No. 80SA58Supreme Court of Colorado.
Decided March 30, 1981. Rehearing denied May 18, 1981.
Appeal from the District Court of the County of Arapahoe, Honorable William B. Naugle, Judge.
J. D. MacFarlane, Attorney General, Richard F. Hennessey, Deputy, Mary J. Mullarkey, Solicitor General, Kathleen M. Bowers, Assistant Attorney General, for plaintiff-appellee.
Leland S. Huttner, Michael D. Brown, for defendant-appellant.
J. Gregory Walta, State Public Defender, Norman R. Mueller, Chief Appellate Deputy, for amicus curiae, Colorado State Public Defender.
Page 735
En Banc.
JUSTICE QUINN delivered the opinion of the Court.
[1] The defendant, Richard John Curtis, appeals his conviction for extreme indifference murder in the first degree, section 18-3-102(1)(d), C.R.S. 1973 (1978 Repl. Vol. 8), resulting from the death of his female companion. He challenges the statute proscribing extreme indifference murder as unconstitutionally vague and as violative of equal protection of the laws. We conclude that the defendant’s conviction is constitutionally infirm because the statutory proscription of extreme indifference murder violates equal protection of the laws under Article II, Section 25, of the Colorado Constitution, and we reverse and remand for that reason. Because of this disposition, it is unnecessary to address the defendant’s other claims in connection with evidential and procedural rulings of the trial court. I.
[2] The defendant was charged with murder in the first degree after deliberation[1] and murder in the first degree by extreme indifference.[2] The evidence at trial established that the defendant had been living with the victim for over a year. Their relationship had been characterized by frequent acts of violence towards each other stemming from what psychiatric witnesses described as a sadomasochistic alliance.
Page 736
criminally negligent homicide.[5] The jury returned one verdict, guilty of extreme indifference murder.
II.
[9] The defendant’s principal contention is that extreme indifference murder, as defined in section 18-3-102(1)(d), violates equal protection of the laws because the statutory definition of that crime is indistinguishable from second degree murder. Our recent decision in People v. Marcy, 628 P.2d 69 (Colo. 1981), controls the resolution of this issue Marcy held that the statutory definition of extreme indifference murder violates equal protection of the laws under Article II, Section 25, of the Colorado Constitution because that crime is not sufficiently distinguishable from second degree murder to warrant the substantial differential in penalty authorized by the statutory scheme:
III.
[14] A reversal of a conviction based on a statutory crime that is constitutionally deficient as substantially indistinguishable from conduct proscribed by a less serious offense does not always require a new trial. On prior occasions where all the elements of the lesser offense were proved by competent evidence and were included in the jury’s verdict of guilty to the more serious but constitutionally infirm crime, we have vacated the conviction and remanded with directions to enter a judgment of conviction on the lesser offense and to resentence the defendant. People v. Dominguez, 193 Colo. 468, 568 P.2d 54 (1977); People v. Horrocks, 190 Colo. 501, 549 P.2d 400 (1976); People v. Webb, 189 Colo. 400, 542 P.2d 77 (1975) People v. Bowers, 187 Colo. 233, 530 P.2d 1282 (1974). However, such a disposition is not appropriate here.
Page 737
but not with respect to result. In People v. Mingo, 196 Colo. 315, 317, 584 P.2d 632, 633 (1978), we held that under the 1977 amendment to the Colorado Criminal Code “[s]econd-degree murder . . . is a general intent crime which entails being aware that one’s actions are practically certain to result in another’s death.” See also People v. DelGuidice, 199 Colo. 41, 606 P.2d 840 (1979); People v. District Court, Sixth Judicial District, 198 Colo. 70, 595 P.2d 1045 (1979). Due to the fundamental infirmity in the instruction defining “knowingly” for the purpose of extreme indifference murder, the jury’s verdict of guilty to that offense did not include, as a matter of law, the determination that the defendant had the requisite culpability for second degree murder — an awareness that his conduct is practically certain to result in another’s death.
[16] Nor did the jury’s verdict of guilty to extreme indifference murder explicitly or implicitly resolve the defendant’s guilt to the crime of first degree murder after deliberation. In this case the defendant was charged alternatively with both first degree murder after deliberation and first degree murder by extreme indifference and alternative verdicts on these offenses were submitted to the jury. Under the statutory scheme first degree murder by extreme indifference carries the same penalty as murder after deliberation and is not a “lesser included offense” within the intended meaning of that term under section 18-1-408(5), C.R.S. 1973 (1978 Repl. Vol. 8). See e.g., James v. United States, 238 F.2d 681 (9th Cir. 1956); Jones v. People, 93 Colo. 282, 26 P.2d 103 (1933); Annot., What Constitutes Lesser Offenses “Necessarily Included” in Offense Charged, 11 A.L.R. Fed. 173, 181-82 (1972). [17] Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial on murder in the first degree after deliberation and any lesser included offenses that appropriately might be submitted to the jury on retrial. [18] JUSTICE ROVIRA concurs in part and dissents in part.