Francisco Moreno, Appellant/cr-respondent v. State Of Washington, Respondent/cr-appellant

470 P.3d 507, 14 Wash. App. 2d 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 17, 2020
Docket78856-6
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 470 P.3d 507 (Francisco Moreno, Appellant/cr-respondent v. State Of Washington, Respondent/cr-appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francisco Moreno, Appellant/cr-respondent v. State Of Washington, Respondent/cr-appellant, 470 P.3d 507, 14 Wash. App. 2d 143 (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 78856-6-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. PUBLISHED OPINION FRANCISCO RUBEN MORENO,

Appellant.

APPELWICK, J. — Moreno appeals his convictions for first degree burglary,

fourth degree assault, and interfering with domestic violence reporting. He argues

that knowledge of the unlawfulness of one’s entry or remaining is an essential

element of first degree burglary. He asserts that the State violated its discovery

obligations and the court’s discovery order by failing to identify the jail calls it

intended to use at trial. Further, he argues that the court violated his right to

present a defense when it refused to instruct the jury on self-defense. He also

argues that the court miscalculated his offender score when it concluded that his

burglary and assault convictions did not encompass the same criminal conduct.

Last, he asserts that certain LFOs must be stricken from his judgment and

sentence, and that a statutory citation must be corrected. We affirm Moreno’s

convictions, but remand for resentencing to correct his offender score and the

statutory citation in his judgment and sentence. No. 78856-6-I/2

FACTS

Francisco Moreno and Ashley Vollmar began dating in August 2017.

Moreno moved into Vollmar’s townhome in Everett that same month. Two months

later, they found out they were expecting a child together.

According to Vollmar, she kicked Moreno out of her house and changed the

locks at the end of October 2017. Despite kicking him out, she testified that she

continued her relationship with him until January 2018. According to Moreno, he

and Vollmar continued their relationship until early April 2018. He testified that she

never changed the locks on him, and that he was welcome to live in her home

throughout their relationship.

Vollmar testified that the morning of Sunday, April 8, 2018, she picked up a

car that Moreno had taken from her garage earlier that week. She stated that he

had come over Tuesday night to pick up his tribal check, and that her car was gone

when she woke up the next morning. She explained that she retrieved her car on

April 8 from a residence in Marysville. That same afternoon, she stated that

Moreno called her looking for the car. She denied having it. She did not specify

where she was when Moreno called her. When she was at home later that night,

Vollmar missed a call from an unknown number. She called the number back, and

it was Moreno. Despite telling him that he was not allowed at her home, she stated

that he told her he was going to come over. She explained that he also started

yelling at and threatening her. She testified, “He was saying he’s going to beat my

ass and I told him I was going to call the police.”

2 No. 78856-6-I/3

Further, Vollmar testified that while she was on the phone with 911, she

heard her door get kicked in. She explained that Moreno came up to her bedroom

door, grabbed her, threw her on the bed, held her down by her neck so that she

could not move, and took her phone out of her hand. She stated that she was

eventually able to break free and run downstairs. As she was running down the

stairs, she testified that Moreno grabbed her again and she fell to the ground on

her knees and stomach. She explained that Moreno then ran out the front door,

and she waited for the police to arrive.

In contrast, Moreno testified that he and Vollmar shared the car that he took

from the garage. He also testified that he took the car on April 8, not earlier in the

week. He explained that on April 8, he was doing laundry and barbecuing at

Vollmar’s house all day before driving the car to his ex-girlfriend’s house at 3:00

p.m. to visit his son.1 He stated that he had not seen Vollmar all day because she

was at work. After visiting his son, he explained that he went to a bar around 8:00

p.m. He parked the car outside the bar with his phone, keys, and wallet inside.

When he went outside to check his phone, he realized that the car was gone. He

was then able to find someone to give him a ride to Vollmar’s house.

When he arrived at the house, Moreno stated that he remembered he did

not have his keys so he knocked on the door. After no one answered, he walked

around to the back of the house and quickly ran up to the back door because he

thought it was open. The door was locked, and he stated that he ended up going

1Moreno characterizes Vollmar’s house as his house throughout his testimony. For clarity, we refer to it as Vollmar’s house.

3 No. 78856-6-I/4

“right through the window.” He testified that once he was inside, he went upstairs

and turned on the light. At that point, he explained that Vollmar threw his phone

at him, told him to leave, and told him she had called the police. He testified that

he then started looking for his keys and wallet. He explained that Vollmar grabbed

his wallet first, he tried to grab it back from her, and they ended up “kind of wrestling

around over it.” He stated that he ended up taking his wallet and walking outside.

Once he was outside, the police blocked him from leaving.

The State charged Moreno with first degree burglary domestic violence,

aggravated by domestic violence against a pregnant victim, fourth degree assault

domestic violence, and interfering with domestic violence reporting.2 At a June 29,

2018 pretrial hearing, Moreno asked the trial court to direct the State to provide

him with a list of his jail telephone calls that it planned to use at trial. He reasoned

that because a detective in the case had already listened to “60 days’ worth of jail

calls,” it would be fair for the State to provide him with this information. The court

asked the State to clarify whether it was intending “in [its] case in chief to use any

of the jail calls.” The State responded that it did not recall the calls being relevant,

but that it needed to review a detective’s report to make sure. The court ordered

the State to “provide to the defense if it intends to use any jail phone calls by Mr.

Moreno what date and phone calls it intends to use” by July 2, 2018. The State

later gave notice that it did not intend to use the calls.

2The State also charged Moreno with two counts of second degree unlawful possession of a firearm. Moreno pleaded guilty to the first unlawful possession count, and the State dismissed the second unlawful possession count.

4 No. 78856-6-I/5

However, at trial, Moreno testified that he had been at Vollmar’s house all

day on April 8 before leaving to visit his son. The next day, the State sought to

introduce excerpts from Moreno’s jail calls in its rebuttal. The trial court found that

Moreno’s statements in two of those excerpts contradicted his testimony regarding

his whereabouts on April 8. Moreno asked the trial court to disallow the evidence.

He argued that the State’s attempt to introduce the excerpts from his jail calls

violated the court’s discovery order and relevant case law. He also asked for a

continuance so that he could listen to the calls.

The trial court ruled that excerpts “two and three” from Moreno’s jail calls

were proper rebuttal and impeachment testimony. It also ruled that the State did

not violate the discovery order. Further, it denied Moreno’s request for a

continuance.

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Bluebook (online)
470 P.3d 507, 14 Wash. App. 2d 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francisco-moreno-appellantcr-respondent-v-state-of-washington-washctapp-2020.