DICKSON, Justice.
Following a jury trial, the defendant was convicted of two counts of Class B felony
The defendant, Shane Keller, was convicted of eight felonies — three counts of Burglary, three counts of Theft, and two counts of Receiving Stolen Property — for taking possessions from a farm in Washington County, Indiana, between May and September of 2013. Two of the burglary convictions resulted from breaking and entering into an old farmhouse on the property. Jeremy Hardwick, who planned to move his family into the farmhouse "in a short period," was remodeling the farmhouse because it had been in "pretty rough" shape after sitting empty for ten to twelve years. Tr. at 501, 503. He was at the farm every day after work, feeding the animals and working on the house. The school bus dropped his daughter off at the farm in the afternoon, and he had his mail delivered there as well. The Hardwick family stored all of their belongings — except beds and the clothes they wore on a daily basis — at the farmhouse, mostly packed in boxes or piled around the house. The farmhouse had one completed bathroom, new drywall and plumbing, and a new electrical system, but several parts of the house still needed finished, including flooring, kitchen cabinets, trim, and appliance installation.
The defendant's two Class B felony Burglary convictions for breaking into the farmhouse required the jury to find that the "building or structure" broken into was a "dwelling."
Appellant's App'x at 596. Informed by this instruction, the jury found the defendant guilty of both counts of Class B felony
In his challenge to the final instruction defining a dwelling, the defendant argues that "[t]he trial court erred by instructing the jury beyond the statutory definition of dwelling.... [by adding language that] unfairly emphasized particular facts, invaded the province of the jury and misled the jury." Appellant's Br. at 10. "We review a trial court's instructions to the jury for an abuse of discretion." Isom v. State, 31 N.E.3d 469, 484 (Ind.2015). The trial court abuses its discretion "when the instruction is erroneous and the instructions taken as a whole misstate the law or otherwise mislead the jury."
Article 1, Section 19 of the Indiana Constitution protects the province of the jury in criminal trials: "In all criminal cases whatever, the jury shall have the right to determine the law and the facts." An instruction that invades this province by inappropriately emphasizing certain facts is erroneous and misleads the jury. See Ludy v. State, 784 N.E.2d 459, 461 (Ind.2003) ("Instructions that unnecessarily emphasize one particular evidentiary fact, witness, or phase of the case have long been disapproved."). Here, the last sentence of the dwelling instruction told the jury that "[a]ny such place where a person keeps personal items with the intent to reside in the near future is considered a dwelling." Appellant's App'x at 596. By emphasizing a set of facts that would satisfy the statutory definition of a dwelling, this language restricted the jury's discretion in applying the statutory definition in light of all the admitted evidence about the farmhouse. This also misled the jury by encouraging it to single out certain facts while ignoring others that it may and should consider. See Fry v. State, 447 N.E.2d 569, 573 (Ind.1983) (overruled on other grounds). Under our Constitution, "it [is] the province of the jury to determine the weight to be given... each item placed in evidence." Woodson v. State, 542 N.E.2d 1331, 1334 (Ind. 1989). Because the last sentence of the instruction "invite[d the jury] to violate its obligation to consider all the evidence," the instruction invaded the province of the jury in violation of the Indiana Constitution. Ludy, 784 N.E.2d at 462.
The State argues that "[t]he trial court did not abuse its discretion because the instruction is rooted in binding precedent."
The addition of the last sentence to the challenged final instruction was misleading and invaded the province of the jury and was therefore erroneous. We thus reverse the defendant's Class B felony Burglary convictions. Under the Burglary statute at the time of the offenses, Burglary was a Class C felony, but was enhanced to a Class B felony if the building or structure broken into was a dwelling. Because the erroneous language only related to the dwelling element, we instruct the trial court to modify the two Class B felony Burglary convictions from Class B felonies to Class C felonies and to resentence the defendant accordingly. See Bradley v. State, 867 N.E.2d 1282, 1286 (Ind.2007). As to the other appellate issues we summarily affirm the Court of Appeals.
As established, the trial court's dwelling instruction erroneously amplified the statutory
RUCKER and DAVID, JJ., concur.
MASSA, J., dissents with separate opinion in which RUSH, C.J., joins.
MASSA, J., dissenting.
In crafting a proper jury instruction for the term "dwelling," the trial court here was placed in a difficult position: either to rely exclusively on the text of the statute, or to further inform deliberations by incorporating the holding of White v. State, which unambiguously found that where a person maintained personal belongings in a house, and intended to take up residency in that house in the near future, it qualified as a "dwelling" for purposes of a burglary conviction, because any other result would "defy logic." 846 N.E.2d 1026, 1031 (Ind.Ct.App.2006). The majority finds that it was error for the trial court to incorporate the holding of White, because that panel considered a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence supporting conviction, rather than the adequacy of a jury instruction. Op. at 1208-10.
I would not parse that difference quite so finely. In White, our Court of Appeals, in no uncertain terms, identified a set of circumstances where a "dwelling" would exist, even though that set of circumstances was not identified within the statutory definition. The trial court thus made the judgment call that White constituted an addition to the law in this area, and instructed the jury accordingly; I see no compelling reason to reverse the trial court for its handling of the situation. If this Court wished to reject the holding of White, it could do so directly (rather than declining to reach the issue by limiting its holding to the jury instruction), and sustain the adequacy of the jury instruction given based on the state of the law at that time. See, e.g., McCowan v. State, 27 N.E.3d 760, 766-67 (Ind.2015) (sustaining conviction where jury instructions were based on appellate interpretation of Supreme Court decisions, despite this Court also disapproving those decisions at the same time). I do not believe it is appropriate or necessary, however, to reduce the level of burglary conviction here because of the trial court's instruction that, per White, this set of circumstances, if found, "is considered a dwelling" rather than merely "could be" so considered. Appellant's App. at 596. I would thus find no reversible instructional error.
Moreover, nor would I reverse on sufficiency grounds as the Court of Appeals did below. The General Assembly has long provided gradations of burglary, with home invasions punished more severely than break-ins of other buildings, such as empty businesses after hours, for a number of reasons easily imagined (including the risk of violence when a burglar surprises a homeowner, see, e.g., Wallace v. State, 486 N.E.2d 445 (Ind.1985)). This risk that someone might be there justifies a more serious charge, even if the risk is low in a particular situation. Indeed, you can live primarily at your home in the city, and if someone breaks into your empty vacation lake cottage in the dead of winter,
I respectfully dissent.
RUSH, C.J., concurs.