Guyton v. State

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT:                 ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:


Teresa D. Harper                        Steve Carter

Bloomington, Indiana                    Attorney General of Indiana

                                        Arthur Thaddeus Perry
                                        Deputy Attorney General
                                        Indianapolis, Indiana

__________________________________________________________________


                                   IN THE



                          SUPREME COURT OF INDIANA




DOMINIQUE GUYTON,                 )
                                  )
      Appellant (Defendant),       )
                                  )
            v.                    )     Indiana Supreme Court
                                  )     Cause No. 49S00-0002-CR-105
STATE OF INDIANA,                 )
                                  )
      Appellee (Plaintiff).             )

_________________________________________________________________

                    APPEAL FROM THE MARION SUPERIOR COURT
                    The Honorable Mark Renner, Magistrate
                       Cause No. 49G04-9804-CF-067208
__________________________________________________________________

                                July 25, 2002

SHEPARD, Chief Justice

      Dominique Guyton was found guilty of numerous offenses arising out  of
a shooting incident on the streets of Indianapolis.  His appeal provides  an
occasion to recapitulate our recent decisions on Double Jeopardy.





                       Facts and Procedural Background


      On April 23, 1998, Indianapolis police officers found the body of  Pax
Larrimore lying in the street in the 4300 block of Norwaldo Avenue.  He  had
died  from  two  gunshot  wounds  to  the  chest  and   abdomen.    As   the
investigation unfolded, Guyton became a suspect.  Guyton and  Larrimore  had
had several encounters in which Larrimore had shot at  Guyton  from  a  car.
On April 28,  police  interviewed  Guyton.   He  admitted  to  running  into
Larrimore  on  the  day  of  the  murder  and  claimed  that  Larrimore  had
approached his car on  foot  and  put  his  hand  in  his  pocket.   Guyton,
thinking Larrimore was about to pull out a gun, drove away.   Guyton  denied
shooting Larrimore.


      Guyton was charged with murder, two counts of  attempted  murder,  and
carrying a handgun without a license.  At  trial,  Guyton  had  a  different
account.  He claimed that on the day  of  the  shooting  he  went  to  visit
friends at 43rd and Norwaldo.  After talking with his  friends  for  awhile,
he left when a group of  men,  including  Larrimore,  Anthony  Butts,  Tonio
Walker, and Damon Jackson, approached.  Guyton  next  visited  Sherry  Akers
and made plans for later that evening.  According to Guyton, after  he  left
Akers, he was driving down Norwaldo  when  he  saw  Larrimore  flagging  him
down.  When Guyton saw Larrimore’s hand on the grip of a gun,  he  panicked,
grabbed his own gun, and fired three or four times.


      Butts testified to a third version.  According to Butts, Guyton  drove
up to the group, held his hand out of his car, and fired four shots, one  at
each of Larrimore, Butts, Walker, and Jackson.  He then fired a  final  shot
at Larrimore before driving off.  Butts identified  Guyton  as  the  shooter
from a photo array.  According to Jackson, Larrimore  did  not  have  a  gun
that day.

      The jury found Guyton guilty of  murdering  Larrimore,  attempting  to
murder Jackson, and carrying a handgun without a license.  He was  sentenced
to fifty-five years for murder, thirty years for attempted murder,  and  one
year for the handgun violation, all to be served concurrently.





                         I.  Double Jeopardy Recited



      Guyton claims that his convictions for murder and carrying  a  handgun
without a license violate the Double  Jeopardy  provisions  of  the  Indiana
Constitution, citing Richardson v. State,  717 N.E.2d 32 (Ind. 1999).

      We held in Richardson that the Double Jeopardy clause is  violated  if
there is “a reasonable possibility that the evidentiary facts  used  by  the
fact-finder to establish the essential elements  of  one  offense  may  also
have been used to establish the essential elements of  a  second  challenged
offense.”  Id. at 53.  As we recently  explained,  “[U]nder  the  Richardson
actual evidence test, the Indiana Double Jeopardy  Clause  is  not  violated
when the evidentiary  facts  establishing  the  essential  elements  of  one
offense also establish only one  or  even  several,  but  not  all,  of  the
essential elements of a second offense.”  Spivey v. State, 76l  N.E.2d  831,
833 (Ind. 2002).

      In addition to the instances covered  by  Richardson,  “we  have  long
adhered to a series of rules of statutory construction and common  law  that
are often described  as  double  jeopardy,  but  are  not  governed  by  the
constitutional test set forth in Richardson.”  Pierce v. State,  76l  N.E.2d
826, 830 (Ind. 2002) (citing Richardson, 7l7 N.E.2d  at  55  (Sullivan,  J.,
concurring), 57 (Boehm, J., concurring in result)).

      Justice Rucker recently pointed out that one of these  rules  prevents
enhancing one conviction  for  robbery  by  using  a  death  for  which  the
defendant is also being punished.  Gross v. State,  769  N.E.2d  1137  (Ind.
2002).  This comes under the  category  described  by  Justice  Sullivan  as
“[c]onviction and punishment  for  an  enhancement  of  a  crime  where  the
enhancement is imposed for the very same behavior or harm as  another  crime
for which the defendant has been convicted and punished.”   Richardson,  7l7
N.E.2d at 56 (Sullivan, J., concurring).

      The list of five categories from  Justice  Sullivan’s  concurrence  in
Richardson  includes  one  category  presumably  covered  by  constitutional
Double Jeopardy (an analysis we recently reaffirmed in  Spivey,  761  N.E.2d
at 833), described by Justice Sullivan then as “[c]onviction and  punishment
for a crime which is a lesser-included offense of another  crime  for  which
the defendant has been convicted and punished.”  Richardson, 7l7  N.E.2d  at
56 (Sullivan, J., concurring).

      That list also includes:
      --“Conviction and punishment for a crime which consists  of  the  very
same act as another crime for which the defendant  has  been  convicted  and
punished.”  Id. (giving the example of a battery conviction vacated  because
the information showed that the  identical  touching  was  the  basis  of  a
second battery conviction).

      --“Conviction and punishment for a crime which consists  of  the  very
same act as an element of another crime for which  the  defendant  has  been
convicted  and  punished.”   Id.  (giving  the  example  of  a   confinement
conviction vacated because it was coextensive with  the  behavior  necessary
to establish an element of a robbery conviction).

      --“Conviction and punishment for the crime  of  conspiracy  where  the
overt act that constitutes an element of the conspiracy charge is  the  very
same act as another crime for which the defendant  has  been  convicted  and
punished.”  Id. at 56-57 (giving the example of a conspiracy  in  which  the
overt act is no more than the crime itself).

      As for Guyton’s claim, it does not succeed under  any  of  the  above.
As we said recently, “Carrying the gun along the street was  one  crime  and
using it was another.”  Mickens v. State, 742 N.E.2d 927, 931 (Ind. 2001).






                      II.  Attempted Murder Instruction


      Guyton challenges the trial court’s instruction on  attempted  murder,
which said:
      A person who knowingly or  intentionally  kills  another  human  being
      commits murder.
      A person attempts to commit a murder when, acting with the culpability
      required for commission of the crime of murder, he engages in  conduct
      that constitutes a substantial step toward commission of  the  murder.
      The crime of Attempted Murder is a Class A felony.
            To convict the Defendant of Attempted  Murder,  the  State  must
      have proved each of the following elements:
            The Defendant Dominique Guyton:
            1. Acting with the specific intent to commit murder that  is  by
      knowingly or intentionally,  shooting  a  deadly  weapon,  that  is  a
      handgun }[ [sic] at and against the person  of  Damon  Jackson  and/or
      Anthony Butts.
            2. Which was conduct constituting a substantial step toward  the
      commission of intended crime of Attempt Murder.
            If the State failed to prove each of  these  elements  beyond  a
      reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant not guilty.
            If  the  State  did  prove  each  of  these  elements  beyond  a
      reasonable doubt, you should find the defendant guilty of the crime of
      Attempted Murder, a Class A felony.


Guyton objected to the instruction  on  the  ground  that  this  instruction
failed to meet the standard set forth in Spradlin v. State, 569  N.E.2d  948
(Ind. 1991).  In Spradlin, this Court held that attempted murder requires  a
specific intent to kill, and is not supported by “knowing” actions.  Id.  at
950.  Spradlin held that the failure to instruct correctly on this point  is
reversible error.

      In reviewing a trial court’s decision to give or refuse tendered  jury
instructions, this Court considers: (1) whether  the  instruction  correctly
states the law; (2) whether there is evidence in the record to  support  the
giving of the instruction; and (3) whether the  substance  of  the  tendered
instruction is covered by other instructions which  are  given.   Cutter  v.
State, 725 N.E.2d 401, 408 (Ind. 2000).   “An  instruction  which  correctly
sets forth the elements of attempted murder  requires  an  explanation  that
the act must have been done with the specific intent  to  kill.”   Smith  v.
State, 459 N.E.2d 355, 358 (Ind. 1984).  The instruction in this  case  does
not meet this requirement, and is therefore an incorrect  statement  of  the
law.  It begins by telling the jury that it can  convict  if  the  defendant
acted with the culpability required for murder,  which  just  one  paragraph
before  is  described  as  “knowingly  or  intentionally.”   “Knowingly”  is
described in another instruction as engaging in conduct when  a  person  “is
aware of a high probability that he  is  doing  so.”   The  instruction  did
refer to the “specific intent to commit murder,” but  the  “specific  intent
to commit murder” was described as “knowingly or intentionally,  shooting  a
deadly  weapon.”   Guyton  is  correct  that  this  instruction   could   be
understood by a jury to permit conviction on a knowing killing.  It  was  at
best confusing because of its circular  reference  to  “specific  intent  to
commit murder,” which leads to the knowing  or  intentional  definition  for
murder, as well as the other references to “knowingly.”


      Guyton objected to the instruction on the ground that it did not refer
to a specific intent to kill.  This was a valid objection.   Because  Guyton
objected to the instruction and it does not correctly state the law, it  was
error and his conviction for attempted murder is  reversed.   See  Allen  v.
State, 575 N.E.2d 615, 617 (Ind. 1991)  (“Had  appellant  objected  to  this
instruction at trial, giving it would have been error because  it  does  not
inform the jury that the State must prove the defendant  acted  with  intent
to kill.”).






                           III.  Juror Misconduct


      Guyton finally claims that the trial court abused  its  discretion  in
refusing to conduct a hearing on his claim of juror misconduct.


      After the trial, Guyton learned that  one  of  the  jurors,  Frederick
Mechum, worked at the Internal Revenue Service with Shirley  Amis,  Guyton’s
stepmother.  On the first day of trial, Mechum approached Amis and asked  if
he knew her.  She responded that they worked together at the IRS and  walked
away.  On the second day of trial, Mechum and Amis exchanged  greetings  and
again Amis walked  away.   A  few  days  after  trial,  Mechum  and  another
coworker approached Amis at work and asked her whether “that was someone  to
you, at the trial.”  Amis replied that it was her son.  The  next  day  Amis
received a sympathy card for the death of her son from her coworker.


      Guyton then filed  a  request  for  a  hearing  to  determine  whether
Mechum’s mistaken assumption that Larrimore was Amis’ son  resulted  in  any
bias against Guyton.  This motion was accompanied by an affidavit from  Amis
reciting the facts described above.  The trial court denied the motion.


      “A defendant seeking a hearing on juror misconduct must first  present
some specific, substantial evidence showing a juror  was  possibly  biased.”
Lopez v. State, 527 N.E.2d 1119, 1130  (Ind.  1988).   In  this  case,  even
accepting Guyton’s facts as true, he  has  not  presented  any  evidence  of
juror bias.  From the testimony it is clear that Mechum  was  not  sure  who
Amis was or whether she had any relation to the  defendant  or  the  victim.
Only after the trial did Mechum ask her relationship  to  either.   Although
he was incorrect in his assumption that her response indicated that she  was
the mother of the victim, not the defendant, this  presents  no  substantial
evidence of bias during the trial.







                                 Conclusion


      We affirm the judgment of the trial court as to murder and carrying  a
handgun without a license.  Guyton’s  conviction  for  attempted  murder  is
reversed and remanded for retrial.

SULLIVAN and RUCKER, JJ., concur.
DICKSON, J., concurs in result with separate opinion.
BOEHM, J., concurs with separate opinion.
DICKSON, Justice, concurring in result.

                                     A.

      In Part II, the Court acknowledges that Guyton contends that his
convictions of murder and carrying a handgun without a license violate the
Double Jeopardy Clause of the Indiana Constitution, as implemented in our
actual evidence test in Richardson v. State, 717 N.E.2d 32, 49 (Ind. 1999).
 The Court does not address this constitutional claim but instead discusses
only the related issue of whether his convictions violate the rules of
statutory construction and common law that we recognize to provide a basis
for relief separate from and additional to the state constitutional claim.
See Henderson v. State, 769 N.E.2d 172, 178 (Ind. 2002); Pierce v. State,
761 N.E.2d 826, 830 (Ind. 2002); Spivey v. State, 761 N.E.2d 831, 834 (Ind.
2002).
      The unaddressed constitutional claim, however, is not meritorious.  To
prevail in his asserted violation of the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause
under Richardson, Guyton must demonstrate that there is a “reasonable, not
speculative or remote,” possibility that the jury used the same evidentiary
facts to establish all the essential elements of both murder and carrying a
handgun without a license.  Griffin v. State, 717 N.E.2d 73, 89 (Ind.
1999), cert. denied, 530 U.S. 127, 120 S.Ct. 2697, 147 L.Ed.2d 968 (2000).

      To prove the murder, the State demonstrated that Guyton caused
Larrimore’s death by shooting him twice with a handgun.  It also showed
that Guyton carried the gun both when he met with Sherry Akers before the
shooting and then later when he used it to shoot Larrimore.  In this case
there was direct evidence, apart from Guyton’s firing the weapon, that he
carried a handgun without a license.  Guyton testified that before he
arrived at the murder scene he had stopped to talk with Akers and had a
handgun wrapped in a towel underneath his leg.  He also admitted that he
did not have a permit to carry it.  Record at 451.
      It is not reasonably possible that the jury ignored this evidence and
instead based its finding of guilt for the handgun offense solely on the
defendant’s possession of the weapon at the time he fired it at Larrimore.
 For this reason, Guyton has failed to establish his claimed violation of
the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause.


                                     B.
      In his separate concurring opinion, Justice Boehm proposes a
methodology that modifies the Richardson actual evidence test by requiring
the evidence proving each offense at trial to be analyzed to determine each
constituent "evidentiary fact" or "fact" established by or inferred from
the evidence.  Thus in this case, Justice Boehm takes the body of evidence
showing that Guyton fired a handgun from his car to fatally shoot
Larrimore, subdivides it into multiple component "facts," and then
concludes that there was no reasonable possibility that the jury based both
convictions on the same group of "facts."
      It is certainly true that throughout Richardson, we used the phrase
"evidentiary facts" instead of "evidence."  We used "evidentiary facts"
when first articulating the test, id. at 53, when we applied the test to
the facts of the case, id. at 54, and when evaluating the proper remedy,
id. at 55.  See also id. at 53 n.46 (noting that the Indiana Double
Jeopardy Clause permits convictions for multiple offenses committed in a
protracted criminal episode when the verdicts are not "based on the same
evidentiary facts.").  However, there is nothing in Richardson or the
analysis on which it is based to support the parsing of one evidentiary
fact to create multiple evidentiary facts.
      Justice Boehm's proposed analysis, I believe, significantly lessens
the protection provided by the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause.  If this
methodology had been followed in several of our earlier post-Richardson
opinions that found double jeopardy violations, we would have reached an
opposite result.
      For example, in Turnley v. State, 725 N.E.2d 87 (Ind. 2000), the
defendant and an accomplice broke into a home to steal money and agreed to
kill the female occupant if necessary.  While Turnley held her hands, his
accomplice choked her to death.  Turnley was convicted of multiple crimes
including both murder and conspiracy to commit murder.  The conspiracy
count alleged that Turnley's restraint of the victim was the overt act
element of conspiracy.  Under Justice Boehm's proposed methodology, a
reviewing court would break the evidence into component "evidentiary facts"
including: (1) Turnley and his accomplice agreed to kill the victim; (2)
they intended to kill; (3) Turnley assisted by restraining the victim; (4)
the accomplice strangled her; and (5) the victim died from the
strangulation.  Using the proposed analysis the court would then determine
that the jury used "evidentiary facts" (1), (2) and (3) to establish the
essential elements of the conspiracy count, and that the jury used
"evidentiary facts" (2), (4), (5) and possibly (3) to establish the murder.
 The result would be that there is no double jeopardy because there is no
reasonable possibility that the jury relied upon the same body of
"evidentiary facts" to establish both offenses, i.e., no possibility that
all the "evidentiary facts" establishing one offense are included among
those that establish another offense, or stated differently, no possibility
that the "evidentiary" facts used by the jury to establish all the elements
of one offense were also used to establish all the elements of another
offense.
      Our opinion, however, reached the opposite result.  Finding a
violation of the Indiana Double Jeopardy clause, we held that "there is at
least a reasonable possibility--indeed a high probability--that the jury
used the same evidentiary fact--the restraining and strangulation of [the
victim]--to prove an essential element of the conspiracy to commit murder
(the overt act) and also the essential element of murder.  Turnley, 725
N.E.2d at 91.
      The methodology proposed by Justice Boehm would also have required a
different result in Richardson itself.  There the defendant and several
others brutally beat the victim and took his wallet.  The proposed
methodology would parse this evidence into several component "evidentiary
facts" including: (1) defendant intended to batter; (2) defendant intended
to take the wallet; (3) defendant and others beat the victim; (4) they took
the victim's billfold; (5) the victim suffered injuries.  It would then be
probable to conclude that the jury used "evidentiary facts" (1), (3), and
(5) to prove class A misdemeanor battery, but used "evidentiary facts" (2),
(3), and (4) to establish class C felony robbery.  As in Turnley, above,
there would be no reasonable possibility that the jury used the same group
of "evidentiary facts" to establish all the elements of both offenses, and
thus no double jeopardy.   In Richardson, however, we reached the opposite
conclusion and found that the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause was violated.
Without disaggregating the evidence into separate "evidentiary facts," we
concluded that the same body of evidence (brutal beating plus taking
wallet) may reasonably have been used by the jury to prove both offenses.

      I acknowledge that, in many cases where a defendant is convicted of
both an offense committed with a handgun and the offense of carrying a
handgun without a license, the Richardson actual evidence test may, at
first blush, appear to require that the handgun offense be vacated.  The
same evidence proving an offense involving use of a handgun would also
appear to prove the elements of carrying a handgun without a license--if we
presume that, because the existence of a license is a matter of affirmative
defense for the defendant, it is not considered as an element of the
offense.  See Ind.Code § 35-47-2-24; Washington v. State, 517 N.E.2d 77, 79
(Ind. 1987).  I contend, however, that this presumption is inappropriate.

      To determine if a defendant has been punished twice for the same
offense under the Richardson actual evidence test, a better approach is to
consider all three statutory elements of the offense of carrying a handgun
without a license: (a) carrying a handgun in any vehicle or on or about his
person (b) except in his dwelling, his property, or fixed place of
business, (3) without a proper license in his possession.  Ind.Code § 35-47-
2-1.[1]  This is not necessarily inconsistent with Washington because it
was addressing whether the existence of a license is an element that must
be disproved by the State or a matter that constitutes an affirmative
defense to be proved by a defendant.  517 N.E.2d at 79.  It was in this
context, not that of double jeopardy, that we declared in Washington:
"Proof that a defendant does not possess a license to carry a handgun is
not an element of . . . the statute which delineates this crime."  Id. at
79.
      In contrast to this language in Washington, our Court of Appeals
recently found no violation of the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause under the
Richardson actual evidence test by assessing the "essential elements" of
the offense of carrying a handgun without a license to include both the
elements which the State must prove and that which the defense must prove.
Ho v. State, 725 N.E.2d 988 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000).  In essence, the Ho court
held that there was no violation of the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause
because the evidence used by the jury to establish robbery while armed with
a handgun did not also relate to whether or not Ho possessed a valid
license.  See id. at 993.  In applying the actual evidence test for
violation of the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause, the Ho court used the term
"element" in a different sense than it was used in Washington, where we
used the phrase "not an element" merely to succinctly express the idea that
such proof is not an element on which the State carries the burden of
proof.  We recently expressed approval of Ho in Mickens v. State, 742
N.E.2d 927, 931 (Ind. 2001), which also rejected a double jeopardy claim
arising from convictions for murder and carrying a handgun without a
license.
      In the present case, even if we did not consider the separate
evidence of Guyton's unlicensed possession of the handgun before he arrived
at the murder scene, Guyton's convictions for murder and carrying a handgun
without a license would not violate the Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause.
There would be no reasonable possibility that the evidentiary facts used by
the jury to establish the elements of murder were also used to establish
the essential elements of carrying a handgun without a license.  The
evidence proving the murder did not involve the existence or absence of a
license for the handgun, and the facts proving carrying an unlicensed
handgun did not include the resulting death of the victim.
BOEHM, Justice, concurring.
      The Court today affirms Guyton’s convictions for murder and possession
of a handgun based on our holding in Mickens v. State, 742 N.E.2d 927  (Ind.
2001), that possessing the gun is one crime and killing with it is  another.
 I agree, but I believe we need to explain how this ruling  relates  to  the
double jeopardy doctrine announced in Richardson v.  State,  717  N.E.2d  32
(Ind. 1999), which the Court cites, then does not  mention  again.   I  also
believe we should directly address Guyton’s claim that Richardson  precludes
use of the same evidence—Butts’ testimony—to convict him of both crimes.
      In Richardson, a three Justice majority announced an “actual evidence”
test for double jeopardy  under  the  Indiana  Constitution  as  applied  to
multiple convictions in the same trial.  Richardson formulated the test  for
Indiana constitutional double jeopardy as whether  there  is  a  “reasonable
possibility” that the “evidentiary facts”  supporting  one  conviction  were
used  by  the  jury  to  support  another.   In  substance,  applying   this
Richardson test means opting for  (1)  psychoanalyzing  the  jury  based  on
evidence, argument, instructions and charging instruments and  indulging  in
the irrebuttable presumption  the  jury  followed  all  of  these;  (2)  the
“reasonable possibility” standard to determine whether  that  occurred,  and
(3) the requirement that “all” not  just  one  of  the  “evidentiary  facts”
overlap.
      After citing Richardson, the Court  today  reaffirms  several  “rules”
that preclude imposition of multiple punishments under  some  circumstances.
As formulated by Justice Sullivan’s concurring opinion in Richardson,  these
turn in large part on whether the “very same act” supports two  convictions.
 The problem Richardson sought to address, albeit with a slim majority,  was
how we know when we have two crimes supported by the  “very  same  act.”   I
think we owe an explanation of this mystery because I believe today we  have
in effect abandoned Richardson, and should be  explicit  in  doing  this  so
future trial and appellate courts can follow  a  consistent  methodology  in
reviewing double jeopardy claims.
      Guyton’s claim under  a  Richardson  analysis  is  a  claim  that  the
evidentiary facts supporting his handgun conviction are  included  in  those
supporting his murder conviction.  The Court makes no mention  of  what  the
jury might have  found,  and  there  is  no  reference  to  the  “reasonable
probability” standard.  Rather, we are told, and I agree, that carrying  the
handgun is one thing and  firing  it  is  another.   For  the  reasons  that
follow, I believe this represents an abandonment of Richardson and a  return
to the pre-Richardson methodology of reviewing the  evidence,  instructions,
charging instrument and argument of counsel under  a  de  novo  standard  to
determine whether it is more probable than not  that  the  facts  supporting
one conviction are  embraced  within  those  supporting  another.   On  this
basis, I concur in the Court’s opinion.
      A.  Some History
       Justice  Sullivan,  concurring  in  Richardson,  identified   several
situations in which two convictions cannot coexist.  They  were:  1)  lesser
included offenses; 2) the two crimes “consist of the very same act”; 3)  one
crime consists of the very same act as  an  element  of  the  other;  4)  an
enhancement of one crime “imposed for the very same  behavior  or  harm”  as
another crime; and 5) conspiracy where the overt act is the  very  same  act
as another crime.  I thought then, and think now, that the  double  jeopardy
clause of the Indiana Constitution has other and more important work  to  do
in addressing subsequent prosecutions.   Richardson,  717  N.E.2d  at  57-73
(Boehm, J., concurring in result).  However, under stare decisis,  I  accept
the  Court’s  view  that  the  Indiana   Constitution   addresses   multiple
convictions.
      Richardson sought to establish “a single comprehensive rule [of double
jeopardy]   synthesizing   and   superseding   previous   formulations   and
exceptions.”  Spivey v. State, 761 N.E.2d 831, 832 (Ind. 2002).   Subsequent
experience has made clear that this goal was not achievable,  at  least  not
without upsetting a number of the precedents supporting the rules  cited  by
Justice Sullivan.  For example,  the  requirement  of  Richardson  that  all
facts of one  crime  be  embraced  within  that  of  the  other  limits  its
application  to  the  rules  prohibiting  conviction  for  lesser   included
offenses. In recognition of the incompatibility of the actual evidence  test
with these  precedents,  Pierce  v.  State,  761  N.E.2d  826  (Ind.  2002),
acknowledged that  some  of  these  doctrines  were  not  of  constitutional
dimensions and were not governed by Richardson.  Accordingly some  of  these
rules (e.g., the same bodily injury does not elevate  two  crimes)  are  not
subject to a  Richardson  analysis,  and  can  prohibit  double  enhancement
through  a  single  common  element.   At  the  same  time,  in  Spivey,  we
reiterated that the Richardson constitutional test required  all,  not  just
one, of the “evidentiary facts” of one crime to be embraced within those  of
another  before  the  constitutional  test  of  Richardson  would  bar   two
convictions.  Spivey, 761 N.E.2d at 833.
      I concur in everything the Court says.   I  nevertheless  believe  the
widespread confusion reflected in the Court of Appeals cases  attempting  to
apply Richardson requires us to try to explain how future cases  are  to  be
analyzed.[2]  The first  Sullivan  rule  is  the  statutory  elements  test,
identical to federal double jeopardy under  Blockburger  v.  United  States,
284 U.S. 299 (1932).  The second and third prohibit dual  convictions  under
an analysis substantially  the  same  as  identification  of  a  “factually”
lesser included offense, as that term is explained in Wright v.  State,  658
N.E.2d 563 (Ind. 1995).[3]  Both Richardson and Wright teach  that  we  look
to the charging instruments and evidence to determine whether one  crime  is
a “factually” lesser  included  offense.   Richardson  and  several  of  its
progeny make clear that the  charging  instrument,[4]  the  instructions,[5]
arguments of counsel,[6] and the evidence itself[7] may  be  relevant  to  a
determination whether the “evidentiary facts”  of  one  crime  are  included
among those of another.
      The fourth Sullivan rule requires us to determine  whether  “the  very
same behavior or harm” enhanced two crimes, but we are not told how that  is
to be determined or reviewed  on  appeal.   The  fifth  similarly  turns  on
whether the overt act supporting a conspiracy is  “the  very  same  act”  as
another crime.  All of the foregoing is acceptable to me,  but  I  think  we
should be clear what we are doing and what we expect the  Court  of  Appeals
to do in reviewing these claims.  Accordingly, I set forth how  I  think  we
are, or should be, approaching these claims in light of the Court’s  holding
today.
      B.  The “Actual Evidence,” or “Same Facts,” Test Under Richardson
      Although the “actual evidence” test has acquired that sobriquet, in my
view it could also have been accurately described as a  “same  facts”  test.
Richardson described it as “a reasonable possibility  that  the  evidentiary
facts used by the fact-finder to establish the  essential  elements  of  one
offense may also have been used to establish the  essential  elements  of  a
second challenged offense.”  717 N.E.2d at 53.  Thus, to prevail under  that
test,  Richardson  taught  that  Guyton  must  demonstrate   a   “reasonable
possibility”  that  the  same  “evidentiary  facts”  used  by  the  jury  to
establish the essential elements of the murder  charge  were  also  used  to
establish the essential  elements  of  the  handgun  offense.   And,  as  we
recently noted in Spivey v. State, 761 N.E.2d 831 (Ind. 2002), the “use”  of
facts establishing one crime to establish  a  second  means  all,  not  just
some, of the evidentiary facts  establishing  one  are  included  among  the
evidentiary facts establishing the other.
      By “evidentiary fact,” I take Richardson to mean the events  found  to
have occurred, without regard to their legal  consequences  and  independent
of the terms lawyers and judges may  use  to  describe  them  or  the  legal
results these facts produce.  Some might prefer the simple term  “fact,”  or
“historical fact” or “event or circumstance.”  The  Court  today  uses  “the
very same act.”  By that term, I think the Court also means the  same  thing
as “same fact” in its embrace of the Sullivan rules.   But  using  the  term
“same act” is problematic because it limits review of the facts to what  the
defendant  did.   Some  elements  of  crimes   are   the   consequences   or
circumstances of the crimes.  Thus  the  same  “act”—e.g.,  burning  down  a
building—can result in conviction of two murders if there are  two  victims.
Cf. Burnett v. State, 736 N.E.2d 259, 263  n.3  (no  double  jeopardy  where
there are multiple victims).  For this reason I believe it  is  more  useful
to use “fact” rather than “act”  to  describe  the  overlap  that  precludes
conviction for two crimes.
      Finally, Richardson refers to “essential elements.”  Because proof  of
all elements of a  crime  is  essential  to  conviction,  I  use  “elements”
interchangeably with “essential elements.”  I understand  that  Richardson’s
majority intended the latter term to include not  only  statutory  elements,
but also the elements as charged.  Thus, although the statutory elements  of
a felony murder are killing in the course  of  a  felony,  if  the  charging
instrument alleges killing in the course of a  robbery  on  June  13,  1999,
these then are among the “essential elements” as charged.   It  is  in  this
sense that I use the term “elements” to mean what  needs  to  be  proven  to
satisfy the statute and the charging instrument.
      C.  Unanswered Questions
      Justice Sullivan’s rules, as he  formulated  them  and  as  the  Court
states and applies them today, do not turn on a Richardson  analysis.   Each
of them requires a determination whether “the very same act”  or  the  “very
same behavior or harm” is involved in two crimes, but  none  elaborates  how
that determination is to be made.  When the Court tells us that none of  the
five Sullivan rules is breached by Guyton’s convictions, it impliedly  holds
that (1) the handgun and murder convictions were not based on the very  same
act and (2) no element of either crime consisted of the very same  act  that
constituted the other.  The Court’s formulation gives us a result:  carrying
the gun and  firing  it  are  two  different  things.   I  agree,  but  this
explanation does not address any of the following issues:
      1) Is this a ruling on a point of law or a finding of fact?
      2) Guyton’s claim is that  the  same  evidence  established  both  the
carrying and the firing of the gun, and this violates  Richardson.   Is  the
evidence in Guyton’s case relevant to this finding by this Court?   If  not,
how does Richardson relate to this case?  If Richardson is  applicable,  how
do we determine whether there is a “reasonable possibility”  that  the  jury
used the same facts to find Guyton  guilty  of  the  possession  and  murder
charges?
      3) If the trial court made a finding on this point, what  standard  of
review applies?
      4) Is this determination that these do not overlap to be  measured  by
the  “reasonable  possibility”  of  overlaps,  or  a  preponderance  of  the
evidence, or something else?
      D.  Of Evidence, Facts, Elements and Conclusions
      I believe one critical  point  for  purposes  of  analyzing  factually
“lesser included” crimes under Richardson or otherwise  (Justice  Sullivan’s
second and third rules)  is  that  the  law  prohibits  sentencing  for  two
convictions if the facts supporting one conviction are embraced  within  the
facts supporting the other.  But it does not  preclude  two  convictions  if
each is based on a  fact  that  is  not  required  for  the  other.   Guyton
contends that the jury used the same fact—his carrying  a  firearm  that  he
discharged at Larrimore—to  convict  him  of  both  murder  and  carrying  a
handgun without a license.  This confuses facts  with  evidence.[8]   Guyton
correctly points out that the evidence supporting the facts  was  the  same,
but  I  agree  with  the   Court   that   the   facts   supported   by   the
evidence—possessing a gun and firing it—are distinct.
      In evaluating a claim of double jeopardy, we must distinguish not only
between evidence and facts.  We must also  differentiate  the  elements  and
legal conclusions involved in the two crimes.  Butts testified  that  Guyton
fired a handgun at the group and,  in  the  process,  shot  Larrimore.   His
testimony  was  evidence.   Black’s  Law  Dictionary  576  (7th  ed.   1999)
(Evidence is “[t]he collective mass of things, esp. testimony and  exhibits,
presented  before  a  tribunal  in  a  given  dispute.”).   Facts  are   the
historical facts, acts, events or  circumstances  that  a  finder  of  fact,
after considering the evidence, concludes occurred.  They may include  facts
directly related by the evidence, and also reasonable inferences as to  what
happened  that  are  drawn  from  the  evidence.   In  order  to  support  a
conviction, the facts must in the aggregate  establish  the  elements  of  a
crime.  The elements are the legal terms we use to describe  a  fact  or  an
aggregation of facts.  If each element is found, the finder of fact  reaches
the legal conclusion, or verdict, that a crime has been committed.
      Although sometimes we use the same word to describe both a “fact”  and
an “element,” elements are not the same  as  facts.   Rather,  elements  are
words of legal significance.  Thus, a lay  person  might  well  describe  an
event by saying the defendant “forced the door open.”  But  another  witness
might say the defendant “broke and entered.”  Both  have  described  a  fact
that supports an element of burglary, whether or not  they  used  the  legal
label that is pinned on the element.  To further confuse us,  some  elements
and some crimes are described by the same terms we use for the  fact.   Thus
a witness in a rape case might well respond to the question  “What  happened
next?” with “He raped me.”  But few would respond “He confined me”  or  “She
battered me” to describe those crimes.
      In short, despite our occasional or even frequent use of the same word
to describe a fact, or an element,  or  the  crime  itself,  the  three  are
distinct from each other and from the evidence in the case.   This  is  true
for  purposes  of  Richardson’s  double  jeopardy  analysis,  and  also  for
purposes of determining the “very same act” under the  rules  cited  by  the
Court.  Only the “facts” are critical for double jeopardy purposes.   I  use
that term  to  include  the  Court’s  term  (“act”)  and  also  consequences
(“multiple  victims,”  “bodily  harm”)  and  circumstances  (“absence  of  a
license”).
      E.  Analysis of this Case Under Richardson
      In my view Guyton’s argument arguably prevails under Richardson.   The
facts critical to the murder charge in this case are: (1) Guyton  pointed  a
gun at Larrimore and shot him; (2) Larrimore  died  as  a  result;  and  (3)
Guyton had the requisite mens rea because he either  (a)  intended  to  kill
Larrimore, or (b) intended to kill someone  else  in  the  group  under  the
doctrine of transferred intent, or (c) fired the shot with  knowledge  of  a
high probability that the shot would be fatal.  The facts  relevant  to  the
elements of the handgun charge are (1) Guyton possessed the gun and  (2)  he
did so on  a  public  street.   The  piece  of  evidence  that  Guyton  shot
Larrimore from the car speaks  directly  to  the  fact  of  the  defendant’s
action (firing the shot), and it also supports the  inference  of  a  second
fact relevant to the murder charge, namely intent to kill.  Owens v.  State,
544 N.E.2d 1375, 1377 (Ind. 1989).  Thus, both shooting and  the  intent  to
kill are facts directly or inferentially drawn from  Butts’  testimony  that
Guyton fired a handgun at the group, and hit Larrimore.
      The jury obviously could have inferred the presence and possession  of
the gun in a public street for some span of time including  the  instant  of
its use.  If so, Richardson would  not  bar  both  convictions.   But  under
these  circumstances  it  is  not  obvious  that  the  jury  did  draw  that
inference.  That leaves us with  a  reasonable  possibility  that  the  jury
“used” the fact of shooting to support the handgun  charge.   Yet  to  force
the conclusion that Richardson permits both convictions we  must  say  there
is no reasonable possibility that the same  fact—Guyton  shot  Larrimore—was
“used” by the jury.  I think it is more appropriate and certainly easier  to
follow if we admit that we are holding as a matter of law that the  evidence
supports both convictions.  Thus, Butts’ testimony,  although  one  item  of
evidence might or might not have produced distinct evidentiary  facts  found
by the jury: (1) Guyton shot Larrimore; (2) Guyton had  the  requisite  mens
rea; and (3) Guyton possessed a handgun on a public street.[9]
      F.  The Court’s Holding Today
      I agree with the Court  that  none  of  Justice  Sullivan’s  rules  is
breached by Guyton’s two convictions.   But  I  think  that  it  takes  some
explanation as to why that is true, and  what  methodology  is  required  to
reach that conclusion.  Guyton was convicted of murder and possession  of  a
handgun without a license.  The elements of murder are  (1)  intentional  or
knowing (2) killing of (3) a  human  being.   The  elements  of  carrying  a
handgun without a license are: (1) carrying a  handgun  in  any  vehicle  or
about the person (2) except in one’s dwelling, on one’s  property  or  fixed
place of business.[10]  Clearly we have no statutory elements problem  here.
  And  it  is  obvious  that  the  fourth  (double  enhancement)  and  fifth
(conspiracy) of Justice Sullivan’s rules do not apply to this situation.
      The  remaining  issue  is  whether  the  same   facts   support   both
convictions.  It seems to me that the Court today handles this the way  pre-
Richardson appellate courts typically did by determining, under  a  de  novo
review of whatever is relevant, whether the facts  of  one  crime  are  such
that the “same fact” fits one of the Sullivan rules.  Thus,  just  as  under
Richardson, we look to see if, under  the  statutes,  charging  instruments,
evidence  and  arguments  of  counsel,  it  seems  to  us  that  the   facts
establishing one crime are the same as the facts establishing another  (Rule
2) or establishing one or more elements of another  (Rule  3).   But  we  do
this de novo, and without any effort to analyze what  the  jury  might  have
considered.  Whatever the jury’s reasoning was, we find as a matter  of  law
that the evidence did or did not support both convictions.
                                 Conclusion
      In sum, although the evidence supporting the facts necessary  for  the
handgun conviction was included in the evidence  necessary  for  the  murder
conviction, the issue, in my view, is whether  the  facts  supporting  these
two crimes are distinct.  It seems to me we cannot  say  that  there  is  no
reasonable possibility the jury based both of Guyton’s  convictions  on  the
same set of facts.  But it is easy to  say  that  the  gun  did  not  appear
magically in Guyton’s hand at the instant of firing.  Therefore,  viewed  de
novo there was  evidence  supporting  the  facts  essential  to  the  murder
conviction and also the fact that Guyton possessed a handgun whether or  not
he fired it.   If so, the facts supporting the murder  do  not  embrace  all
the facts supporting the handgun offense.  Therefore,  Guyton’s  convictions
for murder and carrying a handgun without  a  license  do  not  violate  the
Indiana Double Jeopardy Clause.

-----------------------
      [1] Indiana Code § 35-47-2-1 provides: "Except as provided in section
2 of this chapter, a person shall not carry a handgun in any vehicle or on
or about his person except in his dwelling, on his property or fixed place
of business, without a license issued under this chapter being in his
possession."  Indiana Code § 35-47-2-24 declares in part, "The burden of
proof is on the defendant to prove that he is exempt under section 2 of
this chapter, or that he has a license as required under this chapter."
[2] See, e.g., Vestal v. State, 745 N.E.2d 249, 251-52 (Ind. Ct. App.  2001)
(concluding that a “strict application of Richardson”  in  that  case  would
lead to “absurd results”).
[3] Wright held that where one  offense  is  factually  lesser  included  in
another, viewed in light of the charging instrument  and  the  evidence,  an
instruction on  the  lesser  included  offense  is  required  if  requested.
Because Wright set out the steps to determine  whether  an  instruction  was
needed,  obviously  this  analysis,  unlike  Richardson,  did  not   require
reference to an instruction.
[4] Richardson, 717 N.E.2d at 50.
[5] Guffey v. State, 717 N.E.2d 103, 107 (Ind. 1999).
[6] Johnson v. State, 749 N.E.2d 1103, 1109 (Ind. 2001).
[7] Wieland v. State, 736 N.E.2d 1198, 1205 (Ind. 2000).
[8] The distinction was not made as precisely or  as  clearly  as  it  could
have been in the opinions  that  followed  Richardson.   Compare  Cutter  v.
State, 725 N.E.2d 401, 410 (Ind. 2000) (referring to same “evidence”  rather
than “evidentiary facts” and holding  that  elevating  rape  to  a  Class  A
felony based on the same use  of  force  supporting  murder  conviction  was
constitutional double jeopardy) and Mitchell  v.  State,  726  N.E.2d  1228,
1244 (Ind. 2000) (constitutional double jeopardy where  killing  and  bodily
injury for Class B neglect based on same “evidence”) with Marcum  v.  State,
725 N.E.2d 852,  864  (Ind.  2000)  (overt  act  for  conspiracy  to  commit
burglary conviction also  basis  of  auto  theft  conviction;  referring  to
“evidentiary facts”).  In each of these cases, the evidence  and  the  facts
were both overlapping, so the result, if not the terminology, is  consistent
with the analysis offered  here.   In  other  words,  none  of  these  cases
presented the situation we have here, where the same  evidence  directly  or
by inference supports multiple facts.
[9] I do not think it useful or possible to attempt to  reconcile  all  past
cases with this or any other theory.  I would say,  however,  that  I  think
Justice Dickson’s view of what we are in substance doing slices matters  too
thinly.  I view the Turnley case as an  example  of  Sullivan  Rule  5:  the
overt act supporting the conspiracy cannot be the “very  same  act”  as  the
crime that is the object of the  conspiracy.   Turnley’s  restraint  of  the
victim was the “act” by which he participated  in  the  murder.   Similarly,
Richardson was governed by Sullivan Rule 3  because  his  “act”  of  battery
constituted an element of the robbery as a C felony by reason of his use  of
force.  Richardson, 717 N.E.2d at 55 (Sullivan, J., concurring).
[10] The absence of a license is not an element, but rather its presence  is
an affirmative defense.  Washington  v.  State,  517  N.E.2d  77,  79  (Ind.
1987).