State Of Washington v. K.m. ( 2013 )


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  •                                                                                                      FILED
    r OUR TI'. OF APPEALS
    ISIC       rr
    2013 Iz0V 13 APB I1:
    Ia
    ST      l '    A H1N11G       iN
    V
    EFU         Y
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                      I                    No. 43368 -1 - II
    Respondent,
    V.
    K.M.,                                                     I            UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    JOHANSON, J. —        KM    appeals     his juvenile   adjudication   for   custodial assault.     He argues
    that ( 1) admission of improper opinion testimony of guilt invaded the fact finder' s province and
    2) the heightened common law self -
    defense standard for custodial assault violates the separation
    of powers     doctrine.     Because ( 1)   this was a bench trial and we presume the court does not
    consider     inadmissible    evidence, (   2)   any admission of the opinion of guilt testimony was
    harmless, and ( 3) any potential error in applying the heightened self -
    defense standard was also
    harmless, we affirm.
    FACTS
    I. THE ASSAULT
    On February 26, 2012, Juvenile Detention Officer Bradley Sean Kilmer escorted 14 -year-
    old   KM from the Mason        County   Juvenile Detention       Facility   to the hospital to   evaluate a      broken
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    nose.'     On their way out of the detention center, KM yelled back when a group of juveniles in the
    parking lot yelled at him; Officer Kilmer told KM that he could not speak to people while being
    transported.      KM had been advised of this restriction before leaving the detention facility.
    Despite Officer Kilmer' s admonition, KM spoke to another juvenile while at the hospital.
    When they reentered the detention center and were standing in a small entry area between
    two    secured   doors, Officer Kilmer          advised   KM that " he   was   dropped to   a `   level   one "'   2 because
    he had failed to follow the        rules   by   speaking to   people outside    the   facility. Clerk' s Papers ( CP)
    at   19.   At this time, KM, who was wearing waist chains and leg irons, was standing in front of
    and    to the right of   Officer Kilmer.        KM turned, swore at Officer Kilmer, doubled up both of his
    KM' s)      fists, aggressively "   got    in Officer Kilmer' s face,"        angrily " slammed his chest into
    Officer Kilmer," and pushed the officer into the wall. CP at 19; Verbatim Report of Proceedings.
    VRP) at 5, 8, 22, 24.
    Officer Kilmer attempted to restrain KM by grabbing KM' s hair, but he lost his grip and
    his arm moved down to KM' s neck/ shoulder area. As KM struggled, Officer Kilmer managed to
    push KM into the wall, but Officer Kilmer' s left hand became entangled in KM' s restraints.
    Officer Mike Arnold came to Officer Kilmer' s assistance, restrained KM and released Officer
    Kilmer' s     entangled   hand.    When the officers returned KM to his cell, KM told Officer Arnold,
    T] hat fat fuck dropped     me, "'   referring to Officer Kilmer'    s   dropping   KM' s security level. CP
    Most of the facts are drawn from the juvenile court' s unchallenged findings of fact, which are
    verities on appeal. State v. Hill, 
    123 Wash. 2d 641
    , 647, 
    870 P.2d 313
    ( 1994).
    2
    The   facility had four   security levels.     At level one, the detainee must spend 23 hours a day in
    his cell.
    2
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    at   20.   KM   also made other         threatening          comments         directed to Officer Kilmer.          Officer Kilmer
    suffered a sprained wrist and torn ligaments.
    II. JUVENILE COURT BENCH TRIAL
    The State    charged     KM   with custodial assault               occurring in   a   juvenile   facility.3 The case
    proceeded to a bench trial in a juvenile court.
    During trial, the State asked Officer Kilmer whether KM was " in actual imminent danger
    of serious     injury   at   any time    prior       to the   scuffle you       described ?" VRP        at   10.   Officer Kilmer
    responded      that KM       was not.     KM did not object to the State' s question or to Officer Kilmer' s
    response.
    Officer Christina Torre            also   testified   for the State.      She had observed a large portion of
    the physical alteration on the monitors in the control room as she was opening the doors to admit
    KM      and   Officer Kilmer into the           facility. But she had turned away and was not looking at the
    monitor until after          KM began shouting              obscenities at     Officer Kilmer. When she looked back to
    the monitor, she saw Officer Kilmer pushing KM against the wall and then saw KM " push off
    the   wall and start    pulling away from Officer Kilmer." VRP                        at   33.   She also saw KM and Officer
    Kilmer struggle and observed that at one point Officer Kilmer' s arms were around KM' s neck, in
    the "   head   and neck area."         VRP      at    33.     KM managed to break Officer Kilmer' s grip and then
    proceeded to push his body into Officer Kilmer and get close to his face and proceed to yell"
    more obscenities at          the   officer.    VRP      at   33 -34.       She observed Officer Kilmer " proceed to try to
    3 RCW 9A.36. 100( 1)( a).
    3
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    gain control of [ KM]          by taking       control of    his head       and neck area."           VRP    at   34.   At this point,
    Officer Arnold arrived, and the two officers were able to restrain KM.
    Officer Arnold also testified that he became aware of the altercation when he heard KM
    start swearing at Officer Kilmer. When Officer Arnold arrived, he saw Officer Kilmer struggling
    with   KM; Officer Kilmer'          s   left    shoulder was         against      the   wall    and   his left    arm   was " around
    KM' s] upper body, neck area, and [ KM] was struggling back and forth and got right up in
    Officer Kilmer' s] face"         and swore at          Officer Kilmer.            VRP     at   54.   When he went to Officer
    Kilmer' s assistance, Officer Arnold noticed that Officer Kilmer' s hand was stuck in KM' s
    restraints.    Officer Arnold helped release Officer Kilmer' s hand and separated Officer Kilmer
    and    KM.    During    this   testimony,      the State     asked   Officer Arnold, " From            where you were standing
    during this incident, was [ KM] in imminent danger of serious injury prior to the confrontation
    between him       and    Mr. Kilmer ?" VRP              at   56.    The juvenile court overruled KM' s objection on
    relevancy     grounds.     Officer Arnold        responded, "        I    would   say   no."    VRP at 56.
    KM testified in his defense.             Although he admitted that he turned his head and swore at
    Officer Kilmer when the officer told him ( KM) that he was dropping his security status, KM
    denied touching Officer Kilmer first. Instead, KM asserted that Officer Kilmer had initiated the
    physical contact by placing his arm across KM' s face, including the bridge of his broken nose,
    and that Officer Kilmer' s arm slipped down to his neck area when KM lifted his head to avoid
    contact    with   his   nose.     KM stated ' that Officer Kilmer' s hold was choking him and that he
    repeatedly told the officer to stop choking him. KM further testified that when Officer Kilmer' s
    arm went across         the bridge of    his    nose,   he felt     a "   stinging   feeling    in [ his]   nose,"   and he rated the
    pain as a six on a scale of        one to ten. VRP            at   83. KM stated that before this, his pain level was a
    M
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    three.    VRP         at   84.   And he asserted that the only time he intentionally touched Officer Kilmer
    was "    in   self[- ] defense, because [ the officer] contacted [ him] first" and touched him in " a hurtful
    manner."        VRP at 85.
    The juvenile court found that the evidence established an assault and concluded that
    s] elf-defense does not apply because the respondent initiated contact and because the
    respondent took an aggressive stance against a Detention Officer in a juvenile detention facility[;
    t] he   respondent was not               in imminent danger             under   the law."    CP   at   20 (   emphasis added).   KM
    appeals.
    ANALYSIS
    I. OPINION OF GUILT TESTIMONY
    KM first argues that Officers Kilmer and Arnold' s4 testimonies about whether KM was in
    actual imminent danger of serious injury was improper opinion of guilt testimony that invaded
    the fact finder'           s province and         denied him his Fourteenth Amendment due                      process rights.   Even
    presuming, but not deciding that this is manifest constitutional error that we may address despite
    5                              6
    KM' s failure to           object,       this   argument   fails.
    4
    KM    incorrectly identifies                Officer Torre   as      the   officer   involved in this testimony.       See Br. of
    Appellant        at   6.    But the record clearly shows that the relevant testimony was Officer Arnold' s
    testimony, not Officer Torre' s. VRP at 56.
    See RAP 2. 5( a).
    6 KM also argues that if we refuse to address this alleged error because it was not preserved for
    review, his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance in failing to object to this testimony.
    Because we address this issue directly, we do not address KM' s related ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim.
    5
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    Because this          was        a   bench trial, we presume            the juvenile court did not consider
    inadmissible         evidence     in reaching its        verdict.     State v. Read, 
    147 Wash. 2d 238
    , 244, 
    53 P.3d 26
    2002) ( citing State         v.     Miles, 
    77 Wash. 2d 593
    , 
    464 P.2d 723
    ( 1970)).                   KM could rebut this
    presumption by showing that there is insufficient admissible evidence to support the verdict or
    that "   the trial court relied on the inadmissible evidence to make essential findings that it
    otherwise would not           have        made."    
    Read, 147 Wash. 2d at 245
    -46. But KM does not argue that the
    admissible evidence is insufficient to support the verdict; nor does the record show that is the
    case.     And the juvenile court' s findings of fact or conclusions of law do not suggest that the
    juvenile court        considered      these testimonies.            Furthermore, because the juvenile court concluded
    that    self[- ]defense     did     not   apply because KM " initiated           contact,"   CP at 20, or, in other words,
    7
    that KM      was      the   first    aggressor,        the   testimony —which      related solely to KM' s self -
    defense
    claim —    was irrelevant to the juvenile court' s guilty finding and any error is therefore harmless
    beyond     a reasonable       doubt.8 See State              v.   We, 138 Wn.   App.   716, 
    158 P.3d 1238
    ( 2007),   review
    denied, 
    163 Wash. 2d 1008
    ( 2008).                    Accordingly, this argument fails.
    7
    See State   v.   Riley, 
    137 Wash. 2d 904
    , 909, 
    976 P.2d 624
    ( 1999) ( "[ I] n general, the right of self[ -
    defense cannot be successfully invoked by an aggressor or one who provokes an altercation. ")
    8 To find an error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, from the record, an appellate court must
    find that the alleged error did not contribute to the verdict. State v. Brown, 
    147 Wash. 2d 330
    , 344,
    
    58 P.3d 889
    ( 2002).
    2
    No. 43368 -1 - II
    II. HEIGHTENED SELF- DEFENSE STANDARD
    KM next argues that the judicially- created, actual danger /serious injury self -
    defense
    standard that applies in cases involving custodial assault violates the separation of powers
    doctrine because the legislatively- created statutory defense in RCW 9A. 16. 020 does not include
    this heightened self defense standard. This argument also fails.
    -
    As discussed above, the juvenile court did not rely exclusively on its conclusion that
    KM'          defense claim
    s self -                  failed. Instead, the juvenile court also concluded that KM was the first
    aggressor and,   therefore, not entitled to                defense.
    assert self -          Accordingly, even if the heightened
    self defense standard for custodial assault is invalid because it violates the separation of powers
    -
    doctrine,   any potential error was clearly harmless under the constitutional harmless error
    standard. State v. Brown, 
    147 Wash. 2d 330
    , 344, 
    58 P.3d 889
    ( 2002).
    We affirm.
    A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW
    2. 06. 040, it is so ordered.
    0
    Johanson,
    7