Lerchenstein v. State

697 P.2d 312, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 297
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 5, 1985
Docket7729
StatusPublished
Cited by62 cases

This text of 697 P.2d 312 (Lerchenstein 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
Lerchenstein v. State, 697 P.2d 312, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 297 (Ala. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Judge.

Adolph Lerchenstein was charged with three counts of assault in the third degree and one count of murder in the first degree. Following a jury'trial, Lerchenstein was convicted on all four counts and sentenced to serve four years on one count of assault, three years on each of the other two assault counts, and sixty years on the murder count, all to run concurrently. Ler-chenstein appeals his conviction and his sentence, raising three points of error. First, he contends certain evidence of prior • bad acts should have been excluded. Second, he asserts that the trial court should have given his transitional jury instruction rather than the trial court’s. Third, he appeals his sentence as excessive.

On May 17, 1982, at approximately 1:00 p.m., Adolph Lerchenstein, owner of Alert TV, phoned Custom Coach Auto Body, which is located across the street from Alert TV. He spoke with Michael Hoffman, a co-owner of the auto repair shop. Lerchenstein called to inquire about the progress of an estimate for repair work on his truck which he had left at Custom Coach a week earlier. When Hoffman informed Lerchenstein that the estimate was not ready, an argument ensued in which, according to Hoffman and not disputed by other evidence, Lerchenstein became extremely angry, and in a rash tone cursed Hoffman and made disparaging remarks about his business. Hoffman requested that Lerchenstein come get his truck. 1

Lerchenstein sent an employee across the street to Custom Coach to retrieve the truck. When the employee arrived, Hoffman told him that a thirty-five dollar storage fee would be charged on the truck. Hoffman testified that he decided to charge this fee, which he did not customarily collect, because he was angry about Lerchen-stein’s comments to him on the phone. The employee returned to Alert TV.

A short time later, Lerchenstein crossed the street and entered his truck. Michael Hoffman approached the window of the truck with a bill and told Lerchenstein that he owed the storage fee. At this point, Hoffman testified, Lerchenstein “started acting real erratical.... [H]e was inside the truck and he just started jumping up and down....” Hoffman testified he told Lerchenstein that he was going to call the police, and then walked down the side of and behind the truck.

At this point the particular events giving rise to the charges occurred. Lerchenstein drove his truck in reverse (there was a large sand pile in front of the truck), striking Michael Hoffman and dragging him beneath the vehicle as Hoffman held on to the bumper. Lerchenstein stopped travel- *314 ling in reverse and apparently began to shift to drive. The truck stalled. Around this time Don Hoffman, Ron Hoffman, and Lance DeSaw ran towards Lerchenstein’s truck. Michael Hoffman’s brother, Don Hoffman, reached the truck on the passenger’s side. Don Hoffman testified that he opened the door of the cab and climbed partly onto the front seat of the truck. He then noticed a handgun on the seat. Ler-chenstein picked up the gun and pointed it in Don Hoffman’s direction, but did not fire. Don Hoffman slid out of the truck. At about the same time another Hoffman brother, Ron, reached the driver’s side of the truck, along with DeSaw, co-owner of Custom Coach. Both reached in through the window on the driver’s side. Ron Hoffman had a cast on his wrist at the time. At some point after Don Hoffman slid out of the truck, Lerchenstein’s glasses were knocked off. Lerchenstein fired twice in the direction of Ron Hoffman and DeSaw, striking Ron Hoffman in the chest with one of the shots and fatally wounding him. Then, DeSaw testified, Lerchenstein pointed the gun directly at him, at which point DeSaw dropped to the ground.

Ron Hoffman ran to a nearby service station where he collapsed. Lerchenstein went to the same station, where he announced that he had just been assaulted, and made a “911” emergency telephone call reporting the “assault.” After the phone call, one witness testified, Lerchenstein walked over to the collapsed Ron Hoffman and said, “lay there and die, you son of a bitch.” When informed later that Hoffman had died, Lerchenstein commented to an investigating police officer, “It’s tough, it happened, I don’t regret it.”

While it was undisputed that Lerchen-stein fired the shot which caused Ron Hoffman’s death, the state and the appellant characterize the preceding chain of events quite differently. Under the defense theory, Michael Hoffman was struck by the truck by mistake, and Ron Hoffman was shot (and Don Hoffman and DeSaw assaulted) in perceived self-defense. The prosecution, rather, characterizes the events as an intentional overreaction by an angered Lerchenstein. There was conflict as to whether Lerchenstein knew Michael Hoffman was behind the truck. Testimony conflicted as to whether the three men running toward the truck were yelling, “stop, stop” (testimony of Don Hoffman), and “hey, you’re — you’re killing him, you know, he’s under the truck” (testimony of DeSaw), or “hold him back, don’t let him get out of here” (testimony of bystander). The defense presented testimony that one of the men struck Lerchenstein in the head before any shots were fired. Finally, whether the gun had been carried across the street by Lerchenstein that day or had been pulled out from under the seat of the truck just prior to the shooting was an issue of considerable disagreement, and an issue to which the parties and the court attached great significance.

EVIDENCE OF PRIOR BAD ACTS •

Prior to trial, the defense moved to exclude evidence concerning a dispute between Lerchenstein and his former employee, Henry Buchholz, including Buchholz’ testimony that Lerchenstein had destroyed property at Buchholz’ home the day before the Hoffman shooting, and evidence of three telephone conversations. The trial judge ruled that all of this evidence except one of the telephone conversations would be admitted.

The state was allowed to introduce evidence that on the day prior to the shooting, Lerchenstein damaged a stereo, television, and car stereo at Buchholz’ apartment while Buchholz was not at home. The appliances were apparently “acquired” from Alert TV, and not fully paid for.

Evidence of a telephone conversation between Lerchenstein and Buchholz’ landlord, occurring about 9:00 or 9:30 a.m. on the day of the shooting, was introduced. The landlord, Rand Walls, had been phoned by Lerchenstein. Walls testified that Ler-chenstein shouted and cursed during the conversation, and that Lerchenstein commented, when discussing Buchholtz, “I ought to get a gun and get the SOB.” *315 Walls said that the conversation did not involve any aggressive expressions toward him personally, and that the conversation ended on a friendly note.

Evidence of a phone conversation between Lerchenstein and Buchholz which took place at about noon on the day of the shooting was also introduced. Three witnesses testified concerning this conversation. Buchholz testified that he had phoned Lerchenstein who, after hanging up on him several times, spoke to Buchholz “very irrationally and violently and [used] quite abusive language.” Buchholz testified that Lerchenstein told him “he was pissed off because he thought I’d lied to him and though I'd stolen from him ... and didn’t want to see me again.” Buch-holz’ account of the conversation included no mention of a gun or threat.

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Bluebook (online)
697 P.2d 312, 1985 Alas. App. LEXIS 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lerchenstein-v-state-alaskactapp-1985.