IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL
FIRST DISTRICT, STATE OF FLORIDA
DEREK JAMAL FLOWERS, NOT FINAL UNTIL TIME EXPIRES TO
FILE MOTION FOR REHEARING AND
Appellant, DISPOSITION THEREOF IF FILED
v. CASE NO. 1D14-0496
STATE OF FLORIDA,
Appellee.
_____________________________/
Opinion filed November 6, 2014.
An appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County.
J. Bradford Stetson, Judge.
Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender, and Glenna Joyce Reeves, Assistant Public
Defender, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Trisha Meggs Pate, Assistant Attorney
General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
CLARK, J.
Beware what you ask for. Here, defense counsel requested a jury instruction
on a lesser included charge. Mr. Flowers was then convicted on that lesser included
charge, and Mr. Flowers now seeks to be released without the possibility of retrial
because the lesser included charge his attorney requested was time-barred. The
invited error doctrine precludes such a “heads I win, tails you lose” game.
The State initially charged Mr. Flowers with robbery, aggravated fleeing,
and kidnapping. Defense counsel successfully argued that the robbery and
aggravated fleeing charges were time-barred. The kidnapping charge survived;
and the State proceeded to trial on the kidnapping charge. At the charge
conference, defense counsel requested a jury instruction on false imprisonment—a
lesser included charge of kidnapping. The court obliged. And the jury returned a
verdict of guilty as to false imprisonment.
After the verdict was in, the jury dismissed, and the court adjourned, the
court recalled both attorneys to the courthouse to discuss a potential statute of
limitations issue. It was there the court raised the issue of whether the conviction
for false imprisonment, a third-degree felony, was time-barred, as were the other
counts the court had previously dismissed. See §§ 787.02(2), 775.17(2)(b), Fla.
Stat. (mandating commencement of prosecution for third-degree felony within
three years). Ultimately, the court determined Mr. Flowers and his attorney had
sought the instruction and reaped the benefit of the instruction; they could no
longer claim error. We agree.
The invited error doctrine is succinct: “[A] party cannot successfully
complain about an error for which he or she is responsible or of rulings that he or
she invited the court to make.” Anderson v. State, 93 So. 3d 1201, 1203 (Fla. 1st
DCA 2012). Put another way, “a party may not make or invite error at trial and
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then take advantage of the error on appeal.” Id. at 1206. As applied here, “counsel
should not be allowed to sandbag the trial judge by requesting and approving an
instruction they know or should know will result in an automatic reversal, if
given.” Weber v. State, 602 So. 2d 1316, 1319 (Fla. 5th DCA 1992).
We do not suggest defense counsel here nefariously or perniciously sought
to dupe the court. But given his successful use of the statute of limitations defense
against the two other charges and his admission it was his (sound) trial strategy to
instruct the jury on the lesser included charge, counsel cannot now reap the benefit
of crying foul upon the jury obliging his request.
The Fifth District addressed a very similar scenario. See id. at 1317-18.
There, a defendant was indicted for murder, but found guilty of the lesser included
offense of manslaughter. Id. at 1317. During trial, “the prosecutor, defense
counsel and judge discussed” instructing the jury on the lesser included offenses of
murder. Id. “Defense counsel said ‘give it.’” Id. And in closing, defense counsel
argued the lesser included offenses. Id. Throughout, there were no objections. Id.
Nor did counsel object after return of the lesser included verdict. Id. A week later,
counsel raised the issue by way of motion for arrest of judgment. Id. at 1318. The
trial court found the issue was “waived.” Id. at 1317.
On appeal, the Fifth District affirmed the defendant’s conviction for the
lesser included charge. Id. at 1318-19. The court explained that “if a defendant
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requests a time-barred lesser included offense instruction, and is convicted on such
charge, he or she may be estopped from later challenging the conviction on statute
of limitations grounds.” Id. at 1318. And where a defendant takes “affirmative
acts either in seeking or acquiescing in the erroneous instruction,” a failure to
object precludes the error from being fundamental. Id. (citing Ray v. State, 403
So. 2d 956 (Fla. 1981)). The court found Weber’s counsel accepted and approved
the lesser included instruction in Weber’s presence, argued it to the jury, and failed
to object to the instruction or otherwise apprise the court of a potential issue. Id. at
1317.
Here, Mr. Flowers and his counsel were well aware of the statute of
limitations; they had successfully obtained dismissals of the other two counts for
statute of limitations reasons. Despite this knowledge, and in what counsel
admitted to be his trial strategy, counsel successfully sought to have the jury
instructed on a time-barred, lesser included offense. This occurred with Mr.
Flowers present. And counsel not only affirmatively sought the instruction, but he
failed to object at any point during the proceedings—at the charge conference,
prior to instructing the jury, during the instructions, after the instructions, during
jury deliberations, and upon return of the verdict. In fact, it was the court who saw
a potential issue and asked counsel to return after the verdict was in, the jury
dismissed, and court adjourned.
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In short, counsel affirmatively requested the court instruct the jury on a
lesser included offense he, at minimum, should have known was time barred as
part of (sound) trial strategy. The jury agreed and convicted Mr. Flowers on the
lesser included offense. Mr. Flowers knowingly sought the instruction, the jury
used the instruction, and he now takes issue with the instruction. This falls
squarely within the invited error doctrine. The sandbagging and windfall in
seeking instruction on a crime for which it would be illegal to convict—without the
ability of retrial because of double jeopardy issues—is exactly what invited error
seeks to avoid. We join the Fifth District in finding the invited error doctrine
applicable under this factual scenario.
Appellant’s judgment and sentence are AFFIRMED. 1
PADOVANO and THOMAS, JJ., CONCUR.
1
Mr. Flowers raised one other issue. We affirm without comment.
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