NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
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before this opinion goes to press.
2018 VT 28
No. 2016-284
State of Vermont Supreme Court
On Appeal from
v. Superior Court, Washington Unit,
Criminal Division
Nathaniel R. Peatman October Term, 2017
Kevin W. Griffin, J.
James Pepper, Deputy State’s Attorney, Montpelier, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
Allison N. Fulcher of Martin & Associates, Barre, for Defendant-Appellant.
PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
¶ 1. SKOGLUND, J. Defendant Nathaniel Peatman appeals his convictions,
following a jury trial, for first-degree aggravated domestic assault, aggravated assault of a law
enforcement officer, and resisting arrest. Defendant argues that his convictions must be reversed
because the jury instructions failed to guarantee unanimous verdicts. We affirm.
¶ 2. On December 30, 2014, defendant was arrested and charged with first-degree
aggravated domestic assault, aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer, resisting arrest, and
impeding a public officer following a series of events involving defendant’s girlfriend (girlfriend),
her son, and the responding officers.
¶ 3. Prior to trial, defendant gave notice of his intent to present a diminished capacity
defense for the specific-intent charges—most importantly for this appeal, for the willful conduct
element under the first-degree aggravated domestic assault charge. Additionally, the State gave
notice of election of the elements to be tried as follows: the first-degree aggravated domestic
assault charge would proceed under both willful and reckless conduct; the aggravated assault on a
law enforcement officer charge would proceed under both attempted to cause and caused serious
bodily injury. Defendant objected to the State’s election and sought to have the State choose one
theory for each charge prior to closing argument. At the jury draw, a subsequent motion hearing,
and on the morning of trial, defendant expressed concerns about crafting jury instructions that
would guarantee a unanimous verdict. The trial court disagreed, and allowed the State to proceed
with their alternate theories of the case.
¶ 4. A one-day jury trial took place on February 1, 2016. The State presented the
following evidence through five witnesses. Girlfriend testified that, on the night of the incident,
defendant was at her apartment playing videogames with her son. Throughout the night, defendant
was drinking homebrew and getting progressively more critical about the cleanliness of
girlfriend’s apartment, to the point that he began berating girlfriend with insults such as “filthy
pig” and “hog.” Girlfriend put her son to bed in another room and asked defendant to leave. When
defendant refused, girlfriend got up to go to another room in the apartment, but defendant grabbed
her arm and pushed her back up against a bookcase. Defendant “knock[ed her] around the head”
with a closed fist. While defendant was hitting girlfriend, her son came out of his room and
screamed at defendant to stop.
¶ 5. At this point in time, girlfriend’s upstairs neighbor testified that she heard “scream
crying” and a male voice yelling “Cut the F’ing shit.” The neighbor became concerned, went
down to girlfriend’s apartment, and knocked on the door. Defendant opened the door and told the
neighbor that everything was fine. The neighbor testified that defendant smelled of alcohol and
Defendant testified to drinking two to two-and-a-half glasses of “homebrew.” The
alcohol content of the beverage was not established at trial.
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was slurring his words. Although defendant was standing in the doorway, the neighbor could see
that girlfriend and her son were crying in the apartment and that girlfriend’s nose was bleeding.
The neighbor walked past defendant into the apartment and asked girlfriend and her son if they
were okay. Girlfriend’s son eventually responded that defendant had beat girlfriend. When the
neighbor left to call the police, defendant started hitting girlfriend again, “full fisted” in her right
eye, knocking her head against the wall.
¶ 6. The neighbor and her fiancé waited outside for the police. When the first
responding officer, Officer Karie Tucker, arrived, the neighbor told her that defendant was “in a
drunken rage.” Officer Tucker testified that, as she approached girlfriend’s apartment, she heard
yelling. Within seconds of her arrival at the apartment, defendant opened the door and Officer
Tucker could see girlfriend, with a bruised and swollen eye, and her son in the apartment.
Defendant tried to walk past Officer Tucker, but she grabbed him by the arm and attempted to
handcuff him. Defendant responded by immediately grabbing Officer Tucker’s throat with both
hands, choking her. With her free hand, Officer Tucker attempted to push defendant’s face away,
but he bit her middle finger. Officer Tucker then struck defendant’s face with the hand she was
holding the handcuffs in and hit him in the groin until defendant released her, at which time Officer
Tucker was able to handcuff one of defendant’s hands.
¶ 7. The neighbor’s fiancé entered the hallway where Officer Tucker and defendant
were engaged in the struggle. Officer Tucker threatened to use her taser on defendant if he did not
comply, at which point defendant struck the taser out of her hand and punched her in the face
several more times. The neighbor testified that when she entered the hallway, she saw her fiancé
restraining defendant and blood streaming from Officer Tucker’s face. Two additional officers
then arrived on the scene. They were able to handcuff, arrest, and transport defendant to the police
station to be booked. The entire altercation between defendant and Officer Tucker lasted less than
six minutes.
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¶ 8. At the close of the State’s case, defendant moved for judgment of acquittal for the
charges of first-degree aggravated domestic assault, aggravated assault of a law enforcement
officer, and resisting arrest. Defendant argued first that his diminished capacity negated any
willful conduct, and second that there was insufficient evidence that this was a lawful arrest and
that defendant knew Officer Tucker was a law enforcement officer. The court denied defendant’s
motions, finding sufficient evidence that defendant’s actions were willful and that, while there was
evidence that defendant had been drinking, the evidence did not suggest that he was intoxicated
beyond the point of being capable of acting willfully. Further, the court found there was enough
evidence to show that Officer Tucker’s injuries could also have been caused by reckless behavior
and that she was a law enforcement officer performing a lawful duty.
¶ 9. Defendant then took the stand in his own defense. He testified that he had been
drinking homebrew at girlfriend’s apartment and that he was intoxicated. Defendant did not
remember what triggered it, but he testified that he “snapped” and started “flicking” girlfriend in
the back of the head. After he answered the door and told the neighbor that everything was fine,
girlfriend said something that caused defendant to “flick” her again, which he conceded was the
source of girlfriend’s bruised eye. Defendant briefly talked to girlfriend’s son, then exited the
apartment where he encountered Officer Tucker. He testified that, even though she was wearing
a police uniform, he believed she may have been an adult entertainer in costume, and thus, when
she asked him to face the wall, tried to put handcuffs on him, and started hitting him, he defended
himself. Defendant said he never hit Officer Tucker, but merely grabbed her arms to protect
himself and block her blows. When the two additional officers arrived, defendant testified that he
went to them to have them stop Officer Tucker’s assault, but the other officers started beating him
and knocked him unconscious. Defendant testified that, when he woke up, he was lying on his
back in the middle of the driveway in front of a police cruiser.
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¶ 10. After the close of evidence and closing arguments, defendant again raised his
concerns that the State’s alternative theories might leave open the possibility that the jury could
not be unanimous on any one theory and that the jury might not know how to properly consider
the diminished capacity defense. As to the alternate theories, the trial court determined that it
could craft an instruction that could sufficiently define “willful” and “reckless” and make it clear
to the jury that they must be unanimous. The trial court explained that “whether the jury believes
it is reckless, or whether there are some who get to the higher state of willful, they will have
necessarily gone from reckless to willful,” which ensures unanimity. As to defendant’s concern
that the jury might not properly consider the diminished capacity defense, the trial court
determined that it was unnecessary to repeat the entire instruction for diminished capacity after
each charge where the defense applied because the jury had copies of the instructions in the jury
room and could easily refer to the diminished capacity instruction. Therefore, the court decided it
would read the instruction in its entirety once, but after reading the individual elements of each
charge, the court would instruct the jury for which intent elements they should consider for
diminished capacity. Further, defendant did not object to the lack of a jury instruction requiring
unanimity on the specific acts establishing the aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer or
the resisting arrest charges.
¶ 11. The court instructed the jury and sent them into deliberation. While deliberating,
the jury sent out a note asking whether they had “to agree on the specific physical acts listed” or if
they could “be sure beyond a reasonable doubt that he ‘caused serious bodily injury’ or ‘attempted
to prevent a lawful arrest’ regardless which [of] those physical acts were carried out.” In other
words, were they “limited to those physical acts.” The trial court determined that because all the
acts happened during a very short period of time, the jury did not have to agree “that it was three
strikes versus two, or choking versus this, this.” Defendant objected to this determination. The
trial court then instructed the jury the following:
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[Y]ou don’t all have to agree on the specific acts that, for example,
I cited in the instructions. Your duty is to use your recollection of
the evidence. So you’re not limited to those acts. There could be
more or there could be less. . . . But you must unanimously agree
that the particular element was established beyond a reasonable
doubt.
¶ 12. The jury convicted defendant on all four counts. The verdict form indicated that
on the charge of aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer, the jury found defendant guilty
on the theory of attempting to cause serious bodily injury, and therefore did not reach a verdict on
the State’s alternative theory of causing serious bodily injury. This appeal followed.
¶ 13. On appeal, defendant argues that the jury instructions did not guarantee juror
unanimity in violation of the Vermont Constitution. Vt. Const. ch. I, art. 10 (assuring that person
cannot be found guilty without unanimous consent of jury). First, for the first-degree aggravated
domestic assault conviction, defendant argues that the instructions failed to ensure unanimity on
which of the requisite mental states—willful or reckless—the jury found to establish guilt. Second,
for the aggravated assault of a police officer and resisting arrest convictions, defendant argues that
the instructions were erroneous because the jurors were told they were not required to agree on
which act or acts they found established the requisite element.
¶ 14. The “party appealing [the] jury charge has the burden of establishing that the charge
was both erroneous and prejudicial.” Mobbs v. Cent. Vt. Ry., 155 Vt. 210, 218, 583 A.3d 566,
571 (1990). When reviewing jury instructions, this Court must “read the charge as a whole, rather
than piecemeal, and will uphold the instruction where it breathes the true spirit and doctrine of the
law and does not mislead the jury.” State v. Pitts, 174 Vt. 21, 23, 800 A.2d 481, 483 (2003)
(quotation omitted). However, a trial court “is not required to make every comment that
conceivably could be made on the issues and evidence” and “[t]he degree to which the court is to
elaborate on the points charged lies within the sound exercise of its discretion.” Currier v.
Letourneau, 135 Vt. 196, 204, 373 A.2d 521, 527 (1977).
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¶ 15. Defendant first argues that the trial court’s instructions erroneously did not require
the jury to be unanimous on the mental state element—willful or reckless—for defendant’s first-
degree aggravated domestic assault conviction. The trial court relied on this Court’s previous
analysis of ascending mental states when instructing the jury. State v. Bolio, 159 Vt. 250, 617
A.2d 885 (1992); State v. Boglioli, 2011 VT 60, 190 Vt. 542, 26 A.3d 44 overruled on other
grounds by State v. Bolaski, 2014 VT 36, ¶ 47, 196 Vt. 277, 95 A.3d 460. In Bolio, this Court
held that willful conduct involves a degree of intent that is greater than reckless conduct. 159 Vt.
at 253, 617 A.2d at 887 (“To ‘purposely or knowingly’ cause harm is to form a degree of intent to
harm that is greater than to ‘consciously disregard’ the risk that harm may result from the
conduct.”). The Court applied this principle in Boglioli when it affirmed a conviction for voluntary
manslaughter, even though the jury instructions did not require the jurors to choose and
unanimously agree upon one of the three possible mental states that could be used as a basis to
support the conviction: intent to kill, intent to do great bodily harm, and wanton disregard of the
likelihood of death or great bodily harm. 2011 VT 60, ¶ 11. It noted that the element required to
sustain a conviction was that a defendant have “intent,” and the three mental states were merely
alternative ways to demonstrate that the defendant had the requisite intent. Id. ¶ 12. Therefore, it
concluded that “[a]s long as all jurors were unanimous on the ultimate issue of intent, which of the
three alternative methods used to inform each decision as to intent is immaterial.” Id.
¶ 16. While defendant concedes that Bolio and Boglioli are still good law, he opines that
they are inapplicable in the present case because the jury was also given the added consideration
of a diminished capacity defense. Defendant contends that the jury should have been instructed to
first consider willful intent and the defense of diminished capacity and, if they were unanimous
that defendant’s diminished capacity left him unable to form willful intent, they would be required
to return verdict of not guilty and would not be permitted to consider recklessness. Essentially,
defendant argues that in the manner the jury was instructed, a juror or some of the jurors could
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have accepted the diminished capacity defense and determined that defendant could not have acted
willfully, but then wrongfully considered whether he acted recklessly. This argument is flawed.
¶ 17. The first-degree aggravated domestic assault statute states that a person commits
the crime if they “willfully or recklessly” cause the required injury. 13 V.S.A. § 1043(a)(1)
(emphasis added). When this Court construes a criminal statute, “we presume that the Legislature
knows how to incorporate a scienter element.” State v. Richland, 2015 VT 126, ¶ 8, 200 Vt. 401,
132 A.3d 702. Thus, we must assume that the Legislature expressly intended to include
recklessness as an alternative intent level to willfulness—if one was not satisfied, the other should
be considered. The fact that a defense is applicable to only one of those intent levels does not
change the availability of the other as an alternative. To adopt defendant’s contention that the jury
was precluded from considering recklessness if it could not find willful intent, this Court would
have to disregard the statute and essentially eliminate the reckless theory from the offense.
¶ 18. Here, the trial court’s instruction on first-degree aggravated assault tracked the
language of the statute and contained definitions for both mental states. It gave the jury the
diminished capacity instruction requested by defendant and explicitly instructed them to consider
whether defendant’s intoxication negated his ability to form willful intent. Additionally, jury was
instructed that if it “ha[s] a reasonable doubt about whether [defendant] was capable of forming
the required intent, or whether he actually formed the required intent, you must . . . find him not
guilty.” Therefore, we find that the instructions, taken as a whole, reflect the spirit of the law and
the jury was not misled. Further, we hold that, because the instructions were clear that the jury
was only to consider diminished capacity with willful intent and because there is nothing
restricting recklessness to be considered in the alternative, Bolio and Boglioli apply and thus the
jury was necessarily unanimous on the intent element of defendant’s first-degree aggravated
domestic assault conviction.
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¶ 19. Defendant next argues that the trial court erred because the jury instructions did not
guarantee juror unanimity on the aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer and resisting
arrest convictions because the jurors were told they were not required to agree on which act, or
acts, they found established the requisite element. He argues that the lack of an instruction and
the State’s failure to make an election as to the specific act or acts that constituted the offenses
charged is an error that satisfies the high bar set by the plain error analysis. Notwithstanding
defendant’s apparent request for plain error review, we find that the objection was preserved for
full appellate review. Under the correct standard of review, we find no error.
¶ 20. In instructing the jury on the aggravated assault of a law enforcement officer
charge, the court listed several acts alleged by the State that would together satisfy the “attempted
to cause or caused serious bodily injury” element of the charge, including grabbing Officer Tucker
by the throat while applying pressure to her trachea, biting her finger until it bled, and punching
her in the face multiple times. On the resisting arrest charge, the court listed the same acts but
added “refusing to walk.” Defendant did not object to these instructions at the charge conference,
and thus at first glance it would appear as though defendant did not preserve his objection for
appellate review under Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 30 and that this Court must review
for plain error. V.R.Cr.P. 30(b) (“No party may assign as error any portion of the charge or
omission therefrom unless the party objects thereto on the record either at a charge conference or
before the jury retires to consider its verdict, stating distinctly the matter to which objection is
made and the ground of the objection.”).
¶ 21. However, defendant did object to the trial court’s answer to the question sent out
from the jury’s deliberations, in which the court explained that because the evidence presented was
of a series of alleged actions that all happened during a very short period of time, the jury did not
have to be unanimous on the specific acts that constituted the charge. His objection was “a clear
and concise recitation [that allowed the court] ‘to understand what defendant intended to preserve
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for appeal.’ ” State v. Rounds, 2011 VT 39, ¶ 19, 189 Vt. 447, 22 A.3d 477 (quoting State v.
Wheelock, 158 Vt. 302, 306, 609 A.2d 972, 975 (1992)). Thus, the main goal of Rule 30—“to
give the trial court one last opportunity to avoid an error”—was achieved because the court knew
precisely what defendant argued was in error, had a chance to address it, and chose to give the
instruction despite the objection. Wheelock, 158 Vt. at 306, 609 A.2d at 975. Therefore, instead
of plain error review resulting from an unpreserved objection, this Court will review the initial
instructions and the answer to the jury question as a preserved objection.
¶ 22. As explained above, the “party appealing [the] jury charge has the burden of
establishing that the charge was both erroneous and prejudicial.” Mobbs, 155 Vt. at 218, 583 A.3d
at 571. Reading the instructions as a whole, we find no error because it “breathes the true spirit
and doctrine of the law and does not mislead the jury.” Pitts, 174 Vt. at 23, 800 A.2d at 483
(quotation omitted).
¶ 23. Defendant properly states it is a long-established rule that where there is evidence
of many acts, any one of which would constitute the offense charged, an election must be made.
See, e.g., State v. Blair, 109 Vt. 306, 307, 196 A. 242, 243 (1938) (“There can be no question but
that the respondent was entitled to have the State elect as to which offense it relied upon.”); State
v. Bonilla, 144 Vt. 411, 413, 477 A.2d 983, 985 (1984) (“This Court has held, on numerous
occasions, where there is evidence of many acts, any one of which would constitute the offense
charged, an election must be made.”). “This ensures a defendant’s right to a unanimous verdict
by protecting against the possibility that ‘part of the jury will base its decision to convict on
evidence of conduct different from that considered by the rest of the jury.’ ” State v. Albarelli,
2016 VT 119, ¶ 27, __ Vt. __, 159 A.3d 627 (quoting State v. Gilman, 158 Vt. 210, 215, 608 A.2d
660, 664 (1992)). However, this Court has held that there is an exception to the election rule in
cases when the evidence reflects two or more such acts “where the specific acts are so related as
to constitute but one entire transaction, or one offense.” State v. Bailey, 144 Vt. 86, 98, 475 A.2d
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1045, 1052 (1984). In Bailey, this Court held that, because the acts at issue “all occurred within
the span of one and one-half hours,” it would be “unreasonable to compel the prosecution and
the . . . dazed victim to delineate with specificity each act . . . where she was being repeatedly and
continuously . . . assaulted.” 144 Vt. at 99, 475 A.2d at 1053 (quotations omitted). Cf. Bonilla,
144 Vt. at 414, 477 A.2d at 985 (requiring election between three acts of arson because they took
place over three-day span); State v. Corliss, 149 Vt. 100, 103, 539 A.2d 557, 559 (1987) (finding
that election was required between two distinct acts of burglary over course of several hours).
¶ 24. Here, all of the alleged acts took place over a span of six minutes as part of one
continuous assault—from this, it is clear that this case fits within the exception because the acts
were “inextricably intertwined” as one continuous offense. Therefore, the trial court’s initial
instructions, which included a list of alleged acts that the court suggested the jury consider, and its
answer to the jury question, which clarified that the jury did not have to elect specific acts and
instead had to be unanimous that the element was proven beyond a reasonable doubt, was not in
error. It breathed the true spirit of the law—that there is an exception to the election rule in
multiple-act acts and that the evidence presented qualified this case for said exception—and thus
we affirm.
Affirmed.
FOR THE COURT:
Associate Justice
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