State of Washington v. Michael Rodney Hiatt

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 13, 2021
Docket37024-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Michael Rodney Hiatt (State of Washington v. Michael Rodney Hiatt) 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. Michael Rodney Hiatt, (Wash. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

FILED MAY 13, 2021 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 37024-1-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) MICHAEL RODNEY HIATT, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. — Michael Hiatt appeals his conviction of possession of a stolen

motor vehicle. Evidence that he gave permission to a friend to chain a vehicle

recognizable as stolen to the front bumper of Mr. Hiatt’s own inoperable car was

insufficient, without more, to establish Mr. Hiatt’s constructive possession of the stolen

vehicle. We reverse the conviction, dismiss the charge, and remand for resentencing. No. 37024-1-III State v. Hiatt

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Beginning on December 10, 2018, KC Chavez possessed and was using a Honda

Accord owned by his brother. Mr. Chavez parked and left the Accord outside his home

two weeks later, on Christmas Eve. The next morning, it was gone. A Spokane patrol

officer responded to Mr. Chavez’s report of a stolen vehicle. Mr. Chavez took the officer

to the location where Mr. Chavez said he had parked the Accord and the officer observed

broken glass on the ground. Mr. Chavez said he and his brother were the only two people

with keys to the car, and that he (Mr. Chavez) had not given anyone permission to use it

at the time it went missing.

On Christmas night, another officer, Ethan Wilke, was on patrol when he observed

a Ford Expedition that met the description of an Expedition that had been reported as

stolen.1 He ran the Expedition’s California license plate and learned that the plate, at

least, was not associated with a stolen car. There was too much condensation on the

Expedition’s windows for him to read the vehicle identification number (VIN).

As Officer Wilke began to leave, he saw that a black Honda Accord, which was

parked nose to nose with the Expedition, was actually chained and padlocked to the

1 The trial court’s finding of fact 1, which states in part that Officer Wilke “observed a Ford Expedition which had been reported as stolen,” Clerk’s Papers at 83, is the only finding designated as a finding by the trial court that Mr. Hiatt challenges. There is an error; the Expedition observed by Officer Wilke turned out not to be the Expedition reported as stolen.

2 No. 37024-1-III State v. Hiatt

Expedition, through the cars’ front bumpers. He also saw that the Accord had a broken

driver’s side window. He stopped to investigate and saw glass on the driver’s seat of the

Accord. It had a punch-out key stuck in its ignition that Officer Wilke was unable to

remove. The Accord did not have a license plate, so Officer Wilke checked the Honda’s

VIN and learned that the car was Mr. Chavez’s stolen Accord.

Officer Wilke and Officer Brian Blankenstein, who had joined him at the scene,

wanted to see if there was anyone in the Expedition, so they approached it, knocked on

the door, and announced themselves. Michael Hiatt, who had been sleeping inside,

stepped out. Asked for his name and date of birth, he provided them. Officer Wilke ran

Mr. Hiatt’s name and learned he had misdemeanor warrants. He placed Mr. Hiatt under

arrest and read him his Miranda2 rights. Mr. Hiatt agreed to speak with the officers.

Mr. Hiatt told the officers the Expedition belonged to him, although it was not

registered to him. He told them the Accord belonged to a friend, whose name he did not

want to disclose. He said he had allowed his friend to chain the cars together. At trial,

Officer Wilke provided the following testimony on this point:

Q. . . . Did you ask him if he had any idea who the Honda belonged to? A. I did. Q. Did he reply?

2 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602, 16 L. Ed. 2d 694 (1966).

3 No. 37024-1-III State v. Hiatt

A. He told me it was a friend of his. He did not wish to tell me their name. Q. Did you ask Mr. Hiatt why the sedan was chained to the Ford Expedition? A. I did. Q. Did he respond? A. He told me his friend had asked him if he could keep his car attached to his car so that it didn’t get stolen. Q. Did you ask Mr. Hiatt where he was living at the time? A. I did. Q. Did he respond? A. Yeah, he told me he was homeless and living out of the Expedition.

Report of Proceedings (RP) at 30.

Officer Wilke searched Mr. Hiatt incident to arrest and found three key rings with

shaved keys in Mr. Hiatt’s pants pocket.

When Mr. Chavez arrived to retrieve the Accord, officers cut the chain because no

key to the padlock was found in Mr. Hiatt’s possession or otherwise. On examining the

Accord, Mr. Chavez told officers that several items that had been in it the day before

were missing, including a toolbox, speakers and a stereo. He also claimed that the rims

and tires now on the Accord were not the rims and tires on the Accord when it was

stolen.

Officer Wilke later testified that Mr. Chavez recognized his rims and tires as being

on a white sedan located in the vicinity. (Mr. Chavez testified it was actually his brother

4 No. 37024-1-III State v. Hiatt

who claimed to have seen the rims and tires on a white sedan.) Officer Wilke ran the

white sedan’s plates and confirmed it had not been reported stolen. He did not attempt to

contact that vehicle’s owner.

None of Mr. Chavez’s missing property was found in Mr. Hiatt’s possession.

When cross-examined about that at trial, Officer Wilke said he never obtained a warrant

to search the Expedition. None of the missing items was otherwise recovered.

When cross-examined by the defense at trial, Officer Wilke acknowledged that a

beer can had been found in the Accord that Mr. Chavez said was not his. The officer

collected it as evidence to be checked for latent fingerprints, but never got the results

back. He did not undertake fingerprint collection from the interior or exterior of the

Accord. He admitted he did not see cuts on Mr. Hiatt’s hands, broken glass on his

clothing, or anything else that physically tied Mr. Hiatt to the inside of the Accord.

Officer Blankenstein was told by Mr. Hiatt that the Expedition was inoperable.

Mr. Hiatt also told Officer Blankenstein that the chain connecting the cars was not his.

Officer Blankenstein, like Officer Wilke, tried to remove the punch-out key in the

Accord’s ignition without success. When he tried the key, the Accord started up.

The State called Mr. Chavez as a trial witness. He testified that the persons who

had permission to drive the Accord were his brother and his friends Boogie, Trevor, and

Adam. In the prosecutor’s redirect examination, she asked if he recognized Mr. Hiatt,

5 No. 37024-1-III State v. Hiatt

and Mr. Chavez testified he knew him as his friend Boogie. He said that he had given

him permission to use his car previously, “but not, not that specific day.” RP at 77.

Mr. Hiatt was charged with possession of a stolen motor vehicle and making or

possessing a motor vehicle theft tool. He waived his right to a jury trial and at his one-

day bench trial, the State called as witnesses the three police officers involved in the

investigation and Mr. Chavez. At the close of the State’s case, Mr. Hiatt made a motion

to dismiss the possession of a stolen motor vehicle charge for lack of evidence of actual

or constructive possession. The motion was denied. The defense presented no evidence.

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