Recently, while preparing for trial in a murder case, I was pleased to see that the Supreme Court of Florida amended/revised the heat of passion instruction, included manslaughter as an authorized verdict if heat of passion existed at the time of the killing, and spelled out the necessary elements of the defense for the bench, bar, and jury.
Florida Criminal Standard Jury Instruction 7.2, dealing with First Degree Murder, now reads in pertinent part:
An issue in this case is whether (defendant) did not act with a premeditated design to kill because [he] [she] acted in the heat of passion based on adequate provocation. In order to find that the defendant did not act with a premeditated design to kill because [he] [she] acted in the heat of passion based on adequate provocation:
- a. there must have been a sudden event that would have suspended the exercise of judgment in an ordinary reasonable person; and
b. a reasonable person would have lost normal self-control and would have been impelled by a blind and unreasoning fury; and
c. there was not a reasonable amount of time for a reasonable person to cool off; and
d. a reasonable person would not have cooled off before committing the act that caused death; and
e. the (defendant) was, in fact, so provoked and did not cool off before [he] [she] committed the act that caused the death of (victim).
An issue in this case is whether (defendant) did not have a depraved mind without regard for human life because [he] [she] was in the heat of passion. In order to find that the defendant did not have a depraved mind without regard for human life because [he] [she] was in the heat of passion:
- a. there must have been a sudden event that would have suspended the exercise of judgment in an ordinary reasonable person; and
b. a reasonable person would have lost normal self-control and would have been impelled by a blind and unreasoning fury; and
c. there was not a reasonable amount of time for a reasonable person to cool off; and
d. a reasonable person would not have cooled off before committing the act that would have resulted in death; and
e. the (defendant) was, in fact, so provoked and did not cool off before [he] [she] committed the act that would have resulted in the death of (victim).
There are comparable provisions for attempted first degree murder and attempted second degree murder. The Supreme Court of Florida went beyond merely approving the giving of a special instruction on heat of passion manslaughter, and did even more than drafting a "special instruction", as I had asserted was necessary. It inserted the appropriate language and preexisting legal standards into the existing "standard instructions" on homicide and attempted homicide, and firmly established the doctrine of heat of passion as a viable partial defense.