State of Minnesota v. Ahavel Abimbola Scherz ( 2014 )


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  •                         This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A12-2214
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Ahavel Abimbola Scherz,
    Appellant.
    Filed August 18, 2014
    Affirmed
    Chutich, Judge
    Washington County District Court
    File No. 82-CR-12-1275
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Peter J. Orput, Washington County Attorney, Peter S. Johnson, Assistant County
    Attorney, Stillwater, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Glenn P. Bruder, Mitchell, Bruder & Johnson, Edina, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Chutich, Presiding Judge; Rodenberg, Judge; and
    Stoneburner, Judge.
    
    Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
    Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    CHUTICH, Judge
    Appellant Ahavel Abimbola Scherz appeals her convictions of aiding and abetting
    gross misdemeanor malicious punishment of a child and aiding and abetting
    misdemeanor domestic assault. She asserts that the district court erroneously instructed
    the jury, the evidence is insufficient to support the convictions, and she received
    ineffective assistance of counsel. Because the district court properly instructed the jury,
    the evidence supports the jury’s determinations, and Scherz has not shown that her trial
    counsel was ineffective, we affirm.
    FACTS
    In 2009, Scherz began dating Garret Jensen, the father of two children, K.J. and
    A.J. In 2012, when K.J. was thirteen years old, she and her brother A.J. spent half of
    each week at Jensen’s house in Woodbury and half of each week at their mother’s house
    in Wisconsin.    Scherz kept clothes at Jensen’s house and received mail there; she
    sometimes stayed overnight; and her driver’s license listed Jensen’s house as her address.
    She went on vacations and did many activities with K.J. and A.J., including helping them
    with homework.
    On April 1, 2012, Scherz and Jensen confronted K.J. about K.J. taking some of
    Scherz’s clothing. K.J. took some of Scherz’s clothes, wore them, and brought some of
    them to K.J.’s mother’s house. As a consequence, Scherz told K.J. that she had to put
    shorts on and “go on [her] knees and hold up a chair.” If K.J. did not keep her arms
    straight while holding the chair, she “had to be beaten with a spoon, a wooden spoon.”
    2
    K.J.’s father was there when Scherz administered the punishment. With the chair upside
    down, K.J. held the sides of the seat of the chair, while kneeling on the hard linoleum
    floor of the dining room near the kitchen. K.J. dropped the chair a few times, and she
    “was beaten with a spoon for it” and “was spanked a few times also.” K.J. testified,
    “Ahavel [Scherz] would come over with a wooden spoon and whack me until [my arms]
    were straight.” Scherz hit K.J. on her legs and her arms more than six times, and K.J.
    cried and screamed. K.J.’s father also hit her on her back and her butt “if Ahavel wasn’t
    there.” K.J. said that she had to hold the chair for more than two hours. After K.J.’s
    father told her that she could put the chair down, he told her to clean her room. K.J. said
    that her body was “[s]ore” and “[h]urt,” and she felt like she had been run “over by a
    truck.”
    After going to bed that night, K.J. decided to run away with A.J. because she
    “didn’t want to be punished anymore.” She took her brother with her because she did not
    “want him getting hurt”; “he might be punished for me running away”; and “[t]hey might
    have thought that he knew something, so they [might] try to beat it out of him.” K.J. and
    her brother spent the night in the back of an abandoned truck near Jensen’s house. In the
    morning, K.J. and her brother looked unsuccessfully for somewhere else to stay, but
    eventually returned to the truck.
    After noticing that K.J. and her brother were missing the next morning, Jensen and
    Scherz went to K.J.’s school to look for them. Scherz and Jensen eventually found K.J.
    and her brother at the abandoned truck.
    3
    To humiliate K.J., Scherz wanted her to wear a shirt to school that day that said “I
    am a thief.” The front of the shirt stated, in capital letters, “My name is [K.] & I am a
    thief,” and the back stated, “I have been stealing my dad’s girlfriend’s clothes & VS
    underwear[] to look cool @ school. I am a thief.” The writing appears to have been
    written with marker. Scherz and Jensen brought K.J., wearing the shirt, to school.
    Upon arriving at the school, Scherz, Jensen, and K.J. met with the assistant
    principal, who knew that Scherz and Jensen had been looking for K.J. earlier. When the
    assistant principal noticed that K.J.’s arms were red and heard that K.J. slept in the
    woods, she brought K.J. to the school nurse. The assistant principal then spoke with
    Scherz and Jensen, telling them that the shirt was inappropriate for school. Scherz and
    Jensen told the assistant principal that “they wanted to punish [K.J.] and humiliate her at
    school because she had stole[n] clothes from [Scherz].”
    The school nurse saw bruises on K.J.’s left leg and discoloration of her knees and
    noticed the “I am a thief” shirt that K.J. was wearing. K.J. told the nurse about the
    previous night’s events, that she had to hold a chair while kneeling in shorts on a hard
    floor and that she was hit with a spoon. The school principal and the assistant principal
    also spoke with K.J., who again consistently recounted the details of her punishment.
    The assistant principal immediately reported the punishment to the police. In a
    later interview with the police, Jensen admitted that he and Scherz decided on the
    punishment together and that Scherz “may have hit [K.J.] once on the butt” with the
    wooden spoon.
    4
    The state charged Scherz with aiding and abetting gross misdemeanor malicious
    punishment of a child and aiding and abetting misdemeanor domestic assault. See 
    Minn. Stat. §§ 609.05
    , subd. 1, .2242, subd. 1(2), .377, subd. 2 (2010). Scherz’s jury trial was
    held in August 2012. Witnesses for the state included K.J.; the assistant principal; the
    school nurse; and Sergeant Neil Bauer of the Woodbury Police Department. Jensen and
    Scherz testified for the defense.
    Scherz denied any involvement in the punishment. She denied asking K.J. to
    kneel and hold the chair. Although she admitted that the punishment occurred, Scherz
    testified that K.J. kneeled for only “nine to ten minutes” and that Jensen only “tapped”
    K.J. once on the arm. She denied hitting K.J. and said that it was Jensen’s idea for K.J. to
    wear the shirt.
    Jensen testified that K.J. had taken things from his girlfriend more than once, that
    he had many conversations with K.J. about “not taking things that don’t belong to [her],”
    and that he “had done every punishment [he could] think of” before the punishment with
    the chair. Jensen claimed that he made K.J. hold a chair above her head for ten minutes
    while kneeling and that neither he nor Scherz spanked or hit K.J. during that time. Jensen
    also testified that it was his idea for K.J. to wear the shirt that said “I am a thief.”
    The jury convicted Scherz of both counts.               On the malicious-punishment
    conviction, the district court sentenced Scherz to 360 days in jail, but stayed 300 days for
    two years; on the domestic-assault conviction, the district court sentenced Scherz to 90
    days in jail, but stayed 30 days for two years.
    5
    Scherz petitioned for postconviction relief, arguing that her trial counsel was
    ineffective. The district court denied her petition. This appeal followed.
    DECISION
    I.     Jury Instructions
    Scherz asserts that the district court should have instructed the jury that a person
    acting under the authority of a parent “may impose corporal punishment without
    committing an assault or imposing malicious punishment.” Because Scherz failed “to
    propose specific jury instructions or to object to [the] instructions” on these grounds, we
    review for plain error. State v. Cross, 
    577 N.W.2d 721
    , 726 (Minn. 1998). Under plain-
    error review, an appellant must show that (1) there was error, (2) the error is plain, and
    (3) the error affected substantial rights. Gulbertson v. State, 
    843 N.W.2d 240
    , 247 (Minn.
    2014). If all three prongs are met, we determine “whether the error should be addressed
    to ensure the fairness and the integrity of the judicial proceedings.” 
    Id.
    District courts have broad discretion in selecting the language for jury instructions.
    State v. Peou, 
    579 N.W.2d 471
    , 475 (Minn. 1998). We view jury instructions in their
    entirety to decide whether they “fairly and adequately” explain the law of the case. State
    v. Broulik, 
    606 N.W.2d 64
    , 68 (Minn. 2000). “An instruction is error if it materially
    misstates the law.” State v. Moore, 
    699 N.W.2d 733
    , 736 (Minn. 2005).
    A.     Malicious Punishment
    Scherz contends that the district court erred in its malicious-punishment
    instructions by (1) not providing “relevant considerations in determining whether a
    6
    particular measure of force was ‘unreasonable’” and (2) not instructing the jury “that
    corporal punishment is explicitly permitted under Minnesota law.” We disagree.
    The district court’s instructions follow the statutes on malicious punishment of a
    child and the permitted use of reasonable force. 
    Minn. Stat. §§ 609.06
    , subd. 1(6), .377
    (2010); see also 10 Minnesota Practice, CRIMJIG 13.85, 13.86 (2006). The district
    court explained “unreasonable force” as “such force used in the course of punishment as
    would appear to a reasonable person to be excessive under the circumstances.”
    (Emphasis added.) The jury was instructed to consider the circumstances of the case; the
    statute does not require that the jury be instructed to consider certain identified or specific
    circumstances in deciding reasonableness. See 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.377
    , subd. 1.
    The district court also instructed the jury, “Within these instructions I have defined
    certain words and phrases. If so, you are to use those definitions in your deliberations. If
    I have not defined a word or phrase, you should apply the common ordinary [meaning] of
    that word or phrase.” We assume the jury used the common and ordinary meanings of
    “unreasonable,” “reasonable,” and “force” in deciding whether the measure of force that
    Scherz used was unreasonable. See Gulbertson, 843 N.W.2d at 248 (“We presume that
    juries follow instructions given by the court.” (quotation omitted)); Peou, 579 N.W.2d at
    475 (“[We] assume that the jurors were intelligent and practical people.”).
    Contrary to Scherz’s assertion, the jury was instructed that parents and caretakers
    may use certain force on children. The district court stated,
    The Defendant is not guilty of a crime if the Defendant
    used reasonable force upon or toward [K.J.] without the
    7
    child’s consent when circumstances existed, or the Defendant
    reasonably believed circumstances existed as follows:
    When used by a parent, legal guardian, or other
    caretakers of a child in the exercise of lawful authority, to
    restrain or correct the child.
    This instruction follows the language in Minnesota Statutes section 609.06, subdivision
    1(6), which Scherz cites to in her brief. And the instructions as a whole are in language
    that the jury can understand.       See Peou, 579 N.W.2d at 475 (holding that if the
    instructions correctly state the law “in language that can be understood by the jury, there
    is no reversible error”).
    Because the district court’s instructions on malicious punishment fairly and
    adequately explain the law of the case, the instructions are not erroneous. See Broulik,
    606 N.W.2d at 68.
    In addition, Scherz cannot show that any alleged error affected her substantial
    rights. Scherz did not argue to the jury that the punishment was reasonable to restrain or
    correct K.J. At trial, Scherz’s theory was that she was not a parent, legal guardian, or
    caretaker of K.J. and that it was Jensen, and not Scherz, who administered the
    punishment. The district court’s instructions on malicious punishment do not conflict
    with Scherz’s theory of the case.
    B.     Domestic Assault
    Scherz claims that, in the domestic-assault instructions, the jury should have been
    “advised that [she] had the right to use reasonable force, even if it caused pain to K.J., if
    part of legitimate parental discipline.” But the jury was already instructed that Scherz
    could use reasonable force. “When the substance of a particular instruction is already
    8
    contained in the trial court’s instructions to the jury, the court is not required to give an
    additional requested instruction.” Id. at 71.
    Even though the reasonable-force instruction was given during the elements for
    malicious punishment of a child, the district court also instructed the jury to “consider
    these instructions as a whole and regard each instruction in light of all the others.” It
    further informed the jury that “[t]he order in which the instructions are given is of no
    significance and you’re free to consider the issues in any order that you wish.” We
    assume that the jury followed these instructions. See Gulbertson, 843 N.W.2d at 248
    (holding that district court did not err when it provided the definition of domestic abuse
    as part of the second element of the crime, but did not restate the definition as part of the
    third element). The district court properly instructed the jury on domestic assault.
    In addition, as discussed above, Scherz cannot meet the third prong of plain-error
    review, that the alleged error prejudiced her. Scherz’s theory of the case rested on an
    opposite assertion—that she was not a caretaker and was not involved in the punishment.
    II.    Sufficiency of the Evidence
    Scherz next contends that the evidence was insufficient to convict her.            In
    reviewing this claim, we determine whether the evidence, “when viewed in the light most
    favorable to the conviction, was sufficient to allow a jury to reach a guilty verdict.” State
    v. Hurd, 
    819 N.W.2d 591
    , 598 (Minn. 2012) (quotation omitted). We assume that the
    jury believed the state’s witnesses and disbelieved any evidence conflicting with the
    guilty verdict. 
    Id.
     If a conviction is based on circumstantial evidence, the circumstances
    proved by the state must be “consistent with guilt and inconsistent with any rational
    9
    hypothesis except that of guilt.” State v. Silvernail, 
    831 N.W.2d 594
    , 599 (Minn. 2013)
    (quotation omitted).
    A.     Malicious Punishment
    Scherz claims that the punishment that occurred was not malicious punishment
    within the meaning of the statute and that Scherz did not seek to injure or harm K.J.
    “A parent, legal guardian, or caretaker who, by an intentional act or a series of
    intentional acts with respect to a child, evidences unreasonable force or cruel discipline
    that is excessive under the circumstances is guilty of malicious punishment of a child.”
    
    Minn. Stat. § 609.377
    , subd. 1. “If the punishment results in less than substantial bodily
    harm,” the offense is a gross misdemeanor. 
    Id.,
     subd. 2. The state is not required to
    prove bodily harm for a conviction under this statute. State v. Broten, 
    836 N.W.2d 573
    ,
    577 (Minn. App. 2013), review denied (Minn. Nov. 12, 2013).
    K.J.’s testimony about what occurred is direct evidence, which we assume the jury
    believed. See State v. Clark, 
    739 N.W.2d 412
    , 421 n.4 (Minn. 2007) (“Direct evidence is
    evidence that is based on personal knowledge or observation and that, if true, proves a
    fact without inference or presumption.” (quotations omitted)). Not only did Scherz make
    K.J. change into shorts and hold a chair above her head while kneeling for two hours, but
    she also hit K.J. several times with a wooden spoon while K.J. was holding the chair.
    K.J.’s body was “[s]ore” and “[h]urt,” and she said it felt like she was “[run] over by a
    truck.” K.J. seemed distraught as a result of the punishment as evidenced by her decision
    10
    to run away.1 The next morning, Scherz forced K.J. to wear the “I am a thief” shirt to
    school to humiliate K.J. K.J. was 13 years old when the punishment occurred, and the
    punishment was inflicted because K.J. had taken and worn some of Scherz’s clothes
    without asking.
    A reasonable jury could determine that this punishment was unreasonable force or
    cruel discipline that was excessive in light of these circumstances.          The malicious-
    punishment statute does not require Scherz to have intended to hurt K.J.; it only requires
    an intentional act or series of acts. See 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.377
    , subd. 1. The evidence is
    sufficient to uphold Scherz’s conviction for malicious punishment.
    B.     Domestic Assault
    Scherz only contests the intent element of the assault conviction. A person is
    guilty of misdemeanor domestic assault against a family or household member if he or
    she “(1) commits an act with intent to cause fear in another of immediate bodily harm or
    death; or (2) intentionally inflicts or attempts to inflict bodily harm upon another.” 
    Minn. Stat. § 609.2242
    , subd. 1.
    The first form of assault under this statute is assault-fear, which is a specific-intent
    crime that requires the state to prove that the defendant intended to cause a particular
    result, namely fear of immediate bodily harm or death. See State v. Fleck, 
    810 N.W.2d 303
    , 308–10 (Minn. 2012) (construing substantively identical language in Minn. Stat.
    1
    Scherz mischaracterizes K.J.’s stated reason for running away. K.J. did not testify that
    she left the home because of the “I am a thief” shirt.
    11
    § 609.02, subd. 10). The second form of assault is assault-harm, which is a general-intent
    crime, requiring the state to prove that the defendant intended to do the physical act. Id.
    Intent is “an inference drawn by the jury from the totality of circumstances.” State
    v. Fardan, 
    773 N.W.2d 303
    , 321 (Minn. 2009) (quotation omitted). “A jury is permitted
    to infer that a person intends the natural and probable consequences” of his or her actions.
    State v. Johnson, 
    616 N.W.2d 720
    , 726 (Minn. 2000).
    Based on the evidence at trial, the jury could reasonably conclude that Scherz
    acted with the intent to cause K.J. to fear immediate bodily harm or acted with the intent
    to do the physical act of hitting K.J. The state was not required to prove that Scherz
    intended to cause the result of bodily harm to K.J. See Fleck, 810 N.W.2d at 308–09.
    III.   Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
    Scherz lastly contends that the district court abused its discretion by concluding
    that she is not entitled to relief on grounds of ineffective assistance of counsel.
    “We review a postconviction court’s legal conclusions de novo, and its factual
    findings for clear error.” State v. Hokanson, 
    821 N.W.2d 340
    , 357 (Minn. 2012). We
    review claims of ineffective assistance of counsel de novo.           Dobbins v. State, 
    788 N.W.2d 719
    , 728 (Minn. 2010). To be entitled to postconviction relief, Scherz must
    establish that her trial counsel’s “representation fell below an objective standard of
    reasonableness and that there is a reasonable probability that, but for counsel’s
    unprofessional errors, the result of the proceeding would have been different.”           
    Id.
    (quotation omitted). A “strong presumption” exists that an attorney’s performance was
    reasonable. Hokanson, 821 N.W.2d at 358.
    12
    Scherz argues that her trial counsel failed to “explore the possibility of” calling a
    medical expert to testify about K.J.’s bruising; did nothing to challenge “the plausibility
    of the timeline presented by K.J.”; and failed to object to the state’s redirect as leading.
    But the presentation of evidence and decisions about cross-examination and objections at
    trial are matters of trial strategy. Dobbins, 788 N.W.2d at 731; Francis v. State, 
    781 N.W.2d 892
    , 898 (Minn. 2010) (noting that whether to cross-examine state’s expert
    witness was trial strategy); Leake v. State, 
    737 N.W.2d 531
    , 542 (Minn. 2007)
    (“Decisions about objections at trial are matters of trial strategy.”). We will not review
    challenges to trial strategy. Dobbins, 788 N.W.2d at 731.
    Scherz also asserts that an evidentiary hearing is required to determine “whether
    her trial counsel’s pending charge for filing a false income tax return interfered with his
    effectiveness at trial.” Scherz alleges only generally that her trial counsel’s pending
    charge affected her trial; she does not explain how her trial counsel was impaired or point
    to evidence showing that the alleged charges affected counsel’s professional performance
    during Scherz’s criminal case. See State v. Smith, 
    476 N.W.2d 511
    , 517 (Minn. 1991)
    (rejecting per se rule that representation by a suspended attorney violates the right to
    counsel and holding that, while the attorney’s “misconduct was serious, meriting
    disbarment, it was unrelated to [his] representation of defendant and was not so egregious
    as to infect the trial and undermine its reliability”).     Scherz’s claim of ineffective
    assistance of counsel is therefore unavailing.
    Affirmed.
    13
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A12-2214

Filed Date: 8/18/2014

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021