Newell, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.During Appellant’s trial for first-degree burglary with a deadly weapon, the jury sent out a note stating that it unanimously agreed that Appellant was not guilty of the offense. However, the jury also indicated in this note that it was deadlocked on the issue of guilt for the lesser- included offense of burglary without a deadly weapon. The trial court instructed the jury to keep deliberating and ultimately declared a mistrial when the jury could not reach a unanimous decision. This appeal requires us to decide whether the jury’s initial note was a final verdict of acquittal on the charged offense. Appellant argues that it was, and therefore his conviction at his second trial violates the Double Jeopardy Clause. We disagree.I. BackgroundThe relevant facts here are undisputed. Appellant was charged with first-degree burglary of a habitation. The indictment alleged that Appellant intentionally and knowingly entered his ex-mother-in-law’s habitation without her consent and committed an aggravated assault against her.[1] At Appellant’s first trial, the jury was charged on both first- degree burglary (the charged offense) and second-degree burglary (a lesser-included offense). The only difference between the two offenses was that the jury did not have to find that Appellant used a deadly weapon in order to convict him of second-degree burglary.About four hours into deliberations, the trial court received a phone call from the jury stating that it was deadlocked. In response (and without objection from the attorneys), the trial court sent the jury a note stating: “Without indicating whether your vote is guilty or not guilty, please indicate in the spaces provided below the number of jurors voting one way or the other on the guilt/innocence questions.” The jury wrote back stating that there were 12 votes for not guilty for the charged offense, and 5 votes for guilty and 7 votes for not guilty for the lesser- included offense. The trial court instructed the jury to continue deliberating.The jury deliberated for another hour and then recessed for the night. The following morning, the jury deliberated for another two-and-a- half hours. The jury then sent the trial court another note stating: “The Jurors are at an impasse with 2 jurors for ‘not guilty’ and 2 for ‘guilty’ who have stated they will not change their position. . . . The vote overall at this time is: 8 not guilty [and] 4 guilty.” The State then requested a mistrial; Appellant objected and requested an Allen instruction. After determining that further deliberations would be futile, the trial court declared a mistrial. Five months later, Appellant was re-tried for first- degree burglary, and the jury found him guilty. The trial court sentenced Appellant to 20 years’ imprisonment.Appellant appealed to the Thirteenth Court of Appeals, arguing that the trial court abused its discretion by granting a mistrial over his objection without manifest necessity and that doing so amounted to a double jeopardy violation. Relying primarily upon the United States Supreme Court decision in Blueford v. Arkansas, the court of appeals agreed with Appellant that a double jeopardy violation had occurred.[2]According to the court of appeals, the jury foreman’s report on the jury’s vote count amounted to an informal verdict of acquittal of the first-degree burglary.[3] This, in turn, resulted in a jeopardy bar against Appellant’s subsequent trial for that charge.[4] The State asks us to review this decision of the court of appeals, arguing that the court of appeals misapplied Blueford.[5] We will reverse.II. The Jury Note Was Not a Final Verdict of AcquittalThe Double Jeopardy Clause protects against multiple prosecutions for the same offense.[6] The Supreme Court of the United States has stated that the bar on re-trials after acquittal is “[p]erhaps the most fundamental rule in the history of double jeopardy jurisprudence.”[7] A trial may be discontinued, however, without barring a subsequent trial for the same offense when “particular circumstances manifest a necessity” to declare a mistrial.[8] A jury’s inability to reach a verdict is a “classic basis” for establishing such a necessity.[9]The court of appeals held that Appellant’s subsequent trial for first- degree burglary was barred after the trial court declared a mistrial in the first trial because the jury’s note regarding its deliberations amounted to a verdict of acquittal.[10] The United States Supreme Court recently rejected a similar claim under similar circumstances in Blueford v. Arkansas. According to the court of appeals, the facts of this case are significantly distinguishable from those in Blueford. We disagree.For a jury note regarding the jury’s inability to reach a verdict to bar a subsequent prosecution after a mistrial, there must be some indication that the jury had finally resolved to acquit the defendant.[11] In Blueford, the Supreme Court determined whether a jury reached a final verdict of acquittal for capital murder and first-degree murder.[12] A few hours into deliberations, the jury indicated to the trial court that it was deadlocked.[13]The court then issued an Allen instruction, which is a supplemental charge sometimes given to a deadlocked jury that emphasizes the importance of reaching a verdict.[14] The jury then continued deliberating.A half hour later, the jury told the court it was still deadlocked.[15]The trial court then asked the foreperson what the vote count was on each specific charge. The foreperson stated that the jury was unanimous against guilt on both capital murder and first-degree murder but deadlocked on manslaughter.[16] The court then issued another Allen instruction, and the jury continued deliberating.[17] A half hour later, the jury again returned to the courtroom, indicating that they were still deadlocked. The court then declared a mistrial, and the defendant was later re-tried on all charges.[18]The Supreme Court held that the foreperson’s verbal report of the vote count was not a final verdict of acquittal because it lacked the “finality necessary to constitute an acquittal on the murder offenses.”[19]The Supreme Court reasoned that the vote count lacked finality because: (1) the jury was still deadlocked on the lesser-included offense; (2) the jury continued deliberating after the reported vote count; (3) the foreperson gave no further indication that the jury was still unanimous; and (4) nothing in the jury instructions prohibited the jurors from revisiting the prior vote.[20] Because the verbal exchange was not a final resolution of the defendant’s guilt, the Supreme Court held that the Double Jeopardy Clause did not prohibit the second trial.[21]Here, the court of appeals correctly noted some similarities with Blueford. First, like the foreperson in Blueford, the foreperson here reported to the trial court that the jurors were unanimous against guilt on the charged offense (here, first-degree burglary) but were deadlocked against guilt on the lesser-included offense (here, second-degree burglary).[22] Second, in both Blueford and this case, the jury continued deliberating after the foreperson reported the vote count to the trial court.[23] And lastly, in both Blueford and this case, the jury instructions did not prohibit the jurors from reconsidering their votes.[24]The court of appeals, however, found this case distinguishable from Blueford based on the following verbal exchange that took place the day after the reported vote count:[Trial Court]: I received your note last night indicating that the jury did not believe that Mr. Traylor was guilty of the [charged] offense, but that there was a disagreement amongst the jurors in the lesser included offense and that you were hung up on that issue and that the vote on that apparently changed by only one juror from last night into today, even after deliberating for almost three hours today. So the note that I received . . . is that the jury is hopelessly deadlocked; is that correct?[Foreperson]: I use[d] the word impasse, but I suppose deadlock is probably the legal term.According to the court of appeals, that verbal exchange establishes a final resolution of Appellant’s guilt as to first-degree burglary.[25] We disagree.As in Blueford, the foreperson here gave no indication that the jury was still unanimous on the charged offense in response to the trial court’s question. In fact, shortly before the jury foreman indicated that the jury was at an impasse, the following exchange took place:[Trial court]: Did you fill out any of the certificates on the Court’s Charge?[Foreperson]: No, sir, because we have no – no decision.This unambiguously shows that the jury had not made a final decision on any of the charges. If the jury intended for its vote count from the day before to be a final verdict, then it would have clearly stated so. But it did not because, as the foreperson conveyed, the jury had not made a final decision.The court of appeals also failed to fully consider the jury’s continued deliberation after the reported vote count. These continued deliberations factored heavily into the Supreme Court’s holding in Blueford—even though the jury continued deliberating for only a half hour more—because it gave the jury the opportunity to reconsider its prior vote.[26] Here, the jurors continued deliberating for another three-and-a-half hours after the reported vote count, giving them ample time to reconsider their prior vote. Further, the vote count changed on the lesser-included offense from the time the jury sent the note to the time of the verbal exchange the following day. If the vote on the lesser-included offense changed, the vote on the charged offense could have changed too.[27]We agree with the State that the jury note here lacks “the finality necessary to constitute an acquittal” on the first-degree burglary offense.[28] We disagree with the court of appeals that the facts presented here are significantly distinguishable from Blueford. We hold that the jury note in question did not indicate that the jury had finally resolved to acquit Appellant of the first-degree burglary.III. Our Precedent Does Not Conflict with BluefordThough the court of appeals relied primarily upon Blueford in reaching its decision, it did acknowledge that Texas law formally recognizes the existence of informal verdicts.[29] Article 37.10(a) of the Code of Criminal Procedure sets out in relevant part:If the verdict of the jury is informal, its attention shall be called to it, and with its consent the verdict may, under the direction of the court, be reduced to the proper form. If the jury refuses to have the verdict altered, it shall again retire to its room to deliberate, unless it manifestly appear that the verdict is intended as an acquittal; and in that case, the judgment shall be rendered accordingly, discharging the defendant.[30]The court of appeals also detailed several Texas cases in which jury notes regarding the inability to reach a verdict did not demonstrate that the jury had manifested an intent to acquit the defendant under Article 37.10(a).[31] Yet, the court of appeals distinguished these cases by noting that they pre-dated, and conflicted with, Blueford.[32] We perceive no conflict.Under Texas law, an informal verdict is “one that does not meet the legal requirements of being written or answered as authorized.”[33] For a jury note to qualify as an informal verdict of acquittal, we have held that the jury note must also be “plainly intended to operate as an acquittal.”[34]In State ex rel. Hawthorn v. Giblin, we held that a jury note similar to the one at issue in this case did not qualify as an “informal verdict” under Article 37.10(a).[35] In that case, the trial court sent a note to the jury asking about its progress. The jury wrote back that it was unanimous against guilt on attempted murder (the charged offense) but was deadlocked on aggravated assault (the lesser-included offense).[36] After determining that further deliberations would be futile, the court ordered a mistrial.We held that the note in Hawthorn was not an informal verdict because it was not “plainly intended to operate as an acquittal.”[37] In other words, the jury note did not establish that the jury had finally resolved to acquit the defendant. Given that the jury was merely responding to an inquiry from the trial court and that the jury was obviously deadlocked, we reasoned that the note was “intended merely as reports on the jury’s progress toward a verdict.”[38]Thus, under Texas law we essentially ask the same question that the United States Supreme Court asked in Blueford: Did the jury finally resolve to acquit the defendant? In this case it did not. Because the jury did not plainly intend for its progress report to be treated as a verdict, the jury note lacked the “finality necessary to amount to an acquittal” on the charged offense.[39]IV. ConclusionWe hold that Appellant’s subsequent trial for first-degree burglary does not violate the Double Jeopardy Clause. The jury note was not an informal verdict of acquittal under Texas law because it lacked the “finality necessary to amount to an acquittal” required under Blueford v. Arkansas. We reverse the court of appeals and affirm the trial court’s judgment.Filed: November 7, 2018Publish