State Of Washington, V. Mark Steven Chesler, Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 6, 2024
Docket57495-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington, V. Mark Steven Chesler, Jr. (State Of Washington, V. Mark Steven Chesler, 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. Mark Steven Chesler, Jr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

February 6, 2024

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 57495-1-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION MARK STEVEN CHESLER JR.,

Appellant.

PRICE, J. — Mark S. Chesler Jr. appeals his conviction for residential burglary after a bench

trial. Chesler argues that the State presented insufficient evidence from which a rational trier of

fact could have concluded that he unlawfully entered the back door of his ex-wife’s apartment. As

part of his sufficiency of the evidence challenge, Chesler assigns error to several findings of fact

and conclusions of law.

We disagree and affirm.

FACTS

I. BACKGROUND

On April 12, 2022, C.M. called 911 from her apartment. The call was an open-line

communication, and a male could be heard yelling in the background. After several minutes, C.M.

began speaking to the 911 operator. The 911 operator contacted law enforcement, informing them

that the dispute sounded violent in nature and could be physical. No. 57495-1-II

Police Officer Michael Barela responded to the residence and spoke to C.M. C.M. told the

officer that Chesler, her ex-husband, was involved and had just left the apartment.1 C.M. and

Chesler did not live together. C.M. showed the officer a broken chair on the floor, a broken back

door, and a wet mud print on the back door. Officer Barela observed that the door trim and the

faceplate (which held the lock bolt when the door was in a closed position) were on the floor.

From these observations, the officer concluded that the door had been kicked open. C.M. told the

officer that the chair was not broken prior to Chesler’s arrival.

C.M. explained that she and Chesler were in a dispute over a bill of sale for a car that

Chesler possessed but did not own. Chesler showed up to get C.M. to sign a bill of sale so that he

could prove his legal ownership of the car. C.M. said Chesler threw her car keys over a fence

during the dispute.

Later that day, law enforcement arrested Chesler at his residence. The State ultimately

charged him with residential burglary and third degree malicious mischief, each with special

allegations of domestic violence.

II. EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

The case proceeded to a bench trial. The State called Officer Barela who testified

consistently with the above facts. The officer also testified that C.M.’s demeanor was similar to

other domestic violence victims that he had interviewed in the past because she was frantic and

afraid. He continued,

[A]s we were talking, she was really hesitant to speak with me at first. She -- from my conversation with her, I felt she was contemplating the consequences of telling me information, and she also was looking over her shoulder at the door. She -- it seemed as if the threat was still present in her mind.

1 C.M. and Chesler married in 2016 and divorced a year later.

2 No. 57495-1-II

....

[Her body language] was very closed off. Her arms were folded. She seemed like she was taking defensive postures, which I’ve seen numerous times in victims of domestic violence.

Verbatim Rep. of Proc. (VRP) at 25-26.

Because C.M. said she was afraid of Chesler, the officer gave her suggestions on how to

resecure the door to prevent forced entry and suggested that she go to a relative’s house. C.M.

asked the officer to inform her when Chesler had been taken into custody so that she could feel

safe.

Officer Barela also testified that when Chesler was in custody, he admitted that things had

“gotten out of hand.” VRP at 28.

The State then called C.M. as a witness. She said that Chesler frequently came to her

residence and that the two had an “on again/off again” relationship. VRP at 42. At the time of the

incident, the two may have been “off again.” VRP at 42. C.M. testified that Chesler had a key to

her apartment, they saw each other several times a week, and Chesler did not need to knock when

he visited her. In response to a question about whether Chesler had permission to enter her

residence, C.M. answered, “He didn’t not have my permission.” VRP at 35.

She conceded it was possible that she told Chesler to come over to her residence on the day

of the dispute to sign a bill of sale. When C.M. was asked whether Chesler called her first to get

her permission to come over to her apartment, the following exchange took place:

[Prosecutor]: And before he came over that day, he didn’t call first and get your permission, did he?

[C.M.]: We had been arguing back and forth.

3 No. 57495-1-II

[Prosecutor]: So[,] is that no?

[C.M.]: Maybe.

VRP at 49.

She also explained that the back door had been broken for several months at the time of

the incident. But she acknowledged that the faceplate broke off and fell on the floor when Chesler

entered the house. And she testified that Chesler took the keys to her car and threw them into a

field.

C.M. admitted that when Officer Barela asked her if she wanted a protection order, she

said yes. But she also claimed that she had exaggerated things to the investigating officer and let

her emotions get the better of her. C.M. said that she did not want Chesler to get in trouble but

also said she did not want to see him get in trouble for something that he did not do.

Chesler testified in his own defense. He stated that he had a key to C.M.’s apartment that

worked for the front door but not the back door because the back door would not lock properly

and was broken. He denied that the muddy foot print on the door was from the day of the dispute

but claimed it was, instead, from a few days earlier when one of them used their foot to open the

back door to bring in groceries. Chesler said he went over to C.M.’s residence because C.M.

invited him over to her apartment to pick up a bill of sale and she did not have it ready for him

when he arrived.

Chesler admitted that this made him angry and that he called C.M. a “f[*]cking idiot.”

VRP at 58. He denied throwing her keys during the incident and suggested he threw them on a

different day.

4 No. 57495-1-II

Photographs of the faceplate, door trim, back door, mud print, and broken chair were

admitted into evidence along with the 911 tape.

III. VERDICT AND SENTENCING

The trial court found Chesler guilty of all charged counts.

The trial court gave an oral ruling. As to the residential burglary count (which requires

both an intent to commit a crime and an unlawful entry), the trial court stated there was no question

Chesler had an intent to commit a crime against a person or property therein because Chesler

admitted to breaking the chair upon entry and depriving C.M. of her keys.

But the trial court said it was somewhat struggling with the element of unlawful entry.

Nonetheless, the trial court stated that it was making a reasonable inference that Chesler was not

invited in the house in the manner that he entered. The trial court explained,

It’s not reasonable to assume that somebody allows you to kick their back door in. I don’t think there’s any question that the back door was kicked in. I know that [C.M.] stated the door had previously been damaged. That doesn’t change the fact that it was kicked in on the day in question.

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