SYLLABUS
This syllabus is not part of the Court’s opinion. It has been prepared by the Office
of the Clerk for the convenience of the reader. It has been neither reviewed nor
approved by the Court and may not summarize all portions of the opinion.
State v. A.L.A. (A-3-21) (085500)
Argued February 28, 2022 -- Decided August 18, 2022
PIERRE-LOUIS, J., writing for a unanimous Court.
In this case, the Court considers whether a jury could have understood that the
affirmative defense of reasonable corporal punishment applied to both a child
endangerment charge and a simple assault charge where the reasonable corporal
punishment instruction was provided only in the instructions for the child
endangerment offense.
Defendant A.L.A. was the legal guardian of her four grandchildren, who
ranged in age from three to seventeen years old. In August 2016, the oldest
grandchild reported that defendant physically abused them. After an investigation,
the Division of Child Protection & Permanency initiated an emergency removal of
all four grandchildren. Defendant was tried for multiple counts of endangering the
welfare of a child. The parties agreed that the court would instruct the jury on
second-degree endangering, and what the parties termed a lesser included disorderly
persons offense of simple assault.
When the court asked counsel for comments on the proposed jury instructions,
defense counsel told the judge, “if you were to read that without a caveat, every
spanking is a simple assault.” Defense counsel argued “that corporal punishment is
recognized by the law as a valid means of disciplining a child. So, there are certain
parts of corporal punishment that would not -- would not be a simple assault because
otherwise it’s just going to be an automatic simple assault on all three charges.”
The parties agreed that where there is a child endangering charge under
N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a), the following charge (referred to here as “the K.A. language”)
should be used: “The law does not prohibit the use of corporal punishment. The
statute prohibits the infliction of excessive corporal punishment. The general
proposition is that a parent may inflict moderate correction such as is reasonable
under the circumstances of the case.” (quoting DYFS v. K.A., 413 N.J. Super. 504,
510 (App. Div. 2010)). The trial judge adopted the K.A. language in instructing the
jury on the child endangerment count but not the simple assault charge.
1
After the trial judge instructed the jury, defense counsel, as previously
requested, sought an instruction for the simple assault charge noting the reaso nable
corporal punishment exception. The court declined to change the charge, and the
jury acquitted defendant of all child endangerment charges but convicted her of one
count of simple assault with respect to only one of the children. A majority of the
Appellate Division affirmed. Defendant appealed to the Court as of right based on
the dissent in the Appellate Division.
HELD: The jury could not have understood that the reasonable corporal
punishment language in the child endangerment charge also applied to the simple
assault charge. The trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury, in the context of
the simple assault charge, that reasonable corporal punishment is not prohibited .
Because that error in jury instructions could have led the jury to an unjust result, the
Court vacates defendant’s conviction and remands for further proceedings.
1. The Court reviews the relevant portion of the child endangerment statute,
N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a)(2), and the three subsections of Title Nine referenced in that
statute, including N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21(c)(4)’s provision that a child may be abused or
neglected through “the infliction of excessive corporal punishment.” Although Title
Nine does not define “excessive corporal punishment,” New Jersey courts have
endorsed the K.A. language distinguishing “moderate correction such as is
reasonable under the circumstances” from “excessive corporal punishment” for jury
instructions for child endangerment. The simple assault statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:12-
1(a)(1), does not mention corporal punishment. But the New Jersey Code of
Criminal Justice separately recognizes justification as an affirmative defense in
certain criminal cases. N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 provides in part that force used upon
“another is justifiable . . . where the actor has been vested or entrusted with special
responsibility for the care, supervision, discipline or safety of another or of others
and the force is used for the purpose of and . . . to the extent necessary to further that
responsibility.” The provision of the Model Penal Code on which N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8
was based specifically refers to the use of force by parents or guardians to promote
the welfare of a minor. (pp. 17-22)
2. If a defendant requests a charge on an affirmative defense and there is a rational
basis in the record to give it, then the court should give the requested instruction.
Here, defense counsel twice asked for an explicit statement that reasonable corporal
punishment is not prohibited by law. In response to counsel’s first request, the State
noted that providing the K.A. charge “would seem to address concerns that -- that
the defense has about the jury automatically reaching the conclusion that every time
you employ corporal punishment with a child it would be viewed as simple assault.”
Both parties thus agreed to the trial court providing the K.A. reasonable corporal
punishment instructions, but the trial court provided that instruction only during the
child endangerment charge. Defense counsel’s second request for the K.A. charge
2
occurred after the trial judge completed his instructions but made no mention of
reasonable corporal punishment during the simple assault charge. Although defense
counsel did not specifically mention N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 in either request, counsel was
clearly requesting an affirmative defense instruction, separate and apart from the
child endangerment charge, that reasonable corporal punishment is not a crime and
does not constitute simple assault, as the parties had agreed in using the K.A.
language. Neither the State nor the trial court disputed the applicability of the
reasonable corporal punishment instruction to the simple assault. A rational basis
existed to give the requested instruction, and it was error not to do so. (pp. 22-25)
3. Here, the jury acquitted defendant of the very same conduct under the child
endangerment statute that it found defendant guilty of under the simple assault
statute. The difference is that defendant had the benefit of the K.A. reasonable
corporal punishment instruction for the child endangerment charge but not for
simple assault. Had the same instruction been explicitly given to the jury for the
simple assault charge, there is a real possibility that the jury could have reached a
different result on that charge. If the jury is not instructed as to the law regarding
reasonable corporal punishment in relation to a simple assault charge, then the jury
could never reach a verdict other than guilty so long as there is sufficient evidence
that the child experienced the sensation of physical pain. The argument that the
jurors would automatically carry instructions received as to one charge -- child
endangerment -- through to their consideration of a separate charge on a separate
offense with distinct elements -- simple assault -- is at odds with the fundamental
presumption that the jury follows the trial court’s instructions. (pp. 25-27)
4. The Court does not endorse the notion that simple assault is a lesser included
offense to child endangerment and does not anticipate that simple assault will often
be charged in cases such as the present matter. But, going forward, if simple assault
is charged along with child endangerment in the context of a parent or guardian
inflicting corporal punishment, the trial court must instruct the jury as to the law
regarding each offense. Specifically, the trial court must instruct the jury that the
law does not prohibit the use of corporal punishment and a parent may inflict
moderate correction as is reasonable under the circumstances of the case not only as
to the endangerment charges but also as to the simple assault charges. The jury must
also be instructed that excessive corporal punishment, however, is prohibited as to
both charges. (pp. 8, 27-28)
REVERSED and REMANDED to the trial court.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES PATTERSON and SOLOMON; and
JUDGE FUENTES (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE PIERRE-LOUIS’s
opinion.
3
SUPREME COURT OF NEW JERSEY
A-3 September Term 2021
085500
State of New Jersey,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
A.L.A.,
Defendant-Appellant.
On appeal from the Superior Court,
Appellate Division.
Argued Decided
February 28, 2022 August 18, 2022
Alison Gifford, Assistant Deputy Public Defender,
argued the cause for appellant (Joseph E. Krakora, Public
Defender, attorney; Alison Gifford, of counsel and on the
brief).
Monica do Outeiro, Special Deputy Attorney General/
Acting Assistant Prosecutor, argued the cause for
respondent (Lori D. Linskey, Acting Monmouth County
Prosecutor, attorney; Monica do Outeiro, of counsel and
on the brief).
JUSTICE PIERRE-LOUIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this case, we consider whether a jury could have understood that the
affirmative defense of reasonable corporal punishment applied to both a child
1
endangerment charge and a simple assault charge where the reasonable
corporal punishment instruction was provided only in the instructions for the
child endangerment offense.
Defendant A.L.A. was the legal guardian of her four grandchildren, who
ranged in age from three to seventeen years old. At one point, the oldest
grandchild, K.A., reported to authorities that defendant physically abused her
and the other children. The Division of Child Protection and Permanency
(DCPP) opened an investigation and ultimately concluded, based on an audio
recording of defendant allegedly hitting three-year-old A.A. with a belt
multiple times and defendant’s seeming admission to the abuse, that the
children should be removed from defendant’s home.
Following a trial on several counts of child endangerment, the jury
acquitted defendant of all endangering charges but convicted her of simple
assault, presented as a lesser included offense to endangering, with respect to
A.A.
Defendant appealed, arguing that the jury should have been instructed
that reasonable corporal punishment is not a crime as to ---
both the simple assault
charge and the child endangerment offense, whereas defendant’s jury only
received that instruction on the latter offense. The Appellate Division
affirmed defendant’s conviction in a split decision. The majority found that
2
the trial court’s jury instructions properly included the language from DYFS v.
K.A., 413 N.J. Super. 504, 510 (App. Div. 2010), 1 which instructs that the law
does not prohibit reasonable corporal punishment by a parent or guardian, for
the child endangerment charge. The court determined that the plain language
of the simple assault statute, however, does not include an exception for
reasonable corporal punishment. The dissenting judge opined that the trial
court was required to include the reasonable corporal punishment exception in
its instructions on the simple assault charge and that its omission was clearly
capable of producing an unjust result.
We find that the jury could not have understood that the K.A. language
in the child endangerment charge also applied to the simple assault charge.
We agree with the dissent that omitting the instruction during the simple
assault charge was clearly capable of producing an unjust result; indeed, in
finding defendant guilty of simple assault, the jury convicted defendant of the
same conduct it acquitted her of in the child endangerment charge, as to which
it had been instructed on reasonable corporal punishment. We therefore hold
that the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury, in the context of the
simple assault charge in this case, that reasonable corporal punishment is not
prohibited. We find that the error in jury instructions could have led the jury
1
This case has no relation to the grandchild K.A. in this matter.
3
to an unjust result, so we reverse the Appellate Division’s judgment, vacate
defendant’s conviction, and remand for further proceedings.
I.
A.
We rely on the facts adduced at trial for the following summary.
Defendant A.L.A. assumed the legal guardianship and sole caregiving of
her four grandchildren -- teenagers K.A. and K.L.A., and toddlers C.A. and
A.A.2 At the time of the alleged abuse, K.A. was seventeen, K.L.A. was
fifteen, C.A. was four, and A.A. was three years old. Defendant’s daughter
could not care for her children K.A. and K.L.A. due to a debilitating drug
addiction, and defendant’s son -- the father of A.A. and C.A. -- was deceased.
Defendant assumed responsibility for the children, and they all lived in
her home in Keansburg. Defendant set strict house rules and required K.A.
and K.L.A. to help with chores and take care of the younger children.
According to defendant, she disciplined the teenage girls, but only when they
failed to do “their chores properly,” “ha[d] an attitude,” or “fail[ed] to abide by
rules such as going to bed on time.” There was no evidence presented that the
toddlers had any household responsibilities or chores.
2
Initials are used to protect the identities of the parties and witnesses in this
matter. See R. 1:38-3(c)(9).
4
On August 5, 2016, K.A. ran away from home and went to live with a
friend in Keyport. On August 7, 2016, defendant reported K.A. missing to the
Keansburg Police. The police eventually located K.A., who reported to police
that she ran away to escape defendant’s physical abuse.
A few days later, DCPP opened an investigation into defendant’s
conduct in response to K.A.’s report. A DCPP caseworker, Jacqueline
Alvarez, visited defendant’s home and conducted interviews with the four
grandchildren. K.A. insisted that defendant abused her and the other three
grandchildren. Alvarez, however, did not observe any physical injuries on the
children, and the three younger grandchildren denied the abuse. During
K.L.A.’s interview, she told Alvarez that K.A. had run away because of
defendant’s strict house rules. Alvarez concluded that the children were not in
imminent danger of being harmed; thus, DCPP did not initiate the
grandchildren’s removal from defendant’s home at that point.
About a month later, on September 7, 2016, Alvarez returned to
defendant’s home to follow up on the investigation. During that visit, K.A.
played for Alvarez an audio recording from late August 2016 of defendant
allegedly hitting A.A. with a leather belt multiple times. According to the trial
transcript, the following could be heard on the recording: “[c]rying,
indiscernible, crying, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack,
5
ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack, ow smack,
indiscernible.” 3 Alvarez spoke to A.A., who confirmed that she was the child
on the recording who was being hit. According to K.A., prior to the recording,
defendant had instructed A.A. to lie on the bed, but instead A.A. disobeyed
defendant and got off the bed to play with some toys on the floor. Then,
according to K.A., defendant hit A.A. with the belt. K.A. summed up the
alleged beating as “one of the days when [defendant] felt like beating them.”
After hearing the recording, Alvarez spoke to the other grandchildren who
disclosed additional abusive acts by defendant.
Alvarez played the recording for defendant and, at first, defendant
responded by stating, “[w]ell, I guess you got me,” and “if you have it, you
have it . . . [A.A.] must have been really bad that day.” Defendant later denied
committing the alleged abusive acts captured on the recording claiming DCPP
could not prove it was her on the recording and stated, “when I beat them I yell
so that wasn’t me.”
3
Because the recording contains only audio, it is unclear exactly how many
times defendant allegedly hit A.A. The State argues that based on the audio ,
defendant hit A.A. 12 times. Defense counsel argues that some of the sounds
on the audio could be the belt hitting a chair, and not actually A.A. The trial
court did not make a finding as to how many times defendant allegedly hit
A.A.
6
Alvarez contacted her supervisors at DCPP and sent the recording to
them, and DCPP initiated an emergency removal of all four grandchildren.
The children were removed and taken to the hospital pursuant to DCPP’s
required post-removal procedures. Medical examinations of the children did
not reveal any injuries.
B.
On January 27, 2017, a Monmouth County grand jury charged defendant
in a ten-count indictment with the following: second-degree endangering the
welfare of a child (counts one to four); third-degree aggravated assault (counts
five, six, and eight); third-degree possession of a weapon for an unlawful
purpose (counts seven and nine); and fourth-degree unlawful possession of a
weapon (count ten). The charges stemmed from defendant’s alleged abuse of
her four grandchildren spanning from September 1, 2015 to August 25, 2016.
Prior to trial, the court granted the State’s motion to dismiss counts five
through ten.
The jury trial began on the remaining four counts related to defendant’s
alleged violation of N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a)(2), endangering the welfare a child,
pertaining to each of her four grandchildren: K.A. (count one), K.L.A. (count
two), C.A. (count three), and A.A. (count four). At the close of the State’s
case, the court granted defendant’s motion for a judgment of acquittal on count
7
two, endangering the welfare of K.L.A. After the acquittal on count two, the
parties agreed that the court would instruct the jury on second-degree
endangering, and what the parties termed a lesser included disorderly persons
offense of simple assault. 4
During the charge conference, the court reviewed the jury instructions
and asked counsel for comment. The following exchange occurred between
defense counsel and the judge:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: -- regarding the lesser
included, simple assault . . . if you were to read that
without a caveat, every spanking is a simple assault.
The caveat should be that corporal punishment is
recognized by the law as a valid means of disciplining
a child. So, there are certain parts of corporal
punishment that would not -- would not be a simple
assault because otherwise it’s just going to be an
automatic simple assault on all three charges.
THE COURT: Well, you requested simple assault
yesterday.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, we talked about lesser
included, but I’m -- I’m requesting it now but with the
caveat that not every corporal punishment, spanking is
a simple assault that the law recognizes.
The State then commented that the parties “had discussed in chambers
including within the endangering charge a definition of simple assault taking
4
Although simple assault was referred to as a lesser included offense to child
endangerment, this Court does not endorse that notion. Defense counsel
consented to the inclusion of this charge, so the issue is not before the Court .
8
the language from [K.A.]” The parties agreed that where there is a child
endangering charge under N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a), the following charge, which
the trial judge read into the record, should be used:
The law does not prohibit the use of corporal
punishment. The statute prohibits the infliction of
excessive corporal punishment. The general
proposition is that a parent may inflict moderate
correction such as is reasonable under the
circumstances of the case.
[(quoting K.A., 413 N.J. Super. at 510).]
The State then explained that such an instruction “would seem to address
concerns that -- that the defense has about the jury automatically reaching the
conclusion that every time you employ corporal punishment with a child it
would be viewed as simple assault.” The court asked defense counsel if there
was any objection to giving an instruction that tracked the language in K.A.,
and defense counsel had no objection.
In delivering the jury charge, the trial judge instructed the jury on the
child endangerment count as follows:
So now what I’m going to talk to you about is the
substantive law and what I will tell you, and I’m going
to start with [c]ount [one] in this indictment, and then I
will also instruct you on the lesser included offense as
I just talked about, the lesser included offense of
endangering the welfare of a child, abuse or neglect, is
the simple assault that has been mentioned.
....
9
To find [defendant] guilty of this crime, the State must
prove beyond a reasonable doubt the following about
-- the following elements: That [K.A.] was a child, one;
two, the defendant knowingly caused the child harm
that would make the child abused or neglected; three,
that the defendant knew that such conduct would cause
the child harm that would make the child abused or
neglected and four, the defendant had a legal duty for
the care of the child or had assumed responsibility for
care of the child.
....
The second element that the State must prove beyond a
reasonable doubt is that defendant knowingly caused
the child harm that would make the child abused or
neglected. An abused or neglected child means a child
whose physical condition has been impaired or is in
imminent danger of becoming impaired as a result of
the failure of the defendant to exercise a minimum
degree of care in providing a child with proper
supervision or guardianship by unreasonably inflicting
or allowing to be inflicted harm or substantial risk
thereof including the infliction of excessive corporal
punishment or by any other acts of similar serious
nature requiring the aid of the Court.
The law does not prohibit the use of corporal
punishment. The statute provides -- the statute -- let me
read that again. The law does not prohibit the use of
corporal punishment. The statute prohibits the
infliction of excessive corporal punishment. The
general proposition is that a parent may inflict moderate
correction such as is reasonable under the
circumstances of a case.
The judge then addressed the simple assault charge, commenting that
simple assault should not be considered “unless you find the State has failed to
10
meet its burden with regard to the [endangerment] offenses in the indictment.”
Specifically, the judge stated:
Simple assault is a lesser included offense to [c]ount
[one] of this indictment involving [K.A.].
---- The statute
which defines simple assault provides that a person
commits a simple assault if she purposefully,
knowingly, recklessly causes bodily injury to another.
In order for you to convict the defendant, [A.L.A.], of
this offense the State must prove the following
elements beyond a reasonable doubt: (1) That the
defendant did cause bodily injury to [K.A.] and (2) the
defendant acted purposely or knowingly or recklessly
in causing bodily injury to [K.A.]
The first -- the first element the State must prove
beyond a reasonable doubt is the defendant caused
bodily injury to another. Body injury -- bodily injury
is defined as physical pain, illness or any impairment of
the physical condition. The second element that the
State must prove beyond a reasonable doubt is the
defendant acted purposely or knowingly or recklessly
in causing bodily injury to [K.A.]
After the trial judge instructed the jury, defense counsel, as previously
requested, sought an instruction for the simple assault charge noting the
reasonable corporal punishment exception. The following exchange occurred:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: The only thing I would -- I
would add, Judge, is that under the lesser included,
simple assault . . . spanking is not a simple assault if it
arises during reasonable corporal punishment of a
child.
PROSECUTOR: It’s reasonably entrenched in the
other part of that instruction.
11
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yeah, but that’s the problem,
it’s in the other part, it’s not under the lesser included
part.
THE COURT: I’m not -- I’m not going to change the
charge now.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Okay.
THE COURT: Then we should have done that before.
We’ll just leave it as it is. Okay.
The jury subsequently returned a verdict acquitting defendant of all child
endangerment charges but convicting her of one count of simple assault with
respect to A.A. only. On June 29, 2018, the court sentenced defendant to fines
and penalties totaling $575.
C.
In an unpublished split decision, the Appellate Division affirmed
defendant’s conviction.
The majority found that the parties agreed during the charge conference
to include only the K.A. language and not any other affirmative defense
pertaining to reasonable corporal punishment. The majority noted that the
K.A. language had been used in cases involving Title Nine or in which Title
Nine terms were incorporated into the criminal charges, but that no court has
extended the Title Nine terms and definitions to simple assault. According to
the majority, there was no evidence that the Legislature intended to “graft any
12
Title Nine provision to the simple assault statute,” and tailoring the simple
assault charge to include language derived from Title Nine would improperly
“include an exception that the Legislature chose to exclude.” Finally, the
majority stressed that the evidence “showed that defendant hit a child twelve
times with a belt while the child cried in apparent pain throughout the ordeal .”
Therefore, the majority concluded that such “evidence supports a conviction of
simple assault” and “discern[ed] no error in the instructions warranting a
reversal of the jury’s verdict.”
In departing from the majority opinion, the dissent determined that (1) the
jury could not have understood that the instruction from the child
endangerment charge about “reasonable corporal punishment” also applied to
simple assault; (2) the trial judge was required to include a “reasonable
corporal punishment” exception in the simple assault charge; and (3) omission
of the charge was capable of producing an unjust result.
The dissenting judge agreed with the majority that “the simple assault
statute does not incorporate qualifying language as does the child
endangerment statute,” but rejected the majority’s strict adherence to the
language of the statute. The dissent noted that “[courts] expect too much to
look for such precision” and “the Legislature could not foresee every
conceivable attempt by a prosecutor to criminalize what should not be
13
criminalized, and undoubtedly left it for trial judges to sort out such matters
with common sense and according to the particular circumstances presented.”
In a footnote, the dissent mentioned that the Legislature may have considered
the “particular circumstances presented” by providing a justification defense in
N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8; this footnote was the first time the justification defense was
expressly raised by statutory citation in this matter.
Relying on the tenet that a court must assume the jury followed the
judge’s instructions, the dissent concluded that the jury could not have
considered whether defendant was disciplining A.A. in a “non-excessive way”
for the simple assault charge “because it was not told that this circumstance
mattered or could be considered.” Therefore, according to the dissenting
judge, the absence of the instruction likely produced an unjust result because
the jury acquitted defendant for child endangerment, “suggest[ing] it found
defendant was disciplining the child, but not excessively” while convicting her
for simple assault based on the same conduct.
14
II.
A.
Defendant appealed as of right based on the dissent in the Appellate
Division. -----
See R. 2:2-1(a)(2). In her supplemental brief to this Court,
defendant argues for the first time that the trial court erred in failing to instruct
the jury on the affirmative defense of justification in N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 for the
simple assault charge because there was a rational basis in the evidence to
support the instruction. Defendant points out that defense counsel asked the
court to instruct the jury on reasonable corporal punishment, the substantive
equivalent of N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8, and that there was support in the record for
such an instruction. Defendant further highlights that New Jersey allows the
reasonable use of corporal punishment under both the child endangerment and
abuse statute, N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a), and N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8’s “special relationship
defense” statute. Additionally, defendant contends that the reasonable
corporal punishment defense was “reasonably entrenched” in the child
endangerment charge, such that the jury would not have applied it to the
simple assault charge as well, because the charges were presented as being
distinct.
15
B.
The State argues that the Appellate Division majority appropriately
concluded that the trial court was not required to instruct the jury on the
N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 defense. The State contests defendant’s claim that defense
counsel sought a N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 instruction either during the charge
conference or after the jury was charged. Rather, the State asserts that
defendant requested only language from Title Nine, particularly from K.A.,
excepting reasonable corporal punishment from abuse, to be applied to the
simple assault charge. Consequently, the State argues, because defendant did
not request the affirmative defense of justification under N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8, she
is subject to the “clearly indicated” standard. In addressing the dissenting
opinion, the State argues that trial courts are not required to craft jury
instructions creating defenses to assault not recognized by the Legislature.
III.
Appropriate and proper jury instructions are essential for a fair trial.
Prioleau v. Ky. Fried Chicken, Inc., 223 N.J. 245, 256 (2015). An appeal
centered around jury instructions requires courts to read the charge as a whole,
and not just the challenged portion, to determine its overall effect. State v.
Garrison, 228 N.J. 182, 201 (2017). “[A] proper ‘jury charge must correctly
state the applicable law, outline the jury’s function and be clear in how the
16
jury should apply the legal principles charged to the facts of the case at hand.’”
Est. of Kotsovska v. Liebman, 221 N.J. 568, 591 (2015) (quoting Viscik v.
Fowler Equip. Co., 173 N.J. 1, 18 (2002)).
The jury instruction issues in this case revolve around the child
endangerment and simple assault charges.
A.
The New Jersey child endangerment statute provides, in relevant part,
that
[a]ny person having a legal duty for the care of a child
or who has assumed responsibility for the care of a
child who causes the child harm that would make the
child an abused or neglected child as defined in
[N.J.S.A.] 9:6-1, [N.J.S.A.] 9:6-3, and [N.J.S.A.] 9:6-
8.21 is guilty of a crime of the second degree.
[N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a)(2).]
“The three subsections of Title [Nine] incorporated by the Legislature in
N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4[(a)]” are indispensable in N.J.S.A. 2C:24-4(a)’s application
and enforcement. State v. Fuqua, 234 N.J. 583, 591 (2018).
In Title Nine, N.J.S.A. 9:6-1 first outlines “eight actions that constitute
child abuse,” including child endangerment. Ibid. Regarding the act of child
endangerment, N.J.S.A. 9:6-3 states that
[a]ny parent, guardian or person having the care,
custody or control of any child, who shall abuse,
17
abandon, be cruel to or neglectful of such child, or any
person who shall abuse, be cruel to or neglectful of any
child shall be deemed to be guilty of a crime of the
fourth degree.
N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21(c)(4), in relevant part, defines an “[a]bused or neglected
child” as
a child whose physical, mental, or emotional condition
has been impaired or is in imminent danger of
becoming impaired as the result of the failure of his
parent or guardian, as herein defined, to exercise a
minimum degree of care
....
(b) in providing the child with proper supervision
or guardianship, by unreasonably inflicting or
allowing to be inflicted harm, or substantial risk
thereof, including the infliction of excessive
corporal punishment; or by any other acts of a
similarly serious nature requiring the aid of the
court . . . .
[(emphasis added).]
Although Title Nine does not define “excessive corporal punishment,”
New Jersey courts have endorsed the language used in K.A. for jury
instructions for child endangerment.
In K.A., a mother struck her eight-year-old daughter’s shoulder several
times, which resulted in four noticeable bruises. 413 N.J. Super. at 506. In
resolving the question of whether the beating constituted “excessive corporal
18
punishment” under N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.21, which is undefined in the statute, the
court examined existing case law and the relevant administrative code to
construe its charge. Id. at 510-11.
In its jury instructions in K.A., the court adopted the language in State v.
T.C., 347 N.J. Super. 219, 239-40 (App. Div. 2002): “The law does not
prohibit the use of corporal punishment. The statute prohibits the infliction of
excessive corporal punishment. The general proposition is that a parent may
inflict moderate correction such as is reasonable under the circumstances of a
case.” Id. at 510 (quoting T.C., 347 N.J. Super. at 239-40).
B.
The simple assault statute directs that
[A] person is guilty of [simple] assault if the person:
(1) Attempts to cause or purposely, knowingly,
or recklessly causes bodily injury to another; or
(2) Negligently causes bodily injury to another
with a deadly weapon; or
(3) Attempts by physical menace to put another
in fear of imminent serious bodily injury.
[N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a).]
The model jury instructions for simple assault as a lesser included offense, as
provided to the jury in this matter, note that the State must prove beyond a
19
reasonable doubt that the defendant caused bodily injury to another and further
defines “bodily injury” “as physical pain, illness or any impairment of the
physical condition.” See Model Jury Charges (Criminal), “Simple Assault
(Bodily Injury) (Lesser Included Offense) (N.J.S.A. 2C:12-1(a)(1))” (rev. May
8, 2006).
C.
The New Jersey Code of Criminal Justice recognizes justification as an
affirmative defense in certain criminal cases. State v. Galicia, 210 N.J. 364,
389 (2012). At issue in this case is one of the justification provisions found in
N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8, which provides that
[t]he use of force upon or toward the person of another
is justifiable as permitted by law or as would be a
defense in a civil action based thereon where the actor
has been vested or entrusted with special responsibility
for the care, supervision, discipline or safety of another
or of others and the force is used for the purpose of and,
subject to section 2C:3-9(b), to the extent necessary to
further that responsibility, unless:
a. The code or the law defining the offense deals
with the specific situation involved; or
b. A legislative purpose to exclude the
justification claimed otherwise plainly appears;
or
c. Deadly force is used, in which case such force
must be otherwise justifiable under the
provisions of this chapter.
20
[N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8.]
The 1971 Commentary to N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8 states that the statute was
“based upon [M.P.C.] § 3.08 but is intended to generalize the rules there set
forth . . . and believes that the Courts look to that provision, as well as to
existing law, in interpreting this Section.” The New Jersey Penal Code: Final
Report § 2C:3-8, at 94 (Crim. L. Revision Comm’n 1971) (citing Richardson
v. Parole Bd., 98 N.J.L. 690 (E. & A. 1923) (codifying the parental right to
inflict moderate and reasonable correction to children/wards)). M.P.C. § 3.08,
in turn, provides that
[t]he use of force upon or toward the person of another
is justifiable if:
(1) the actor is the parent or guardian or other
person similarly responsible for the general care
and supervision of a minor or a person acting at
the request of such parent, guardian or other
responsible person and:
(a) the force is used for the purpose of
safeguarding or promoting the welfare of
the minor, including the prevention or
punishment of his misconduct; and
(b) the force used is not designed to cause
or known to create a substantial risk of
causing death, serious bodily injury,
disfigurement, extreme pain or mental
distress or gross degradation; . . .
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IV.
A.
When a party requests a specific instruction that is not given, reviewing
courts consider whether a rational basis for giving the instruction existed.
State v. Carrero, 229 N.J. 118, 128 (2017). That standard applies to requested
charges on affirmative defenses. See State v. Walker, 203 N.J. 73, 87 (2010)
(“[I]f a defendant requests a charge on the defense and there is a rational basis
in the record to give it, then the court should give the requested instruction. ”).
“The rational-basis test sets a low threshold,” Carrero, 229 N.J. at 128, and in
deciding whether the rational-basis test has been satisfied, the trial court must
view the evidence in the light most favorable to the defendant, see State v.
Mauricio, 117 N.J. 402, 412, 418 (1990).
Here, defendant highlights that defense counsel twice asked the court to
instruct the jury on the affirmative defense of reasonable corporal punishment
and that there was support in the record for such an instruction. The State, on
the other hand, argues that defense counsel never sought an affirmative
defense instruction under N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8.
While it is true that defense counsel did not expressly cite to N.J.S.A.
2C:3-8 in requesting the reasonable corporal punishment charge, the record is
clear regarding what defense counsel twice asked for -- an explicit statement
22
that reasonable corporal punishment is not prohibited by law. Defense counsel
first requested the charge during the charge conference:
DEFENSE COUNSEL: -- if you were to read that
without a caveat, every spanking is a simple assault.
The caveat should be that corporal punishment is
recognized by the law as a valid means of disciplining
a child. So, there are certain parts of corporal
punishment that would not -- would not be a simple
assault because otherwise it’s just going to be an
automatic simple assault on all three charges.
THE COURT: Well, you requested simple assault
yesterday.
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Well, we talked about lesser
included, but I’m -- I’m requesting it now but with the
caveat that not every corporal punishment, spanking is
a simple assault that the law recognizes.
In response to this first request, the State noted that providing the K.A. charge
“would seem to address concerns that -- that the defense has about the jury
automatically reaching the conclusion that every time you employ corporal
punishment with a child it would be viewed as simple assault.” In that
statement, the State quite succinctly summarized defense counsel’s concerns in
agreeing to provide the K.A. language in order to address the corporal
punishment/simple assault issue. Both parties agreed to the trial court
providing the K.A. reasonable corporal punishment instructions, but the trial
court provided that instruction only during the child endangerment charge.
23
Defense counsel’s second request for the K.A. charge occurred after the
trial judge completed his instructions but made no mention of reasonable
corporal punishment during the simple assault charge. Defense counsel sought
an additional instruction applicable to the simple assault charge that “spanking
is not a simple assault if it arises during reasonable corporal punishment of a
child.” The State responded that “[i]t’s reasonably entrenched in the other part
of that instruction.” Defense counsel maintained that while reasonable
corporal punishment was entrenched in the child endangerment instruction, it
was not part of the simple assault charge.
Although defense counsel did not specifically mention N.J.S.A. 2C:3-8
in either request, defense counsel was clearly requesting an affirmative defense
instruction, separate and apart from the child endangerment charge, that
reasonable corporal punishment is not a crime and does not constitute simple
assault, as the parties had agreed in using the K.A. language. The trial court,
as well as the State, was aware of and understood defense counsel’s requested
jury instruction. By virtue of defense counsel’s repeated request for the
reasonable corporal punishment charge, the rational basis standard applies.
Neither the State nor the trial court disputed the applicability of the
reasonable corporal punishment instruction to the simple assault charge as
evidenced by the extensive discussion regarding the applicability of reasonable
24
corporal punishment in this case. Therefore, we conclude that a rational basis
existed for the trial court to give the requested instruction and that it was error
not to do so. We now consider whether the error requires reversal.
B.
In this case, whether the error in omitting the requested jury instruction
was harmless, see State v. Baum, 224 N.J. 147, 159 (2016), turns on whether
the jury would have understood from the entirety of the jury charge that
“reasonable corporal punishment” was an exception to criminal liability under
both the child endangerment and simple assault charges. We find there is a
real possibility that the erroneous instruction “led to an unjust result” -- that is,
there is a possibility “sufficient to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether [the
instruction] led the jury to a verdict it otherwise might not have reached.”
Ibid. (quoting State v. Lazo, 209 N.J. 9, 26 (2012)).
Although we cannot speculate as to the jury’s determinations during
deliberations, the jury verdict was inconsistent. The jury acquitted defendant
of the very same conduct under the child endangerment statute that it found
defendant guilty of under the simple assault statute. The difference is that
defendant had the benefit of the K.A. reasonable corporal punishment
instruction for the child endangerment charge but not for simple assault. Had
the same instruction been explicitly given to the jury for the simple assault
25
charge, there is a real possibility that the jury could have reached a different
result on that charge.
As defense counsel explained in requesting the reasonable corporal
punishment charge, if a parent or guardian is charged with simple assault and
the jury is not instructed that reasonable corporal punishment is not prohibited,
a guilty verdict will almost always result because bodily injury under simple
assault can be found if the victim suffered the sensation of physical pain. If
the jury is not instructed as to the law regarding reasonable corporal
punishment in relation to a simple assault charge, then the jury could never
reach a verdict other than guilty so long as there is sufficient evidence that the
child experienced the sensation of physical pain.
At oral argument, the State conceded that the charge of simple assault in
conjunction with a child endangerment offense is uncommon. In this case,
because those charges were packaged together and based on the same alleged
conduct, a common sense understanding of the law regarding corporal
punishment by a parent or guardian should have resulted in an instruction to
the jury, embedded within the simple assault charge, that explained that
reasonable corporal punishment is not a crime. Again, the trial transcript is
clear that the trial court and the State agreed that the charge was applicable,
26
but they disagreed with defense counsel on the need to reiterate the charge
after it had already been articulated during the child endangerment instruction.
Under the view taken by the court and the State, the jurors would
automatically carry instructions received as to one charge -- not as part of an
overarching section that would apply to multiple charges or throughout an
entire trial, but an instruction within and limited to a specific charged offense -
- through to their consideration of a separate charge on a separate offense with
distinct elements. That view is completely at odds with “[o]ne of the
foundations of our jury system [--] that the jury is presumed to follow the trial
court’s instructions.” State v. Burns, 192 N.J. 312, 335 (2007); see also State
v. Afanador, 151 N.J. 41, 54 (1997) (“Erroneous instructions are poor
candidates for rehabilitation as harmless, and are ordinarily presumed to be
reversible error.” (quoting State v. Brown, 138 N.J. 481, 522 (1994)); State v.
Hodde, 181 N.J. 375, 384 (2004) (underscoring the vital importance of
accurate jury instructions in a criminal trial).
Once again, in this matter, the parties consented to simple assault as a
lesser included offense of child endangerment. Going forward, if simple
assault is charged along with child endangerment in the context of a parent or
guardian inflicting corporal punishment, the trial court must instruct the jury as
to the law regarding each offense. Specifically, the trial court must instruct the
27
jury that the law does not prohibit the use of corporal punishment and a parent
may inflict moderate correction as is reasonable under the circumstances of the
case not only as to the endangerment charges but also as to the simple assault
charges. The jury must also be instructed that excessive corporal punishment,
however, is prohibited as to both charges. We do not anticipate that simple
assault will often be charged in cases such as the present matter, but if it is, the
above-noted instructions must be provided.
V.
For the reasons outlined above, we reverse the judgment of the Appellate
Division, vacate defendant’s conviction, and remand the matter consistent with
this opinion.
CHIEF JUSTICE RABNER; JUSTICES PATTERSON and SOLOMON;
and JUDGE FUENTES (temporarily assigned) join in JUSTICE PIERRE-
LOUIS’s opinion.
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