State Of Washington v. Tehl Matthew Dunlap

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedSeptember 12, 2017
Docket48753-5
StatusUnpublished

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Bluebook
State Of Washington v. Tehl Matthew Dunlap, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

September 12, 2017

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 48753-5-II

Respondent,

v. UNPUBLISHED OPINION

TEHL MATTHEW DUNLAP,

Appellant.

MAXA, A.C.J. – Tehl Dunlap appeals his convictions of fourth degree assault and

unlawful imprisonment. We hold that (1) the judge presiding over the proceedings properly

denied Dunlap’s affidavit of prejudice because the judge already had granted a motion for

authorization of funds for investigative services, which was a discretionary ruling in the case; (2)

the presiding judge did not violate the appearance of fairness by not recusing himself because his

previous encounter with Dunlap was brief, occurred over 10 years earlier, and did not impact the

judge’s ability to be fair; and (3) Dunlap cannot raise the unanimity issue for the first time on

appeal because the evidence shows that he engaged in a continuous course of conduct, and

therefore the trial court did not commit manifest error in failing to give a unanimity instruction.

Accordingly, we affirm Dunlap’s convictions of fourth degree assault and unlawful

imprisonment. No. 48753-5-II

FACTS

Background and Charges

Dunlap had an on and off romantic relationship with Jeneal Thompson throughout 2014

and 2015. On September 27, 2015, Thompson spent the day with a man named Aaron.

Thompson had known Aaron for 10 years and referred to him as her brother, although they were

not actually related. While Thompson was with Aaron, Dunlap sent Thompson a text message

asking her to go out and get a drink with him. Thompson responded that she was spending the

day with Aaron and did not want to leave him to go see Dunlap.

Dunlap responded by calling Thompson a liar and accusing her of having an intimate

relationship with Aaron. Later, after Aaron and Thompson went to a nearby bar, Dunlap showed

up and began arguing with Aaron. A bartender threatened to call the police, and Dunlap left the

bar. Aaron later left on foot. Thompson was intoxicated and was unable to drive at that point, so

she remained at the bar.

Dunlap eventually returned and offered to give Thompson a ride so she could find Aaron.

Thompson agreed and got into Dunlap’s truck. Thompson knew of two trailer parks where

Aaron had likely gone and asked Dunlap to drive her to those two places. But Dunlap did not

drive in the direction of the trailer parks. Instead, he drove around for the next 60 to 90 minutes.

Thompson claimed that Dunlap assaulted her multiple times during that period.

The State charged Dunlap with one count of fourth degree assault, first degree

kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment, and third degree malicious mischief.

2 No. 48753-5-II

Pretrial Matters

Dunlap’s defense counsel made a motion for authorization of funds for investigative

services, requesting approval to spend $750 of public funds for a private investigator. The trial

court granted the motion. A week later, defense counsel filed an affidavit of prejudice against

the same judge who granted the motion. The trial court denied the affidavit of prejudice as

untimely because granting the motion for investigative services was a discretionary ruling in the

case.

Dunlap then requested that the judge recuse himself because before becoming a judge, he

had acted as the defense attorney in an assault trial in which Dunlap was the victim. The judge

declined to recuse himself, noting that the trial would have been at least 10 years earlier and that

he did not remember Dunlap or the details of the case.

Trial Testimony and Conviction

At trial, Thompson testified about the details of the incident. She stated that after Dunlap

drove in the wrong direction, he stopped the truck, grabbed Thompson’s phone from her hand,

and began looking at her messages. Thompson tried to grab her phone back several times, but

Dunlap threw it out of the window.

Thompson responded by taking a shotgun that was sitting on the seat between them and

throwing it out the door. Dunlap grabbed Thompson by her hair and “ripped [her] head down”

while telling her to go get his gun. 1 Report of Proceedings (RP) at 132. Thompson retrieved

the gun and got back in the truck. Dunlap then started driving again.

3 No. 48753-5-II

Thompson started to smoke a cigarette, but Dunlap told her she could not smoke in his

truck and took the cigarette from her. Thompson claimed that Dunlap put the cigarette out on

her chest, getting cigarette ash down her shirt and in her hair.

Dunlap continued driving and yelling at Thompson, calling her a liar. Thompson tried to

grab the steering wheel and turn the truck into a ditch so she could get out. Dunlap grabbed her

arm and twisted it, then he tried to push her out of the moving truck with his foot. Thompson

also tried to grab the keys from the ignition and Dunlap pushed her head into the dashboard.

Dunlap then drove Thompson back to the bar, returning about 60 to 90 minutes after they

had left. When Dunlap parked, Thompson threw items out of his truck because she wanted to

force him to stop and pick up the items in order to give her time to record his license plate

number. Dunlap grabbed Thompson by the hair and forced her head into the seat of his truck

and told her to stop throwing things out of his truck. Thompson then ran into the bar and told the

bartender to call the police.

Dunlap also testified, but his version of events differed in many ways. He said he

grabbed Thompson’s phone from her because he was agitated, but said he only dropped it from

the truck because she was grabbing the steering wheel to make the truck swerve and he reached

to get the wheel back under control. Dunlap said that he tried to hold her off as she tried to grab

at the steering wheel in order to defend himself, defend his truck, and prevent them from

crashing.

Dunlap said that he tried to drive off after Thompson got out to pick up the shotgun she

had thrown out the door. He said that he kept his foot out to try to prevent Thompson from

4 No. 48753-5-II

getting back in the truck, but she would not let go of the truck door and eventually got back in

the truck before Dunlap could drive off.

Dunlap denied ever putting a cigarette out on Thompson. He stated that he took the lit

cigarette from her and when Thompson tried to grab it back she knocked some of the cigarette

ash on her arm. Dunlap did admit to grabbing Thompson by the hair when she was throwing

items out of his truck when they returned to the bar.

During closing argument, the State told the jury regarding assault that “there’s a whole

bunch of them you can pick from here. There were a lot of assaults that happened here.” 2 RP at

410-11. The State then noted that Dunlap (1) grabbed Thompson by the hair when she tried to

grab the keys or the steering wheel, (2) shoved her head toward the dashboard, (3) tried to push

her out of his truck, and (4) grabbed her by the hair when they got back to the bar. The State did

not elect which incident it wanted the jury to rely on in considering the single assault charge.

Dunlap did not request a unanimity instruction and the trial court did not instruct the jury

on unanimity. Dunlap did not object to the lack of a unanimity instruction. The jury found

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