Gottschalk v. State

881 P.2d 1139, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 45, 1994 WL 544377
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 7, 1994
DocketA-4863
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 881 P.2d 1139 (Gottschalk 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
Gottschalk v. State, 881 P.2d 1139, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 45, 1994 WL 544377 (Ala. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

George F. Gottschalk, Jr., was convicted by a jury in Naknek of first-degree assault. Gottschalk appeals, contending that Superior Court Judge Peter A. Miehalski erred in excluding evidence of the victim’s violent character. We reverse.

FACTS

A. The Stabbing

Early in the morning on June 12, 1992, at Gottschalk’s home in Naknek, Gottschalk *1140 stabbed his twenty-two-year-old son Clayton in the neck and seriously wounded him. James Woods, Jr., a friend of Gottschalk and Clayton, was present at the time of the incident. Immediately after being stabbed, Clayton, bleeding profusely, ran to the nearby house of Laurie Anderson, yelling that he had been stabbed and needed a ride to the clinic. While waiting for help to arrive, Clayton told Anderson, “I want George Gott-schalk, Jr., brought up on attempted murder charges.”

As Clayton sought help from Anderson, Woods ran to the home of another neighbor, Dawn Johnson, screaming, “Call 911, call 911, George [Gottschalk] stabbed Clayton in the neck.” Woods told Johnson that:

him, Clayton, and George were ... drinking together and then George went to bed in his room, and him and Clayton passed out on the floor. He said he was awoken by George coming down the hall screaming, “Clayton, you son of a bitch, you son of a bitch.” He said he was still half out of it, so he was kind of opening his eyes and shutting them, and in and out. And he said then the next time when he opened his eyes, George was leaning over Clayton. And as he said to himself, “He’s not going to do that,” George cut Clayton’s neck.

B. The State’s Case at Trial

The state subsequently charged Gottschalk with first-degree assault, in violation of AS 11.41.200(a)(1), 1 for recklessly causing serious physical injury to Clayton by means of a dangerous instrument. Based on Clayton’s and Woods’ post-stabbing statements, the state asserted that Gottschalk had become angry at Clayton and had stabbed him without provocation. By the time Gottsehalk’s case was tried, however, both Clayton and Woods had become reluctant witnesses.

At trial, Clayton testified that he and his father had been arguing intermittently during the night of the incident and the preceding day. Shortly after midnight, while he, Woods and Gottschalk were drinking at Gott-schalk’s house, the argument started anew, and Gottschalk told him to leave. Clayton left and spent the next several hours at a friend’s house, where he “[h]ad a couple more shot[s].” At about 5:00 a.m., he returned to Gottsehalk’s house, walked in, and sat down in a chair.

According to Clayton, Gottschalk, still angry, again asked him to leave. An argument ensued. Gottschalk went to the kitchen; Clayton could hear Gottschalk “fumbling around” in the knife drawer, so Clayton decided to leave. He bent over to put his shoes on; as he began to stand up, Clayton suddenly felt “warm blood ... [cjoming out of [his] neck.” Clayton testified that he then “jumped up and ... said you stabbed me, you stabbed me, and ... ran out the door.” To the apparent surprise of the trial prosecutor, Clayton added:

I didn’t even know if he even tried to stab me, you know.... I was getting up out of the chair. You know, he ... might have just came over there to show me the way out. I don’t know. Because I was getting up like this. And I got up.
I don’t know. Because I wasn’t looking at him. I didn’t see him thrust it at me or anything like that.

For his part, Woods testified that on the night of the incident he had been drinking “[a]ll over” and “passed out” shortly after he arrived at Gottschalk’s. He awoke to the sound of Gottschalk getting up in the morning and a short time later saw Gottschalk leaning over Clayton, who slept; Gottschalk held a knife to Clayton’s neck. Then, according to Woods, “Clayton got up I guess and bumped into the knife or something because George was over him like that.... You know, must have got scared and jumped or something.” Woods added, “He got poked. He never got stabbed.”

*1141 The prosecution impeached Clayton and Woods by introducing various prior inconsistent statements they had made, including the statements they made to Laurie Anderson and Dawn Johnson shortly after the stabbing.

C. Gottschalk’s Testimony

Gottschalk’s defense at trial combined elements of self-defense and accident. Gott-schalk testified that he ordered Clayton out of his house because Clayton had been drinking, had become belligerent, and had assaulted him. Clayton refused to leave. Fearing a further assault, Gottschalk armed himself with a knife from the kitchen. Gottschalk returned to the living room, repeated his request for Clayton to leave, “[a]nd I was telling him that I wanted him to please leave_ And ... he said, fuck you, old man, and he jumped right out of the chair and he came right after me. And ... I guess that’s when he got hurt on the — got the cut on his neck.” On cross-examination, Gottschalk insisted that he had picked up the knife as a “deterrent” because he “didn’t want to get kicked around again,” but that he “never intended to use it.”

D. The Excluded Character Evidence

To support his claim of self-defense and to establish that Clayton had been the initial aggressor in the incident, Gottschalk attempted to testify and to present testimony from four witnesses concerning Clayton’s character for violence.

Gottschalk himself proposed to testify about two instances (one in 1991, the other in 1992) in which he posted bail for Clayton after Clayton had been arrested for what Gottschalk believed were assaultive crimes. Gottschalk also offered to describe a recent incident in which he took Clayton to the clinic for treatment of a severe slash on his leg that Gottschalk thought Clayton had sustained in an alcohol-related confrontation. Clayton fled the clinic and resisted treatment. 2

Judge Michalski excluded this evidence, saying: “The conduct involved there is not conduct that involves the use of deadly force that would make it appropriate to use deadly force in return. And therefore it’s not relevant.”

Through cross-examination of Dawn Johnson, Gottschalk offered to present evidence of an incident occurring three years previously in which Clayton, while drinking in a restaurant, pulled a whiskey bottle from his coveralls and threatened a restaurant employee with it. The incident resulted in Clayton’s forcible removal from the restaurant.

Judge Michalski excluded this evidence, finding that it was irrelevant to show Gott-schalk’s fear of Clayton because Gottschalk had not been aware of it and that it was too remote and “de minimis” to show violent character.

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Bluebook (online)
881 P.2d 1139, 1994 Alas. App. LEXIS 45, 1994 WL 544377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gottschalk-v-state-alaskactapp-1994.