A14-2166 Nonprecedential Affirmed Processed

State of Minnesota v. Alexander Kenton Edmondson

Minnesota Court of Appeals · Filed December 7, 2015

Opinion text

This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2014).

STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A14-2166

State of Minnesota,
Respondent,

vs.

Alexander Kenton Edmondson,
Appellant.

Filed December 7, 2015
Affirmed
Reilly, Judge

Hennepin County District Court
File No. 27-CR-14-14777

Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and

Michael O. Freeman, Hennepin County Attorney, Jean E. Burdorf, Assistant County
Attorney, Minneapolis, Minnesota (for respondent)

Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Steven P. Russett, Assistant
Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)

Considered and decided by Schellhas, Presiding Judge; Rodenberg, Judge; and

Reilly, Judge.

UNPUBLISHED OPINION

REILLY, Judge

Appellant Alexander Kenton Edmondson challenges his conviction of first-degree

burglary (assault), arguing that the district court’s jury instructions (1) omitted an element
of the crime; (2) erroneously defined “assault;” and (3) violated appellant’s right to a

unanimous verdict. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant appeals his conviction of assaulting his ex-girlfriend, S.M., inside her

mother’s apartment. S.M. lived with her mother in the upper-floor apartment of a triplex

apartment building. The apartment building also contains a main-floor apartment and a

basement unit. For approximately one year, appellant and S.M. lived with S.M.’s mother

in the upper-floor apartment. The couple later moved into the basement unit for six

months. Appellant and S.M. broke up a few months prior to the incident, but appellant

continued to live in the basement unit.

On May 24-25, 2014, appellant and S.M. were involved in three separate domestic

disputes at the residence and police officers were called on each occasion. The first

incident happened at approximately 8:45 p.m., when a neighbor heard appellant and S.M.

arguing and fighting outside, and called the police. The police arrived and questioned

both S.M. and appellant. S.M. told the police officers she did not need police protection

and the officers left. S.M. drove appellant to his mother’s home.

Appellant returned to the apartment building later that night. At approximately

11:30 p.m., the neighbors on the main level of the apartment building heard appellant and

S.M. fighting in the back hallway. S.M. was screaming and “telling [appellant] ‘you got

to get out of here.’” The neighbor opened her apartment door and saw that appellant

“had [S.M.] by the hair and she was crying.” The neighbor initially attempted to

intervene, but appellant and S.M. went upstairs. S.M. later called the police when

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appellant “didn’t calm down.” Appellant left the apartment and ran down an alley when

the police officers arrived. S.M. returned to her mother’s upstairs apartment, locked the

door, and fell asleep.

An hour later, S.M. awoke and heard appellant banging on the apartment door.

S.M. was nervous and scared because she did not want appellant in her mother’s

apartment. S.M.’s mother was out of town for the weekend and appellant did not have

permission to be in the apartment when she was away. Appellant entered the apartment

without permission, prompting S.M. to run into the bathroom, lock the bathroom door,

and call the police. Appellant stopped banging on the door and S.M., believing that

appellant had left the apartment, came out of the bathroom. Appellant was standing by

the door in the back hallway. He began chasing S.M. and grabbed her by her wrists and

her arms. S.M. ran down the stairs from her apartment toward the main floor. S.M.

banged on her neighbor’s door and yelled that appellant “broke into [her] mom’s house.”

The neighbor let S.M. inside her apartment and described S.M. as “crying and

hysterical.”

Minneapolis police officers arrived within five minutes of the emergency call. A

police officer observed that S.M. had “marks on her neck that looked a lot like finger

marks,” as well as fresh bruise marks and scratches on her arm. The police officers

determined that appellant assaulted S.M. and placed him under arrest. The state charged

appellant with one count of felony burglary in the first degree in violation of Minn. Stat.

§ 609.582, subd. 1(c) (2014). A jury trial was held and the jury returned a guilty verdict.

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The district court committed him to the commissioner of corrections at the Minnesota

Correctional Facility in St. Cloud for a period of 36 months. This appeal followed.

DECISION

Appellant raises three issues on appeal. First, appellant argues the district court

erred in instructing the jury on the elements of first-degree burglary. Next, appellant

claims the district court erred in its instruction on the definition of assault. Lastly,

appellant contends the district court erred in its jury-unanimity instruction. We address

each argument in turn.

I.

Appellant claims the district court committed reversible error by failing to provide

a specific jury instruction on the elements of first-degree burglary (assault). The parties

disagree on the proper standard of review on appeal. Appellant claims he properly

objected to the instruction at trial and argues the harmless-error standard applies while

the state argues appellant did not object and the plain-error analysis applies. We

determine appellant objected to the jury instruction during the pre-instruction conference,

and therefore conclude that the harmless-error standard applies.

“[W]hen a defendant timely objects to a jury instruction, we apply the harmless-

error analysis to determine whether the error requires reversal.” State v. Watkins, 840

N.W.2d 21, 27 n.3 (Minn. 2013); State v. Lee, 683 N.W.2d 309, 316 (Minn. 2004). “A

jury instruction is erroneous if it materially misstates the applicable law.” State v. Koppi,

798 N.W.2d 358, 362 (Minn. 2011). “[W]hen an erroneous jury instruction eliminates a

required element of the crime this type of error is not harmless beyond a reasonable

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doubt.” State v. Hall, 722 N.W.2d 472, 479 (Minn. 2006). Appellant bears the burden of

showing the error and any resulting prejudice. State v. Kuhnau, 622 N.W.2d 552, 556

(Minn. 2001).

We first address whether the district court erred in its instruction to the jury on the

first-degree felony burglary (assault) charge. The state charged appellant under

subdivision 1(c), which provides that:

Whoever enters a building without consent and with
intent to commit a crime, or enters a building without consent
and commits a crime while in the building . . . commits
burglary in the first degree . . . if . . . the burglar assaults a
person within the building or on the building’s appurtenant
property.

Minn. Stat. § 609.582, subd. 1(c).

Appellant claims the statute creates a temporal element requiring the state to prove

that appellant either intended to commit a crime when he entered the building or

committed a crime “while in the building.” Appellant argues subdivision 1(c) also

creates a location element requiring the state to prove that appellant committed a crime

while in the building and, in addition, assaulted a person “within the building or on the

building’s appurtenant property.” Appellant claims the district court’s jury instruction

required the jury to find the location element but “completely omitted the temporal

element.” We disagree, and determine that no error occurred.

In a harmless-error analysis, the reviewing court reviews jury instructions in their

entirety “to determine if they fairly and accurately reflect the law of the case.” State v.

Johnson, 699 N.W.2d 335, 339 (Minn. App. 2005). The district court followed the

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pattern jury instruction for first-degree burglary and instructed the jury, in relevant part,

that:

With respect to burglary in the first degree, the statutes
of Minnesota provide that whoever enters a building without
the consent of the person in lawful possession or remains
within a building without the consent of the person in lawful
possession, and the person assaults another within the
building or on the building’s [appurtenant] property is guilty
of a crime.

The elements of burglary in the first degree are: First,
Mr. Edmondson entered a building without consent of the
person in lawful possession or remained within the building
without the consent of the person in lawful possession.

...

Second, Mr. Edmondson assaulted a person within the
building or on the building’s [appurtenant] property.

...

Third the element for burglary is that Mr.
Edmondson’s act took place on or about May 25, 2014, in
Hennepin County.

See 10A Minnesota Practice, CRIMJIG 17.04 (articulating first-degree burglary (assault)

elements).

Here, the district court instructed the jury that it “must consider these instructions

as a whole and regard each instruction in light of all the others.” The jury heard

testimony that police officers were called to the residence on three separate occasions.

S.M. testified she did not want appellant in her mother’s apartment. During the third

incident, appellant walked into S.M.’s mother’s upstairs apartment without permission.

S.M. locked herself in the bathroom and begged appellant to leave. When S.M. left the

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bathroom, appellant chased her and grabbed her wrists and her arms. From this evidence,

the jury could reasonably conclude that appellant entered the building without consent

and assaulted S.M. within the building. The law requires only that “the charge as a whole

convey to the jury a clear and correct understanding of the law of the case.” Johnson,

699 N.W.2d at 339 (quoting Barnes v. Northwest Airlines, Inc., 233 Minn. 410, 421, 47

N.W.2d 180, 187 (1951)). We hold that the district court’s jury instruction conveyed a

“clear and correct understanding” of the law and was not erroneous. Id.

Appellant also argues the district court failed to distinguish between an assault

committed inside S.M.’s apartment unit and an assault committed in the apartment-

building’s common stairway. Appellant claims that because he was not barred from the

common areas of the apartment building, any assault committed in the stairway does not

meet the statutory definition of burglary (assault). The district court rejected this

argument:

[T]he burglary statute does speak broadly enough that
it would include burglary as entering a building without
permission, maybe encountering someone and if that
encounter leads to some type of assault that either begins in
the building or even involves a person in the [appurtenant]
property even perhaps in a common area or a lawn . . . that
would satisfy . . . the intent of the burglary statute[.]

Caselaw supports the district court’s reasoning. See State v. Devens, 852 N.W.2d

255, 259 (Minn. 2014) (stating the word “dwelling” within burglary statute’s definitional

section is “broad enough to include an apartment hallway”). State v. Holmes, 758

N.W.2d 326, 331 (Minn. App. 2008), aff’d, 778 N.W.2d 336 (Minn. 2010) (“An assault

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committed by a defendant can be used to fulfill both the crime element and the assault

element of first-degree burglary under Minn. Stat. § 609.582, subd. 1(c).”).

Lastly, appellant seeks a new trial on the ground that the jury instruction relieved

the state of proving that appellant entered a building “with the intent to commit a crime”

or committed a crime “while in the building.” The district court is allowed “considerable

latitude” in selecting language in the jury instructions and in “determining the propriety

of a specific instruction.” Alholm v. Wilt, 394 N.W.2d 488, 490 (Minn. 1986) (citations

omitted). We therefore review a district court’s decision to give a particular jury

instruction for an abuse of discretion. State v. Hall, 722 N.W.2d 472, 477 (Minn. 2006).

A new trial may be granted if the district court abused its discretion in instructing the jury

and the injured party properly objected at trial. Minn. R. Civ. P. 59.01(f). However, a

new trial will not be granted “when an instruction fairly and correctly state[s] applicable

law.” Alevizos v. Metro. Airports Comm’n, 452 N.W.2d 492, 501 (Minn. App. 1990),

review denied (Minn. May 11, 1990) (citation omitted). Applying the harmless-error

standard of review, we determine the district court did not abuse its discretion by

providing the pattern jury instruction on the elements of burglary (assault) and appellant

is not entitled to a new trial.

II.

Appellant argues the district court committed plain error by failing to instruct the

jury that it could not convict appellant of first-degree burglary (assault) unless the state

proved appellant acted with the purpose of causing S.M. to fear bodily harm or death.

Appellant did not raise this objection at trial and we therefore review for plain error. See

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State v. Harlin, 771 N.W.2d 46, 52 (Minn. App. 2009) (“Because appellant did not object

to the instructions at trial, we review the unobjected-to instruction under the plain-error

standard.”). Under this standard, appellant must establish that (1) there was an error;

(2) the error was plain; and (3) it affected his substantial rights. Id. (citation omitted). If

these three prongs are satisfied, we assess whether to address the error to ensure fairness

and the integrity of the judicial proceedings. State v. Griller, 583 N.W.2d 736, 740

(Minn. 1998).

The first question is whether an error occurred. Appellant argues the district court

erred in its instruction on the definition of assault. “Assault” is defined as:

(1) an act done with intent to cause fear in another of
immediate bodily harm or death; or

(2) the intentional infliction of or attempt to inflict bodily
harm upon another.

Minn. Stat. § 609.02, subd. 10 (2014); see also 10 Minnesota Practice, CRIMJIG 13.01

(defining “assault” as the “intent to cause fear in another person of immediate bodily

harm or death” or “intentionally inflict[ing] or attempt[ing] to inflict bodily harm upon

another”). “In cases in which a defendant is charged with a degree of an assault, the

court may wish to incorporate this instruction directly into the first element of the

appropriate elements instruction as a further definition of that element.” 10 Minnesota

Practice, CRIMJIG 13.01 cmt. Here, the district court included the assault definition

within its first-degree burglary instruction, as follows:

An assault is the intentional infliction of bodily harm
upon another or intentional attempt to inflict bodily harm

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upon another or an act done with the intent to cause fear of
immediate bodily harm or death in another.

Appellant contends that the district court erred by failing to define “with intent to,”

because it “left jurors to speculate about the meaning of the phrase” and created

confusion. Appellant relies on State v. Fleck to support his argument that assault-fear, in

contrast to assault-harm, is a specific-intent crime “requir[ing] the State to prove the

defendant committed an act with an additional special mental element—specifically: ‘an

act done with intent to cause fear in another of immediate bodily harm or death.’” 810

N.W.2d 303, 309 (Minn. 2012) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Minn. Stat. § 609.02, subd.

10(1). Appellant argues the district court erred by failing to instruct the jury that the state

had to prove that appellant “acted with specific intent, i.e., that he ‘had a purpose to’

cause S.M. fear or bodily injury or death.’” Appellant claims that in light of Fleck, the

district court should have ensured that the jury understood that assault-fear applies only

insofar as appellant intended to cause S.M. fear of bodily harm.

We determine the district court did not err in declining to give a specific-intent

instruction. This court has previously determined that the word “intent” has a commonly

understood meaning, and a district court does not err by declining to provide an

instruction that “does not greatly increase the jury’s understanding of [a common]

phrase.” Harlin, 771 N.W.2d at 52; see also State v. Duke, 335 N.W.2d 511, 515 (Minn.

1983) (holding no plain error and stating that it is “not clear to us that it is an error of

‘fundamental law’ or ‘plain error’ for the trial court to fail to define ‘intent to kill,’

particularly where the definition that would have been given arguably does not add

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much”); State v. Robinson, 699 N.W.2d 790, 799-800 (Minn. App. 2005) (concluding

district court’s jury instructions did not constitute plain error by failing to define intent in

assault case), aff’d on other grounds, 718 N.W.2d 400 (Minn. 2006). Because appellant

has not met his burden of establishing the district court erred, we do not reach the issue of

whether the error was plain or affected appellant’s substantial rights.

III.

Appellant argues the district court committed plain error by failing to give a

specific-unanimity instruction. Appellant claims the district court erred by not instructing

the jurors to unanimously agree on (1) what act appellant committed that constituted the

crime of burglary (assault); and (2) what type of assault appellant committed. Appellant

did not object at trial and this court applies a plain-error standard of review. See State v.

Hayes, 831 N.W.2d 546, 555 (Minn. 2013) (reviewing unobjected-to jury instructions for

plain error).

We first address whether the district court erred by omitting a specific-unanimity

instruction. “Jury verdicts in all criminal cases must be unanimous.” State v. Pendleton,

725 N.W.2d 717, 730 (Minn. 2007) (citing Minn. R. Crim. P. 26.01, subd. 1(5)). “To

achieve that end, a jury must unanimously find that the government has proved each

element of the offense.” Id. at 730-31 (quotation omitted). Relying on State v. Wenthe,

appellant argues the jurors “must unanimously agree on which act the defendant

committed” when faced with a single charge, where the state presents evidence of

multiple acts that could constitute the charged offense. 845 N.W.2d 222, 229 (Minn.

App. 2014), review granted (June 25, 2014), rev’d, 865 N.W.2d 293 (Minn. 2015).

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The Minnesota Supreme Court reversed Wenthe and determined that it was “not

reasonably likely that the district court’s failure to provide a specific-unanimity jury

instruction significantly affected the verdict” and concluded “that any error did not affect

Wenthe’s substantial rights.” Id., 865 N.W.2d at 301; see also Pendleton, 725 N.W.2d at

731 (confirming that a jury “does not have to unanimously agree on the facts underlying

an element of a crime in all cases”). In Schad v. Arizona, the United States Supreme

Court stated that “[w]e have never suggested that in returning general verdicts in such

cases the jurors should be required to agree upon a single means of commission[.]” 501

U.S. 624, 631-32, 111 S. Ct. 2491, 2497 (1991). Indeed, Schad recognized that “different

jurors may be persuaded by different pieces of evidence, even when they agree upon the

bottom line,” and, therefore, “there is no general requirement that the jury reach

agreement on the preliminary factual issues which underlie the verdict.” Id. (citations

omitted).

This court addressed a similar issue in State v. Dalbec, where the defendant argued

on appeal that he was deprived of his right to a fair trial because the district court failed to

instruct the jury that it must unanimously agree on the act that constituted the offense of

domestic assault. 789 N.W.2d 508, 509 (Minn. App. 2010). We determined that the

district court did not err by failing to instruct the jury on the doctrine of specific

unanimity and affirmed. Id. We reasoned that:

[T]he act of assault is the element of the crime of
domestic assault, and an assault can be committed in any of
three ways. In theory, each of appellant’s acts over the course
of [a single day] could be one of these disparate means of
accomplishing this element. The jury could agree, therefore,

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that appellant intended to assault [the victim] but need not
agree on whether the assault was accomplished by causing
fear or inflicting or attempting to inflict bodily harm. We
conclude that the district court did not plainly err by failing to
instruct the jury that it must unanimously determine which
action, among several proved, supported the element of
assault in a charge of domestic assault.

Id. at 513 (footnote omitted).

Precedential authority supports our determination that the district court did not err

by failing to provide a specific-unanimity jury instruction. Because we determine an

error did not occur, we do not consider whether the error was plain or affected appellant’s

substantial rights.

Affirmed.

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