Leu v. State

251 P.3d 363, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 23, 2011 WL 1440585
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedApril 8, 2011
DocketA-10346
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 251 P.3d 363 (Leu 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
Leu v. State, 251 P.3d 363, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 23, 2011 WL 1440585 (Ala. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

COATS, Chief Judge.

Byron R. Leu was convicted of fourth-degree domestic violence assault and sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance. 1 He argues that his assault was justified in defense of his daughter, and that the district court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on defense of a third person. He also argues that the domestic violence statutes are unconstitutionally vague on their face and as applied to him. For the reasons discussed below, we reject Leu's claims and affirm his convictions.

Facts and proceedings

On May 23, 2008, Byron Leu was visiting his friend Kenneth Wehmeier. Leu had his eight-month-old daughter with him. The two men were drinking and "hanging out" as they often did. According to Webhmeier, he and Leu had previously been sexually involved, but that involvement had ended some five months earlier, when Leu met his girlfriend.

At some point during this visit Wehmeier made remarks that angered Leu. Wehmeier testified that Leu chased him into the kitchen and pushed him into some cabinets, causing the shelves and their contents to spill to the floor. Leu then held Wehmeier around the neck and punched him in the face several times.

Wehmeier testified that after this assault he called 911 and Leu called his girlfriend to come pick him up. During the three or four minutes it took the police to arrive, Wehmeier tried to get Leu to leave, kicking him in the legs in an effort to get him out the door. Leu refused to leave, telling Webmeier he was waiting for his girifriend and that he did not want to wait outside with the baby.

'When the police arrived, Leu denied assaulting Wehmeier. Initially, he told the police he did not know how Wehmeier was injured, but later he said Wehmeier must have fallen down. The two officers observed that Wehmeier's house was generally tidy but that in the kitchen several pantry shelves and their contents had been upended. The officers also observed that Leu was calm and that Wehmeier was upset and crying. Web-meier's left eye was swollen and he had a cut on his shin. The police arrested Leu, and during a pat-down search they found a small amount of marijuana, a marijuana pipe, and a digital seale in his coat pocket.

Leu was charged with fourth-degree assault and sixth-degree misconduct involving a controlled substance. At trial on those charges, Leu denied assaulting Wehmeier. He said Wehmeier got very drunk and said derogatory things about women and called his daughter names. He said he told Weh-meier he no longer wanted to be friends and that Wehmeier became irate and told him to leave. Leu said that Wehmeier then ran around the house gathering things that belonged to Leu and his daughter and throwing them out the door, including the child's car seat. Leu testified that he retrieved the car seat but when he tried to re-enter the house to get his daughter Wehmeier kicked him and tried to shove him out the door. Leu said he put his left arm around Wehmeier's neck and used his foot to trip him and that they both fell to the floor. Leu speculated that Wehmeier may have received his injuries-the black eye and the cut on his shin-during this fall.

*365 After the close of evidence, Leu asked the court to instruct the jury on defense of a third person (his daughter) and self-defense. District Court Judge John Wolfe refused to give the instruction on defense of a third person but agreed to instruct the jury on self-defense. The jury convicted Leu of both charges.

At sentencing, the court found by a preponderance of the evidence that Leu and Wehmeier had previously engaged in a sexual relationship, and that the assault was therefore a domestic violence assault.

Leu appeals.

Why we conclude that the district court did not err in instructing the jury

At trial Leu testified that the only reason he used force against Wehmeier was to protect his eight-month-old daughter, and he asked Judge Wolfe to instruct the jury on the justification of defense of a third person. Under AS 11.81.340, a person is justified in using force to defend a third person if he reasonably believes the third person would be justified in using that degree of force in self-defense. 2

Leu argues that Judge Wolfe based his refusal to give the defense of a third person instruction on the legally irrelevant consideration that Leu's daughter, at eight months old, was incapable of acting in her own defense. Although we acknowledge some ambiguity in Judge Wolfe's remarks, we do not agree with Leu's interpretation of them. Judge Wolfe ultimately focused on the appropriate question-whether Leu's child "would have been justified in throwing Mr. Wehmeier down to defend herself" 3 -not on whether the child was physically capable of doing so.

To be entitled to an instruction on defense of a third person, Leu had to present "some evidence" that he reasonably believed that his daughter faced imminent harm or threat of harm. 4 In district court, Leu did not offer any evidence to support a reasonable belief that an attack on his daughter was imminent, such that the child would have been justified in using force to defend herself. On appeal, Leu argues that Wehmeier's angry and irrational behavior made it reasonable for him to conclude that Wehmeier was capable of harming his daughter. But even accepting this assertion as true, it does not amount to evidence that Leu reasonably feared that Wehmeier posed an imminent risk to his daughter. 5 Judge Wolfe therefore did not err in refusing Leu's proposed instruction on defense of a third person.

Judge Wolfe concluded that Leu did present sufficient evidence to raise a claim of self-defense because there was evidence that Wehmeier used unlawful force (kicking and shoving) to keep Leu out of the house. Judge Wolfe reasoned that Leu had a right to reenter Wehmeier's house to retrieve his daughter, and that when Wehmeier used foree to keep Leu out of the house, this was arguably an unlawful use of force against Leu, thus entitling Leu to use defensive force against Wehmeier.

Leu challenges Judge Wolfe's ruling on two grounds. First, he argues that the self-defense instruction did not encompass his theory of the case and that Judge Wolfe erroneously concluded that it did. Second, he argues that the court's ruling precluded him from arguing to the jury that he acted to protect his daughter.

Leu's second claim is not supported by the record. Although Leu was not entitled to a defense of others instruction, nothing in the judge's remarks precluded Leu from arguing to the jury that he used force against Weh-meier to protect his daughter, and Leu in fact made that argument.

*366 The problem with Leu's other claim-that Judge Wolfe erred in concluding that the self-defense instruction encompassed his theory of the case-is that Leu failed to object on this ground in district court. 6

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
251 P.3d 363, 2011 Alas. App. LEXIS 23, 2011 WL 1440585, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leu-v-state-alaskactapp-2011.