State of Iowa v. Dustin James Witt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedOctober 14, 2015
Docket14-1551
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Dustin James Witt (State of Iowa v. Dustin James Witt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Dustin James Witt, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 14-1551 Filed October 14, 2015

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

DUSTIN JAMES WITT, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Wapello County, Annette J.

Scieszinski, Judge.

Dustin James Witt appeals from his conviction of willful injury causing

bodily injury. AFFIRMED.

Mark C. Smith, State Appellate Defender, and Stephan J. Japuntich,

Assistant Appellate Defender, for appellant.

Thomas J. Miller, Attorney General, Kelli Huser, Assistant Attorney

General, Lisa Holl, County Attorney, and Gary Oldenburger, Assistant County

Attorney, for appellee.

Considered by Vaitheswaran, P.J., and Potterfield and McDonald, JJ. 2

POTTERFIELD, Judge.

Dustin James Witt appeals from his conviction of willful injury causing

bodily injury. He contends the district court erred in denying his motions for

judgement of acquittal “as the evidence of the cause of the injuries was

ambiguous at best and the complaining witness’[s] testimony was ‘impossible

and absurd and self-contradictory.’” Because substantial evidence supports the

conviction, we affirm.

I. Background Facts.

Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, a rational

jury could find the following.

James Seamans testified that on August 4, 2013, he and his two sons

were pulling up in front of their house on Tuttle St. and starting to get out of their

vehicle. They heard screaming approximately two blocks down the street and

noticed a SUV travelling at a high rate of speed. When the SUV got within a

block of their house where there was “a pretty good little dip there on the side

road,” the SUV hit the dip, “went up in the air, came down, bottomed out, [and]

shot sparks out from under it.” The vehicle turned left, and Seamans heard a

yelp. He and his sons walked toward the intersection and “noticed a young lady

sat up out of the ditch by the cornfield there. We took off running up there, and

she started screaming at us that he was beating her.”1 At that point, the men

saw Witt climbing out of the vehicle and yelling at the woman to get back in the

vehicle before he hit her again. The left side of the woman’s face was swollen

1 Seamans also stated the woman told him at some point she jumped from the vehicle to get away. Witt argued at trial the injuries were caused by the jump from the vehicle rather than by his assault. 3

and bruised. Seamans intervened, and Witt “wanted to fight us all.” While Witt

and the men were talking, the woman got in the vehicle and drove away. Witt

“started screaming that she was suicidal and how is he going to get home.”

Seamans’s wife called the police while Seamans spoke with Witt.

At about dusk on August 4, Jeffrey Griffiths was at his home (at the Mary

and Tuttle intersection) standing by his vehicle when he heard a neighbor yell

“slow down.” He looked up to see a SUV-type vehicle “bottoming out and it flew

by me.” He saw the driver, who appeared to be male, “make a swinging motion

towards the passenger.”

Officer Michael Sieren received a dispatch to return a call to Sarah Steine

at a hospital concerning an assault. Officer Sieren called Steine who told him

she had been in the process of leaving Witt’s residence (with whom she had

been having a relationship) at about 9 p.m. when she realized she did not have

the keys to her vehicle. Before she could get out of the vehicle, Witt grabbed her

by the hair and body, jerked her out of the car, and repeatedly punched her. She

told the officer Witt dragged her to the house but she had gotten away and had

driven to her husband’s residence.

Officer Sieren learned the next day from another officer that they had been

in contact with Witt the previous day in response to a report at about 9 p.m. of a

vehicle that was driving very recklessly. The officer responding to that August 4

report came in contact with Witt. Witt had been in a vehicle with Steine but she

left before the officers arrived. Witt was extremely intoxicated and

uncooperative; he would provide no information and was arrested for public

intoxication. 4

Officer Sieren contacted Steine again on August 21. He stated he had

been given some “additional information of a different location that some of this

had happened,” and Steine replied that she had been remembering more things

and offered information corroborating what happened on Tuttle. Officer Sieren

testified, “Steine stated that due to being hit in the head, she believed she was

just remembering more things as time went on.”

The nurse who treated Steine at the hospital, Melinda Coleman, testified

Steine stated she had been assaulted. Steine named Witt as the assailant and

said, “‘He kept punching me. He kept punching me.’ And when I said—and she

said, ‘And he drug me, he slapped me, he punched me.’ She just kept saying,

‘He punched me.’” Coleman noted injuries to Steine’s face “mainly around the

eye and nose,” injuries to her neck, and numerous abrasions, bruises, and

lacerations on the left and back side of her body. Coleman testified, “She said

that he had drug her out of her vehicle across the yard [on] a paved sidewalk, so

as I’m jotting this down, her injuries were consistent with what she was telling me

happened to her.”

Steine testified about “scuffling” with Witt at his house, about trying to get

the keys to her vehicle but Witt got in the vehicle before she did. She stated,

Everything is kind of bits and pieces. So I was on the ground, and he got in my vehicle. And I had got up and gotten into the passenger seat because I didn’t want him to take it. That was my only way to get out of there. Q. You said that you were on the ground. How did you get on the ground? A. I don’t know if I fell or if I was knocked down. I’m not sure. Q. So then you got into the passenger side of the truck; right? A. Correct. Q. And what happened at that point? A. He started driving all through town. I’m not sure where we were. We were running 5

stop signs. He was trying to argue with everybody. He didn’t have his lights on. At some point we had hit a dip so hard in my truck that we had caught air, and I remember my head hitting the top of the car like the roof. . . . After that he repeatedly punched me in my eye and my face, and I have some goose eggs on my forehead from him punching me. .... Q. Now at that point as he’s driving along and hitting you, do you remember anything specifically about where he was hitting you and how that was happening? A. He was punching me on my left side. My right side was towards the passenger door so he couldn’t really reach it, and it was just, like, I want to call them rabbit punches, because it kept coming and coming and coming. It was fast, and I just remember, like, going like this and telling him, like, “You’re hitting me,” hoping that it would stop. And then everything just kind of felt and sounded like it was under water. Like I remember feeling like my face was going to explode. Like I could almost feel the bones breaking, and I felt my forehead swell up. I just remember feeling massive amounts of pain in my face, and he was also punching me in my ribs, and it was—it was my face.

She testified she “somehow managed to drive” to her husband’s. “I had asked

him to lay down because I was tired, and he jumped out of bed and took me over

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Related

State v. Mitchell
568 N.W.2d 493 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1997)
State v. Truesdell
679 N.W.2d 611 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 2004)
State v. Adney
639 N.W.2d 246 (Court of Appeals of Iowa, 2001)

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State of Iowa v. Dustin James Witt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-iowa-v-dustin-james-witt-iowactapp-2015.