State of Washington v. Edward W. Terry

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 19, 2014
Docket31094-9
StatusPublished

This text of State of Washington v. Edward W. Terry (State of Washington v. Edward W. Terry) 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. Edward W. Terry, (Wash. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FILED

JUNE 19,2014

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. 31094-9-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) OPINION PUBLISHED EDWARD W. TERRY, ) IN PART ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, C.J. - During Edward Terry's criminal trial for theft of a vehicle and

related charges, the trial court invited jurors to propose questions. One juror question

accepted by the trial court and posed to the deputy who arrested Mr. Terry was whether

Mr. Terry ever questioned or expressed surprise at being arrested. The deputy answered

that Mr. Terry did not ask, and in closing argument, the prosecutor reminded the jurors of

that answer and argued that Mr. Terry did not ask because "[he] knew that he had stolen a

vehicle and he was going to get caught." Report of Proceedings (RP) at 329. Mr. Terry's

lawyer did not object to the juror's question on constitutional grounds nor object to the

prosecutor's argument. For the first time on appeal, Mr. Terry argues that the testimony

and argument violated constitutional protections against self-incrimination and his right

to due process. No.31094-9-Ill State v. Terry

An error of manifest constitutional proportions occurred here, including as a result

of the court-posed question. The error was not harmless as to most of the counts charged.

It requires a new trial on all of the challenged convictions other than his conviction for

resisting arrest. 1

Given that disposition, we do not reach Mr. Terry's remaining assignments of

error other than his request that we order all of the charges against him dismissed on the

basis of allegedly insufficient evidence. The evidence against him was sufficient. We

reverse the convictions of theft of a vehicle, possession of a stolen vehicle, and

trespassing, and remand for a new trial on those counts.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Edward Terry was arrested after he was followed from the scene of a one-car

accident on a county road near Dayton. The accident was witnessed by Angelia and

Gordon Smith, who were standing outside at around 7 a.m. when they saw an

approaching truck round a comer at a high rate of speed, spin out on gravel, hit the bank

on the side of the road, and tlip over. The driver crawled from under the truck and ran

through a wheat field up a nearby hill, away from the crash site. Mr. Smith saw the

Mr. Terry's judgment and sentence included his conviction of an assault I committed in March 2012 that he does not challenge.

No. 31094-9-111 State v. Terry

individual "tum[ ] around in kind of a swinging motion, looked like he threw something."

RP at 172.

Ms. Smith immediately called her OnStar service, which conveyed her report of

the accident to 911. Although she and her husband were as much as a quarter of a mile

away from where the truck flipped over, they described the driver to the OnStar

representative who answered their call as between 5 feet 6 inches and 6 feet tall, wearing

dark clothing, with long dark hair, wearing a hoodie or a cap, and jeans.

Columbia County Deputy Sheriff Richard Loyd responded to the report of the

accident and spoke to Mr. Smith, who had walked to the truck to make sure no one else

was inside. Mr. Smith told Deputy Loyd which direction the driver had run. He also

explained that the farm on which they were standing was his, that he was familiar with

the terrain over the hill, and that he thought they could probably catch up with the driver.

The deputy took Mr. Smith up on his offer of help and the two went looking for the

driver in the deputy's sports utility vehicle.

Two miles from the crash site, Mr. Smith and Deputy Loyd saw Mr. Terry

walking slowly. Deputy Loyd knew Mr. Terry from prior contacts. Mr. Terry is 6 feet

2 inches tall and at the time had very short hair.

The deputy approached Mr. Terry and ordered him to stop and get on the ground.

Mr. Terry refused and made a contemptuous finger gesture at Mr. Smith and the deputy.

Deputy Loyd then approached Mr. Terry with his gun drawn. When he was close enough

No.31094-9-III State v. Terry

to satisfy himself that Mr. Terry was not armed, the deputy put away his sidearm and

drew his taser, again telling Mr. Terry to get on the ground and put his hands behind his

back or he would be "tased." RP at 228. In what testimony suggests was a sardonic tone,

Mr. Terry responded, '''Oh, a taser'" and renewed the finger gesture, although this time

using both hands. Id. He then turned his back on the deputy and Mr. Smith, dropped his

pants, and, as Mr. Smith would later testify, "mooned both of us." RP at 179. That done,

he pulled up his pants, dropped to the ground, and put his hands behind his back.

The deputy attempted to handcuff Mr. Terry, telling him to turn his head away; he

later explained to the jury that when handcuffing an individual who is prone, officers

prefer to be out of the individual's line of sight. Mr. Terry did not comply, answering,

according to the deputy, "that was all I was going to get." RP at 229. The officer then

walked around to Mr. Terry's other side. He placed a handcuff on Mr. Terry's left wrist

but, when he reached for his right arm to cuff his second wrist, Mr. Terry tried to push up

against the deputy, roll over, and bite him. Deputy Loyd told Mr. Terry he was resisting

arrest, which Mr. Terry denied. Deputy Loyd then used a pressure compliance technique

and Mr. Terry relented and allowed him to finish handcuffing him. The deputy would

later testify that the basis for the arrest was trespass.

Deputy Loyd took Mr. Terry to the sheriffs department. During the booking

process, Ralph Frame, who owned the truck in which Mr. Terry had been driving, called

the department to report that his truck had been stolen. He had left it parked in front of

No. 31094-9-III State v. Terry

his shop the night before with the keys inside, and in the morning it was gone. It turned

out that Mr. Frame's shop was a quarter mile from where Mr. Terry lived with his mother

and was 10 to 12 miles from the crash site.

After booking Mr. Terry and traveling to speak to Mr. Frame, Deputy Loyd

returned to the scene of the crash to further investigate. He was unable to find the keys to

the truck either in the truck or in the area ofthe field where Mr. Smith thought he had

seen Mr. Terry swing his arm as if to throw something. He saw footsteps leaving the

crash site and going up into the field. Hoping to better tie Mr. Terry to the stolen truck,

the deputy attempted to follow the path of the footprints through wheat fields, a pea field,

and an access road that lay between where the truck rolled and where he arrested Mr.

Terry. Using a GPS (global positioning system) device, he tracked his steps, later

producing a topographical map that showed where he had been able to follow the

footprints and where, on several occasions, he lost them. He took pictures of the tracks

and later obtained pictures of Mr. Terry's shoe tread, taken at the jail.

Mr. Terry was eventually charged with theft of a vehicle, possession of a stolen

vehicle, trespassing, and resisting arrest.

At trial, Mr. Smith and Deputy Loyd testified that when Mr. Terry was

encountered and arrested, Mr.

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