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Daniels v. State
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Pinellas County; Philippe Matthey, Judge.
Howard L. Dimmig, II, Public Defender, and Dane K. Chase, Special Assistant Public Defender, Bartow, for Appellant.
Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Cerese Crawford Taylor, Assistant Attorney General, Tampa, for Appellee.
Sirarthur Stefon Daniels challenges his conviction for aggravated battery and his resulting ten-year prison sentence. He argues that providing the jury with the forcible-felony exception to the justifiable use of nondeadly force instruction was improper and resulted in fundamental error. We agree. Therefore, we reverse Daniels’ conviction and sentence and remand for a new trial.
Daniels was charged with aggravated battery after a physical altercation oc- curred between him and Ms. Mitchell—the two were in a relationship and had been living together. The incident was witnessed by Bridget Riesenbeck. Unsurprisingly, the testimony from Mitchell and Daniels differed on critical details concerning the order of events. Riesenbeck’s testimony, if believed, seemed to support Daniels’ story.
Mitchell testified that on the night of the incident, Daniels arrived home early in the morning with another woman, Riesenbeck, Mitchell refused to allow Riesenbeck to enter, so Daniels pushed her out of the way with his body and she pushed him back. The two were arguing when Daniels "socked" her. The two exchanged hits until Daniels knocked her to the ground. She got up, told them both to leave, and went into another room to call her children. Daniels—believing Mitchell had called the police—began hitting her again. He punched her in the eye, grabbed her by her hair, and dragged her into the living room where he continued to kick, punch, and bite her to the point of tearing skin. Daniels then strangled her until she was unconscious.
Sometime after she regained consciousness, Riesenbeck approached her with a bowl of ice-water. Daniels then attempted to drown Mitchell by holding her face in the bowl but was ultimately stopped by Riesenbeck. She also claimed that Riesenbeck put items in front of the door to create a barricade and that Daniels threatened her with a firearm before hitting her in the head with it, causing her to lose consciousness again. When she awoke for the second time, she was able to squeeze past the items blocking the door and escape to find help. She testified that after roughly two hours of abuse, she sustained several injuries including an orbital fracture, a torn away portion of her upper lip, and an injury to her cervical spine.
Daniels testified that when he arrived at the apartment, Mitchell was angry at him for coming home late with Riesenbeck. The three of them were still outside the apartment when Mitchell began yelling and hitting Daniels. Daniels pushed her into the apartment where Mitchell continued to slap him. He admitted that he slapped her back but claimed that they had stopped fighting for a period of time until Mitchell attacked Riesenbeck. At that point, Daniels and Mitchell began "tussling" again. Mitchell was on top of him punching his chest, face, and head. He could not get out from under her, so he began biting her. She eventually got off and ran to the bathroom. After coming out of the bathroom, Mitchell began throwing punches again and Daniels returned the punches. During this fight, Mitchell slipped and hit her face on the tile floor and started to bleed. He sat down, and Riesenbeck grabbed a bowl of ice-water for Mitchell’s mouth. Mitchell eventually left. Daniels denied ever holding her face in the water, striking her with a firearm, or preventing her from leaving.
Riesenbeck testified that when she and Daniels arrived at the apartment, Mitchell began yelling at him for coming home late, pulled on him, and smacked him. Riesenbeck suggested they "just give her the money" and go.1 Riesenbeck entered the apartment first with Daniels and Mitchell following behind, still arguing. Daniels stopped by the bathroom first and then took off his backpack to get the money.2 She testified that it was Mitchell who began barricading the door while Daniels was in the bathroom. And upon exiting the bathroom, Mitchell and Daniels continued to bicker, and Mitchell continued to slap Daniels. According to Riesenbeck, Daniels did not hit Mitchell first, but Mitchell started to choke, bite, and hit Daniels. At one point Mitchell tried to attack her, but Daniels grabbed Mitchell and the two ended up on a mattress on the floor of the living room. Mitchell was on top of Daniels, and they were both "striking each other, pulling hair, [and] choking each other." When the fighting stopped, Riesenbeck noticed the blood on Mitchell and offered a bowl of ice-water for her to soak her face in. Mitchell eventually went to the bedroom and later came out with a backpack, calmly moved the pieces blocking the door, and "walked right out." Riesenbeck testified that nobody held Mitchell’s head in the water and that there was never a firearm.
Mr. Daniels’ primary defense was that he was acting in self-defense. The trial judge read the jury instructions for the justifiable use of nondeadly force, but also included the following instruction: "[T]he use of non-deadly force is not justified if you find that [Mr. Daniels] was attempting to commit, committing, or escaping after the commission of an Aggravated Battery."
[1] The Florida Supreme Court explained that the forcible-felony exception to a claim of self-defense applies only when there is a forcible felony independent of the one which the defendant claims he or she committed in self-defence. Martinez v. State, 981 So, 2d 449, 454 (Fla. 2008); see also Santiago v. State, 88 So. 3d 1020, 1022 (Fla: 2d DCA 2012) . Here, Daniels was charged only with aggravated battery—the act he claims he committed in self-defense. Therefore, the court erred when it read the forcible-felony exception instruction to the jury. Because the error was not raised before the trial court, however, the error must be fundamental to warrant reversal.
[2, 3] The State argues that we cannot consider Daniels’ fundamental error argument because the issue was waived when counsel affirmatively agreed to the instruction, thus inviting the error. The State correctly asserts that a fundamental error argument is waived where counsel affirmatively agrees to an improper instruction. See York v. State, 932 So. 2d 413, 416 n.2 (Fla. 2d DCA 2006) . However, the Florida Supreme Court has opined that the exception from the doctrine of fundamental error does not apply where counsel has merely acquiesced to the instructions. See Lowe v. State, 259 So. 3d 23, 50 (Fla. 2018).
[4] We first note that in this context, what constitutes mere acquiescence versus an affirmative agreement has not been fully defined by case law.3 Instead, the determination is akin to the approach taken by Justice Potter Stewart.4 We begin our review by looking to the charge conference, where the following conversation occurred:
The court inquired again before the instructions were read to the jury:
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