Pastos v. State

157 P.3d 1066, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 118, 2007 WL 1453934
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMay 18, 2007
DocketA-9425
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 157 P.3d 1066 (Pastos 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
Pastos v. State, 157 P.3d 1066, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 118, 2007 WL 1453934 (Ala. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

In August 2005, William Peter Pastos pleaded no contest to four counts of engaging in unlawful contact with his ex-girlfriend, Kristen Yearsley. On each of the four counts, District Court Judge Sigurd E. Murphy sentenced Pastos to serve 15 days in jail, with another 345 days suspended on condition of Pastos's good behavior during ten years' probation. After imposing this sentence, Judge Murphy ordered Pastos to report to jail the next morning. In the interim, as a condition of release, Judge Murphy ordered Pastos to have no contact, direct or indirect, with Yearsley.

After Pastos left the courtroom, he went to the bank and deposited a check for $2000 that Yearsley had written to him more than three years earlier (as payment for house painting). Based on Pastos's act of negotiating this check, Judge Murphy found that Pastos had engaged in indirect "contact" with Yearsley, thus violating the terms of his release.

Violating the terms of one's release is a crime under AS 11.56.757(a). Based on Pas-tos's commission of this new crime, Judge Murphy revoked Pastos's probation and sentenced him to some of the previously suspended jail time. Pastos now appeals.

The question is whether Pastog's act of depositing Yearsley's check constituted a "contact" with Yearsley in violation of Pas-tos's conditions of release. We conclude that, given the circumstances of this case, Judge Murphy reasonably found that Pastos cashed the check with the knowledge that his action would, in all probability, cause Years-ley emotional distress and fear. Because Pastos acted with this culpable mental state, his act of cashing the check constituted a prohibited "contact" with Yearsley.

Additional underlying facts, and Judge Murphy's ruling

Yearsley wrote the check to Pastos in 2002 in payment for painting her house. According to Yearsley, Pastos refused the check (declaring that he performed the labor out of *1068 friendship), so Yearsley kept the check and put it in a locked box in her house.

When Yearsley presented her viectim-im-pact statement at Pastos's sentencing hearing, she mentioned this check and the fact that she thought the check was still in her possession. (Yearsley told the court that she had last seen the check in the box sometime in the spring of 2005.) In her viectim-impact statement, Yearsley told the court that she now thought that Pastos had refused the check "to make [her] feel obligated", and that she had "[paid] for it time and time again emotionally".

Later, after Pastos cashed the check and the State petitioned Judge Murphy to revoke Pastos's probation, Yearsley told Judge Murphy that she believed that Pastos had broken into her house and stolen the check-and that he cashed the check out of malice and vindictiveness, to hurt her financially, and to show her that he continued to have power over her.

At the probation revocation hearing, Pas-tos offered a different account of what happened to the $2000 check. According to Pastos, he accepted the check when Yearsley wrote it, but he kept the check and did not cash it. Pastos testified that he kept the check clipped behind the visor of his truck from 2002 to 2005. (Two other witnesses corroborated this.) Pastos said he did not wish to cash the check, but he kept it, thinking that he might cash it one day if he really needed the money.

Then, at Pastos's sentencing hearing, Yearsley spoke about the check during her victim-impact statement. According to Pas-tos's version of events, Yearsley's remarks during the viectim-impact statement reminded him that he still had the check-and that the check was a potential source of needed funds, now that he was going to jail. Pastos testified that, as he left the sentencing hearing, he spoke to his ex-wife, Gina Pastos, and asked her what he should do:

Pastos: I looked at the check, [and I asked Gina,] "What do you think? [Do] you think I could cash this?" And she said, "Yeah, I think you can cash it; you did the work." And I said, "Yeah, I think so, too."

Pastos told Judge Murphy that he did not think that depositing the check "could possibly be any kind of contact with [Yearsley]", nor did he think that his act of negotiating the check would cause Yearsley to be afraid of him.

After hearing this conflicting testimony, Judge Murphy found that, contrary to Years-ley's testimony, the check had not been in her possession. Judge Murphy found, instead, that Pastos had had custody of the check at all pertinent times.

Nevertheless, Judge Murphy found that Pastos engaged in indirect contact with Yearsley when he negotiated the check:

The Court: Mr. Pastos ... not only knew of the court's order against any indirect contact, but [he] was aware [that it] clearly prohibited him from doing anything that would intrude upon [Ms. Yearsley]. I also [find], based on the totality of the facts in this case, ... that [Mr. 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 [that] he [also] knew as he left the courtroom and went to cash that check that it would have an effect on [Ms. Years-ley]. And, therefore, [it] 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, ... within hours after being warned not to.... Mr. Pastos was aware of a substantial probability that his conduct violated [his conditions of release] and would have the deleterious effect [that] it apparently has had on the victim.

Why we conclude that Pastos's act of cashing the check constituted a prohibited "contact" with Yearsley

The true source of the problem in this case is the ambiguity of the word "contact".

In our criminal code (Title 11) and in AS 18.65 and 18.66, the chapters of our statutes that govern protective orders in cases of stalking, sexual assault, and domestic vio-lenee, the word "contact" appears in over twenty statutes. Leaving aside those in *1069 stances where the statutory reference is explicitly to "sexual contact" or to "physical contact", there are eight statutes that use the term "contact" to refer to an interaction between two people. 1 But with one exception, these statutes have no pertinent, clarifying definition of exactly what sort of interaction they are referring to. 2

The Alaska Supreme Court noted in Cooper v. Cooper, 144 P.3d 451 (Alaska 2006), that the normal meaning of the verb "contact" is to either physically touch or communicate with another person. Id. at 457-58. And, with the exception of the stalking statute, see AS 11.41.270(b)(8), it appears that our statutes employ the word "contact" in this normal sense. 3

In Cooper, our supreme court held that the word "contact" is used in this normal sense in AS 18.66.100(c)(@2)-the statute governing protective orders for victims of domestic violence. Id. at 458.

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Related

Pastos v. State
194 P.3d 387 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
157 P.3d 1066, 2007 Alas. App. LEXIS 118, 2007 WL 1453934, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pastos-v-state-alaskactapp-2007.