Dawson v. State

264 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 116, 2011 WL 5026030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 21, 2011
DocketA-10137
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 264 P.3d 851 (Dawson v. State) 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
Dawson v. State, 264 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 116, 2011 WL 5026030 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

This case requires us to construe one clause of our disorderly conduct statute, AS 11.61.110-specifically, subsection (a)(5) of the statute, which declares that a person commits disorderly conduct if the person "engages in fighting other than in self-defense". [853]*853The precise issue is whether the phrase "engages in fighting" encompasses all instances where one person strikes another-or whether, instead, this phrase is limited to situations where two or more people share a mutual intent to trade blows (or at least attempt to trade blows).

For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that, for purposes of this subsection of the disorderly conduct statute, "fighting" requires a mutuality of intention, and therefore this subsection of the statute does not cover all situations where one person strikes another.

Underlying facts

The Appellant in this case, Ginnie Dawson, was charged with fourth-degree assault under AS 11.41.220(a)(1) for hitting her domestic partner, Patrick Meyer, with her fists and throwing a baking pan at him. 'To prove this assault charge, the State had to establish that Dawson "recklessly cause[d] physical injury to [Meyer]".

As used in our criminal code, the term "physical injury" means "physical pain or an impairment of physical condition.1 The State alleged that Dawson's acts of striking Meyer with her fists and with the baking pan constituted fourth-degree assault because this conduct caused Meyer to suffer physical pain.

At trial, Dawson conceded that she struck Meyer, but she contended that she had not caused him physical pain. Meyer took the stand and agreed that he had not suffered pain (other than emotional pain) during the attack.

Based on this testimony, Dawson's attorney asked the trial judge to instruct the jury on the lesser offense of disorderly conduct as defined in AS 11.61.110(a)(5)-"engagling] in fighting other than in self-defense". The defense attorney argued that if the jury believed Meyer's testimony that he had not suffered pain, then the State would have proved only that Dawson fought with Meyer-and, thus, disorderly conduct under subsection (a)(5) would be the proper verdict.

The trial judge refused to instruct the jury on disorderly conduct because (1) the judge concluded that "fighting" meant a mutual physical struggle between two or more people, and (2) there was no evidence that Meyer and Dawson engaged in mutual struggle-i.e., no evidence that Meyer intended to fight Dawson, or that he responded with physical force to Dawson's blows.

The jury convicted Dawson of fourth-degree assault, and Dawson now claims that the trial judge committed error by refusing to instruct the jury on disorderly conduct as a potential lesser included offense.

This Court's decision in Hedgers v. State

As we have just explained, the primary issue raised in this appeal is whether the phrase "engages in fighting" (as used in subsection (a)(5) of the disorderly conduct statute) includes all situations where one person strikes another, even though there is no mutual combat-ie, even though the second person does not wish to engage in a physical struggle, and does not respond with force. This Court has already directly addressed and answered this question in an unpublished opinion: Hedgers v. State, Alaska App. Memorandum Opinion No. 4056 (June 2, 1999), 1999 WL 349062.

The defendant in Hedgers was convicted of disorderly conduct under subsection (a)(5) of AS 11.61.110-4.e., for engaging in fighting other than in self-defense-based on evidence that, during a verbal dispute with another woman, she used her knee to kick this other woman in the leg. Hedgers, slip opinion at 1-2, 1999 WL 349062 at *1.

On appeal, Hedgers argued that she was wrongly convicted because "fighting" required mutual combat. This Court rejected Hedgers's argument. We held that the term "fighting" encompassed any "physical struggle"-more specifically, that it included "those fights that are one-sided due to choice, surprise by the aggressor, or simply the superior ability of a participant." Hedgers, slip opinion at 2-3, 1999 WL 849062 at *2,

[854]*854Thus, in Hedgers, this Court rejected the interpretation of "fighting" that Dawson's trial judge employed in the present case. Instead, Hedgers adopted the interpretation that Dawson proposes: the interpretation that "fighting" includes all instances where one person knowingly strikes another, even though the other person does not wish to fight and does not respond with force.

Given the underlying facts of Dawson's case, and given the fact that the primary dispute between the parties at Dawson's trial was whether Meyer suffered physical pain as a result of Dawson's striking him, it would appear that, under our decision in Hedgers, Dawson was indeed entitled to a jury instruction on the lesser offense of disorderly conduct.

However, for the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that we were mistaken in Hedgers when we declared that "fighting" does not require any degree of mutuality. We now hold that the phrase "engages in fighting" encompasses only those situations where the participants share a mutual purpose or understanding that they will trade blows or attempt to trade blows.

The origins of subsection (a)(5) of our disorderly conduct statute

The common law provided criminal penalties for direct assaults or batteries upon another person, but it also provided penalties for people who breached the public peace with violent, tumultuous, or otherwise disorderly conduct, even when that conduct did not constitute a punishable assault or battery.

If a group of people assembled for the purpose of engaging in violent or tumultuous behavior (and then engaged in that behavior), they were guilty of "riot". This offense (as generally defined) consisted of "planned and deliberate violent or tumultuous behavior involving a confederation of three or more persons".2 Most American jurisdictions have enacted statutory versions of the offense of riot.3

A lesser common-law crime-"affray"-applied to breaches of the peace by people who had come together in a public place by chanee or otherwise innocently, and then a quarrel arose which prompted them to engage in violent or tumultuous behavior. In such cireumstances, the participants "[were] not guilty of riot, but of sudden affray only", because "[the] breach of the peace happened unexpectedly without any previous intention concerning it." 4 Affray was defined as "a mutual fight in a public place to the terror or » 5 alarm of [other] people".5

To constitute an "affray", the parties' intention or willingness to fight had to be mutual. If one person unlawfully attacked another, and the other person used force in an effort to defend himself, the instigator was guilty of assault and battery, while the other participant was entirely innocent of crime. In such cireumstances, there was no affray.6

Moreover, with respect to both of these offenses-riot and affray-the gravamen of the offense was not any injury to persons or property that might ensue, but rather the present breach of the public peace and the attendant risk of terror or alarm that the violent or tumultuous behavior might cause.7

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Dawson v. State
264 P.3d 851 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
264 P.3d 851, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 116, 2011 WL 5026030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-state-alaskactapp-2011.