State Of Washington, V. Elisabeth Ashley Mckinley

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 29, 2024
Docket84768-6
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Elisabeth Ashley Mckinley (State Of Washington, V. Elisabeth Ashley Mckinley) 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. Elisabeth Ashley Mckinley, (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 84768-6-I Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION ELISABETH ASHLEY MCKINLEY,

Appellant.

COBURN, J. — A jury convicted Elisabeth McKinley of vehicular assault. She

challenges the sufficiency of the evidence arguing that the State did not prove that she

caused the victim “substantial bodily harm.” She also requests remand for the trial court

to strike the victim penalty assessment (VPA) and DNA fee. We affirm the conviction,

but remand for the ministerial act of striking the VPA and DNA fee.

FACTS

In June 2019, Gregory Mosen was in the front passenger seat of the Chevy

Suburban that his wife was driving. They were stopped at a light on State Route 104

when they were rear-ended by a fast-moving Chevy Cobalt driven by McKinley. The

front of the Cobalt was crushed in the collision. Investigating police smelled intoxicants

coming from McKinley, who denied consuming any alcohol, and conducted field sobriety

tests, which lead to her arrest and the administration of a breath alcohol concentration No. 84768-6-I/2

(BAC) test. The results of the BAC test were .165 and .169. 1

Immediately after the collision, Mosen felt pain in his neck and right shoulder and

a tingling sensation going down his arm. His pain progressed and his general day-to-

day activities were limited in the days after the collision, including less ability to lift

objects, mow his lawn, and continue a previously-begun home remodel.

Many years before the accident Mosen had rotator cuff surgery on the same

shoulder, but fully recovered with range of motion and strength. His shoulder was doing

well before the accident. Nine days after the accident Mosen saw Dr. Charles Peterson

because of the progressing pain and difficulty with movement. Peterson, an orthopedic

surgeon, had seen Mosen professionally for a variety of musculoskeletal ailments for

more than 15 years and was the surgeon who had previously repaired Mosen’s rotator

cuff.

Peterson examined Mosen and determined that he retained strength and range

of motion in the shoulder, but that Mosen found it painful and difficult to move. After

physical therapy without improvement, an MRI 2 on August 1 revealed a torn rotator cuff.

Mosen’s subscapularis tendon had a tear that was all the way through the thickness of

the tendon, but not all the way off the bone. Because rotator cuff tears cannot heal

themselves, Peterson recommended surgery to fix the new tendon tear. Unlike

Mosen’s first surgery where the tear was on the top of the shoulder in the

supraspinatus, this surgery required a different incision because the tear was in the

front of the shoulder. Peterson performed surgery in January 2020.

1 The court instructed the jury that a person is under the influence or affected by the use of intoxicating liquor when she has sufficient alcohol in her body to have an alcohol concentration of .08 or higher within two hours after driving. 2 Magnetic resonance imaging. 2 No. 84768-6-I/3

In February 2020, the State charged McKinley with reckless driving and vehicular

assault, alleging that while under the influence of intoxicating liquor or any drug,

McKinley operated or drove a vehicle and “caused substantial bodily harm” to Mosen.

At trial the State asked Peterson whether “to a reasonable degree of medical

certainty, do you believe that this tear occurred as a result of the collision on June 16th

of 2019 that Mr. Mosen described?” The doctor answered: “Yes.” During cross-

examination, Peterson acknowledged that it was “possible” that Mosen had a previous

tear, but did not experience symptoms of it until after the accident. On redirect,

Peterson clarified and said, “In this case, with a reasonable degree of medical certainty,

I feel that the tear either was caused by the crash, or if it was present, it was made

worse by the crash to the point at which the patient sought medical treatment.”

McKinley presented the expert witness Dr. Virtaj Singh, a board-certified physical

medicine rehabilitation doctor with a subspecialty in pain medicine. Singh is the medical

director at a spine and sports medicine practice. Singh reviewed the medical records

and deposition testimony of Peterson, interview transcripts with Mosen, pictures of

Mosen post-surgery, and a collision report including photographs of the car accident.

Singh did not himself examine Mosen. Singh testified that he believed with a

reasonable degree of medical certainty that the tear existed before the collision but in

an asymptomatic way but that the collision caused an inflammatory response and pain.

Singh also testified that to a reasonable degree of medical certainty the pain Mosen was

experiencing could interfere with his daily activities. Based on his own clinical

experience and review of the medical literature, Singh could “not fathom from a

mechanism of injury standpoint how you would get the subscapularis muscle and not

3 No. 84768-6-I/4

get the labrum, not get the inferior shoulder ligaments, not get anything else but just

isolatedly tear that muscle as opposed to it is a degenerative tear.” Singh testified that

once you are over 65 years old “having degenerative tears in the shoulder is almost

inevitable, like at least a third of people have them.” Mosen was 66 at the time of the

collision.

I can’t see how your classic whiplash injury, even with a seatbelt over that harness, would have caused the subscapularis to tear unless for some reason he is grabbing onto something and somehow it happens without tearing any of the inferior glenohumeral ligaments. I just don’t see how that could happen.

Mosen’s wife had testified that when she saw in her rearview mirror the vehicle

approaching, she said “Oh” and swore seconds before the collision. Mosen testified

that when they came to a stop he turned his body back to talk to his father-in-law who

was sitting in the back seat when all of a sudden, he heard his wife say, “Oh” and an

expletive before the collision. 3 Mosen said his best memory is that the collision kind of

lifted the car up, twisting him more as he had the lap belt and the shoulder harness on.

Mosen testified that he did not collide with anything else inside the car except his

seatbelt and that he could not recall where his right hand was at the time of the collision.

Peterson said he put little trust into patients’ descriptions of their own body positions

during an accident because “it is notoriously inaccurate” and when “peoples’ bodies are

flailed all over the place instantaneously,” they “have no real good recollection of what

actually happened.”

The jury found McKinley guilty of vehicular assault, but not guilty of reckless

driving. The trial court found McKinley eligible for a mental health sentencing alternative

3 Mosen’s father-in-law had passed away by the time of trial. 4 No. 84768-6-I/5

and imposed 24 months of community custody on the condition she meet with her

treatment provider and comply with all recommendations, and not use any alcohol or

controlled substances without a prescription. The court also imposed a DNA collection

fee and victim penalty assessment (VPA).

McKinley appeals. The trial court certified that McKinley was indigent for

purposes of her appeal.

DISCUSSION

Sufficiency of the Evidence

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