State Of Washington v. W.s.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 19, 2013
Docket68378-1
StatusPublished

This text of State Of Washington v. W.s. (State Of Washington v. W.s.) 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. W.s., (Wash. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

STATE OF WASHINGTON, No. 68378-1-1

Respondent, DIVISION ONE

v.

PUBLISHED OPINION W.S., DOB 07/20/95,

Appellant. FILED: August 19, 2013

Schindler, J. — The juvenile court found W.S. guilty of domestic violence

assault in the second degree of C.G. The "Order on Disposition" prohibits contact with

C.G., and the court entered a "Domestic Violence No-Contact Order" (DVNCO) for the

10-year statutory maximum of the crime of assault in the second degree. W.S.

concedes the juvenile court had the authority to enter the DVNCO under RCW

10.99.050 but contends the juvenile court did not have the authority to enter a DVNCO

that will remain in effect beyond his 18th birthday. We hold the juvenile court has the

authority to enter a DVNCO for the statutory maximum for the offense, and affirm. No. 68378-1-1/2

FACTS1

W.S., date of birth July 20, 1995, and C.G., date of birth November 17, 1994,

dated off and on since middle school. On December 31, 2011, W.S. and C.G. got back

together but "broke off their relationship again after only a few days - deciding to remain

friends instead."

On January 6, 2012, W.S. went to C.G.'s house "to hang out and flirt." At some

point C.G. used a chefs knife with an eight-inch blade to slice cake, and left the knife on

her dresser.

The flirting between W.S. and C.G. soon turned to "play-fighting." W.S. was also

"play-bit[ing]" C.G. "repeatedly on [her] shoulders and back." At some point, W.S.

mistakenly called C.G. by the name of his current girlfriend. C.G. got angry and

"slapped [W.S.] in the face." W.S. began hitting C.G., yelling," 'Bitch, I will kill you!'"

C.G. fought back but W.S. soon "gained the upper hand," pummeling C.G. until she was

on the ground holding her hands over her head to protect herself. W.S. then grabbed

the knife from the dresser and stabbed C.G. "with a downward motion, leaving a gaping

three-inch gash in her leg." C.G. screamed. W.S. ran out the bedroom door to the

backyard.

After waiting a few minutes, C.G. went outside to get help. C.G. said that W.S.

"chased her and she was either pushed by [W.S.] or tripped and fell to the ground."

After C.G fell down, W.S. kicked her in the face and "continued fighting with her."

During the fight, W.S. bit C.G.'s hand, "leaving visible wounds."

1W.S. does not challenge the findings of fact. Unchallenged findings of fact are treated as verities on appeal. State v. Hill. 123 Wn.2d 641, 644, 870 P.2d 313 (1994). No. 68378-1-1/3

After W.S. left, C.G. went back inside the house yelling," '[W.S.] stabbed me!'"

C.G.'s mother said that C.G. was crying hysterically and holding her leg. C.G.'s mother

told her to call 911. C.G. told the 911 operator that her ex-boyfriend stabbed her and

she needed medical aid. Seattle police and medics responded to the 911 call. The

medics transported C.G. to Harborview Medical Center.

Dr. Martin Makela examined C.G. In addition to the three-inch wound to her leg,

C.G. had a deep bite mark on her hand, bite marks on her shoulders and back, and an

abrasion and lump near her eye. C.G. told Dr. Makela that "her former boyfriend bit her

hand twice and stabbed her in the leg." C.G. told the Harborview social worker that

"she was [in] her room with her former boyfriend, play fighting, when he stabbed her in

the leg with a knife she had in her room." C.G. also told the social worker that W.S.

chased her and "bit her on her hand" before he ran away.

The State charged W.S. with domestic violence assault in the second degree.

The State alleged that W.S. intentionally assaulted C.G. with a deadly weapon and

recklessly inflicted substantial bodily harm in violation of RCW 9A.36.021(1)(a) and (c).

The State also alleged W.S. committed a crime of domestic violence under RCW

10.99.020.2

After returning home from Harborview and "in the days and weeks following the

incident," C.G. received threatening telephone calls and text messages from W.S.'s

family and his friends demanding that "she change her story." In response to the

2 RCW 10.99.020 defines "domestic violence" to include assault in the second degree when committed by a person 16 years or older with whom "a person sixteen years of age or older. . . has had a dating relationship." RCW 10.99.020(3), (5){b). No. 68378-1-1/4

threats, C.G. told the police that her injuries were accidental. C.G. said that she lied to

the police "[t]o get [W.S.] out of detention and make the threatening messages stop."

But "[w]hen it became clear that her false recantation was having no effect," C.G. told

the police about the threats and that she lied when she said the injuries were accidental.

The State called a number of witnesses to testify during the four-day fact-finding

hearing, including C.G., C.G.'s mother, police officers, and Dr. Makela. W.S. did not

testify. The defense argued C.G. was not credible, and that she lied about the attack

because W.S. was dating someone else.

The juvenile court found W.S. guilty of domestic violence assault in the second

degree. The court found that W.S. recklessly caused substantial bodily harm to C.G.

with a knife, and that he committed the "crime against a person sixteen years of age or

older with whom [W.S.] has or has had a dating relationship."

The Order on Disposition prohibits W.S. from having "contact with [C.G.] (DV

NCO attached)." The court issued a DVNCO under RCW 10.99.050. The DVNCO

prohibits W.S. from having contact with C.G. for 10 years, the statutory maximum for the No. 68378-1-1/5

crime of assault in the second degree/

The DVNCO states, in pertinent part: l Protected Person's Identifiers [OGJ Name (First, Middle, Last) 11-17-94 0 Q DOB Gender Race ! Respondent A do not cause, attempt, or threaten to cause bodily injury to, assault, sexually assault, harass, stalk, or keep under surveillance the protected person B do not contact the protected person, directly, indirectly, in person or through others, by phone, mail, or electronic means, except for mailing or service of process of court documents through a third party, or contact by the Respondent's lawyers C do not knowingly enter, remain, or come within 500 [feet] (1,000 feet if no distance entered) of the protected person's residence, school, workplace, other

4 This no-contact order expires on 2-22-22 . . .

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