State Of Washington v. Paul Cuevas Adamson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 30, 2020
Docket78763-2
StatusUnpublished

This text of State Of Washington v. Paul Cuevas Adamson (State Of Washington v. Paul Cuevas Adamson) 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. Paul Cuevas Adamson, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 78763-2-I

Respondent, DIVISION ONE v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION PAUL CUEVAS ADAMSON,

Appellant.

LEACH, J. — Paul Adamson appeals his judgment and sentence for child

molestation in the third degree. He claims the trial court should have instructed the jury

on attempted child molestation because it received evidence that supported a conviction

of attempted molestation to the exclusion of actual molestation. We agree, reverse the

conviction, and remand for a new trial consistent with this opinion.

FACTS

In 2017, the State charged Paul Adamson with one count of child molestation in

the third degree. Trial testimony showed the following facts.

In 2017, 14-year-old J.C. lived part time with his mother, B.C. At the time, she

was dating Jenny York. Adamson and York dated in the past and were still good

friends. B.C. wanted to meet Adamson and suggested York bring him to her house on

June 22 of that year. That same day, J.C.’s friends A.A. and C.R. went to B.C.’s house

to spend the night.

During the evening, Adamson drank beer and cooked dinner. The group listened No. 78763-2-I/ 2

to music, danced, played basketball and football, and played video games. At one point

Adamson wanted York to drive him to Seattle to buy J.C. a pair of shoes. But, B.C. said

no.

As the evening wore on, B.C. offered to let Adamson sleep on the couch in the

living room so York did not have to drive him home. At some point, B.C. and York went

to B.C.’s bedroom. The bedroom’s fan made it hard to hear anything happening in the

rest of the house.

The boys continued playing video games in J.C.’s room. Inside the room, which

had no door, was a mattress and box spring on a frame, and a futon folded into the

couch position. J.C. and C.R. testified that, at some point during the evening, Adamson

watched a video on his phone on Pornhub with “naked people” doing “sexual things”

while he was in the bedroom with them.

Later, C.R. and A.A. went to the kitchen to make food. C.R. testified that J.C. did

not go with them. J.C. testified that he did go to the kitchen and then Adamson followed

him back to his room. Either way, J.C. ended up in his room, sitting on his futon with his

back to the wall, while Adamson reclined on the futon.

J.C. testified that Adamson asked several times whether he wanted his legs

massaged. J.C. said no each time. Then, Adamson grabbed J.C.’s ankle, put his hand

down behind the waistband of J.C.’s shorts, and touched J.C.’s testicles. J.C.

immediately stood up and left the room.

J.C. sent his mother several texts to let her know he wanted to talk. B.C. opened

the door to her bedroom and they went to her bathroom to talk privately. J.C. testified

that he told his mother that Adamson touched his “private part.” B.C. testified that J.C.

-2- No. 78763-2-I/ 3

said Adamson “grabbed” his “balls.” York testified that she talked to J.C. about what

happened several times after the incident. York testified that J.C. told her that Adamson

“reached his hand down his pants and tried to grab his balls and [J.C.] brushed him

away and [Adamson] wasn’t able to get to them.”

B.C. called 911. Officers from the City of Kent Police Department came to the

house. After speaking with B.C., they went inside. They found Adamson asleep on the

futon. The officers woke Adamson up, took him outside, and arrested him. Adamson

consented to a search of his bag by the front door. The officers found, among other

things, condoms and personal lubricant.

Jury Instructions

During the trial, a scheduling issue for York arose requiring that she testify before

J.C. The State told the court that the parties anticipated York would testify that J.C. told

her Adamson only tried to touch him but did not make contact. The State said it would

not object to York’s hearsay statement because both parties agreed York’s testimony

was evidence intended to impeach J.C.’s testimony. But, because York was to testify

before J.C., the jury would hear her impeachment of J.C. before he testified. As the

court reiterated, “The statement allegedly made by [J.C.] to . . . York would be

admissible during [her] testimony without hearsay objection as basically early

anticipated impeachment.” York testified as anticipated. Neither party requested any

instruction limiting the jury’s consideration of her testimony.

The defense proposed jury instructions that included one on attempted child

assault in the third degree and one on child molestation in the fourth degree. During a

colloquy, the court and the State agreed that attempted child molestation in the third

-3- No. 78763-2-I/ 4

degree met the legal standard of a lesser included crime. Defense counsel said York’s

testimony, that J.C. told her Adamson “reached down his pants and tried to grab his

balls and he brushed him away and wasn’t able to get to them”, supported attempted

molestation but not actual molestation. The court pointed out that York’s testimony was

impeachment evidence, and not substantive evidence, because the defense did not

proffer a hearsay exception at the time of the testimony. So, the court did not think that

York’s testimony could support a decision to instruct the jury on attempt.

Defense counsel recalled J.C. saying “yes” to a question on cross examination

about whether J.C. stopped Adamson from touching him. The court recalled that J.C.

testified the touch was fleeting because he immediately stood up. The court believed

J.C.’s statement, that he “blocked” Adamson, meant he blocked Adamson “from going

further” after the first contact.

The court stated it did not see how a reasonable juror could conclude that

Adamson made contact with J.C.’s groin given the evidence about J.C. and Adamson’s

positions on the futon. But, because York’s testimony describing what J.C. reported to

her was for impeachment purposes, the only substantive evidence regarding the

incident came from J.C.

The court said,

“J.C. testified very clearly that he was touched under his underwear. And whether he was then touched in his groin under his underwear and there was actual contact made with his testicle or not . . . once there was touching under the underwear into the groin we’re into evidence of child molestation. . . . I think it would be error for me to give the lesser includeds having now heard all of the testimony.”

Later, the court concluded,

“there are significant arguments to be made with respect to the credibility

-4- No. 78763-2-I/ 5

of [J.C.’s] testimony in general but there is no countervailing testimony with respect to or evidence with respect to the incident that occurred and the Court cannot under existing case law base a decision to give a lesser included simply on a concern that the jury might disbelieve the evidence pointing to the guilt of the defendant. There may very well be evidence to support an acquittal but the Court is concerned that it would be error to provide . . . the instructions as proposed [by the defense].”

Defense counsel objected to failure to give the attempt instruction.

The court instructed the jury only on child molestation in the third degree. After

deliberations, the jury returned a guilty verdict.

Adamson appeals.

ANALYSIS

Adamson claims the court should have instructed the jury on attempted

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Related

State v. Parker
683 P.2d 189 (Washington Supreme Court, 1984)
State v. Workman
584 P.2d 382 (Washington Supreme Court, 1978)
State v. Wright
214 P.3d 968 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)
Roberson v. Perez
123 P.3d 844 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Fernandez-Medina
6 P.3d 1150 (Washington Supreme Court, 2000)
Roberson v. Perez
156 Wash. 2d 33 (Washington Supreme Court, 2005)
State v. Mohamed
375 P.3d 1068 (Washington Supreme Court, 2016)
State v. Wright
152 Wash. App. 64 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)
In re the Personal Restraint of Heidari
159 Wash. App. 601 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2011)

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