MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Apr 13 2015, 8:49 am
Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as
precedent or cited before any 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
Chris Palmer Frazier Gregory F. Zoeller
Marion County Public Defender Agency Attorney General of Indiana
Indianapolis, Indiana
Katherine Modesitt Cooper
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Titus S. Dunn, April 13, 2015
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No.
49A02-1408-CR-588
v.
Appeal from the Marion Superior
State of Indiana, Court
The Honorable Barbara Crawford,
Appellee-Plaintiff,
Judge
Cause No. 49F09-1404-FD-16610
Robb, Judge.
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Case Summary and Issue
[1] Following a jury trial, Titus Dunn was convicted of residential entry, a Class D
felony, and found to be an habitual offender.1 He raises one issue on appeal:
whether his due process rights were violated by the State’s comments during
closing argument about the defense of necessity. Concluding that the issue has
been forfeited for appeal, we affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] During the early morning hours of March 31, 2014, Valerie Floyd was asleep in
her home when the sound of a shattering window woke her up. When she
went to investigate, she encountered a man in the hallway whom she did not
know. The man was later identified as Dunn. As Floyd began moving through
her house toward the back door, Dunn followed, asking her if she had a gun
and telling her to call the police. When Floyd opened her back door, her alarm
system was activated. She ran to her neighbors’ house and woke them up by
banging on their bedroom window. They called 911 for her, and she stayed at
their house until police arrived. During that time, Dunn also called 911 from
Floyd’s house.
1
After the jury found Dunn guilty of residential entry, he waived his right to jury as to the habitual offender
phase. The trial court found him to be an habitual offender after the presentation of evidence.
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[3] Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department officers arrived at Floyd’s house
to find Dunn walking down the driveway. After speaking with Floyd and
observing the damage to her home, the officers arrested Dunn. Dunn told
police that he had been followed by a dark car after being released from the
hospital. The car pulled into a driveway a few houses away from Floyd’s and
Dunn entered her house to get away. At trial, Dunn testified that it was his
stepson who was chasing him and after the car pulled into the nearby driveway,
his stepson had gotten out of the car brandishing a gun. Floyd had not seen any
cars or pedestrians on the street when she ran to her neighbors’ house, and the
officers did not see anyone other than Floyd and Dunn in the vicinity of Floyd’s
house while investigating.
[4] The State charged Dunn with residential entry, a Class D felony, and alleged
that he was an habitual offender. At trial, Dunn asserted the affirmative
defense of necessity as justification for entering Floyd’s house. During closing
arguments, the State told the jury:
Now, you’re going to get instructions – it’s gonna be Final Instruction
No. 20 um, that tell you about the necessity defense. So the State – or
the defense has to prove um, seven things by a preponderance of the
evid – or six things by a preponderance of the evidence.
Transcript at 214. Dunn objected, and the trial court held a side bar conference,
during which the prosecutor expressed her understanding that the defendant
had to prove all the elements of the necessity defense. The trial court corrected
the prosecutor, stating that the defense has “to raise it and – and present
evidence to support the instruction on the facts, but they don’t actually have to
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prove anything.” Id. at 216. Before the State continued its closing argument,
the trial court admonished the jury as follows:
Uh, ladies and gentlemen of the jury, uh – uh, you will get instruction
on the defense of necessity which uh, under Indiana law, the
defendant is required to raise – if that’s something that he – he believes
applies. It is the obligation of the State to disprove one of the elements
. . . . And I’m going to give you the instruction, and what the
instruction – how the instruction tells you – how the law tells you you
need to look at that defense.
So there will be information in the . . . instruction to tell you how to
look at it or how to consider it. Um, that the defense has to – only has
to raise the – raise the defense of . . . necessity, and the State has the
obligation to disprove one of the parts of it.
Id. at 217-18. Upon resuming closing argument, the prosecutor correctly stated,
“[F]or the defense of necessity to apply, you have to find all six [elements]. The
State must only disprove one of them beyond a reasonable doubt.” Id. at 218.
[5] After closing arguments were concluded, the trial court gave the jury final
instructions, including the following:
The Defendant has raised the defense of necessity in this case. The
defense of necessity applies when:
(1) The act charged as criminal was the result of an emergency
and was done to prevent a significant harm;
(2) There was no adequate alternative to the commission of the
act;
(3) The harm cause[d] by the act was not disproportionate to
the harm avoided;
(4) The Defendant had a good-faith belief that his act was
necessary to prevent great harm;
(5) The Defendant’s belief was objectively reasonable under all
the circumstances of the case; and
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(6) The Defendant did not substantially contribute to the
creation of the emergency.
The State has the burden to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the
Defendant was not acting out of necessity, and may do so by
disproving any one of the above facts.
Appellant’s Appendix at 72. The jury found Dunn guilty of residential entry,
and the trial court found him to be an habitual offender. This appeal followed.
Discussion and Decision
[6] Dunn contends that the prosecutor’s statement during closing argument
impermissibly shifted the burden of proof to him and that the trial court’s
admonishment to the jury was insufficient to remedy the damage caused by the
misstatement of law. The State argues that Dunn has waived the issue of
prosecutorial misconduct, because although he now claims that the
admonishment was insufficient, he did not move for a mistrial at the time. “To
preserve a claim of prosecutorial misconduct, the defendant must—at the time
the alleged misconduct occurs—request an admonishment to the jury, and if
further relief is desired, move for a mistrial.” Ryan v. State, 9 N.E.3d 663, 667
(Ind. 2014). Failure to comply with these requirements forfeits a prosecutorial
misconduct claim. Delarosa v. State, 938 N.E.2d 690, 696 (Ind. 2010).
[7] Dunn objected to the prosecutor’s improper comments on the defense of
necessity, and the trial court issued an admonishment to the jury to correct the
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error. However, Dunn did not request a mistrial.2 This is not a case where
such a request would necessarily have been futile; Dunn objected to the
prosecutor’s statement and the trial court agreed it was a clear misstatement of
the law and issued an admonishment to the jury. If Dunn believed the
admonishment was insufficient, it was incumbent upon him to request a
mistrial at that time. Having failed to do so, he has failed to preserve the issue
for appeal.
[8] Where a claim of prosecutorial misconduct has been procedurally defaulted,
“[t]he defendant must establish not only the grounds for prosecutorial
misconduct but must also establish that the prosecutorial misconduct
constituted fundamental error.” Ryan, 9 N.E.3d at 667-68. Review for
fundamental error is not intended to grant the defendant a second bite at the
apple; it is meant to permit appellate courts “to correct the most egregious and
2
During a sidebar conference following the conclusion of the State’s rebuttal closing argument, defense
counsel requested an opportunity to present surrebuttal because “it’s the defense . . . position that second
closing is for rebuttal only [and] the State has brought up three additional things that they did not argue in
that first close.” Tr. at 231. The trial court denied the request. After the final instructions were read and the
case submitted to the jury, defense counsel stated:
I think in order to preserve my record for surrebuttal . . . I would like to note – to point
out to the Court that the two arguments that I think were new in the second close were
that no one uh, saw any of the cars around and that Mr. Dunn waited a couple of
minutes before calling the police. And, I believe, in order to preserve the issue, I have to
ask for a mistrial.
Id. at 232-33. The request for mistrial was denied. Because this request for mistrial was specific to the State’s
rebuttal argument, it does not preserve the earlier issue. Dunn does not argue otherwise. See Brief of the
Appellant at 9 n.1.
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blatant trial errors that otherwise would have been procedurally barred . . . .”
Id. at 668.
In evaluating the issue of fundamental error, our task . . . is to look at
the alleged misconduct in the context of all that happened and all the
relevant information given to the jury—including evidence admitted at
trial, closing argument, and jury instructions—to determine whether
the misconduct had such an undeniable and substantial effect on the jury’s
decision that a fair trial was impossible.
Id. (emphasis in original).
[9] Assuming Dunn is correct that the prosecutor’s statement “gave jurors the
impression that Dunn had an obligation to affirmatively prove his innocence,”
Br. of Appellant at 10, we look at the alleged misconduct in the context of the
entire trial. With respect to the evidence, Dunn testified regarding the events he
alleged necessitated his entering Floyd’s house, offering facts supporting the
giving of an instruction on the defense of necessity. The State offered several
witnesses whose testimony either contradicted Dunn’s testimony or cast doubt
on his version of events. At Dunn’s request, the trial court immediately
intervened when the prosecutor misstated the necessity defense during closing
argument and gave the jury a correct statement of the law regarding the
defense. “[W]here the trial court adequately admonishes a jury,
such admonishment is presumed to cure any error that may have occurred.”
Emerson v. State, 952 N.E.2d 832, 840 (Ind. Ct. App. 2011), trans. denied. In
addition, when the prosecutor resumed her closing argument, she restated her
comments in the correct terms, and the final instructions to the jury correctly
stated the law. In light of the evidence from which a reasonable jury could have
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found the State had disproved at least one of the elements of the necessity
defense and the multiple corrective statements given to the jury, we cannot say
that the prosecutor’s misstatement of law had “such an undeniable and
substantial effect on the jury’s decision that a fair trial was impossible.” Ryan, 9
N.E.3d at 668 (emphasis omitted).
Conclusion
[10] We cannot say that the prosecutor’s misstatement, in the context of all the
information given to the jury, amounted to fundamental error. Accordingly,
Dunn’s conviction is affirmed.
[11] Affirmed.
Bailey, J., and Brown, J., concur.
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