Pastos v. State

194 P.3d 387, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 151, 2008 WL 4682648
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 2008
DocketS-12745
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 194 P.3d 387 (Pastos v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pastos v. State, 194 P.3d 387, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 151, 2008 WL 4682648 (Ala. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

William Pastos pled no contest to four counts of violating a protective order by engaging in unlawful contact with his former girlfriend, K.Y. The district court directed him to report to state custody the following morning. Until that time, Pastos was to have no contact, direct or indirect, with K.Y. After he left the courtroom, Pastos went to a bank and deposited a $2,000 check that KY. had written him more than three years earlier. Based on Pastos's act of negotiating this check, the district court found that Pastos violated a condition of his release by indirectly contacting K.Y. Pastos served part of his previously suspended sentence and was later released on parole. He appealed the district court's finding of a no-contact violation to the court of appeals, which affirmed. We granted his petition for review. We reverse because the mere act of negotiating a single check, without more, does not constitute "contact" proscribed by a no-contact order.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

William Pastos and K.Y. 1 were in a romantic relationship for approximately two years. In May 2002, near the outset of their relationship, Pastos offered to paint K.Y.'s home. After the painting was complete, K.Y. wrote a check for $2,000 payable to the order of Pastos. 2 Pastos took the check but declined to negotiate it at that time. He attached it to the visor of his truck where it remained for over three years.

The relationship deteriorated, and K.Y. petitioned for and received a domestic violence protective order in July 2004. The protective order was extended in February 2005. In April 2005 the State charged Pastos with fifty-three violations of the protective order for sending e-mails to one of K.Y.'s e-mail accounts. On August 10, 2005, District Court Judge Sigurd E. Murphy accepted Pastos's plea of no contest to four counts of unlawful contact in the first degree. On each count Pastos was sentenced to 360 days of prison, with 345 days suspended. The sentences were consecutive, giving Pastos sixty days to serve with 1,880 days suspended. 3 Further, there was a ten-year probation period during which time Pastos was to have no contact-direct or indirect-with K.Y. or her mother, KK. When given the option of entering directly into state custody or reporting the next morning, Pastos elected to report the next morning. The court expressly stated that, pending his incarceration, Pastos was subject to the terms of his bail which included, among other things, no contact-direct or indirect-with K.Y. or her mother, KK.

During the plea hearing, KY. read a lengthy victim impact statement. KY. brought up the time Pastos painted her home and asserted that Pastos "wouldn't accept the check." She claimed that the check was still in her possession. This assertion was incorrect. 4 On August 10, the day of his *390 sentencing and the day before he was to report to state custody, Pastos negotiated the check, depositing the amount in his bank account. KY. learned that Pastos had negotiated the check after receiving notification from her bank that her checking account was overdrawn. The State filed a petition to revoke Pastos's probation, 5 arguing that Pas-tos's act of negotiating the check constituted prohibited "contact" with K.Y.

In September 2005 Judge Murphy held hearings regarding the State's petition. K.Y. testified that she felt "violated" by Pastos's act. She expressed her belief that Pastos broke into her home and took the check from her lockbox. 6 Pastos stated that K.Y.'s mentioning of the check during her victim impact statement caused him to remember that it was still in his possession. Pastos explained that he negotiated the check due to financial difficulties and that, after consulting with his ex-wife, he decided to cash the check because he "did the work." He testified that he thought KY. knew that he possessed the check.

The district court concluded that Pastos's act of negotiating the check violated the no-contact term of his probation. 7 The court found that Pastos

knew exactly what he was doing by cashing the check, that it wasn't a matter of just wanting the money because he was impoverished, which I assume to be true, but he knew as he left the courtroom and went to cash that check that it would have an effect on [K.Y.], and, therefore, was an indirect contact. This is not an innocent cashing of a check. It is a purposeful action on his part to affect adversely the victim in this case, and to do so within hours after being warned not to makes the probation violation even more egregious.... Mr. Pastos was aware of a substantial probability that his conduct violated the order and would have the deleterious effect it apparently has had on the victim.

Under AS 11.81.900(a)(2) the court's use of the phrase "aware of a substantial probability" should be read as meaning that Pastos acted "knowingly." The court ordered that Pastos restore the $2,000 to KY., plus the five dollar overdraft fee. The court suggested, however, that Pastos could pursue a civil action against K.Y. based on a contract theory that he painted K.Y.'s home in exchange for $2,000. The court also revoked part of Pastos's probation, and sentenced him to 180 days of the previously suspended jail time (forty-five days for each no-contest count).

Pastos appealed the district court's finding of a no-contact violation to the court of appeals. The court of appeals affirmed the district court's finding that Pastos's act of negotiating the check constituted "contact" with KY. 8 The court of appeals reasoned that "contact" requires knowing communication, direct or indirect. 9 Given the cireum-stances of this case, the court of appeals concluded that "Judge Murphy reasonably found that Pastos cashed the check with the knowledge that his action would, in all probability, cause [K.Y.] emotional distress and fear. Because Pastos acted with this culpable mental state, his act of cashing the check constituted prohibited 'contact' with [K.Y.]." 10

We granted Pastos's petition for review.

*391 III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review findings of fact for clear error. 11 We review legal questions de novo, 12 "adopt{ing] the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy." 13

IV. DISCUSSION

Alaska Statute 12.30.040 governs a defendant's release after conviction. This statute, which incorporates pre-trial terms of release from AS 12.30.020, 14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P.3d 387, 2008 Alas. LEXIS 151, 2008 WL 4682648, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pastos-v-state-alaska-2008.