Matter of D.A.

2012 ND 132
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 2012
Docket20110358
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2012 ND 132 (Matter of D.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Matter of D.A., 2012 ND 132 (N.D. 2012).

Opinion

Filed 7/12/12 by Clerk of Supreme Court

IN THE SUPREME COURT

STATE OF NORTH DAKOTA

2012 ND 140

State of North Dakota, Plaintiff and Appellee

v.

Gale Lee Bruce, Defendant and Appellant

No. 20110360

Appeal from the District Court of Cass County, East Central Judicial District, the Honorable Steven E. McCullough, Judge.

AFFIRMED.

Opinion of the Court by Sandstrom, Justice.

Reid A. Brady (on brief) and Kimberlee J. Hegvik (argued), Assistant State’s Attorneys, Courthouse, P.O. Box 2806, Fargo, N.D. 58108-2806, for plaintiff and appellee.

Monty G. Mertz, Fargo Public Defender Office, 912 Third Avenue South, Fargo, N.D. 58103-1707, for defendant and appellant.

State v. Bruce

Sandstrom, Justice.

[¶1] Gale Bruce appeals from a judgment entered after the district court convicted him of menacing under N.D.C.C. § 12.1-17-05.  We affirm the judgment, concluding the State presented sufficient evidence at trial for the court to find Bruce guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

I

[¶2] After a May 29, 2011, altercation with Fargo police officers in downtown Fargo, the State charged Bruce with menacing under N.D.C.C. § 12.1-17-05, which states:  “A person is guilty of a class A misdemeanor if he knowingly places or attempts to place another human being in fear by menacing him with imminent serious bodily injury.”  The State alleged Bruce knowingly clenched his fists, threatened to hurt and hospitalize two police officers, and stepped toward the officers, thereby causing the officers to fear imminent serious bodily injury.

[¶3] Bruce waived his right to a jury trial, and at a bench trial, the district court heard testimony from three Fargo police officers—Jeremiah Ferris, Jason Moszer, and Patrick Fylling.  Officer Ferris testified that he and Officer Moszer responded to a dispatch call about a possible trespasser near a store in downtown Fargo on May 29, 2011.  Officer Ferris testified he and Officer Moszer arrived at the scene in separate, marked police cars and they were both wearing police uniforms.  Officer Fylling testified he arrived at the scene shortly after the other two officers.  Officer Ferris and Officer Moszer testified they initially approached Bruce in an alleyway, and Bruce stated, “Oh, there’s two of you.  This is gonna be fun.”  Officer Ferris testified he believed Bruce was intoxicated because his speech was slurred and he was “somewhat unsteady on his feet.”  Officer Moszer testified he also believed Bruce was intoxicated and agitated and he saw a plastic liquor bottle protruding from Bruce’s pocket.  Both officers testified Bruce used profanities, he walked away from them after they tried to talk with him, and he pounded his chest with his clenched fists.  Both officers also testified Bruce said he would “kick [their] ass” and “put [them] in the hospital.”  Officer Ferris testified Bruce was standing about ten to fifteen feet from him when Bruce made those statements and he did not draw a weapon on Bruce.  Officer Moszer testified he drew his Taser but did not use it.  Officer Ferris testified Bruce had not then violated any laws in their presence, and after Bruce took a step toward the officers, Bruce complied with Officer Ferris’s instructions to back off.

[¶4] All three officers testified Bruce then ran across the street and punched a bank sign.  Officer Ferris testified he and Officer Moszer followed Bruce across the street, and Officer Ferris “br[ought] [Bruce] to the ground” and arrested him with the assistance of the other officers after Bruce took “steps towards [him] closing in on [him] fairly fast with clenched fists.”  Officer Fylling testified that after Bruce hit the bank sign, he turned toward Officer Ferris and Officer Moszer, but Officer Fylling did not know whether Bruce “actually made any forward advances.”  All three officers testified that Bruce did not have any weapons in his clenched fists.  Officer Ferris and Officer Moszer testified they knew Bruce had a reputation for being violent with police officers and they knew Bruce was taller than each of them.  Officer Ferris testified that when Bruce took steps toward him, he was afraid and felt as though “[Bruce] was going to follow through on every comment that he had made.  That he was going to kick our ass.  That he was going to put us in the hospital.”  Officer Moszer testified that he believed Bruce would “put [them] in the hospital” and “break a bone [or] cause unconsciousness.”

[¶5] After the State presented its case, Bruce moved for a judgment of acquittal under N.D.R.Crim.P. 29(a), which the district court denied.  After Bruce rested his case without introducing any evidence or calling a witness to testify, the court found him guilty of menacing, stating, in part:

The officers have testified that they were dispatched into the area on a possible trespass call.  They observed the defendant near the area and he was the person that was identified to them as the possible trespasser.  They arrived at the scene and made contact with the defendant.  They identified themselves as Fargo Police Department—or at least Officer Ferris testified he did.  I think Officer Moszer wasn’t certain if they identified themselves as Fargo police officers.  In any event, they both arrived in marked squad cars and were both in full uniform—patrol uniform.  This happened about 9:30 in the evening and it was fairly dark in the area.  Although that is a fairly well lit area.

Upon initial approach, defendant made some sort of a comment that, oh, there’s two of you.  This is going to be fun.  Nothing in there that would create the officers—a fear of the officers of being placed in imminent serious bodily injury.  The defendant told them that he hadn’t trespassed and walked away from them.  Although they did note indicia of intoxication including slurred speech and unsteady gate.  One of the officers actually saw a container of alcohol.

They followed the defendant—I think at this point the defendant thinks he should have just been allowed to leave.  I think that’s kind of the argument here.  That the officers really are the ones who escalated the situation.  But, I mean, that’s just simply not good police practice.  There’s no way officers can simply allow someone that they believe that may be a suspect to a crime just because he said he didn’t do it to just walk away without doing some more follow up.

In any event, that’s not to say that the officers couldn’t have handled this with a little more tact.  They perhaps could have.  However, the defendant got agitated by being pursued by the officers.  Probably wouldn’t have had he not been intoxicated is my guess, but in any event he did.  At some point in time he pounded on his chest with clenched fists.  At another time he pounded on a sign near the State Bank drive through.  He said that he would, quote, kick their ass and put them in a hospital more than once.  At one time he took a step [to]wards them.  The officer said step back and he did.  A second time he took a step towards them with clenched fists and did not move back.  The officers attempted to get control over him and ultimately wrestled him to the ground.

The defense makes an argument throughout the course of trial that you had two officers here and they were both fully armed and both had tasers.  One of them testified—or maybe both of them testified they had pepper spray.

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Related

State v. Bruce
2012 ND 140 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 2012)

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2012 ND 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-da-nd-2012.