State of Washington v. Cristian Lupastean

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 6, 2021
Docket37394-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Cristian Lupastean (State of Washington v. Cristian Lupastean) 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. Cristian Lupastean, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED MAY 6, 2021 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 37394-1-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION CRISTIAN LUPASTEAN, ) ) Petitioner. )

FEARING, J. — We must decide whether a juror’s incomplete and perhaps

misleading answer to a question during voir dire constituted juror misconduct and

whether any misconduct warrants a new trial for petitioner Cristian Lupastean. Unlike

the settings addressed in most other reported decisions, the parties discovered the

incomplete answer at the beginning of trial, and the trial court addressed the potential

juror misconduct. We conclude that the trial court did not abuse its discretion when No. 37394-1-III State v. Lupastean

refusing to dismiss the juror, and we affirm Lupastean’s convictions. The juror did not

intentionally mislead the parties, and the juror held no disqualifying bias.

FACTS

The jury needed to decide whether petitioner Cristian Lupastean or Erika Harvey

drove a truck when Trooper Antonio Olivas spotted the truck on January 27, 2018, at

2:50 p.m., on I-90 in Adams County. Both Harvey and Lupastean then occupied the

truck. Lupastean’s father owned the trucking company that owned the truck. Harvey had

a valid commercial driver’s license, but Lupastean’s license was suspended.

During trial both Erika Harvey and Cristian Lupastean testified that Harvey drove

the truck. Harvey averred that she exited the interstate to use the restroom at a gas station

because she felt sick. She saw the emergency lights of Trooper Antonio Olivas’s vehicle

only after she took the exit ramp and brought the truck to a stop near the gas station. She

had not earlier noticed the presented of the law enforcement vehicle.

Trooper Antonio Olivas works for the Washington State Patrol’s commercial

vehicle division. At the identified time, Trooper Olivas observed the truck, in which

Erika Harvey and Cristian Lupastean traveled, pass him. Olivas testified that Lupastean,

not Harvey, drove the truck.

Trooper Antonio Olivas decided to stop the truck for a routine inspection, and he

turned on his emergency lights. The vehicle exited the freeway onto a ramp and

continued toward a gas station. Trooper Olivas grew curious as to why the truck did not

2 No. 37394-1-III State v. Lupastean

stop, and he peered into the truck’s mirrors to observe the driver. He observed Lupastean

and Harvey switch seats, with Harvey assuming the driver’s seat. At the time the two

switched seats, Olivas estimates that the truck traveled at 10 miles per hour toward gas

station fuel pumps fifty yards away. Trooper Olivas testified that a vehicle of that size

traveling at ten miles an hour could be dangerous.

PROCEDURE

The State of Washington charged Cristian Lupastean, in district court, with driving

while license revoked in the first degree, driving without a commercial license, and

reckless driving.

At the beginning of voir dire, the trial judge listed the three charges and read the

elements of each charge. He informed the jury that the State charged Cristian Lupastean

with driving while having a revoked license in the first degree:

A person commits the crime of driving while license revoked in the first degree when he or she, having been found by the Department of Licensing, to be a habitual traffic offender, drives a motor vehicle while an Order of Revocation is in effect.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 45. He then read the elements of the second charge, driving

without a commercial driver’s license. The trial court declared that a person commits this

crime when, “at the time of the driving, he or she does not have a valid commercial

driver’s license.” CP at 46. Finally, the court explained that the third charge for reckless

3 No. 37394-1-III State v. Lupastean

driving occurs when a driver “drives a motor vehicle in willful or wanton disregard for

the safety of persons or property.” CP at 46.

After listing the charges and their respective elements, the district court asked all

members of the venire:

Have any of you had any personal experience with a similar or related type of case or incident as a victim, witness, or accused?

CP at 49. One potential juror responded affirmatively, and the rest responded in the

negative.

The district court next asked:

Do any of you have a close friend or relative who has had experience with a similar or related type of case or incident? And that would be as a victim, witness, or accused.

CP at 51. Three jurors responded affirmatively. One commented that a brother-in-law

was in an accident when the other driver was unlicensed. Another noted that his brother

had his driver’s license revoked and the brother was arrested for driving while under the

influence of alcohol (DUI). The third venire person recounted that a child had received a

DUI. The district court noted on the record negative responses from other jurors to the

question.

The State questioned venire juror 14 on her ability to evaluate a case based on

testimony. Defense counsel exercised all available peremptory challenges. Venire juror

number 14 was seated as juror number 6. We hereafter refer to this juror as juror 6.

4 No. 37394-1-III State v. Lupastean

After the district court swore in the jury, the district court ordered a brief recess.

After the recess, defense counsel informed the trial court that the husband of juror 6

approached him and told him that his car had been hit by an unlicensed driver.

According to counsel:

He [the juror’s husband] asked if I was an attorney, and then proceeded to ask about an incident that he had been involved in with regards to getting hit by an unlicensed driver in an accident, and his wife is on the jury.

CP at 84. Counsel explained that the husband wanted to recoup his losses in the accident

with the unlicensed driver. According to defense counsel, he informed the man that he

could not speak with him during the trial.

After the disclosure by defense counsel, the district court summoned juror 6 into

the courtroom for questioning. The following colloquy ensued:

THE COURT: And it has come to the Court’s attention that apparently your husband has been involved in an automobile accident? JUROR NO. 6: Yeah, this was about a month ago, but it didn’t go to court or nothing. THE COURT: Okay. And as far as that accident, do you think that would affect your ability to be fair and impartial in this case? JUROR NO. 6: Oh, yeah. THE COURT: You think it would affect you? JUROR NO. 6: No, it wouldn’t affect me. I would be fair. THE COURT: Okay. Be a fair juror? JUROR NO. 6: No, yeah, I would be fair. THE COURT: All right. Any further questions from the State or the defense? MS. RUSSELL [the State’s attorney]: No. Thank you, Your Honor. MR. KIRKHAM [defense counsel]: Yes, Your Honor. Ms. Castro, what do you know about that accident?

5 No. 37394-1-III State v. Lupastean

JUROR NO. 6: Well, I wasn’t with him when it happened. MR. KIRKHAM: Okay. JUROR NO. 6: But he was dropping off my grandkids at school, and when he dropped off the last one—I’m just thinking in my head of what he told me—that he was coming home and he was making a left turn and there was an oncoming car and it hit him. MR. KIRKHAM: Okay. Do you know if the other driver was cited or not? JUROR NO. 6: The other driver didn’t have his driver’s license. MR. KIRKHAM: Okay.

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