State v. Andazola

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedNovember 9, 2023
Docket125166
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Andazola (State v. Andazola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Andazola, (kanctapp 2023).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 125,166

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

YADIRA ANDAZOLA, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Douglas District Court; JAMES T. GEORGE, judge pro tem. Oral argument held April 11, 2023. Opinion filed November 9, 2023. Affirmed in part, reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded with directions.

Brenda J. Clary, of Law Office of Brenda J. Clary, of Lawrence, for appellant.

Jon Simpson, assistant district attorney, Suzanne Valdez, district attorney, and Kris W. Kobach, attorney general, for appellee.

Before GARDNER, P.J., HILL and PICKERING, JJ.

HILL, J.: This is a direct appeal by Yadira Andazola of her convictions for domestic battery and criminal damage to property. She claims the judge pro tem denied her right to present her theory of defense. Andazola also claims that there is insufficient evidence to support her conviction for criminal damage to property.

1 Nothing good happens at 2 a.m.

Andazola is a single mother rearing two teenage sons. When these events took place, Miguel, the older son, was an 18-year-old high school student living at home.

One night in July 2021, Miguel worked a late shift at a fast-food restaurant and then went out with his friends. He had borrowed Andazola's car for the evening. Usually, she did not have a problem with Miguel going out after work because he would check in and tell her who he was out with and where they were going. That night, Andazola knew he had gone out after work, but Miguel, however, had been evasive and did not tell her with whom. When she called him after 11 p.m., Miguel did not answer her call. Andazola had expected Miguel to come home before midnight, but this time he did not return home until 2 a.m.

When Miguel returned home, his mother asked him to return her car key. He refused. His refusal surprised her, and they started to argue. She kept asking for the key and Miguel kept refusing. At some point, Andazola reached into Miguel's pocket to get the key but instead pulled out his phone. The two were yelling at each other—Miguel asking for the phone and his mother asking for the key. Andazola told Miguel it was her phone and if she wanted to break it, she could. She threatened to smash it if Miguel did not hand over her car key. When Miguel did not turn over the key, she threw the phone on the ground, which shattered the screen and broke the phone. Andazola testified she had become angry and frustrated.

After breaking the phone, Andazola testified, "[T]hings really got ugly." Miguel became very upset and said, "Fuck you" to his mother. She slapped him; he said, "Fuck you" two more times and "Fuck you, you fucking whore." She slapped him each time he cursed at her. Andazola testified that he had never disrespected her or cursed at her before that night. At the bench trial, responding to the question, "Were you trying to

2 teach him, or were you trying to hurt him back," she explained, "Oh, never hurt my kids, no. I was trying to teach him."

Miguel used his little brother's phone to call the police and report the incident. When the police arrived, Miguel was waiting outside their home and Andazola was distressed. The Douglas County District Attorney's Office charged her with two misdemeanors: domestic battery and criminal damage to property.

During her direct examination, Andazola was asked about her "views on corporal punishment for the discipline of a child." The State objected, citing relevance. Defense counsel responded that the question was "directly relevant to the defense of parental discipline." Counsel continued, "I realize that the young man has turned 18, but in his mother's mind he's living in her home as her child. She's still exerting a certain amount of control and discipline over him, which he expects, and from the standpoint of a mother's intent, it's relevant." The State responded that because Miguel was 18 years old, there was "no corporal punishment for an adult." The judge pro tem sustained the State's objection.

The ownership of the damaged phone is disputed. Both Miguel and Andazola testified about their individual efforts to buy the phone, each claiming ownership of the phone. Miguel testified that he gave his mother $450 cash for a phone. He explained that she went to a used phone store in Kansas City and purchased the phone for him. Before buying the phone, Andazola sent Miguel photos of available phones, and Miguel picked one from the selection. Miguel said he paid his mother $35 per month towards his portion of the phone bill.

Andazola testified that she bought the phone when Miguel started driving her older car, which could be unreliable at times. She disagreed with Miguel's testimony that he paid her $450 for the phone. Instead, Andazola said that Miguel sporadically

3 contributed to bills and rent. Once he gave her $200-$300 in cash, but it was not necessarily for the phone. Andazola did not expect Miguel to pay her for the phone.

The judge pro tem concluded that under Kansas law, "when you're 18 you're not a child anymore," and thus Andazola had no right to discipline her son. The judge pro tem thus found her guilty of domestic battery.

Next, the judge found that Andazola had bought the phone for Miguel. The court thought the phone "almost [came] to the point of being a gift." But even if it were not a gift, the court found that because the phone was intended for Miguel's use, he had enough of an interest in it to support a claim for criminal damage to property. The court found Andazola guilty of criminal damage to property.

The pro tem judge sentenced Andazola to concurrent 90-day jail sentences on each count and placed her on supervised probation for 6 months. The judge also ordered her to pay $200 restitution.

Can Andazola present a parental discipline defense?

Andazola argues that the judge pro tem denied her right to present her theory of defense. She wanted to present the parental discipline defense to the domestic battery charge. The judge pro tem ruled that because Miguel was 18, he was no longer a child, and thus the parental discipline defense was inapplicable. We treat this as a question of law. State v. Branson, 38 Kan. App. 2d 484, Syl. ¶ 1, 167 P.3d 370 (2007).

There are important rights at stake in resolving this question. The first is the right to make a defense. Defendants have a constitutional right to present their theory of defense, and the exclusion of evidence that is integral to that theory violates a defendant's fundamental right to a fair trial. State v. Evans, 275 Kan. 95, 102, 62 P.3d

4 220 (2003). If Andazola could legally raise the parental discipline defense, then by denying her the opportunity to make her defense, the judge pro tem denied her a fair trial.

The parental discipline defense arises from caselaw, thus it is a common-law defense. This does not mean it is a low quality defense. Our Supreme Court has explained that although common-law crimes were abolished under K.S.A. 21-3102(1), there is nothing in the statutes "to indicate that common-law defenses or rules relating thereto were abolished when the current version of the criminal code was enacted in 1969." State v. Scobee, 242 Kan. 421, 428, 748 P.2d 862 (1988). Despite its origin in caselaw, parental discipline is a recognized defense in Kansas.

Several Kansas cases have recognized the common-law defense of parental discipline. See, e.g., State v.

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State v. Andazola, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-andazola-kanctapp-2023.