Echols v. State

818 P.2d 691, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 75, 1991 WL 196767
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 4, 1991
DocketA-3307
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 818 P.2d 691 (Echols 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
Echols v. State, 818 P.2d 691, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 75, 1991 WL 196767 (Ala. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinions

OPINION

COATS, Judge.

Arthur W. Echols was convicted, following a jury trial, of assault in the first degree, a class A felony. AS 11.41.200. Echols appeals, arguing that Superior Court Judge Mark C. Rowland did not properly charge the jury on the elements of her offense. We agree and reverse Echols’ conviction.

Arthur Echols was indicted based on an incident which occurred when her husband, Melvin J. Echols, beat the Echols’ fourteen-year-old daughter, T.E., with an extension cord. The grand jury charged Melvin Echols with assault in the first degree based upon this incident, along with seven counts of sexual abuse of his two daughters.1

T.E. testified that on Friday, November 4, 1983, while Arthur Echols and her four [692]*692other children were out of the house and Melvin was asleep, T.E. went to the kitchen and took some cookies. T.E. was not allowed in the kitchen. Her mother came home, finding T.E. in the kitchen. Echols went downstairs for “a second” to where Melvin slept. The two of them came back to the kitchen. Melvin screamed at T.E., punched and slapped her, and threw her to the floor. He left the room briefly but returned with an extension cord. He then proceeded to beat T.E. with the cord.

T.E. testified that her mother was in the kitchen washing dishes while her father beat her. The beating lasted five or ten minutes. At some point, Echols told her husband that she saw blood. Melvin continued to beat T.E. for a few minutes and then stopped.

After the beating, T.E. took a bath and cleaned herself up. She then left the house through a second floor window and went to a friend’s house where she got on the school bus. After discovering she was gone, Arthur Echols caught up with the school bus and took T.E. home. She gave her breakfast and told her she was not going to school that day. Melvin beat T.E. again later that day and during the weekend.

T.E. returned to school on Monday, November 7, 1983. She reported to her teacher that her father had beaten her. The teachers and the school nurse observed scars and fresh wounds on T.E.’s back, and contacted the Department of Family and Youth Services (DFYS). T.E. was placed in state custody and has not lived with her parents since that time.

The state charged Arthur Echols with assault in the first degree under AS 11.16.-110(2), based upon her solicitation of Melvin Echols to commit the assault, a violation of AS 11.41.200(a)(1).2 Alaska Statute 11.16.110(2) provides that one is legally accountable for conduct of another if: “with intent to promote or facilitate the commission of the offense, the person (A) solicits the other to commit the offense; or (B) aids or abets the other in planning or committing the offense.”

In analyzing AS 11.16.110, we start with the fact that the statute requires the accomplice to act “with intent to promote or facilitate the commission of the offense ” (emphasis supplied).3 The plain language of the statute seems to indicate that the accomplice must intend the commission of the particular crime charged. We have looked at the legislative history of AS 11.-16.110 in order to determine the legislative intent behind this statute. It appears from the tentative draft of the Alaska Criminal Code revision that the legislature intended to codify prior Alaska law in passing AS 11.16.110. The commentary to the tentative draft states:

Subsection (2) codifies the current case law that one ⅛ liable as a traditional “accomplice” only if he acts “with intent to promote or facilitate the commission of the offense”. Tarneff [sic] v. State, 512 P.2d 923, 928 (AK 1973), citing Thomas v. State, 391 P.2d 18, 25 (AK 1964). Acting with that intent, the defendant must, under the Revised Code, ... “solicit or command” the offense[.]

Alaska Criminal Code Revision Part II, at 31 (Tent.Draft 1977), In Tarnef, the court stated: “It is well established at common law and in Alaska that a person cannot be convicted of 'aiding and abetting' a crime unless it is shown that he had the specific criminal intent to bring about the illegal end.” Tarnef v. State, 512 P.2d 923, 928 (Alaska 1973). The supreme court later explained this language as follows:

[693]*693The significance of this formulation of the mens rea requirement was not fully-explicated in Tarnef. Nevertheless, this language, which was addressed to Mahle’s [Mahle v. State, 371 P.2d 21 (Alaska 1962) ] general “criminal intent” seems to indicate that “knowledge,” would not satisfy the mental aspect of accomplice liability. Rather, the individual must also have had the specific criminal intent to bring about the illegal end.

Hensel v. State, 604 P.2d 222, 233-84 (Alaska 1979).

It therefore appears that in enacting AS 11.16.110 the legislature intended to codify prior law, and that under prior law a person could not be convicted of aiding and abetting a crime unless the state showed “the specific criminal intent to bring about the illegal end.”

Arthur Echols argued that AS 11.16.-110(2), the accomplice liability statute, required the state to prove that she intended T.E. to suffer serious physical injury in order to prove her guilt as an accomplice of assault in the first degree.4 Judge Rowland relied on this court’s decision in Bowell v. State, 728 P.2d 1220 (Alaska App.1986), and concluded that, in order to be guilty as an accomplice to assault in the first degree, Arthur Echols needed only to have acted recklessly regarding the results of Melvin Echols’ conduct.

In Bowell, the defendant was convicted as an accomplice of a first-degree sexual assault which was committed by Thomas. We stated:

In other words, in order to convict Bowell as an accomplice of Thomas’ first-degree sexual assault of B.S., the state was required to prove that Bowell knew that Thomas intended to engage in sexual intercourse with B.S., that he intentionally engaged in conduct facilitating Thomas’ efforts, and that at the time he aided Thomas, he recklessly disregarded B.S.’s lack of consent to Thomas’ overtures.

Id. at 1223. In reaching this conclusion, we relied on the provisions establishing accomplice liability in the Model Penal Code, which is one of the sources for our revised criminal code. However, as Echols points out, our reliance on the Model Penal Code is problematical. The Model Penal Code contains a provision which reads as follows:

[694]*694When causing a particular result is an element of an offense, an accomplice in the conduct causing such result is an accomplice in the commission of that offense if he acts with the kind of culpability, if any, with respect to that result that is sufficient for the commission of the offense.

Model Penal Code § 2.06(4) (1962).

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Bluebook (online)
818 P.2d 691, 1991 Alas. App. LEXIS 75, 1991 WL 196767, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echols-v-state-alaskactapp-1991.