Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D),
this Memorandum Decision shall not be
regarded as precedent or cited before any May 21 2014, 6:52 am
court except for the purpose of
establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:
STANLEY F. WRUBLE III GREGORY F. ZOELLER
South Bend, Indiana Attorney General of Indiana
KARL M. SCHARNBERG
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
BRICE L. WEBB, )
)
Appellant-Defendant, )
)
vs. ) No. 71A05-1305-CR-263
)
STATE OF INDIANA, )
)
Appellee-Plaintiff. )
APPEAL FROM THE ST. JOSEPH SUPERIOR COURT
The Honorable Jerome Frese, Judge
Cause No. 71D03-0910-MR-23
May 21, 2014
MEMORANDUM DECISION - NOT FOR PUBLICATION
BARTEAU, Senior Judge
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
After a jury trial, Brice Webb was convicted of murdering his girlfriend. We
affirm his conviction.
ISSUES
Webb raises three issues for our review:
I. Whether the trial court improperly advised him about how any choice to
testify about his own voluntary intoxication would affect his ability to get a
jury instruction on reckless homicide.
II. Whether the trial court abused its discretion by refusing his tendered
instruction on negligence.
III. Whether the evidence is sufficient to sustain his conviction.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In October 2009, Webb and his girlfriend Cherlyn Reyes lived in an apartment in
South Bend. One evening, their friends Shane Hillebrand and Ashley Gurrister came
over to have dinner, drink, watch movies, and hang out. Through the course of the night,
Webb drank most of a big bottle of tequila.
When Ashley first arrived, she showed the group her newly-purchased gun. Each
of them handled the gun and fired it into the air just outside the apartment. Later, Webb
joked around by pointing the unloaded gun at Cherlyn and Ashley and dry firing it. They
told him to stop playing around.
Cherlyn and Ashley left to visit a friend. Ashley did not want to take the gun with
her, but she also did not want the men shooting it at the apartment. So she took the clip
and left the unloaded gun at the apartment.
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When the women returned, Shane was still awake but Webb was sleeping on the
couch. Ashley put the clip back into the gun. Cherlyn picked up Webb’s phone and
checked his call history. Angered by what she found, she slapped him across the face to
wake him up. They yelled and physically fought with one another.
Ashley and Shane broke the couple apart several times. At one point, Ashley
grabbed Webb in a bear hug and pulled him into the kitchen. Webb calmed down, but
Cherlyn then ran into the kitchen and started hitting Webb while Ashley was still holding
him. Webb broke an arm free and hit Cherlyn in the jaw, which knocked her
unconscious. Ashley grabbed her gun, pointed it at Webb, and told him that if he hit
Cherlyn again she would shoot him. Shane took the gun from Ashley and set it down,
and things calmed down.
Webb waited for Cherlyn to regain consciousness. When she did, he helped her to
the bathroom. After about a half an hour, they came out of the bathroom laughing and
talking. Cherlyn was on her phone talking to a friend. She then went back into the
bathroom. Webb passed Ashley and Shane in the living room on his way to the kitchen,
then passed them again on his way back to the bathroom. Shortly after, they heard a
gunshot.
Jessica Hoover was the person Cherlyn was on the phone with at the time of the
shooting. Jessica heard Webb banging on the door and demanding to be let into the
bathroom. She heard the door fly open, and Cherlyn yelled, “Brice, no, Brice, no.” Tr. p.
58. She heard a bang and Webb yelling, “Baby, get up, Baby, get up, it will be okay,
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come on, Cherlyn, wake up, it will be okay.” Id. She then heard Ashley screaming,
“Cherlyn, girl, wake up, wake up.” Id.
Shane and Ashley found Webb leaving the bathroom with the gun in his hand. He
said he had “just shot [his] baby mama,” asked why there was a bullet in the chamber,
and said he “didn’t mean to.” Id. at 99, 246. Cherlyn was lying on the bathroom floor.
Shane took the gun from Webb. Webb hugged him and got emotional like he was crying,
but he had no tears. He punched the ground a few times.
Shane suggested calling an ambulance, but Webb said “that he didn’t want an
ambulance there, that if an ambulance comes, the police would come, too, and he didn’t
want to go to jail for murder.” Id. at 100. Instead, Webb asked him “to help him clean
up the scene to make it look like it was a robbery or somebody else had broken in the
door, kick in the door, trash the place to make it look like somebody else was in there.”
Id.
Shane told Ashley to take Webb to his house and pushed them out the door. When
they left, Shane called the police. Webb was crying and hysterical during the ride, asking
why there was a bullet in the chamber and saying he did not mean to kill Cherlyn.
Ashley dropped him off at Shane’s house, where Stasha Alexander was sleeping. Stasha
awoke with Webb leaning over her bed telling her that he shot his baby mama and that he
did not mean to. Stasha called Shane, who confirmed it was true. Stasha noticed that
Webb acted as if he was crying but had no tears.
When the police arrived, Shane called Stasha and told her to tell Webb to go
outside. Webb went out the door to the garage. He saw the police through the open
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garage door and turned to go back into the house, but Stasha slammed the door and
locked it. Webb was taken into custody.
Webb told the police in a videotaped interview that he had left the apartment to
buy cigarettes from a nearby gas station, and when he returned, Cherlyn had already been
shot.
The State charged Webb with murder and being a habitual offender. A jury found
him guilty as charged. On appeal, the Indiana Supreme Court reversed, concluding the
trial court should have instructed the jury on the lesser included offense of reckless
homicide. See Webb v. State (Webb I), 963 N.E.2d 1103, 1108-09 (Ind. 2012).
Specifically, the Court noted that although Webb testified he was not present during the
shooting, the State’s evidence showed he was there and produced a serious evidentiary
dispute as to whether he acted knowingly or recklessly.
Webb was retried. At the conclusion of the State’s evidence, the trial court
advised Webb of his right to testify and his right not to testify. It noted certain risks, such
as impeachment, that came with testifying.
The State then asked the court to instruct Webb about Sanchez v. State, 749
N.E.2d 509 (Ind. 2001), and Orta v. State, 940 N.E.2d 370 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans.
denied. The State explained:
[I]t would be the State’s position that while Mr. Webb would certainly of
course be free to testify about all sort of matters relevant to that night, to the
extent that he introduces evidence or claims that he was too intoxicated to
form the requisite mental state of knowingly, that he would then not be
entitled to a lesser instruction on recklessness, or Reckless Homicide I
guess, pursuant to the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision in Sanchez . . . .
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Tr. p. 434. After a lengthy discussion, the court indicated it was unclear whether Orta
was still good law in light of the Supreme Court’s more recent decision in Webb I, said
the issue may have some bearing on jury instructions, and noted it was not sure how it
would rule. The court concluded:
So there you go. I can’t give you a heads-up on how I’m going to
rule on that.
I only know that the defendant has a right to testify. He has a right
not to testify. He will be taking an oath to tell the truth, and we’ll go from
there.
Id. at 452.
Webb elected not to testify, and the trial court gave an instruction on reckless
homicide. The jury found him guilty of murder and being a habitual offender. The court
later sentenced him to ninety years. Webb now appeals.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. ADVISEMENT OF RIGHT TO TESTIFY
Webb first contends the trial court improperly advised him about how any choice
to testify about his own voluntary intoxication would affect his ability to get a jury
instruction on reckless homicide.
The pertinent cases, as noted above, are Sanchez v. State, 749 N.E.2d 509 (Ind.
2001), and Orta v. State, 940 N.E.2d 370 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. In Sanchez,
the Supreme Court held that the Indiana statute prohibiting the use of voluntary
intoxication evidence to negate the mens rea requirement in criminal cases did not violate
the Indiana Constitution. 749 N.E.2d at 511. In Orta, this Court determined that the trial
court properly applied Sanchez when it informed the defendant that he would not be
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entitled to a reckless homicide instruction if he testified that he was too intoxicated (there
was no claim his intoxication was involuntary) to know what he was doing and was too
drunk to knowingly or intentionally act. 940 N.E.2d at 378-79.
Webb argues his conviction should be vacated because the trial court improperly
advised him that he would forfeit a jury instruction on reckless homicide if he testified at
all. This improper advisement, Webb asserts, caused him to waive his right to testify.
Our review of the record shows no error. The State repeatedly stated its opinion
that Webb would not be entitled to the lesser instruction if he testified he was too drunk
to act knowingly. As for the court, it said it was unsure how to reconcile Orta with Webb
I but noted the issue might have a bearing on the jury instructions. We set forth the
relevant portions of the discussion as follows.
After the State asked the trial court to instruct Webb on Sanchez and Orta and
argued that Webb would not be entitled to a reckless homicide instruction if he
introduced evidence that he was too intoxicated to form the requisite mental state of
knowingly, the court explained the State’s position:
[O]ut of Sanchez and out of Orta, there were court decisions that said if a
person testifying claims inability to remember any of this, claims voluntary
intoxication whether by alcohol or drugs, then they are not entitled to offer
a lesser included charge of Reckless Homicide in this case.
Tr. pp. 435-36. The court next discussed with the parties whether Sanchez and Orta
predated the Supreme Court’s opinion in Webb I and whether the Supreme Court
addressed Orta in Webb I. The court then stated:
[T]he State’s position here is that under . . . Orta, that if you were to testify
and say you were drunk and couldn’t remember anything, that then the
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State is arguing that the decision by the Court of Appeals, which was not
explicitly overruled by the Supreme Court in the appeal in your first trial, . .
. they’re arguing that under that Orta case, then there should not be allowed
a lesser included offense of Criminal Recklessness or Reckless Homicide . .
..
Id. at 438. The court added:
Now, I’m not taking a position -- I’m not responding to that other than I
asked a question. But I’m saying there is the risk -- there is the possibility -
- because that’s going to get argued by these attorneys, and there’s a
possibility I may rule with them and say there can’t be a reckless homicide .
...
Id. at 439. Defense counsel asked for clarification of the State’s position as to exactly
what situation would make a reckless homicide instruction unavailable. The State
explained Sanchez and Orta, then it stated how they applied to Webb’s case:
Orta’s defense was I was too drunk to know what I was doing,
therefore I didn’t have the sufficient capacity to act knowingly because I
was drunk. So I didn’t act knowingly. That was going to be his position.
The trial court instructed Orta, well, okay, but if you go down that
road and testify that you got drunk and therefore you lacked capacity to
know what you were doing or to be intentional or act knowingly, then you
don’t get reckless because that’s what Sanchez says. The voluntariness of
raising the glass to your mouth kicks in and supplies the mens rea for the
knowing element of in that case murder.
That’s exactly what we’re talking about here. The State’s evidence
proved that the defendant walked into the bathroom with a loaded gun,
pulled the trigger, and shot his girlfriend in the head from about twelve
inches away or less.
From the opening, [the defense’s] position was even yes, that’s all
going to be sort of acknowledged and undisputed; the issue is whether he
acted knowingly. Can the State prove Murder, or is this going to be one of
the lesser offenses or a lesser state of mind altogether?
It’s the State’s position that any sober rational person would clearly
know in the sense of being aware of a very high probability that to point a
loaded gun at another person’s head and pull the trigger is killing that
person.
If Mr. Webb’s position is I was drunk and I didn’t know the gun was
going to go bang, or I didn’t know it was going to kill her, or something
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like that, I didn’t act rationally and knowingly and carefully and the
drunkenness contributed to my negligence or recklessness or some other
state of mind, if Mr. Webb goes down that road, I think we’re square into
Sanchez and Orta, and he doesn’t get Reckless Homicide anymore.
Id. at 444-46. At this point, the trial court talked at length about Webb Iagain, where
the Supreme Court concluded Webb was entitled to a reckless homicide instruction,
despite his testimony that he was not present during the shooting, because the State’s
evidence showed he was there and produced a serious evidentiary dispute as to whether
he acted knowingly or recklesslyand then stated: “So I don’t know what that sort of
reasoning does to poor trial judges like us who are supposed to deal with how we
logically view what people are entitled to offer as instructions. So I’m in a bit of a
quandary.” Id. at 450.
The court’s next statement is what Webb points to as reversible error: “Orta says
you testify -- if the jury convicts you and you don’t even get the reckless, you don’t get
the lesser included if you testify, but if you don’t testify, then you can get it if the rest of
the evidence is in flux enough.” Id. at 451. We acknowledge this statement, taken by
itself, is inaccurate. An accurate statement would be to say that Webb would not get the
lesser instruction if he testified he was too drunk to act knowingly.
Nevertheless, the context of the entire discussion between the court and the parties
shows the court was unsure of how Orta and Webb I would affect the final instructions.
Indeed, after the statement Webb challenges here, the court said:
So it takes better minds than mine to try and reconcile those two
opinions. And I don’t know what I’m going to do.
I have to tell you it’s in flux here, and it’s at issue.
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And I’m not being facetious here when I say you have a right to
testify. But there are these two cases out there which a poor old guy like
me doesn’t know how to put them together. . . .
So there you go. I can’t give you a heads-up on how I’m going to
rule on that.
I only know that the defendant has a right to testify. He has a right
not to testify. He will be taking an oath to tell the truth, and we’ll go from
there.
And the prosecutor can certainly use whatever he’s saying in final
arguments to try to argue why he shouldn’t. And it may have some bearing
on the instructions.
Id. at 451-52.
We thus disagree with Webb’s claim that the court misadvised him he would
forfeit a reckless homicide instruction if he testified at all. The discussion between the
court and the parties shows Webb was adequately and repeatedly informed of Orta’s
holding. In the end, though, the court refused the State’s request to advise Webb along
the lines of Orta, noting the Supreme Court’s more recent decision in Webb I left the
court with no clear guidance as to whether Orta remained good law. And in any event,
Webb was represented by counsel who could explain the court’s dilemma in determining
what effect Webb’s testimony might have on jury instructions. We conclude there was
no error in the court’s advisement.
II. JURY INSTRUCTION ON NEGLIGENCE
Webb next contends the trial court erred by refusing his tendered instruction on
negligence. We review a trial court’s refusal of a tendered instruction for an abuse of
discretion. Springer v. State, 798 N.E.2d 431, 433 (Ind. 2003). We consider: (1) whether
the instruction correctly states the law; (2) whether there is evidence in the record to
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support giving the instruction; and (3) whether the substance of the tendered instruction is
covered by other instructions that are given. Id.
Webb’s tendered instruction differentiated knowing acts from reckless and
negligent acts. See Appellant’s App. p. 42. His claim here is that the court abused its
discretion by refusing the instruction because he was entitled to a jury instruction on
negligence. He points to Springer to support his claim.
In Springer, the defendant learned that his son had been beaten up at someone’s
house after he tried to crash a party. The defendant drove to the home with a gun, loaded
a bullet into the chamber, demanded to know the whereabouts of the person who beat up
his son, and fired a shot through a wall. The bullet struck someone in a different room.
At a jury trial for criminal recklessness, the court refused the defendant’s tendered
instruction on negligence. The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s refusal, noting
that negligence law “presupposes that an individual is engaged in lawful conduct which
can be undertaken with due care for the safety of another person.” 798 N.E.2d at 435.
Because the defendant engaged in conduct in which he had no right to engage, he was not
entitled to an instruction on negligence. Id. at 435-36.
Webb argues that, unlike the defendant in Springer, he was not engaged in any
unlawful conduct. Instead, he argues, he was merely engaged in an argument with his
girlfriend and likely assumed the gun was not loaded. Appellant’s Br. p. 12.
But the undisputed evidence shows Webb was engaged in unlawful conducthe
pointed a gun at his girlfriend and pulled the trigger. See Ind. Code § 35-47-4-3 (1995)
(knowingly or intentionally pointing a firearm at another person is a Class D felony, the
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offense is a Class A misdemeanor if the firearm was not loaded). Therefore, pursuant to
Springer, he was not entitled to a negligence instruction. The trial court did not abuse its
discretion by refusing his tendered instruction.
III. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
Webb finally contends the evidence is insufficient to sustain his conviction. In
reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, we neither reweigh the evidence nor assess
the credibility of witnesses. Bailey v. State, 979 N.E.2d 133, 135 (Ind. 2012). Rather, we
look to the evidence and reasonable inferences drawn therefrom that support the verdict.
Id. We affirm if there is probative evidence from which a reasonable jury could have
found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Id.
To convict Webb of murder, the State had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
he knowingly killed Cherlyn. See Appellant’s App. p. 357; Ind. Code § 35-42-1-1(1)
(2007).
The evidence most favorable to the verdict shows that Webb and Cherlyn engaged
in a heated argument that quickly devolved into a physical altercation requiring Ashley
and Shane to break the couple apart several times. At one point, Webb knocked Cherlyn
unconscious. After she came to, he helped her to the bathroom. They emerged a half an
hour later. Cherlyn returned to the bathroom, and Webb headed toward the bathroom
after going to the kitchen. He banged on the bathroom door and demanded to be let in.
When the door opened, Cherlyn yelled, “Brice, no, Brice no.” Tr. p. 58. Webb pointed
Ashley’s gun at Cherlyn’s head from within a foot away and pulled the trigger. Id. at
199. Ashley and Shane found Webb leaving the bathroom with the gun in his hand.
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Webb did not want to call for an ambulance because “the police would come, too, and he
didn’t want to go to jail for murder.” Id. at 100. Instead, Webb asked Shane to help him
stage the scene to make it look like a home invasion robbery gone awry.
Despite this clear evidence, Webb challenges the knowing element of the crime.
He argues that he and Cherlyn were on good terms by the time they emerged from the
bathroom, that he had no way of knowing that Ashley had reloaded the gun, and that,
after the shooting, he repeatedly asked Ashley why the gun was loaded.
Webb’s argument is nothing more than a request to reweigh the evidence, which
we may not do. The issue of whether Webb acted knowingly was placed squarely before
the jury and decided by the jury. We will not disturb the jury’s verdict where, as here, its
decision was a reasonable one. We thus conclude the evidence is sufficient to sustain his
conviction.
CONCLUSION
We therefore affirm.
BAKER, J., and MAY, J., concur.
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