State of Washington v. Tashia Stuart

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJune 13, 2017
Docket31909-1
StatusUnpublished

This text of State of Washington v. Tashia Stuart (State of Washington v. Tashia Stuart) 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. Tashia Stuart, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED JUNE 13, 2017 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STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) ) No. 31909-1-III Respondent, ) ) v. ) ) TASHIA STUART, ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) Appellant. )

SIDDOWAY, J. -Tashia Stuart appeals her convictions for the aggravated first

degree murder of her mother and an earlier attempt to murder her, arguing the trial court

erred when it admitted testimony from family and friends that her mother expressed fear

before her death that Tashia 1 and Tashia's husband might be trying to kill her. The

statements were not testimonial, so the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment to

the United States Constitution does not apply. We question whether the forfeiture by

wrongdoing exception to the hearsay rule ever applies to a defendant on trial for the

1 Given the large cast of characters, we refer to Tashia and Todd Stuart by their first names for clarity. We intend no disrespect. No. 31909-1-111 State v. Stuart

speaker's murder, but defer that decision to another day. Tashia's convictions can be

affirmed on the basis of harmless error.

Since we affirm the convictions, we do not address the State's cross appeal of the

court's suppression of certain evidence. We affirm a small sanction imposed on the

prosecutor.

We refuse to consider a challenge to the imposition of legal financial obligations

raised for the first time on appeal, but exercise our discretion to deny the State costs on

appeal.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In January 2011, Judy Hebert allowed her daughter Tashia Stuart, Tashia's

husband Todd Stuart, and Tashia's seven-year-old daughter to move into her Pasco home.

In the weeks leading up to March 3, 2011, when Ms. Hebert was fatally shot, Ms. Hebert

expressed concern to several friends and her ex-husband, Tashia's father, that Tashia and

Todd were trying to kill her. The following statements and events were eventually

offered as evidence that Ms. Hebert had the concern and that her concern might have

been reasonable.

On February 20, 2011, Todd asked Ms. Hebert to help him take measurements of

the floor of her garage so that he could build a wall. Handing her a measuring tape, he

asked her to back up until he told her to stop. As she stood at the point where he told her

2 No. 31909-1-III State v. Stuart

to stop, an 18-gallon tub filled with books fell from a floored area on the rafters above

her, hitting her on the head and knocking her to the ground.

Tashia quickly called her father, Rolfe Hebert. While Mr. Hebert and Ms. Hebert

were divorced, they remained friendly. Tashia told Mr. Hebert there had been an

accident, her mother was hurt, and she needed the combination to Ms. Hebert's safe to

retrieve her mother's "do not resuscitate" order and her will. Mr. Hebert answered,

"[Y]ou don't need any of that stuff. You need to hang up and dial 911." Report of

Proceedings (RP) at 1696. 2 When Tashia answered, "[M]om won't let me," Mr. Hebert

told her to put her mother on the phone. Asked what happened, Ms. Hebert told her ex-

husband, "[I]t's the damndest thing," and explained how Todd had been directing her

with the measuring tape when the tub fell and struck her. Id. She told him that the blow

"smashed her to the concrete," and she felt "really beat up" but did not think she needed

medical attention. Id.

Tashia called her father again twice that day, continuing to request the

combination to her mother's safe. He refused to provide it even after Tashia told him,

"[M]om told me everything in that safe is mine anyway." RP at 1699. He answered,

"[T]hen get the combination from mom," ending the discussion. Id.

2 Seven transcripts, separately paginated, are included in our record. The largest begins with an August 22, 2012 hearing and continues with most of the record of the one- month trial. We refer to pages of that transcript as the Report of Proceedings (RP). References to any of the six other transcripts are date-specific, e.g., RP (Nov. 1, 2012).

3 No. 31909-1-III State v. Stuart

Shortly after the tub fall accident, Tashia spoke with Charles Adney, an ex-

boyfriend and the father of her daughter. She asked if he would be willing to witness a

forged will (Ms. Hebert's) for $1,000. She said she wanted to make sure Todd did not

inherit anything from her mother. According to Mr. Adney, she told him, "[T]hat bitch

should be dead in a few days. . . . I dropped something on her head" and she is "bleeding

out of her eyes and her nose." RP at 1489, 1491. He said Tashia also "kind of made a

joke," telling him, "Take it from me, if you drop something on somebody's head, make

sure it's round instead of flat." RP at 1489.

Ms. Hebert became suspicious that the tub might not have fallen by accident, and

perhaps Tashia had been on the partially-floored rafters above Ms. Hebert and pushed it.

Several of Ms. Hebert's friends talked with her in the weeks before her death about her

suspicion and her fear of Tashia and Todd.

Ms. Hebert expressed concern to neighbor Deborah Severin about her safety and

asked Ms. Severin to check in with her on Mondays if Tashia and Todd were at her home

on the weekend. She told Ms. Severin "if something ever happened to [me], they did it."

RP at 732. At Ms. Severin's suggestion, the two came up with a "code word,"

"[l]avender," that Ms. Hebert would use if she wanted Ms. Severin to call the police but

was not free to say so. Id.

Ms. Hebert told Ryan Rhodes, another neighbor, about how Todd led her out to

the garage and positioned her under the rafters so that Tashia could push the tub of books

4 I I No. 31909-1-III State v. Stuart

to fall on her. Ms. Hebert told Mr. Rhodes that "she felt that they were planning

something and that if she wasn't at the house for any period of time that they probably

buried her out in the backyard." RP at 900.

A third neighbor, Tonya Amende, spoke with Ms. Hebert about her injury from

the falling tub, including on the day before Ms. Hebert died. On that last occasion, Ms.

Hebert told Ms. Amende she had drawn a diagram of the garage, depicting where she and

Todd were standing when the tub fell, and that she had taken pictures of the top of the

pickup truck and the top of the rafters because it looked like someone had been on top of

both. She told Ms. Amende she had put the drawing and the photos in her safe. Finally,

she told Ms. Amende she feared Tashia and Todd were "messing with her medication."

RP at 484.

Toni Capaul, Ms. Hebert's friend and banker, testified that Ms. Hebert called her

the day before her death to report abnormal activity in her bank account, identifying two

ATM withdrawals and a retail purchase. She asked Ms. Capaul to cancel her debit card

and issue a new one. During the conversation, Ms. Hebert told Ms. Capaul about being

injured by a tub of books falling from the rafters of the garage. She told Ms. Capaul, "I

think Todd is trying to kill me." RP at 315.

Ms. Hebert spoke to her ex-husband about her suspicion of Tashia and Todd. She

expressed concerns about her medications, telling Mr. Hebert, "[I]f I didn't know better,

5 No. 31909-1-111 State v. Stuart

I'd think they're trying to kill me." RP at 1703.

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