In the Interest of Doe

107 P.3d 1203, 106 Haw. 530, 2005 Haw. App. LEXIS 71
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 22, 2005
Docket26105
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 107 P.3d 1203 (In the Interest of Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Interest of Doe, 107 P.3d 1203, 106 Haw. 530, 2005 Haw. App. LEXIS 71 (hawapp 2005).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

LIM, J.

Minor appeals the July 30, 2003 judgment of disposition filed by the family court of the first circuit 1 that adjudicated him a law violator for assault in the first degree. 2 Minor *532 contends there was not sufficient evidence that he inflicted serious bodily injury, and that he did so intentionally or knowingly. We disagree, and affirm.

I. Background.

Trial was held on July 14 and 30, 2003. The eighteen-year-old complainant testified that on September 1, 2002, in the very early morning hours, he and two of his male friends went to Nanakuli Beach Park to see another friend, a girl who was celebrating her nineteenth birthday. About fifty young people happened to be at the park, hanging out and drinking beer. According to the complainant, for some unknown reason, “Everybody was pretty much trying to fight with us — or I mean I just felt like heat.” Eventually, the complainant and his friends decided to leave, but before they left, the complainant went around shaking hands. “I don’t know their names but — because I didn’t know anybody there, but I was just trying to, you know, be cool, show some respect and shake their hands before I left.” Suddenly, the complainant was punched hard in the left temple. He fell to the ground on his hands and knees and was kicked in the face — in the mouth and in the eye — several times. The complainant did not see his assailant, but he did remember the last person he shook hands with before being attacked, and that was Minor.

“I broke — yeah, I fractured the top part of my jaw; four of my teeth was kicked in. I had a big — a big cut above my lip — not cut, but it went all the way through my lip. My eye was fractured.... And that’s about it. I could have missed something, but I don’t really remember that night too well. I’m not trying to remember it.” Bleeding profusely, the complainant was driven to the emergency room. “Yes, they sewed up my lip and they gave me just painkillers and that’s it. Later on that morning I had to go and try and pull my teeth out — I mean push them out because they were all the way in. I went to the orthopedic surgeon which was in Ala Moa-na.... He braced my teeth so it wouldn’t fall out.... He was able to save the teeth, but I will need a root canal just to make sure they stay in place.... Yes, I went to Dr. Camara, which he just — he pretty much he did surgery on my eye to replace the floor of my eye.... I mean not to replace it but to malee it so my eye wouldn’t sink in. Sink.” When asked about any aftereffects on his vision, the complainant explained, “It’s not a major impact, but it definitely changed a little bit. Like I get double vision and I gotta really concentrate to read because my vision blurs out.”

The girl the complainant went to see that night testified for the State. She knew Minor on a “hi and bye basis.” She remembered that the atmosphere at the park turned menacing when the complainant, and his friends arrived. In fact, as soon as the trio got out of their car, a boy ran up to one of them and asked him if he was looking for a fight. The girl tried to make the peace with the boys already there, whom only she knew, but the nimbus of impending violence continued to grow, so the girl urged the complainant and his friends to leave. The complainant was walking to his car to leave, but then he turned around and went back to shake hands. He shook hands with several people, then with Minor, and was toning to go when Minor punched him in the left side of the face. The complainant fell, and Minor kicked him hard in the face two or three times with a shod foot. The girl witnessed the attack from about six or seven feet away.

One of the complainant’s companions that night also testified for the State. He essen *533 tially corroborated the State’s case, but admitted he was in the car when the attack occurred and did not see the entire incident. He did not actually see the punch and the kicks land, but he did see Minor swinging his leg in a kicking motion. He acknowledged that there were other people nearby, and that he was not one hundred percent sure it was Minor who both punched and kicked the complainant.

Two of Minor’s longtime friends testified in his behalf. Both were at the park drinking with Minor that night. Each maintained that Minor never left his side that night, except. perhaps to “use the bathroom” on a nearby tree. Both remembered seeing or hearing a commotion across the way and going over with Minor to see what was going on. Both remembered seeing there the same boy, whom they identified by name, getting off of another boy who was on the ground. And each admitted not going to the authorities with his story, even though he had known all along that it was Minor who had gotten arrested for the assault.

Minor also testified in his defense. He was seventeen years old on the date of the offense. He remembered drinking at the park with his friends. He recalled shaking hands with the complainant, but maintained that was the full extent of his involvement with the complainant that night. Minor also told of hearing the commotion of a fight across the way and running over with his friends to see what was going on. When he got there, he saw the boy his friends had named, being pulled away from the fight by two other guys. He did not see the other party to the fight because too many people were circled around the site of the fight, blocking his view. Minor mentioned that he is right-handed, and that he had broken his right pinky finger playing football before the night of the fight. He was a football and baseball player in high school. He also remarked that the girl who testified against him had come on to him, unrequited, about six months before the incident. Minor’s testimony marked the end of the first day of trial.

Dr. Jorge Camara (Dr. Camara), a board-certified ophthalmologist and an ophthalmic reconstructive surgeon, testified as such as an expert witness for the State. He was the only witness on the second and final day of trial. His testimony had been delayed due to scheduling difficulties.

Dr. Camara treated the complainant, via referral, on September 6, 2002:

Q. And can you describe [the complainant’s] appearance on that date.
A. As I recall, he had an orbital hemorrhage on his left side and he had subcon-junctival bleeding. He had slight inward movement of his left eye; in other words, the left eye was displaced posteriorly or backward compared to the right eye. He also, as I recall, had a sutured laceration on his mouth unrelated to his coming to see me. I just noticed that he had a laceration on his mouth.
Q. Okay. Can we break it down one by one.
When you say orbital hemorrhage of the left side, can you in lay terms tell us what that is.
A. In lay — in lay terms that might be called a black eye. He had obvious swelling of the left eye with discoloration, suggestive of blood within the socket of the eye, and the wrapping of the eye called the conjunctiva or the white part of the eye also was very, very red, suggestive again of having a hemorrhage.
Q. Okay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P.3d 1203, 106 Haw. 530, 2005 Haw. App. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-interest-of-doe-hawapp-2005.