State Of Washington v. Lerone Major, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 5, 2017
Docket49075-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Lerone Major, Jr. (State Of Washington v. Lerone Major, Jr.) 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. Lerone Major, Jr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 5, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 49075-7-II

Respondent,

v.

LERONE MAJOR, JR., UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Appellant.

MELNICK, J. — Lerone Major Jr. appeals his convictions and sentence for assault in

violation of a no contact order, violation of a post-conviction no contact order, two counts of

assault in the fourth degree, and interfering with the reporting of domestic violence.

We conclude that Major did not receive ineffective assistance of counsel and affirm his

convictions. Because the judgment and sentence is unclear as to what the sentencing court

intended as to suspended time and community custody, we remand to the trial court to resentence

Major.1

FACTS

Major and Jazmine Graves married on March 1, 2015. As of May 11, a domestic violence

no contact order prohibited Major from having any contact with Graves. By August 1, Graves had

vacated the marital residence. On that date, Graves, seven months pregnant, returned to the marital

1 Major also asks us to waive appellate costs. Pursuant to RAP 14.2, we will defer to a commissioner if the State files a cost bill and Major objects. 49075-7-II

residence to retrieve some personal belongings. She found Major there watching television.

Graves reported what happened next to a 911 operator and to Officer Joshua Bartz. She provided

a different version of events at trial.

I. GRAVES’ ACCOUNT OF EVENTS

The following is Graves’s description to a 911 operator and to Bartz on August 1. Both

took Graves’s statements and recorded them. The jury heard both recordings.

After Graves returned to the marital residence, she went into the bedroom to retrieve her

belongings and closed the door. Major confronted Graves about locking him out of the bedroom

and demanded she leave the apartment. Graves responded that she came to get her belongings.

Major “got in [her] face” and repeated that she shouldn’t be there so Graves pushed him away.

Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 11, 2016) at 67.

Major became angry and started punching Graves and slapping her face. He knocked off

her glasses. When Graves tried to escape, Major pushed her away. Major then took Graves’s cell

phone and refused to return it, claiming it was his phone.

After a brief scuffle over the phone, Graves convinced Major to look at its back, where he

saw a label identifying it as Graves’s phone. Major then returned the phone and apologized.

Graves went into another room and called 911. Midway through the call, Major took the phone

from Graves’s hand and threw it against the wall, cutting off the call. He then punched Graves in

the face and choked her so that she could not breathe.

The 911 operator called Graves back and Major started to leave. As Graves attempted to

lock the door behind Major, he punched her in the face again. He then left the apartment. Graves

told both the 911 operator and Bartz that she knew a no contact order existed.

2 49075-7-II

The police contacted Graves and agreed to meet with her at the hospital. While at the

hospital, Graves received six calls to her cell phone from the same number. She identified the

caller by voice as Major and immediately hung up after the first call. She did not answer the

remaining calls.

At trial, Graves told a different version of events. She took more responsibility for the

violent encounter, downplayed her injuries, and indicated confusion as to whether there had been

a no contact order in place. She stated that, because of a medical condition that occurs when she

gets angry, she blacked out through much of the incident. She also testified that she responded to

Major’s slapping and punching by “swinging back.” RP (May 10, 2016) at 31.

Graves explained that the 911 call was cut short because her cell phone battery died, not

because Major threw the phone. She testified that she defended herself from Major with a large

cooking fork. Graves reiterated that Major punched her numerous times and choked her. She also

affirmed that she had received calls from Major when she was at the hospital.

Because Bartz took extensive photographs of Graves’s injuries, the jury saw corroboration

of Graves’s original account. Bartz also testified that Graves’s reports of being choked by Major

were consistent with his training about strangulation and choking allegations.

II. MAJOR’S ACCOUNT OF EVENTS

The police stopped Major when he left his apartment at approximately 10:27 P.M. after the

incident. Major told Officer Alicia Howard that he had argued with Graves about her phone and

that she “went crazy” and started scratching him. RP (May 10, 2016) at 80. He claimed that the

only physical contact he had with Graves occurred when he “batted her hands away.” RP (May

10, 2016) at 80. Major told Howard that he knew about the no contact order.

3 49075-7-II

Major testified and confirmed that he had had a physical confrontation with Graves. He

asserted that Graves had physically attacked him when she tried to retrieve her phone from him.

He believed the phone belonged to him. Major admitted he struck Graves when she reached for

the phone, but did so accidentally. Major told the jury he used force to stop Graves and “jabbed

her neck” causing her to “start gasping.” RP (May 11, 2016) at 102. He denied squeezing her

throat. Major said any other physical contact resulted as he attempted to block her blows.

III. MAJOR’S CRIMINAL CHARGES, TRIAL, AND SENTENCING

On August 4, the State charged Major with burglary in the first degree, assault in the second

degree with an aggravating factor based on the victim’s pregnancy, an assault that violated the no

contact order, violation of a post-conviction no contact order, two counts of assault in the fourth

degree, and interfering with the reporting of domestic violence.2 All but the last charge included

domestic violence allegations.3

Pretrial, the judge granted Major’s motion in limine, which forbade “[a]ny reference to the

complaining witness as the ‘victim.’” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 40; see also RP (May 9, 2016) at 9

(trial court granting motion). During the trial, on direct examination, Bartz referred to Graves as

“victim Jazmine” three times while he described the photographs of her injuries. RP (May 11,

2016) at 37-39. Major’s attorney did not object to any of these statements.

The jury found Major guilty of assault in violation of a no contact order, violation of a post-

conviction no contact order, two counts of assault in the fourth degree, and interfering with the

reporting of domestic violence. The first charge is a felony; the others are gross misdemeanors.

2 RCW 9A.52.020(1), 9A.36.021(1)(g), 9.94A.535(3)(c), 26.50.110(4), 26.50.110(1), 9A.36.041 9A.36.150. 3 RCW 10.99.020(5).

4 49075-7-II

Through a special verdict form, it also found that Major and Graves were members of the same

family or household. It found Major not guilty of burglary in the first degree and assault in the

second degree.

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