State v. McPhaul

851 P.2d 860, 174 Ariz. 561, 129 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 63, 1992 Ariz. App. LEXIS 325
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedDecember 24, 1992
DocketNo. 1 CA-CR 91-0270
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 851 P.2d 860 (State v. McPhaul) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McPhaul, 851 P.2d 860, 174 Ariz. 561, 129 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 63, 1992 Ariz. App. LEXIS 325 (Ark. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

KLEINSCHMIDT, Judge.

The defendant appeals from his conviction, following a jury trial, of attempted [562]*562armed robbery, a dangerous offense with a prior conviction. After conviction, it was determined that the offense had been committed while the defendant was on parole. He was sentenced to life in prison. Because we find that the trial court erred by failing to give a lesser included instruction on attempted robbery, we reverse and remand.

The events that gave rise to the charge were as follows. On an evening in August 1990, a man attempted to rob a self-service gas station in Phoenix. According to the cashier, the robber jumped over the counter with a knife in his hand and told her he was robbing the station. The robber demanded that the cashier open the cash register, and he hit her in the face several times. The cashier had difficulty opening the cash register, and while she was attempting to do so, a customer began to enter the station. The robber told the customer that the station was closed for inventory. The diversion allowed the cashier to escape out a side door, and when she did, the robber got in his car to leave the station. The cashier immediately called the police and gave them his license number.

The defendant was arrested a few minutes later in a nearby residential neighborhood. Shortly thereafter, the cashier identified the defendant as the man who robbed her. At the time the defendant was arrested, he was not wearing a shirt, although the cashier said the robber had been wearing a T-shirt. A T-shirt, but no knife, was found in the defendant’s car. Later that night the police found a knife in the street in an area where the defendant’s car had been driven, near where the defendant was arrested. The police tested the knife for fingerprints, but the defendant’s fingerprints were not found on it.

The defendant denied that he had tried to rob the station. He testified that he stopped at the station with a hitchhiker he had picked up and that he, the defendant, made a telephone call and urinated in some bushes near the station. When he returned to his car, the hitchhiker was gone and he, the defendant, drove away.

Portions of the attempted robbery had been recorded on a videotape which was admitted in evidence. The tape is not very clear but arguably it does not show a knife in the robber’s hands. Before the closing arguments, the defendant requested a lesser included instruction on attempted robbery, arguing that the jury could conclude that the robber did not have a knife. The trial judge denied the requested instruction, saying:

Inasmuch as the defendant has denied participating in the crime as charged, defendant is not entitled to a lesser included instruction.
... When a defendant denies having committed a particular offense, on the stand, under oath, he is not entitled to a lesser included instruction. Because he did it or he didn’t.

The state’s principal argument is that the trial judge was correct for the very reason that he expressed. We disagree.

The state has the burden of proving every element of a crime beyond a reasonable doubt. See, e.g., State v. Main, 159 Ariz. 96, 764 P.2d 1155 (App.1988). When any theory of the defense is reasonably .supported by the evidence, it is reversible error to refuse a lesser included instruction. State v. Celaya, 135 Ariz. 248, 660 P.2d 849 (1983). We see nothing inconsistent, illogical or improper about a defendant saying, “I was not the person who committed the robbery, but even if you do not believe me, the evidence shows that whoever did commit it was not armed.”

The Arizona case we consider to be most closely in point is State v. Dugan, 125 Ariz. 194, 608 P.2d 771 (1980). There, the defendant was charged with robbery. The victim, a cashier in a convenience store, testified that the defendant and another man who had a bulge under his coat entered the store and disabled the video cameras. He said that the defendant took money from the cash register while the other man kept a lookout. The cashier recognized the defendant as a person who had patronized the store on other occasions.

[563]*563The defendant admitted having been in the store but said that he had merely made a purchase and left without taking any money with him. He asked for a lesser included offense instruction on the theory that the state had failed to prove the element of fear on the part of the victim necessary to sustain a conviction for robbery. The trial court refused the instruction, and the supreme court reversed. In doing so, the supreme court said:

While a total denial of guilty by defendant may give rise to the guilt or innocent situation, for which the state contends, reason persuades us that such is not the case here. See State v. Schroeder, 95 Ariz. 255, 389 P.2d 255 (1964). The jury might believe the cashier’s story in its entirety, or it might believe the defendant’s story in its entirety. However, on the record, the jury could also believe certain parts of the cashier’s testimony, discounting others, and by believing parts of [the defendant’s] testimony and disbelieving others, could find him guilty of theft and not guilty of robbery, simply because the element of fear was not credibly established. Therefore, the requested instruction to charge the jury on the crime of theft was erroneously refused.

Id. 125 Ariz. at 196, 608 P.2d at 773.

We do not believe the supreme court’s introductory remark about a denial perhaps precluding a lesser included instruction is anything more than an acknowledgement of the state’s argument. Dugan is very similar to the case we now decide.

Other courts have squarely reached the result that we reach. In State v. Mount, 422 N.W.2d 497 (Iowa 1988), the defendant was convicted of first-degree robbery and first-degree burglary. His defense was that he was not the person who had committed the crime. He requested a lesser included instruction on second-degree robbery and second-degree burglary, and it was conceded that under the state of the evidence the jury could have found that whoever committed the crime had a toy gun, and not a real firearm. This was the element which distinguished the two classes of offenses.

The trial judge refused to give a lesser included offense instruction, observing, in a statement remarkably similar to what the trial judge said in the case before us:

Defense doesn’t attack the allegations except to say I was not the person that did it. So it’s either an all or nothing proposition here____ The same goes for ... Burglary in the Second Degree. Again, as this case has shaped up, the Defendant either did what the State said or didn’t do what the State said.

The Supreme Court of Iowa concluded that this was error. In doing so it said:

We have never suggested, however, that a defendant’s reliance on an alibi defense lessens the State’s burden of proving each and every element of the offense charged beyond a reasonable doubt. As we said in Morgan,

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Bluebook (online)
851 P.2d 860, 174 Ariz. 561, 129 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 63, 1992 Ariz. App. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mcphaul-arizctapp-1992.