Bennett v. Municipality of Anchorage

205 P.3d 1113, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 69, 2009 WL 1098878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 24, 2009
DocketA-10255
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 205 P.3d 1113 (Bennett v. Municipality of Anchorage) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett v. Municipality of Anchorage, 205 P.3d 1113, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 69, 2009 WL 1098878 (Ala. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Steven L. Bennett was convicted of assaulting his wife. On appeal, he argues that the district court erred by admitting testimony about a previous incident involving his wife. Bennett argues that this prior incident should not have been admitted as a “crime of domestic violence” — because, according to Bennett, he did not assault his wife in the earlier incident, but rather injured her in self-defense. Bennett also argues that the court should have ordered the Municipality to produce more evidence of this prior incident before finding that it was a crime of domestic violence. Having reviewed the record, we conclude that the Municipality offered enough evidence that this incident was a crime of domestic violence for the court to admit the evidence under Evidence Rule 404(b)(4).

Bennett also claims that the district court erred by admitting this evidence without explaining what character trait the evidence was relevant to prove. But the record shows that the district court admitted the evidence for the reason articulated by the municipal prosecutor: because the evidence was relevant to prove Bennett’s propensity to assault his wife. We therefore affirm Bennett’s conviction.

Facts and proceedings

On the afternoon of April 21, 2008, Anchorage Police Officers Horase Snyder and Roger Billiet were dispatched to the home of Steven and Celeste Bennett on a report of a domestic disturbance or assault. As the officers *1115 approached the Bennetts’ house, Officer Bil-liet noticed that there was women’s clothing in the trash cans. The officers contacted Steven Bennett, who told them he had been in an argument with his wife, Celeste, over her use of alcohol and sleeping pills, and that Celeste had attacked him and he had defended himself by grabbing her and throwing her out of the house. Bennett admitted that in the course of this argument he had pulled the closet door off its tracks and thrown the phone against the wall, leaving a hole in the wall. The police documented scratches on Steven Bennett’s face and hand.

When the police contacted Celeste Bennett, she was crying and shaking. She told the police that her husband had tried to smother her. Celeste Bennett had bruises and scrapes on her arms.

The officers arrested Steven Bennett, and he was ultimately convicted of assault, 1 family violence 2 (because the incident occurred in front of the couple’s young daughter) and malicious destruction of property, 3 for throwing his wife’s clothes out into the yard, damaging the closet door, and throwing the phone against the wall, breaking the phone and leaving a hole in the wall.

Before trial, the Municipality asked the district court to admit evidence under Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) that Steven Bennett had assaulted his wife once before, in 2005. Bennett’s attorney objected to the admission of this evidence, arguing that the prior incident was not an act of domestic violence but of self-defense. The attorney said that Celeste Bennett was very intoxicated during the earlier incident, that she hit Steven, and that he hit her back.

District Court Judge Alex M. Swiderski ruled that the Bennetts could both testify about the 2005 incident. But because he did not want a mini-trial on the prior incident that would distract the jury from the charged offenses, Judge Swiderski precluded the parties from offering any other evidence on this incident — although he indicated that either party could make an application to admit additional evidence if the party believed there was “blatant perjury concerning an objective fact.”

At trial, Celeste Bennett testified that on the day of the offense charged in this ease, her husband was angry and drinking, and they were arguing. She started to call the police, but Steven took the phone and threw it against the wall repeatedly until the phone broke and there was a hole in the wall. Then he started to scream at her and he held her down by her throat and put his hand over her mouth and nose so she couldn’t breathe. When she wedged her hand between his hand and her face, her wedding ring cut him, and he smeared the blood on his face. Then he pushed her down to the floor and hit her in the head a few times, then hit her head against the wall. Celeste Bennett testified that she told her husband that their young daughter was watching, and he grabbed the daughter and threw her out of the room. She testified that her husband then threw her over the footboard of the bed, grabbed her clothes out of the closet, and left the room.

Celeste Bennett also testified about the 2005 incident. She said both she and Steven were in the military at the time, that they had both been drinking, and that she was highly intoxicated. They argued, and during this argument she told Steven that he was pathetic and just like his father. Steven Bennett then knocked her to the ground and hit her repeatedly on the side of her face with the balls of his hands, and choked her. She said she ended up with two black eyes and bruises around her neck, and that the blood capillaries in her right eye were broken. Celeste Bennett said that after she called the sergeant in charge to pick her up, Steven told her, “if he was going down, that I was going down too,” and he injured himself by hitting his head against the thermostat.

Steven Bennett gave a different account of both incidents. He said on the day at issue in the present case, he and his wife were arguing and that she “flew off the handle” *1116 when he threatened to take custody of the children. She tried to claw his face, so he grabbed her by the arras and got her out the door. He said he might have put his palm over her mouth while he was struggling with her. He denied punching her in the head repeatedly and banging her head against the wall. He conceded that the closet door fell off the track as he was pulling her clothes out of the closet and throwing them outside. He said he threw the phone against the wall when he was alone in the room, because he was trying to call 911 and the battery was dead. He denied throwing his daughter out of the room; he said he took her by the hand and led her out.

As for the 2005 incident, Steven Bennett testified that he and his wife were fighting and that she became enraged and tried to gouge his face. He slapped her, but she kept coming at him. He said he slapped her three or four times, and that she ended up with two black eyes, broken capillaries in one of her eyes, and some bruising on her arm where he grabbed her.

Steven Bennett also testified to three other incidents in which his wife struck him without provocation. Celeste Bennett admitted to two of these incidents, although she said she was provoked by things her husband said. She testified that her husband did not hit her back on those two occasions.

Why the district court properly admitted evidence of the 2005 incident

Bennett argues that Judge Swiderski erred by admitting testimony about the 2005 incident under Evidence Rule 404(b)(4) because there was insufficient evidence that the prior incident was a crime involving domestic violence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
205 P.3d 1113, 2009 Alas. App. LEXIS 69, 2009 WL 1098878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-v-municipality-of-anchorage-alaskactapp-2009.