State of Washington v. Eduardo Chavez

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 7, 2017
Docket34334-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Eduardo Chavez (State of Washington v. Eduardo Chavez) 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. Eduardo Chavez, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED SEPTEMBER 7, 2017 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 34334-1-111 Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) EDUARDO CHAVEZ, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

KORSMO, J. -Eduardo Chavez appeals from a conviction for second degree rape,

arguing that the trial court erred in excluding evidence concerning the young victim's

reputation for honesty in her school community. Since the defense did not establish a

proper foundation for the testimony, the trial court did not abuse its discretion by

excluding the proposed evidence. The conviction is affirmed.

FACTS

The prosecutor filed a charge of second degree rape predicated on A.S.'s inability

to consent due to incapacity. The charge arose from an incident occurring after 15-year-

old A.S. ran away from her home in Milton-Freewater, Oregon following a dispute with

her father. She eventually ended up in the home of Jesus Torres in Walla Walla where No. 34334-1-III State v. Chavez

she consumed liquor and smoked marijuana. 1 The youth became quite intoxicated and

shaved her eyebrows and cut her hair in an effort to change her appearance. Torres, a

"known sex offender," later walked her to the nearby home of Eduardo Chavez so that

A.S. had a place to sleep. Mr. Chavez would soon tum 17.

Chavez provided A.S. a bed in a room where two people were sleeping in another

bed; he left to sleep elsewhere in the house. A.S. awoke the next morning with her shirt

pushed up and her jeans twisted around her ankles and unzipped; her hips felt sore. She

was still very intoxicated. Torres arrived at the house and gave A.S. a ride to her

boyfriend's house in Milton-Freewater. During the ride, the two younger girls (M.B. and

A.B.) noted that A.S. had hickeys on her neck, a fact that embarrassed A.S. She

commented that she may have been raped.

After her father picked her up from her boyfriend's home and returned her to her

home, A.S. got into a fight with her grandmother and left the house again. This time she

went to the nearby home of her friend, S.B. There she explained that she thought she

might have been raped. S.B. reported the comment to her mother, who in tum called

A.S. 's grandmother. The police were called and A.S. was directed to go to the hospital

the following morning to undergo a sexual assault exam.

1 There was testimony that A.S. and two younger friends (M.B. and A.B.), a week prior to the incident, had gone with Torres to a hotel room in Walla Walla and spent the night drinking and smoking marijuana.

2 No. 34334-1-III State v. Chavez

DNA belonging to Mr. Chavez was recovered from A.S. He initially denied that

police would find his DNA, but after being told they had done so, Mr. Chavez told

detectives that the couple had engaged in intercourse at A.S.'s suggestion and with her

consent. He later explained to jurors that it was common for girls to take their clothes off

and throw themselves at him when they first met him. A 14-year-old friend, M.R.-G.,

testified that she was at Chavez's home and could hear the couple engaging in sex and

that the girl was "moaning. " 2

A.S. was a freshman at "Mac-Hi" at the time of trial. Report of Proceedings (RP)

at 154. She previously had spent part of her eighth grade year at Weston Middle School.

Before that she had been in school at Central and at Ferndale. S.B., who was one school

year younger, had been in the same schools with A.S. during some of those years. RP at

195-197. A.S. testified that she drank "a lot" of vodka and did not remember engaging in

sexual intercourse, let alone consenting to it. Her grandmother testified that even at the

hospital, a day after the incident, A.S. "reeked of alcohol," "appeared to be in a fog," and

acted like she was hungover. RP at 143-144, 149.

During the testimony of S.B., the defense used cross-examination to attack the

credibility of A.S. S.B. told jurors that A.S. "smiled" when she disclosed she thought she

2 M.R.-G.'s testimony that the girl was enjoying herself was twice stricken from the record.

3 No. 34334-1-III State v. Chavez

had been raped. S.B. also testified that A.S. had told several people at a skateboard park

that she had been raped; A.S. denied having done so. The defense also attempted to have

S.B. opine concerning A.S.'s reputation for honesty at school.

S.B. is a year behind A.S. in school and had attended the same schools for several

years, although A.S. had only been at Weston for part of her eighth grade year. The

following exchange between S.B. and defense counsel occurred:

Q Okay. And you have gone to school with her off and on since at least second grade down at Ferndale? A Yes. Q And then you went to school with her at Central? A Yes. Q And then you went to school with her down at Weston? A Yes. Q And during that time if you added up all the students in all the grades that you had been with her, you have been around probably at least a hundred different people that had interaction with you and her; isn't that right? A Yes. Q And were you aware of her reputation in the school community-

RP at 298-299. The prosecutor objected and an extended discussion took place outside

the presence of the jury at which both sides questioned S.B. After hearing the testimony

and argument of the parties, the court ruled:

The Court finds that the relevant factors of the frequency of contact between members of the community, the amount of time known in the community and the role the person played in the community and the number of people, that that foundation has not been met and that that opinion statement with reference to truthfulness and veracity will not come m.

4 No. 34334-1-III State v. Chavez

The evidence that came in, counsel, does not convince me that the community has been defined and the foundation has not been laid.

RP at 316.

The defense renewed its questioning of S.B., but the trial court remained

unconvinced that a foundation had been established, so the cross-examination moved on

to other matters. The cross-examination concluded with S.B. indicating that she had

trouble believing A.S. RP at 326.

The parties argued the case on competing theories of the respective credibility of

A.S. and Mr. Chavez. The jury returned a verdict of guilty. After imposition of a

standard range sentence, Mr. Chavez timely appealed to this court.

ANALYSIS

The sole issue 3 presented is whether the trial court erred in declining to permit

S.B. to state the reputation of A.S. in the school community. Although the court could

have reached a different result on these facts, we cannot hold that the court abused its

discretion.

3 Mr. Chavez also filed a well-written statement of additional grounds raising several issues. In such matters as the length of voir dire and other courtroom management issues, Mr. Chavez has failed to establish any abuse of the trial court's considerable management discretion. Peluso v. Barton Auto Dealerships, Inc., 138 Wn. App. 65, 69, 155 P.3d 978 (2007). In those and all of the other claims, his personal statement fails to establish prejudicial error. Accordingly, there is no basis for relief and we will not further address the arguments.

5 No. 34334-1-III State v. Chavez

This court reviews the trial court's evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion.

State v.

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