Mahan v. State

51 P.3d 962, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 148, 2002 WL 1729533
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 26, 2002
DocketA-7662
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 51 P.3d 962 (Mahan 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
Mahan v. State, 51 P.3d 962, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 148, 2002 WL 1729533 (Ala. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Miriam M. Mahan kept over 130 animals on her property, including 9 horses, 2 llamas, 10 cows, 18 sheep, 1 goat, 34 pigs, 21 dogs, 10 cats, 18 assorted birds, and a number of rabbits. At the request of some of Mahan’s relatives, a private organization called Alaska Equine Rescue entered Mahan’s property to check on the condition of these animals. They found that the animals were in ill-health and were not adequately cared for. With the aid of the Alaska State Troopers, Equine Rescue removed the animals from Mahan’s property and found foster homes for them.

Mahan was ultimately convicted of one consolidated count of cruelty to animals, AS *964 11.61.140(a)(l)-(2), for neglecting these animals. She now appeals her conviction and certain aspects of her sentence.

Mahan raises a number of claims on appeal. For the reasons explained here, we conclude that none of these claims has merit, and we therefore affirm Mahan’s conviction and sentence.

Mahan’s request for a writ of assistance

After Alaska Equine Rescue rescued the animals from Mahan’s property, it placed them with various “foster families”. When Mahan’s attorney prepared for trial, she arranged through Equine Rescue to visit Ma-han’s animals and the families caring for them. However, the defense attorney’s initial visits did not go well, and the foster families (apparently through Equine Rescue) resisted further contacts. Ultimately, Equine Rescue agreed to further visits, but only if the defense attorney refrained from pressuring the foster families to answer a questionnaire that the defense attorney had prepared.

At this point, Mahan’s attorney asked the district court to issue a writ of assistance — a court order directing the state troopers to accompany the defense attorney on her visits to the foster families. The defense attorney conceded that the foster families were willing to allow her to visit their property and to photograph Mahan’s animals, but the defense attorney claimed that the foster families were unwilling to answer her questionnaire. Thus, the defense attorney told the court, she needed police assistance to get the foster families to answer her questionnaire.

A “writ of assistance” is a court order directing law enforcement officers to assist a litigant in enforcing a judgement or decree. Black’s Law Dictionary defines “writ of assistance” as limited to enforcement of decrees adjudicating title to real property 1 , but Alaska cases use the term in a broader sense.

For example, one Alaska case speaks of a writ of assistance to aid a trustee in supervising and preventing the removal or destruction of assets that were the subject of a pre-judgement attachment. 2 Several other supreme court decisions refer to writs of assistance issued to enforce child custody and visitation decrees 3 , and one case speaks of a writ of assistance issued to aid the Division of Family and Youth Services in entering a home to investigate a child’s welfare. 4

But although .Alaska cases may use the term “writ of assistance” in a broader sense than its historical origins, the gist of a writ of assistance remains the same: it is a court order directing law enforcement officers to assist a person in enforcing a prior court order when there is reason to believe that enforcement efforts may be met with forcible opposition.

Thus, to determine whether Mahan’s attorney was entitled to a writ of assistance to help her force the foster families to answer her questionnaire, the primary question to ask is whether Mahan’s attorney was legally entitled to demand answers to her questionnaire in the first place. The answer is no. A person has no legal duty to answer an attorney’s questions unless the questions are posed after the person has been sworn as a witness at a deposition or court hearing.

If Mahan’s attorney believed that her client would be denied a fair trial unless the foster families were forced to answer the questions in her questionnaire, she could have asked the district court to order the deposition of these families under Alaska Criminal Rule 15(a). But unless and until the court ordered a deposition and the foster families were properly subpoenaed to attend that deposition, the families were under no legal obligation to respond to the questionnaire — and, thus, the defense attorney was not entitled to police assistance to force or intimidate the families to answer her ques *965 tions. We therefore uphold the district court’s denial of Mahan’s request for a writ of assistance.

Mahan’s request for a change of venue

Mahan asked the district court to change the venue of her trial because of the publicity that her ease had generated locally. The court chose to defer its decision on this matter until it could assess the results of jury selection. 5 After hearing the voir dire examinations of many prospective jurors, the district court denied Mahan’s motion.

On appeal, Mahan does not give a single example of the publicity that she complains of. Even her trial court motion is unsupported by evidence. Instead, Mahan’s attorney simply made the assertion that Mahan’s case had been discussed in “newspaper articles in the Peninsula Clarion and Anchorage Daily News” and that “KTUU-TV ha[d] run numerous stories involving this case and Equine Rescue”. Mahan’s attorney did not describe the content or tenor of this media coverage except to say that Kenai District Attorney Dwayne McConnell “[was] quoted in the Peninsula Clarion article” and that “Lieutenant Bowman, [the] Detachment Commander [of the] Soldotna Post [of the Alaska State Troopers] was featured in one of the early KTUU-TV broadcasts”.

On appeal, Mahan asserts that her jury could not have been fair because, of the 32 prospective jurors summoned to court for her ease, 16 had been exposed to pre-trial publicity about the case. But exposure to pre-trial publicity does not equal bias. The question is whether the pre-trial publicity prejudiced these 16 prospective jurors against Mahan to such án extent that they would be unable to judge her case fairly. Generally, these 16 people testified that they had read or heard about the case only once or twice, near the time when the animals were removed from Mahan’s custody.

Moreover, all but one of these 16 prospective jurors were excused, either for cause or through peremptory challenges. Even if we accepted Mahan’s assertion that these 15 excused jurors were prejudiced against her as a result of their exposure to pre-trial publicity, this would not require a change of venue. As we explained in Cheely v. State, 861 P.2d 1168 (Alaska App.1993), “the question is not how many biased prospective jurors were identified and excused; rather, the question is whether there is substantial reason to doubt the impartiality of the jurors who remained after the selection process was complete.”

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Bluebook (online)
51 P.3d 962, 2002 Alas. App. LEXIS 148, 2002 WL 1729533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahan-v-state-alaskactapp-2002.