesser-included charges of aggravated manslaughter and reckless manslaughter -- is whether evidence to support convictions for manslaughter or aggravated manslaughter is clearly indicated from the record; that is, whether that evidence jumps off the page. It does not. Under Hearns’s version of the facts, no rational jury could find that he acted recklessly, particularly considering that it was allegedly Jones who pulled the gun and who was holding it when it started discharging before it ever hit Hearns’s knee. The Court therefore finds no error in the exclusion of lesser-included-offense charges. (pp. 22-25)

4. The Appellate Division determined that the jury instructions used at trial did not adequately account for circumstances when the defendant “uses force in self-defense, and in doing so recklessly or negligently injures a bystander” and therefore “‘may’ be found guilty of assault upon the bystander.” Fowler, 453 N.J. Super. at 508. The Appellate Division thus presented additional instructions it would require on that point. The Court finds that those additional instructions are not warranted under the circumstances of this case.

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Joey J. Fowler and Jamil L. Hearns (080880) (Union County and Statewide), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joey-j-fowler-and-jamil-l-hearns-080880-union-county-and-nj-2019.