Kurzmann v. State

903 A.2d 702, 2006 Del. LEXIS 390, 2006 WL 1971718
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJuly 13, 2006
Docket381, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by160 cases

This text of 903 A.2d 702 (Kurzmann v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kurzmann v. State, 903 A.2d 702, 2006 Del. LEXIS 390, 2006 WL 1971718 (Del. 2006).

Opinion

STEELE, Chief Justice.

Several years ago, the defendant appellant, Michael Kurzmann pleaded guilty to assaulting his wife and to several other charges. A Superior Court judge sentenced him to seven years at Level 5, suspended for six months at Level 4, followed by Level 3 probation. On July 4, 2005, while he was still on probation, Kurz-mann allegedly assaulted his wife. The State brought a violation of probation proceeding against Kurzmann based on the alleged assault contending, among other things, that Kurzmann violated his probation by committing a new criminal offense. After a contested VOP hearing at which both the State and Kurzmann presented testimony, a Superior Court judge found that Kurzmann violated his probation by assaulting his wife. The Superior Court judge then sentenced Kurzmann to serve seven years at Level 5, the full suspended Level 5 term of the original sentence. Kurzmann now appeals the judgment that he violated his probation claiming that the prosecutor engaged in egregious misconduct at the VOP hearing; that the Superi- or Court judge sentenced him with a closed mind; that the Superior Court judge should not have found a violation of probation when the State never charged him with a criminal offense arising out of the alleged assault; and that the Superior Court judge impermissibly relied upon “medical testimony” from a non-expert *706 witness. We have concluded that Kurz-mann’s arguments are without merit. Accordingly, we affirm the judgments of the Superior Court.

FACT AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On April 21, 2004, Kurzmann pleaded guilty to one Count of Second Degree Assault and three Counts of Endangering the Welfare of a Child for an incident in which he assaulted his wife, Lea Kurzmann. On the Assault charge, Kurzmann received a sentence of four years at Level 5, with credit for time served, suspended for six months at Level 4 home confinement, followed by one year of probation at Level 3. On each of the three Endangering charges to which he pleaded guilty, Kurzmann received a sentence of 1 year at Level 5 suspended for 1 year of probation at Level 3. The probation for the Endangering charges ran concurrently with that for the Assault charge.

On February 25, 2005, while he was still on Level 3 probation, Kurzmann was arrested and charged with one Count of Ter-roristic Threatening, three Counts of Endangering the Welfare of a Child, and two Counts of Offensive Touching. Kurz-mann’s probation officer filed a report alleging a violation of probation, in part, based on the new charges. After a trial in Family Court, Kurzmann was found not guilty of the Terroristic Threatening charge and a Family Court Commissioner dismissed the remaining charges. Because of the outcome in Family Court, Kurzmann’s probation officer withdrew the violation report on June 22, 2005. Thereafter, Kurzmann continued on Level 3 probation.

Robin Williams and her fiancé, Kevin Walls, a retired Probation and Parole Officer, were at Back Bay Skillets, a restaurant in Long Neck, Delaware on July 4, 2005. Williams was previously employed as a domestic violence advocate case manager at the Division of Family Services. During the course of her employment at DFS, Williams worked with Lea Kurz-mann for about nine months while Lea was a DFS client. During the nine months, Williams had “quite a bit of contact with Lea.” While Williams was in the restaurant, Lea abruptly rushed inside “clutching” her two-year old child. Lea was crying, her eye was almost swollen shut, her lip was “busted” and there was blood on her and “all over the child.” Lea was hysterical, “definitely in fear,” and said: “Don’t let him come in here. Please don’t let him come in here.” Lea put down her child, and Williams then picked up the child. Shortly thereafter, Kurzmann walked into the restaurant and demanded to know who Williams was and why she was holding his child. Kurzmann denied that he had hurt Lea, but Lea looked at her child and said “Tell Ms. Robin, Joanna, that daddy — tell Ms. Robin what daddy did. Daddy hit mommy.” The child did not respond.

Williams gave the child back to Lea and Walls asked Kurzmann to step outside of the restaurant. After some prodding, Kurzmann left. Williams stayed and talked with Lea for over an hour. Lea told Williams that she and her husband had an argument the previous day, during which Kurzmann poked Lea in the neck. After the argument Lea left her home and spent the evening in her vehicle. When Lea came back home the next day, she refused to get out of the vehicle. Kurz-mann came out of the residence screaming at Lea. He then approached the van and hit Lea with his fist on the side of her face. The two-year old child was with Lea in the van during the assault.

During the hour in which Lea talked with Williams, she “remained upset” and “never stopped crying.” Williams unsuccessfully tried to convince Lea to go to a battered women’s shelter, but Lea did not *707 want to go because she feared DFS would be involved and she would “end up losing her children.” After the conversation with Williams, Lea went back to her home, which was across the street from the restaurant. Kurzmann arrived back at the home a few minutes later. Once Williams saw Kurzmann go back into the home, she called the police to report the incident. Before the police arrived, Lea left in a van and drove to her nearby Mend’s house. One of the police officers that responded to the scene later told Williams that she had spoken with Lea over the phone and that both Lea and Kurzmann said that Kurz-mann had been playing football with their dog and that the football hit Lea when she came outside with the child.

In an attempt to “get some information” about the July 4th incident, two probation officers, Debbie Benton and James Ayers, went to the Kurzmann residence on July 7, 2005. Benton observed that Lea had a black eye and bruising on her right cheek, upper lip, and on her shoulder and arms. Ayers confirmed that Lea had a black eye, some swelling, and discoloration of her lip. Ayers also observed that Lea had finger marks on her arms. Lea explained that she sustained her facial injuries when Kurzmann drop-kicked a football that struck her in the face. According to Lea, the finger marks on her arms were from “rough sex.”

Lea told the probation officers that she and her husband had an argument on July 3rd. She left the house in a car and parked somewhere. When Lea returned home the next day, the argument with Kurzmann continued. During this argument, Kurzmann hit her with the football. Ayers did not remember asking Lea how many times the football had hit her; however, it seemed to him that there was “more than one blow or strike” on Lea’s face.

Williams, Ayers, and Benton testified at the contested VOP hearing consistent with the foregoing facts. The defense called only Lea Kurzmann. According to Lea’s testimony, she and her husband were out back playing “monkey in the middle” by throwing a football back and forth and having the dog chase the football. Kurz-mann allegedly kicked the football, it bounced off the fence, and hit Lea in the face. Kurzmann found this incident funny, which made Lea very angry and upset.

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Bluebook (online)
903 A.2d 702, 2006 Del. LEXIS 390, 2006 WL 1971718, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kurzmann-v-state-del-2006.