State of Washington v. Jon Jason King

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 1, 2015
Docket31802-8
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Jon Jason King (State of Washington v. Jon Jason King) 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. Jon Jason King, (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

t I \ FILED t f DEC. 1,2015 t I n the Office of the Clerk of Court i ! W A State Court of Appeals, Division III tf ! 1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON I I DIVISION THREE t STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) I !t ) No. 31802-8-111 Respondent, ) f ) ) ~ v. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION t f

JON JASON KING, ) ) I I £ ) l

Appellant. I BROWN, A.C.J. - Jon Jason King appeals his three convictions for residential I I, ~ burglary. Two counts include aggravating factors. Mr. King contends insufficient ~

i evidence supports his convictions because he was too incapacitated by intoxication to ! formulate the necessary intent. In his statement of additional grounds for review (SAG),

Mr. King expresses concerns about violations to his right to a fair and impartial jury and I r i f due process; he also contends the trial court erred in giving the reasonable doubt ~ I pattern jury instruction and in imposing legal financial obligations (LFOs) without first ! l determining his ability to pay. We disagree with Mr. King's main contention and his first i three SAG contentions and affirm. We remand because the State concedes the trial t 1 court failed to enter written findings of fact and conclusions of law supporting his f exceptional sentence. On remand, Mr. King can raise his objections to the imposition of ft' l I discretionary LFOs. f

I tf ~ f­

I No. 31802-8-111 i State v. King t FACTS f t1 ~ On the evening of March 27! 2013, a number of condominiums located on the

Meadow Springs Golf Course in Richland, Washington were burglarized. Samantha I Norris was home alone when she heard footsteps coming down the hallway toward her

room. Ms. Norris asked who was there but got no response; the footsteps kept coming.

As her bedroom door opened, she yelled and saw a man run away from the room. Ms. I Norris left the residence and called the police. Ms. Norris and her roommate, who had i

I returned while the police cleared the residence, determined a pack of the roommate's

Camel menthol cigarettes were missing. The police noted the slider door, which faced F the golf course, was open. I Similarly, Jean Smith was home alone, reading in her bed on the second floor of i I her residence, when she heard rattling noises. However, she was not alarmed as she

assumed it was leaves on her skylight. A short time later, an officer arrived at the I ~

residence and told her to go outside. While she waited outside, Ms. Smith's husband f ~

I came home. The Smiths determined the man stole the following items: (1) five $20 bills

from Ms. Smith's purse in the kitchen; (2) some medication from the kitchen; (3)

collectible coins, a silver dollar, a watch box, and a notepad from the spare bedroom f upstairs; and (4) a bottle of whiskey. r! ! It was Ms. Smith's neighbors, Ruth LaBouy and Gary Faust, who called the !I f ~, police. Ms. LaBouy noticed a man with a backpack. Mr. Faust went outside and t I watched the man stand near the sliding door on Ms. Smith's deck. Mr. Faust asked the I ~ ~ 2 J f t 1 No. 31802-8-111 f State v. King f

man what he was doing, and the man mumbled a word that sounded like "Jerry."

Report of Proceedings (RP) (June 3, 2013) at 254. Mr. Faust told the man no one by I ~

f that name lived there and he should leave, which the man apparently did. A few ,• 1 i minutes later, while checking to make sure the man was gone, Mr. Faust saw a

flashlight beam shining first in Ms. Smith's kitchen then in the living room. He called the lt ~

I police. i Corporal Hyram Stohel and Officer Jason Crouch responded to the Smiths'

residence. Both officers observed a flashlight in the upstairs window. A short while It later, a man, later identified as Mr. King, walked out the Smiths' front door carrying

numerous items in his gloved hands, including a large bottle of alcohol, some coins, and I J

cases. The officers ordered Mr. King to show his hands. Mr. King instead turned back l ,If toward the Smiths' residence and unzipped his coat, which caused several items to fall i out, including a notepad, coins, and cigarettes; Corporal Stohel perceived this as an 1 obvious attempt to get rid of the stolen items. I r Officer Jory Parish approached Mr. King and arrested him. Mr. King kept asking tf why he had been arrested. When told it was for burglary, Mr. King said, "This is my r f friend's house. I have permission to be here." RP (June 3, 2013) at 191. Officer Parish

searched a noncompliant Mr. King and partly found pill bottles belonging to a Ronald I l t Riley and Ms. Smith and five $20 bills. Officer Parish then had difficulty getting Mr. King •t to sit in the back of the patrol car. Once Mr. King was finally sitting in the car, Corporal J IJ Stohel told him another search needed to be done. Mr. King said he would comply with

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f

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I , 1 ~ No. 31802-8-111 I ! State v. King It officers' commands as the car was too hot. After completing the second search, Officer It ~

Parish had to use knee strikes to get Mr. King back into the patrol car. Once inside the lI car, Mr. King kept sticking his leg out of the car to prevent Officer Parish from shutting •

the door. After Mr. King complained of leg pain, he was transported to an area hospital I l before being medically cleared to be booked into jail. f ,f !.

During his contact with Mr. King, Officer Parish observed Mr. King was obviously tt f intoxicated as he could smell alcohol on his breath and Mr. King exhibited slurred, slow !

speech and had balance issues when walking. Officer Crouch similarly noted Mr. King

was intoxicated but not grossly intoxicated. He observed nothing in his interactions with I f i i Mr. King that demonstrated Mr. King was unaware of where he was or what was tf happening. Corporal Stohel testified Mr. King had no issues with communication, could I! move freely on his own, had quick reflexes, and nothing about Mr. King's demeanor 1

showed he did not understand what was happening. i ! While the officers were dealing with Mr. King, other officers found two backpacks f t

around the Smiths' residence. One of the backpacks contained hospital identification [ badges and medication belonging to Mr. Riley, who lived on the golf course but was out

of town on that evening. Police determined the entry point into Mr. Riley's residence t t was the sliding door facing the golf course. l Mr. King was charged with three counts of residential burglary, two of which I alleged the victim-inside-the-dwelling aggravating circumstance. The State alleged the if ; t multiple current offenses aggravating circumstance. The court gave the jury a voluntary f

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J No. 31802-8-111 State v. King

intoxication instruction. 1 The jury returned guilty verdicts on all three counts and found

the aggravating circumstances as alleged in two of the counts. The sentencing court

imposed a 108-month exceptional sentence and provided its reasons for doing so in an

oral ruling. Mr. King appealed.

ANALYSIS

The issue is whether sufficient evidence exists to establish the intent element of

residential burglary. Mr. King contends he was too incapacitated to form the necessary

intent. I I Evidence is sufficient to support a guilty finding if '''after viewing the evidence in

the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the

essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.'" State v. Green, 94 Wn.2d

216,221,616 P.2d 628 (1980) (emphasis omitted) (quoting Jackson v.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
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State v. Thompson
533 P.2d 395 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1975)
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899 P.2d 1251 (Washington Supreme Court, 1995)
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616 P.2d 628 (Washington Supreme Court, 1980)
State v. Salinas
829 P.2d 1068 (Washington Supreme Court, 1992)
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State v. Grimes
966 P.2d 394 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1998)
State v. Carver
789 P.2d 306 (Washington Supreme Court, 1990)
State v. Bennett
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