Court Opinion

ID: 2758880
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-12-09 18:20:48.470681+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:26:59.920161
License: Public Domain

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                                                                               FILED
                                                                             DEC. 9,2014
                                                                     In the Office of the Clerk of Court
                                                                   W A State Court of Appeals, Division III

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              IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
1                                DIVISION THREE

    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                          )
                                                  )         No. 32297-1-III
                         Respondent,              )
                                                  )
           v. 	                                   )
                                                  )
    TODD R. JOHNSON,                              )         UNPUBLISHED OPINION
                                                  )
                         Appellant.               )

           SIDDOWAY, C.J. -    Todd Johnson appeals his conviction of fourth degree assault,

    challenging the trial court's refusal to give an instruction on defense of property. He

    claims he was defending his dogs from harm and his real property from malicious

    trespass at the time he struck the victim. Review of the record reveals, however, that the

    only evidentiary support for lawful use of force was in arguable self-defense. The trial

    court instructed the jury on self-defense but the jurors evidently believed the victim, not

    Mr. Johnson.

           Because the evidence did not support a defense of property instruction, and for the

    additional reason that Mr. Johnson's lawyer relented and ultimately agreed to the

    instruction that is now challenged, we affIrm.
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I     No. 32297-1-III
  t
,~!   State v. Johnson

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                          FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

             On August 11,2011, Todd Johnson fought with Charles Haltom, who had been

      canoeing near Mr. Johnson's residential property on Bay Lake. Mr. Haltom ended up

      with broken ribs. Following an investigation by the Pierce County sheriff's department,

      the Pierce County prosecutor charged Mr. Johnson with second degree assault.

             At trial, witnesses provided two diametrically different versions of what had

      occurred.

             In the State's case, Mr. Haltom testified that on the August afternoon of the

      assault, he had loaded his canoe with a weighted buoy, an inner tube, and a cooler, and

      paddled his canoe out onto Bay Lake, the public lake on which he lived. He then cast his

      inner tube into the water and began to float and drink a few beers.

            After about three hours, he got back in his canoe and was paddling home when he

      heard dogs barking as he passed a boat dock. One dog entered the water and approached

      his canoe. A woman on the shore yelled at him, calling him "'white trash,'" and telling

      him to '''[g]et out of here.'" Report of Proceedings (RP) (Sept. 11,2012) at 33. Mr.

      Haltom responded to the woman, whom he later identified as Valerie Johnson, the

      defendant's wife, that he was canoeing on a public lake and she could not order him to

      leave. He also told her that her dogs were being aggressive. Ms. Johnson told him she was

      going to call the sheriff and angrily went inside her home. Mr. Haltom assumed that she

      was going to call the sheriff and decided to remain in his canoe and wait for law

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No. 32297-l-1II
State v. Johnson

enforcement officers to arrive. As he explained at trial, he had never had his right to canoe

on the lake challenged before, and he wanted to wait for the sheriff and settle the matter.

       Mr. Haltom testified that Ms. Johnson then re-emerged from the house, this time

with a gun in her hand. She yelled that she had called the sheriff and her husband. Mr.

Haltom responded "good," "I want the sheriffhere." Id. at 47. She soon left again.

       Mr. Haltom continued to await the sheriffs arrival, paddling to stay in place, with

his back to the Johnsons' dock, when he heard the footsteps of someone running on the

dock and a big splash. He turned his canoe and saw someone whom he later identified as

Mr. Johnson swimming rapidly toward him. When he reached the canoe, Mr. Johnson

grabbed its bowline and began to bring it to shore. Once the canoe was close enough for

Mr. Johnson to stand, he flipped Mr. Haltom out of the canoe and began to beat him. Mr.

Haltom said that he pleaded for his life as Mr. Johnson held him underwater with one

hand and punched him with the other. He claims that Mr. Johnson hit him 15 or 20

times. Eventually Mr. Johnson stopped beating Mr. Haltom and told him to "[g]et out of

here." Id. at 66. Mr. Haltom managed to canoe home and called the sheriff. He was

admitted to the hospital, where he was treated for broken ribs and blood in his urine.

      Mr. Johnson's version of events was that he was driving toward his home with

family members he had picked up from the airport when he received a call from his wife.

According to him, she said there was a man who had arrived by canoe who was on their

property "jabbing at the dogs and trying to bait [them]." RP (Sept. 18,2012 Test. of

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No. 32297-1-III
State v. Johnson

Todd Johnson) at 26. He told her to call 911. A few minutes later, Ms. Johnson called

Mr. Johnson again, this time telling him that Mr. Haltom was beating their dogs with an

oar. This time, Mr. Johnson told her to get a handgun and let the man know she was

armed. Upon arriving home, Mr. Johnson said he saw Mr. Haltom standing on his

property near a beached canoe at the shoreline, "tomahawking" the Johnsons' dogs. Mr.

Johnson described "tomahawking" as the act of "[h]olding a stick with two hands on the

oar, and [chopping] overheard with both hands." Id. at 34.

       Mr. Johnson testified that he yelled at Mr. Haltom to stop hitting the dogs and ran

at full speed to where Mr. Haltom was standing. He claims that as he got close, he was

going to run into the dogs so he tried to slow down, tripped, and fell next to the canoe.

He testified that as he tried to stand up, Mr. Haltom attacked him with the paddle.

According to Mr. Johnson, a struggle ensued over the paddle, with both swinging at and

punching one another. He claims they eventually agreed to stop fighting. Mr. Johnson's

wife, his stepfather, and his stepbrother all testified at trial and for the most part

corroborated Mr. Johnson's version of events.

       During trial, there were discussions ofjury instructions outside the presence of the

jury. Both the State and Mr. Johnson submitted proposed instructions. A packet of

replacement and supplemental instructions submitted by the State included one with the

handwritten caption, "Self-Defense etc. (IF APPLICABLE)." Clerk's Papers (CP) at 4.

It was adapted from WPIC 17.02, entitled "Lawful Force-Defense of Self, Others,

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No. 32297-1-III
State v. Johnson

Property." 11 WASHINGTON PRACTICE: WASHINGTON PATTERN JURY INSTRUCTIONS:

CRIMINAL 17.02, at 253 (3d ed. 2008) (WPIC). It set forth all of the alternative defenses

covered by that pattern instruction, including defense of property and defense against

malicious trespass. l Mr. Johnson did not submit a defense of property instruction.

       The final conference on the jury instructions took place on the morning of the last

day of trial. At that time, the prosecutor asked the trial court to remove from his proposed

lawful force instruction any reference to defense of others or defense of property, arguing

that there was no evidence to support either defense. According to the prosecutor:

       1 The  State's proposed instruction stated:
               It is a defense to a charge of Assault that the force used was lawful
       as defined in this instruction.
               The use of force upon or toward the person of another is lawful
       when used by a person who reasonably believes that he is about to be
       injured, by someone lawfully aiding a person who he reasonably believes is
       about to be injured, in preventing or attempting to prevent an offense
       against the person, and when the force is not more than is necessary.
               The use of force upon or toward the person of another is lawful
       when used in preventing or attempting to prevent a malicious trespass or
       other malicious interference with real or personal property lawfully in that
       person's possession, and when the force is not more than is necessary.
               The person using the force may employ such force and means as a
       reasonably prudent person would use under the same or similar conditions
       as they appeared to the person, taking into consideration all of the facts and
       circumstances known to the person at the time of the incident. '
               The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that
       the force used by the defendant was not lawful. If you find that the State
       has not proved the absence of this defense beyond a reasonable doubt, it
       will be your duty to return a verdict of not gUilty.
CP at 4.

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!   State v. Johnson
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I                  Clearly, an assault takes place. I don't think that the defense is
I          disputing that Todd Johnson struck the victim. And the testimony was very
           clear that he was doing it to protect himself. Valerie was nowhere around.
           The dogs weren't around at the point that the assault took place. There was

I          no defense of property.... However [Charlie] ended up in the water, ...
           by the defense theory [he] was coming at the defendant, swinging, and that
           was why the defendant swung back. That is their theory of the case.

                 . .. And that is simply self-defense, rather than defense of others or
           defense of property.

    RP (Sept. 19,2012 Jury Instruction Arg.) at 3-4.

           Mr. Johnson's lawyer opposed the State's request to remove portions of the

    proposed instruction. He argued that "there is evidence that the confrontation occurred

    because the-Mr. Haltom, the alleged victim, was swinging at the dogs, the property of

    Mr. and Ms. Johnson." ld. at 4. Continuing, he argued:

           [A]t the time that he's confronting the alleged victim at the water line, he is
           there for three reasons: To deal with the trespass that's on his property; to
           deal with the assault that's occurring on his dogs; and to deal with the
           threats that he made against his wife .
                   . . . We're entitled to argue all of that. That is all something that can
           be instructed, and there we go.

    ld. at 5. When the court responded by asking Mr. Johnson's lawyer ifhe had any case

    law that would help the court with its ruling, the lawyer responded that he did not,

    because the issue had just come up.

           Having heard from the lawyers, the court said that its ruling "at this time" was to

    leave out instruction about a malicious trespass or interference with property because it

    would be confusing and "at least to this time, there is no evidence that the assault

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No. 32297-1-111
State v. Johnson

occurred based on that." Id. at 10-11. He pointed out that limiting the instruction in that

manner would not prevent Mr. Johnson's lawyer "from arguing all of the circumstances

known to the person at the time of the incidence. And clearly, there's evidence in the

record." Id. at 11. He concluded that "unless there's some case law to give me more

instruction, this is what I believe is the proper instruction." Id. Mr. Johnson's lawyer

replied, "I will prepare-if we need to, I'll address the issue at lunchtime and have

something at 1:30." Id.

       Later that morning, the following exchange took place outside the presence of the

jury, during a break from the testimony of the last rebuttal witness:

              [THE COURT:] ... Let's bring the jury back in. I have the 

       instructions ready, so maybe we should go ahead and ... copy the 

       instructions now. I can instruct the jury. 

              [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And Your Honor, I've been thinking
       about it. I actually don't think-I think that I'm fine with the instruction
       the way that the Court has rewritten the self-defense instruction. It allows
       me to get what I want. I don't think it's that-
              THE COURT: Okay. So you're withdrawing your objection.
              [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I'll withdraw my-I just want to make-I
       am actually happy to move along. I don't think the case law is going to
       give me anything. It gives me everything I want to argue. It's-we're
       prepared to go, and I think I'd rather just have that ready to go. So Ijust
       want to make sure the Court's aware.

RP (Sept. 19,2012 Excerpt of Proceedings) at 48-49.

       A jury acquitted Mr. Johnson of the second degree assault charge, but found him

guilty of the lesser degree offense of fourth degree assault. He appeals.

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No. 32297-1-III
State v. Johnson

                                         ANALYSIS

       Mr. Johnson's only assignment of error on appeal is to the trial court's "den[ial of]

Mr. Johnson's request for 'defense of property' language injury instruction # 15." Br. of

Appellant at 1. The State responds that (1) by failing to propose a defense of property

instruction, Mr. Johnson failed to preserve error, citing RAP 2.5(a); (2) Mr. Johnson

affirmatively waived or invited error by his statements; and (3) in any event, the trial

court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to give the instruction, since defense of

property was not Mr. Johnson's theory and was not supported by the evidence.

       As to the RAP 2.5(a) issue, we conclude that initially, at least, Mr. Johnson

adopted the State's lawful force instruction and objected to removing the defense of

property language. The fact that his lawyer had adequately stated an objection at the final

instruction conference is apparent from the fact that later that morning-after Mr.

Johnson's lawyer told the court that the instruction as modified "allows me to get what I

want"-the trial court said, "Okay. So you're withdrawing your objection." RP (Sept.

19,2012 Excerpt of Proceedings) at 48 (emphasis added). In any event, RAP 2.5(a) is

discretionary and we choose to consider Mr. Johnson's appeal.

       Of the two issues that remain, we first address the sufficiency of the evidence to

support giving the State's lawful force instruction as originally proposed. We conclude

that the trial court correctly refused to instruct the jury on defense of property or

malicious trespass of property. We next address the issue of waiver or invited error and

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No. 32297-1-III
State v. Johnson

agree with the State that ifthere was error, it was invited.

                   I      The defense was not supported by the evidence

       Mr. Johnson contends that one of his theories at trial was that he was defending

property: his dogs. He testified that when he saw Mr. Haltom "tomahawking" his dogs

with a canoe paddle, he ran to protect them from further injury. He argues that under

RCW 9A.16.020, his use of force would also have been lawful to prevent malicious

trespass and interference with real property, which he believed had taken place given his

wife's reports that Mr. Haltom had been on the property and refused to leave.

       Jury instructions as a whole must correctly apprise the jury of the law and enable a

defendant to argue his defense theory. State v. Rice, 102 Wash. 2d 120, 123,683 P.2d 199

(1984). "A criminal defendant is entitled to an instruction on his or her theory of the case

if the evidence supports the instruction." State v. Werner, 170 Wn.2d 333,336,241 P.3d

410 (2010). Failure to so instruct is reversible error. State v. Harvill, 169 Wash. 2d 254,

259,234 P.3d 1166 (2010).

       To determine whether a defendant is entitled to an instruction on a lawful use of

force, "the trial court must view the evidence from the standpoint of a reasonably prudent

person who knows all the defendant knows and sees all the defendant sees." State v.

Read, 147 Wn.2d 238,242,53 P.3d 26 (2002). In evaluating a self-defense claim,

therefore, the court "applies both a subjective and objective test." Id. at 242-43. Stated

differently, a defendant bears the initial burden of pointing to evidence showing that he

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No. 32297-1-III
State v. Johnson

"had a good faith belief in the necessity of force and that that belief was objectively

reasonable." State v. Dyson, 90 Wash. App. 433, 438-39, 952 P.2d 1097 (1997).

       The standard under which this court reviews a trial court's refusal to instruct the

jury on self-defense depends on whether the reason for its refusal was based on fact or

law. Where a trial court refuses to instruct on a defense because it finds insufficient

evidence to support it-an issue of fact-the standard of review is abuse of discretion.

Read, 147 Wash. 2d at 243.

       When Mr. Johnson was questioned by his lawyer, he explained that he tripped

while running toward Mr. Haltom at a point where he was about to run into his dogs,

causing the two dogs to take off in opposite directions:

       Q. 	   . .. [W]hen you ran towards [Mr. Haltom], what's the next thing that
              happened?
       A. 	   The dogs saw me coming and one went this way.
              (Indicating.) 

      'Q.     One went this way? 

       A. 	   I'm sorry. Fritzie went to, looking at the picture, the left side and
              Diesel went the right side. And I was going to run into them, and I
              tried to slow down and I did a face plant, I mean, right in front of the
              canoe. I bumped the canoe, so I made the canoe move, rock.
      Q. 	    SO you-you fell?
      A.      Yeah.

RP (Sept. 18,2012 Test. of Todd Johnson) at 36.

       In Mr. Johnson's testimony about what happened thereafter, his explanation for

every use of force against Mr. Haltom was to defend himselJfrom harm. He testified, for

example, "[A]s I was standing up, Ijust blocked a-the oar coming down in my face," id.

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No. 32297-1-111
State v. Johnson

at 37; next, "[W]hen 1 blocked [the oar], 1 can't remember ifhe came down again or if 1

grabbed it that time," id. at 39; next, "I got ahold of [the oar] ... 1 twisted my body to the

right ... [a]nd the-the boat turned sideways, and he fell," id. at 39-40; next, "And then

he jumped up and started roundhousing me ... [s]winging with everything he had," id. at

41; next, "When he was swinging at me, 1 was either ducking this way or ducking this

way. (Indicating.)," id.; next, "He would lead with his left and then really over-swing

with his right," in response to which "I returned punches," id. at 42; next, "[H]e would

throw two [punches], 1 would throw two. He would throw two, 1 would throw two. He

would throw two, 1 would throw two," id.; and finally, "The fight stopped with a blow to

his midsection, and he let out a gasp of air and said, 'Okay. I'll leave.'" fd. at 42-43.

       Mr. Johnson called his wife, his stepfather, and his stepbrother as witnesses in the

defense case. All three claimed to have witnessed Mr. Haltom's fight with Mr. Johnson, all

three described Mr. Johnson as acting to defend himself as Mr. Haltom attacked him, and

none mentioned that either dog was in the vicinity or imperiled by the two men's fight.

       The prosecutor and the trial court recalled the testimony correctly; the dogs were

out of the picture at the time of the assault.

       Defense of property is not the same as retaliating against someone who has

already damaged property; it is not the same as acting in revenge. '" [T]he right of self-

defense does not imply the right to attack in the first instance or permit action done in

retaliation or revenge.'" State v. Janes, 121 Wn.2d 220,240,850 P.2d 495 (1993)

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     No. 32297-1-III
     State v. Johnson

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i    (alteration in original) (quoting People v. Dillon, 24 IlL 2d 122, 125, 180 N.E.2d 503

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   (1962)); accord State v. Studd, 137 Wn.2d 533,550,973 P.2d 1049 (1999). The fact that

     Mr. Johnson had been told of an earlier "baiting" of his dogs was not a basis for a defense

     of property instruction.

            As for malicious trespass, the "reasonable force" that may be exercised to prevent

     one from trespassing includes confinement of the trespasser or putting him in fear of

     physical harm. 16 DAVID K. DEWOLF & KELLER W. ALLEN, WASHINGTON PRACTICE:

     TORT LAW AND PRACTICE § 14.23, at 593 (4th ed. 2013) (citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND)

     OF TORTS § 80 (1965)). Ifa property owner responds with greater force because of an

     assault or fear of assault by the trespasser, then he is engaged in self-defense, not defense

     against a trespass, and his right to self-defense applies. See id.

            Mr. Johnson described only acts of self-defense, the jury was instructed on the

     defense of self-defense, and the jury evidently did not believe Mr. Johnson. The trial

     court's instruction 15 adequately set forth the defenses that were supported by the evidence.

                                        II Waiver or invited error

            Alternatively, the State contends that Mr. Johnson affirmatively waived his initial

     objection to the narrowing of the lawful force instruction. The invited error doctrine

     prohibits a party from setting up an error at trial and then complaining of the error on

     appeal. State v. Wakefield, 130 Wn.2d 464,475,925 P.2d 183 (1996). A party may

     invite error by affirmatively assenting to it, materially contributing to it, or benefiting

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No. 32297-l-III
State v. Johnson

from it. State v. Momah, 167 Wash. 2d 140, 154, 217 P .3d 321 (2009). "Under the doctrine

of invited error, even where constitutional rights are involved, we are precluded from

reviewing jury instructions when the defendant has proposed an instruction or agreed to

its wording." State v. Winings, 126 Wn. App. 75,89, 107 P.3d 141 (2005).

       At the time that Mr. Johnson's lawyer originally objected to the narrowing of the

lawful force instruction, the trial court pointed out to him that even as narrowed, the

instruction would permit him to argue the circumstances known to Mr. Johnson as a basis

for the amount of force he used in self-defense. In its final form, the instruction included

the statement that

              [t]he person using the force may employ such force and means as a
       reasonably prudent person would use under the same or similar conditions
       as they appeared to the person, taking into consideration all of the facts and
       circumstances known to the person at the time of the incident.

CP at 32.

       In the trial court's last discussion with the lawyers before instructing the jury, Mr.

Johnson's lawyer withdrew his objection to the narrowed lawful force instruction, having

realized, it appears, that the trial court had given him all the instruction to which he was

entitled in light of the evidence.

       Mr. Johnson now argues that his lawyer stopped short of withdrawing his

objection by saying only, "I'll withdraw my-" not "I'll withdraw my objection." Reply

Br. of Appellant at 5. This is hairsplitting. It is clear from all that Mr. Johnson's lawyer

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No. 32297-1-111
State v. Johnson

said that he was withdrawing his objection. After all, among the things he said was, "I'm

fine with the instruction the way that the Court has rewritten the self-defense instruction.

It allows me to get what 1 want." RP (Sept. 19,2012 Excerpt of Proceedings) at 48. That

is all that a party is assured under the law.

       If Mr. Johnson's lawyer's concession was not classic invited error, it is only

because it was made very late, after the trial court had already finalized its instructions.

One cannot say, however, that the court would not have modified the instruction had Mr.

Johnson's lawyer not made it clear he was satisfied with the instruction as given. For this

additional reason, Mr. Johnson's appeal fails.

       Affirmed.

       A majority of the panel has determined that this opinion will not be printed in the

Washington Appellate Reports but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW

2.06.040.

                                                Sid~( C-J=
WE CONCUR:

Lawrence-Berrey, J.

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