State Of Washington, V. Courtney Humphrey Felton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 26, 2024
Docket57813-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Courtney Humphrey Felton (State Of Washington, V. Courtney Humphrey Felton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Of Washington, V. Courtney Humphrey Felton, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

March 26, 2024 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 57813-1-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION COURTNEY HUMPHREY FELTON,

Appellant.

PRICE, J. — Courtney H. Felton appeals his conviction for second degree assault arguing

that the trial court erred by refusing to give jury instructions on self-defense and defense of others.1

Felton also argues that the trial court erred by imposing a $500 crime victim penalty assessment

(VPA) and a $100 DNA collection fee as part of his sentence. We conclude the trial court erred

by failing to give proper jury instructions on self-defense but the error was harmless. The superior

court did not err by refusing to give a jury instruction on defense of others. Accordingly, we affirm

Felton’s second degree assault conviction but remand to the trial court to strike the legal financial

obligations (LFOs) that are no longer authorized by the legislature.

FACTS

In the early morning hours of May 10, 2021, Felton broke into a townhouse where Michael

Taylor and Shanerica Carter lived. Felton was with his sister, Samantha Felton, and Samantha’s2

1 Felton was also convicted of first degree burglary, but he does not appeal his first degree burglary conviction. 2 We refer to Samantha by her first name to avoid confusion. We mean no disrespect. No. 57813-1-II

adult daughter, Shavante Duke. Felton beat up Taylor while inside the townhouse. The State

charged Felton with first degree burglary and second degree assault. The case proceeded to a jury

trial.

Carter, Taylor, and several responding officers testified at trial. The parties had a long-

established relationship because Carter and Samantha had been friends for many years. Samantha

was god mother to Carter’s daughter and Carter was close to all of Samantha’s children. However,

after Carter met Taylor, her relationship with Samantha began to deteriorate. Despite this,

Samantha continued to have a good relationship with Carter’s daughter.

As for the specific events on May 10, Carter testified that in the early morning hours, she

was awoken by Samantha throwing glass bottles at the windows of her townhouse. After Carter

woke up Taylor, the two headed down their stairs to the first floor. At that moment, Felton,

Samantha, and Duke kicked in the front door. The kick broke the deadbolt and the door frame

came off.

Carter testified that Felton was the first person through the broken door. He first went into

the garage for a few seconds, but then started up the stairs to confront Taylor and Carter. Carter

testified that Felton and Duke began punching and kicking Taylor. Duke was also hitting Taylor

with a sharp metal shelving bracket. When Carter tried to help Taylor, Duke pushed her back up

the stairs and onto the floor.

Taylor testified that Carter woke him up in the early morning hours because she heard a

noise outside. Taylor looked out the window and saw Samantha and Duke outside. Then Taylor

called 911. While Taylor was on the phone with 911, he heard banging on the front door. As

Taylor began going down the stairs, “the door busted open.” 4 Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP)

2 No. 57813-1-II

at 323. Felton then approached Taylor on the stairs, grabbed him by the shirt, and said, “Let’s go.”

4 VRP at 324. Taylor testified that he thought he was going to be killed, so he hit Felton. Taylor

and Felton “got into a tussle,” with Taylor ending up on the floor. While Taylor was on the floor,

Felton kept repeatedly punching Taylor. Taylor believed other people were hitting him as well.

On cross-examination, Taylor was asked if he got between Carter and Duke at any time

during the incident. Taylor responded no, but that he had gotten between them during an earlier

incident that occurred prior to May 10. Taylor was asked again if he had told the police that he

jumped between Duke and Carter when they arrived after the May 10 incident. Taylor again said

he was referring to the prior incident.

Officer Cory Correia, who responded to the townhouse on the early morning of May 10,

also testified. On cross-examination, Officer Correia testified that Taylor had told him that

morning that Duke was screaming at Carter and pushed Carter to the ground, which caused Taylor

to intervene by jumping between them.

There was some dispute at trial about why Samantha, Felton, and Duke were at the

townhouse on May 10—specifically, whether they were looking for Samantha’s son, Aviontay.

Aviontay was around 21 years old in May 2021. Aviontay was cared for by Samantha because he

had special needs related to seizures.

A few months before the May 10 incident, Aviontay had run away from Samantha’s home

and gone to Carter’s townhouse. When Aviontay arrived, Carter called Samantha, who then came

and got him.

During trial, Carter maintained that she did not have any information that Samantha,

Felton, and Duke were looking for Aviontay, although she did testify Duke asked where her

3 No. 57813-1-II

brother was when she came into the townhouse. On cross-examination, Carter was asked about

several previous statements she had made that indicated Samantha and Duke were looking for

Aviontay.

Felton did not testify at trial.

Felton proposed a self-defense jury instruction for the second degree assault count.

Felton’s proposed instruction stated, in relevant part:

The use of force upon or toward the person of another is lawful when used by a person who reasonably believes that he is about to be injured or by someone lawfully aiding a person who he reasonably believes is about to be injured in preventing or attempting to prevent an offense against the person, and when the force is not more than is necessary.

Clerk’s Papers at 124.

In the discussion with the trial court, Felton asserted there was evidence presented at trial

supporting both self-defense and the defense of others:

[FELTON]: Like Mr. Taylor saying he threw the first punch.

[COURT]: After his door was kicked in and people came charging up the stairs.

[FELTON]: Well, that’s his argument but --

[COURT]: That’s not just the argument. That’s supported by both direct and circumstantial evidence.

[FELTON]: There is evidence for that. I’m not arguing like that is what [Taylor] said happened, but he says that he threw the first punch, that Mr. Felton -- the evidence shows that Samantha and [Duke] were the two people outside doing things and that’s what he was concerned about. He says he threw the first punch, and that should create a situation of self-defense with Mr. Felton.

Also, [Taylor] denied having said it to the officer, but the officer wrote in his report and was refreshed -- his recollection was refreshed that in the moment after -- when the first Officer Correia arrived and was talking to Mr. Taylor about what happened, before he had a chance to get his story straight, he said that he jumped -- that Mr. Taylor jumped between the two women who were screaming at each other, and Ms.

4 No. 57813-1-II

Duke was screaming at his girlfriend, and he inserted himself between them and intervened, and then Mr. Felton removed Mr. Taylor from that situation, and so it’s reasonable to think that -- well, an argument can be made that defense of others, that Mr. Felton was protecting his niece and sister from Mr. Taylor and the others inside that apartment.

5 VRP at 489-90.

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State Of Washington, V. Courtney Humphrey Felton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-washington-v-courtney-humphrey-felton-washctapp-2024.