SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 10–1320
_________________
ALEX BLUEFORD, PETITIONER
v.
ARKANSAS
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of
arkansas
[May 24, 2012]
Justice Sotomayor, with whom Justice Ginsburg
and Justice Kagan join, dissenting.
The Double Jeopardy Clause “unequivocally
prohibits a second trial following an acquittal.”
Arizona v.
Washington,
434 U.S.
497, 503 (1978). To implement this rule, our cases have
articulated two principles. First, an acquittal occurs if a
jury’s decision, “whatever its label, actually
rep-resents a resolution, correct or not, of some or all of the
factual elements of the offense charged.”
United
States v.
Martin Linen Supply Co.,
430 U.S.
564, 571 (1977). Sec-ond, a trial judge may not defeat a
defendant’s entitlement to “the verdict of a tribunal
he might believe to be favorably disposed to his fate” by
declaring a mistrial before deliberations end, absent a
defendant’s consent or a “ ‘manifest
necessity’ ” to do so.
United States v.
Jorn,
400 U.S.
470, 486, 481 (1971) (plurality opinion) (quoting
United
States v.
Perez, 9 Wheat. 579, 580 (1824)).
Today’s decision misapplies these
longstanding prin-ciples. The Court holds that petitioner Alex
Blueford was not acquitted of capital or first-degree murder, even
though the forewoman of the Arkansas jury empaneled to try him
announced in open court that the jury was “unanimous
against” convicting Blueford of those crimes. Nor, the Court
concludes, did the Double Jeopardy Clause oblige the trial judge to
take any action to give effect to the jury’s unambiguous
decision before declaring a mistrial as to those offenses. The
Court thus grants the State what the Constitution withholds:
“the proverbial ‘second bite at the
apple.’ ”
Burks v.
United States,
437 U.S.
1, 17 (1978).
I respectfully dissent.
I
A
The bar on retrials following acquittals is
“the most fundamental rule in the history of double jeopardy
jurisprudence.”
Martin Linen, 430 U. S., at 571;
see,
e.g., United States v.
Ball,
163 U.S.
662, 671 (1896); 4 W. Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of
England 329 (1769). This prohibition stops the State, “with
all its resources and power,” from mounting abusive,
harassing reprosecutions,
Green v.
United States,
355 U.S.
184, 187 (1957), which subject a defendant to
“embarrassment, expense, anxiety, and insecurity, and the
possibility that he may be found guilty even though
innocent,”
United States v.
DiFrancesco,
449 U.S.
117, 136 (1980).
In ascertaining whether an acquittal has
occurred, “form is not to be exalted over substance.”
Sanabria v.
United States,
437 U.S.
54, 66 (1978). Rather, we ask whether the factfinder has made
“a substantive determination that the prosecution has failed
to carry its burden.”
Smith v.
Massachusetts,
543 U.S.
462, 468 (2005). Ju-risdictions have different procedures
respecting the announcement of verdicts and the entry of judgments,
but that diversity has no constitutional significance. Jeopardy
terminates upon a determination, however characterized, that the
“evidence is insufficient” to prove a defendant’s
“factual guilt.”
Smalis v.
Pennsylvania,
476 U.S.
140, 144 (1986). Thus, we have treated as acquittals a trial
judge’s directed verdict of not guilty,
Smith, 543
U. S., at 468; an appellate reversal of a conviction for
insufficiency of the evidence,
Burks, 437 U. S., at 10;
and, most pertinent here, a jury’s announcement of a not
guilty verdict that was “not followed by any judgment,”
Ball, 163 U. S., at 671.
A straightforward application of that principle
suffices to decide this case. Arkansas is a classic
“acquittal-first” or “hard-transition”
jurisdiction. See generally
People v.
Richardson, 184
P.3d 755, 764, n. 7 (Colo. 2008). Arkansas’ model jury
instructions require a jury to complete its deliberations on a
greater offense before it may consider a lesser. 1 Ark. Model Jury
Instr., Crim., No. 302 (2d ed. 1994). As a matter of Arkansas law,
“[b]efore it may consider any lesser-included offense, the
jury must first determine that the proof is insufficient to convict
on the greater offense. Thus, the jury must, in essence, acquit the
defendant of the greater offense before considering his or her
guilt on the lesser-included offense.”
Hughes v.
State, 347 Ark. 696, 706–707, 66 S.W.3d 645, 651
(2002).[
1]
Here, the trial judge instructed
Blueford’s jury to consider the offenses in order, from the
charged offense of capital murder to the lesser included offenses
of first-degree murder, manslaughter, and negligent homicide. The
judge told the jury to proceed past capital murder only upon a
unanimous finding of a “reasonable doubt” as to that
offense—that is, upon an acquittal. See
In re Winship,
397 U.S.
358, 363 (1970). The State’s closing arguments repeated
this directive: “[B]efore you can consider a lesser included
of capital murder, you must first, all 12, vote that this man is
not guilty of capital murder.” App. 55. And the
forewoman’s colloquy with the judge leaves no doubt that the
jury understood the instructions to mandate unanimous acquittal on
a greater offense as a prerequisite to consideration of a lesser:
The forewoman reported that the jury had not voted on negligent
homicide because the jurors “couldn’t get past the
manslaughter” count on which they were deadlocked.
Id., at 65.
In this context, the forewoman’s
announcement in open court that the jury was “unanimous
against” conviction on capital and first-degree murder,
id., at 64–65, was an acquittal for double jeopardy
purposes.[
2] Per Arkansas law,
the jury’s determination of reasonable doubt as to those
offenses was an acquittal “in essence.”
Hughes,
347 Ark., at 707, 66 S. W. 3d, at 651. By deciding that the
State “had failed to come forward with sufficient
proof,” the jury resolved the charges of capital and
first-degree murder adversely to the State.
Burks, 437
U. S., at 10. That acquittal cannot be reconsidered without
putting Blueford twice in jeopardy.
Green and
Price v.
Georgia,
398 U.S.
323 (1970), bolster that conclusion. In
Green, the jury
convicted the defendant on the lesser included offense of
second-degree murder without returning a verdict on the charged
offense of first-degree murder. This Court concluded that this
result was an “implicit acquittal” on the greater
offense of first-degree murder, barring retrial. 355 U. S., at
190. The defendant “was forced to run the gantlet once on
that charge and the jury refused to convict him. When given the
choice between finding him guilty of either first or second degree
murder it chose the latter.”
Ibid.; see also
Price, 398 U. S., at 329 (“[T]his Court has
consistently refused to rule that jeopardy for an offense continues
after an acquittal, whether that acquittal is express or implied by
a conviction on a lesser included offense when the jury was given a
full opportunity to return a verdict on the greater charge”
(footnote omitted)). Notably,
Green acknowledged that its
finding of an “implicit acquittal” was an
“assumption,” because the jury had made no express
statement with respect to the greater offense. 355 U. S., at
190–191.
Blueford’s position is even stronger
because his jury was not silent on the murder counts, but announced
that it was “unanimous against” conviction. And the
trial judge specifically instructed the jury to consider
manslaughter only after acquitting Blueford of the murder counts.
Courts in several acquittal-first jurisdictions have held that a
jury’s deadlock on a lesser included offense justifies the
assumption that the jury acquitted on any greater offenses. See
State v.
Tate, 256 Conn. 262, 283–285, 773
A. 2d. 308, 323–324 (2001);
Stone v.
Superior
Ct. of San Diego Cty.,
31 Cal. 3d 503, 511–512, n. 5, 646 P.2d 809, 815, n.
5 (1982). That assumption is not even necessary here because the
jury unmistakably announced acquittal.
B
The majority holds that the forewoman’s
announcement was not an acquittal because it “was not a final
resolution of anything.”
Ante, at 6. In the
majority’s view, the jury might have revisited its decisions
on the murder counts during the 31 minutes of deliberations that
followed the forewoman’s announcement. We cannot know whether
the jury did so, the majority reasons, because the jury was
discharged without confirming that it remained “unanimous
against” convicting Blueford of capital and first-degree
murder.
Ante, at 6–8.[
3]
Putting to one side the lack of record evidence
to support this speculation—by far the more plausible
inference is that the jurors spent those 31 minutes attempting to
resolve their deadlock on manslaughter—I do not agree that
the jury was free to reconsider its decisions when its
deliberations resumed. “A verdict of acquittal on the issue
of guilt or innocence is, of course, absolutely final.”
Bullington v.
Missouri,
451 U.S.
430, 445 (1981). The jury heard instructions and argument that
it was required unanimously to acquit on capital and first-degree
murder before it could reach manslaughter. And as the
forewoman’s colloquy makes plain, the jury followed those
instructions scrupulously. There is no reason to believe that the
jury’s vote was anything other than a verdict in
substance—that is, a “final collective decision
. . . reached after full deliberation, consideration, and
compromise among the individual jurors.”
Harrison v.
Gillespie, 640 F.3d 888, 906 (CA9 2011) (en banc). And when
that decision was announced in open court, it became entitled to
full double jeopardy protection. See,
e.g.,
Commonwealth v.
Roth, 437 Mass. 777, 796, 776 N.E.2d
437, 450–451 (2002) (declining to give effect to
“ ‘ “the verdict received from the lips
of the foreman in open court” ’ ” would
“elevate form over substance”);
Stone, 31 Cal.
3d, at 511, 646 P. 2d, at 814–815 (“[I]n
determining what verdict, if any, a jury intended to return, the
oral declaration of the jurors endorsing the result is the true
return of the verdict” (internal quotation marks omitted));
see also,
e.g., Dixon v.
State, 29 Ark. 165, 171
(1874) (technical defect in verdict “is of no consequence
whatever, for the verdict need not be in writing, but may be
announced by the foreman of the jury orally”);
State
v.
Mills, 19 Ark. 476 (1858) (“The verdict was of no
validity until delivered, by the jury, in Court”).
The majority’s example of a jury that
takes a preliminary vote on greater offenses, advances to the
consideration of a lesser, and then returns to a greater, is
inapposite. See
ante, at 7. In the majority’s example,
the jury has not announced its vote in open court. Moreover, the
instructions in this case did not contemplate that the jury’s
deliberations could take the course that the majority imagines.
Arkansas’ model instruction requires acquittal as a
prerequisite to consideration of a lesser offense, and the Double
Jeopardy Clause entitles an acquittal to final-ity. Indeed, the
purpose of an acquittal-first instruction is to ensure careful and
conclusive deliberation on a greater offense. See
United
States v.
Tsanas, 572 F.2d 340, 346 (CA2 1978)
(Friendly, J.) (acquittal-first instruction avoids “the
danger that the jury will not adequately discharge its duties with
respect to the greater offense, and instead will move too quickly
to the lesser”). True, Arkansas’ instruction does not
expressly forbid reconsideration, but it does not expressly permit
reconsideration either. In any event, nothing indicates that the
jury’s announced decisions were tentative, compromises, or
mere steps en route to a final verdict, and the Double Jeopardy
Clause demands that ambiguity be resolved in favor of the
defendant. See
Downum v.
United States,
372 U.S.
734, 738 (1963).
The fact that the jury was not given the express
option of acquitting on individual offenses is irrelevant. See
ante, at 3, 9. Arkansas law ascribes no significance to the
presence of such options on a verdict form. See
Rowland v.
State, 263 Ark. 77, 85, 562 S.W.2d 590, 594 (1978)
(“The jury may prepare and present its own form of
verdict”). The lack of a state procedural vehicle for the
entry of a judgment of acquittal does not prevent the recognition
of an acquittal for constitutional purposes. See
Hudson v.
Louisiana,
450 U.S.
40, 41, n. 1 (1981).
Finally, the majority’s distinction of
Green and
Price is unavailing. The majority observes
that
Green and
Price, unlike this case, involved
final decisions.
Ante, at 8. As I have explained, I view the
forewoman’s announcements of acquittal in this case as
similarly final. In any event,
Green clarified that the
defendant’s “claim of former jeopardy” was
“not based on his previous conviction for second degree
murder but instead on the original jury’s refusal to convict
him of first degree murder.” 355 U. S.
, at 190,
n. 11; accord,
id., at 194, n. 14. That is, the
jury’s silence on the greater offense spoke with sufficient
clarity to justify the assumption of acquittal and to invoke the
Double Jeopardy Clause.
Id., at 191; see also
Price,
398 U. S., at 329. In light of the forewoman’s
announcement, this is an
a fortiori case.
In short, the Double Jeopardy Clause demands an
inquiry into the substance of the jury’s actions.
Blueford’s jury had the option to convict him of capital and
first-degree murder, but expressly declined to do so. That ought to
be the end of the matter.
II
A
Even if the majority were correct that the
jury might have reconsidered an acquitted count—a doubtful
assumption for the reasons just explained—that would not
defeat Blueford’s double jeopardy claim. It “has been
long established as an integral part of double jeopardy
jurisprudence” that “a defendant could be put in
jeopardy even in a prosecution that did not culminate in a
conviction or an acquittal.”
Crist v.
Bretz,
437 U.S.
28, 34 (1978). This rule evolved in response to the
“abhorrent” practice under the Stuart monarchs of
terminating prosecutions, and thereby evading the bar on retrials,
when it appeared that the Crown’s proof might be
insufficient.
Washington, 434 U. S., at 507; see,
e.g., Ireland’s Case, 7 How. St. Tr. 79, 120 (1678).
Accordingly, retrial is barred if a jury is discharged before
returning a verdict unless the defendant consents or there is a
“manifest necessity” for the discharge.
Perez, 9
Wheat., at 580; see also
King v.
Perkins, 90 Eng.
Rep. 1122 (K. B. 1698).
In
Perez, this Court explained that
“manifest necessity” is a high bar: “[T]he power
ought to be used with the greatest caution, under urgent
circumstances, and for very plain and obvious causes.” 9
Wheat., at 580. Since
Perez, this Court has not relaxed the
showing required. See,
e.g., Washington, 434
U. S., at 506 (requiring a “ ‘high
degree’ ” of necessity);
Downum, 372
U. S., at 736 (“imperious necessity”); see also,
e.g., United States v.
Coolidge, 25 F. Cas. 622, 623
(No. 14,858) (CC Mass. 1815) (Story, J.) (“extraordinary and
striking circumstances”). Before de-claring a mistrial,
therefore, a trial judge must weigh heavily a
“defendant’s valued right to have his trial completed
by a particular tribunal.”
Wade v.
Hunter,
336 U.S.
684, 689 (1949). And in light of the historical abuses against
which the Double Jeopardy Clause guards, a trial judge must tread
with special care where a mistrial would “help the
prosecution, at a trial in which its case is going badly, by
affording it another, more favorable opportunity to convict the
accused.”
Gori v.
United States,
367 U.S.
364, 369 (1961); see
Green, 355 U. S., at 188.
A jury’s genuine inability to reach a
verdict constitutes manifest necessity. But in an acquittal-first
jurisdiction, a jury that advances to the consideration of a lesser
included offense has not demonstrated an inability to decide a
de-fendant’s guilt or innocence on a greater—it has
acquit- ted on the greater. Under
Green, that is
unquestionably true if the jury convicts on the lesser. See
id., at 189. It would be anomalous if the Double Jeopardy
Clause offered less protection to a defendant whose jury has
deadlocked on the lesser and thus convicted of nothing at all. See
Stone, 31 Cal. 3d, at 511–512, n. 5, 646
P. 2d, at 815, n. 5.
I would therefore hold that the Double Jeopardy
Clause requires a trial judge, in an acquittal-first jurisdiction,
to honor a defendant’s request for a partial verdict before
declaring a mistrial on the ground of jury deadlock. Courts in
acquittal-first jurisdictions have so held. See,
e.g.,
Tate, 256 Conn., at 285–287, 773 A. 2d, at
324–325;
Whiteaker v.
State,
808 P.2d 270, 274 (Alaska App. 1991);
Stone, 31 Cal. 3d,
at 519, 646 P. 2d, at 820;
State v.
Pugliese,
120 N. H. 728, 730, 422 A.2d 1319, 1321 (1980)
(per curiam);
State v.
Castrillo, 90
N. M. 608, 611,
566 P.2d 1146, 1149 (1977); see also N. Y. Crim. Proc. Law
Ann. §310.70 (West 2002). Requiring a partial verdict in an
acquittal-first jurisdiction ensures that the jurisdiction takes
the bitter with the sweet. In general, an acquittal-first
instruction increases the likelihood of conviction on a greater
offense. See
People v.
Boettcher, 69 N.Y.2d 174, 182,
505 N.E.2d 594, 597 (1987). True, such an instruction may also
result in deadlock on a greater, preventing a State “from
obtaining a conviction on the lesser charge that would otherwise
have been forthcoming and thus require the expense of a
retrial.”
Tsanas, 572 F. 2d, at 346. But a State
willing to incur that expense loses nothing by overcharging in an
acquittal-first regime. At worst, the State enjoys a second
opportunity to convict, “with the possibility that the
earlier ‘trial run’ will strengthen the
prosecution’s case.”
Crist, 437 U. S., at
52 (Powell, J., dissenting). If a State wants the benefits of
requiring a jury to acquit before compromising, it should not be
permitted to deprive a defendant of the corresponding benefits of
having been acquitted. The Double Jeopardy Clause expressly
prohibits that outcome.
The majority observes that we “have never
required a trial court, before declaring a mistrial because of a
hung jury, to consider any particular means of breaking the
impasse—let alone to consider giving the jury new options for
a verdict.”
Ante, at 10 (citing
Renico v.
Lett, 559 U. S. ___, ___ (2010) (slip op., at 8)). That
hands-off approach dilutes
Perez beyond recognition. This
Court has never excused a trial judge from exercising
“scrupulous” care before discharging a jury.
Jorn, 400 U. S., at 485 (plural-ity opinion). Rather,
we have insisted that a trial judge may not act
“irrationally,” “irresponsibly,” or
“precipi-tately.”
Washington, 434 U. S., at
514–515. Nor have we retreated from the rule that
“reviewing courts have an obligation to ensure themselves
that . . . the trial judge exercised ‘sound
discretion’ in declaring a mistrial.”
Id., at
514 (quoting
Perez, 9 Wheat., at 580).[
4]
B
Even if the Double Jeopardy Clause did not
compel that broader rule, the facts of this case confirm that there
was no necessity, let alone manifest necessity, for a mistrial.
There was no reason for the judge not to have asked the jury, prior
to discharge, whether it remained “unanimous against”
conviction on capital and first-degree murder. There would have
been no intrusion on the jury’s deliberative process. The
judge was not required to issue new instructions or verdict forms,
allow new arguments, direct further deliberations, or take any
other action that might have threatened to coerce the jury. Merely
repeating his earlier question would have sufficed. Because the
judge failed to take even this modest step—or indeed, to
explore any alternatives to a mistrial, or even to make an
on-the-record finding of manifest necessity—I conclude that
there was an abuse of discretion. See,
e.g., id., at
486; see also
Washington, 434 U. S., at 525 (Marshall,
J., dissenting) (manifest necessity requires showing “that
there were no meaningful and practical alternatives to a mistrial,
or that the trial court scrupulously considered available
alter-natives and found all wanting but a termination of the
proceedings”).
Indeed, the only reason I can divine for the
judge’s failure to take this modest step is his misperception
of Arkansas law with respect to the transitional instruction. After
the colloquy with the forewoman, the judge commented at sidebar
that the jurors “haven’t even taken a vote on
[negligent homicide]. . . . I don’t think
they’ve completed their deliberation. . . . I
mean, under any reasonable circumstances, they would at least take
a vote on negligent homicide.” App. 65–66. And after
the jury retired for the last half-hour of deliberations, the judge
said, “I don’t think they have an understanding of
really that they don’t have to get past every charge
unanimously before they can move to the next charge.”
Id., at 69. That misstated Arkansas law as well as the
judge’s own instructions. The jury was required to reach a
unanimous decision on a greater offense before considering a
lesser. See
supra, at 2–3. In discharging the jury,
the judge said, “Madam Foreman, there seems to be a lot of
confusion on the part . . . of the jury about some of the
instructions. And because of the confusion and because of the
timeliness and the amount of hours that has gone by without being
able to reach a verdict, the Court is going to declare a
mistrial.” App. 69–70.
If, as these comments suggest, the judge wrongly
believed that the jury was not required to reach unanimity on a
greater offense before considering a lesser, then he accorded
insufficient finality and weight to the forewoman’s earlier
announcement of acquittal on capital and first-degree murder. That
mistake of law negates the deference due the judge’s decision
to declare a mistrial. The judge explained that the jury was being
discharged in part based on its “confusion” with
respect to the instructions, when in fact, the confusion was the
judge’s.
Ibid.; see,
e.g., Washington,
434 U. S., at 510, n. 28 (“If the record reveals that
the trial judge has failed to exercise the ‘sound
discretion’ entrusted to him, the reason for . . .
deference by an appellate court disappears”);
Illinois
v.
Somerville,
410 U.S.
458, 469 (1973) (critiquing “erratic” mistrial
inquiry);
Gori, 367 U. S., at 371, n. 3 (Douglas,
J., dissenting) (noting that “[i]n state cases, a second
prosecution has been barred where the jury was discharged through
the trial judge’s misconstruction of the law,” and
collecting cases). And a trial court “by definition abuses
its discretion when it makes an error of law.”
Koon v.
United States,
518 U.S.
81, 100 (1996).
* * *
At its core, the Double Jeopardy Clause
reflects the wisdom of the founding generation, familiar to
“ ‘every person acquainted with the history of
governments,’ ” that “ ‘state
trials have been employed as a formidable engine in the hands of a
dominant administration. . . . To prevent this
mischief the ancient common law . . . provided that one
acquittal or conviction should satisfy the law.’ ”
Ex parte Lange, 18 Wall. 163, 171 (1874) (quoting
Commonwealth v.
Olds, 15 Ky. 137, 139 (1824)). The
Double Jeopardy Clause was enacted “ ‘[t]o
perpetuate this wise rule, so favorable and necessary to the
liberty of the citizen in a government like
ours.’ ” 18 Wall., at 171. This case demonstrates
that the threat to individual freedom from reprosecutions that
favor States and unfairly rescue them from weak cases has not waned
with time. Only this Court’s vigilance has.
I respectfully dissent.