State v. Christiansen

163 P.3d 1175, 144 Idaho 463, 2007 Ida. LEXIS 117
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 2007
Docket33527
StatusPublished
Cited by63 cases

This text of 163 P.3d 1175 (State v. Christiansen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Christiansen, 163 P.3d 1175, 144 Idaho 463, 2007 Ida. LEXIS 117 (Idaho 2007).

Opinion

EISMANN, Justice.

This is an appeal from a conviction for arson. The fire started in the defendant’s leased business premises. The defendant seeks a new trial based upon misconduct by the prosecuting attorney in eliciting inadmissible evidence by seeking to lay the foundation for expert testimony by a police officer that in his opinion the defendant was deceptive during police interrogation and in eliciting testimony from the officer that the defendant refused to consent to a search of his business premises. We find the prosecutorial misconduct harmless beyond a reasonable doubt and affirm.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

At about 3:30 a.m. on November 20, 2001, the defendant Eric Christiansen reported a fire in commercial property he leased in Lewiston, Idaho. He operated a business known as Partyworks from the property. The fire investigators concluded that it was an arson fire, and on September 20, 2002, Christiansen was indicted for four felonies: first degree arson of a structure, first degree arson of personal property, attempted first degree arson of a structure, and attempted first degree arson of personal property. Christiansen entered a plea of not guilty, and the charges were tried before a jury in July 2004. The jury found Christiansen guilty of all four counts, and the district court granted him a withheld judgment and placed him on probation.

Prior to sentencing, Christiansen moved for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial based upon trial testimony wrongfully elicited by the prosecuting attorney from Sergeant Clark of the Lewiston Police Department. Sergeant Clark testified that at about 11:15 a.m. on the morning of the fire he interviewed Christiansen at the police station. Christiansen was not in custody, but had come voluntarily to the station at Sergeant Clark’s request. Sergeant Clark testified that Christiansen gave the following account of what had occurred. He had worked late that night and had left a candle burning on his desk when he left the business at *465 about 12:45 a.m. and went home to bed. At about 3:30 a.m. he awakened and remembered the candle. He went to the business to check on it and discovered the fire, which he thought was probably started by the candle. The prosecuting attorney elicited testimony from Sergeant Clark that he did not believe Christiansen’s story and had told him so. 1 The prosecutor then asked whether Sergeant Clark had asked Christiansen for permission to search the property. The officer answered that he had and that he had told Christiansen that the search could shed light on whether Christiansen had a financial motive to start the fire. The prosecutor then asked whether Christiansen had given consent to the search, and Sergeant Clark answered that he had not. Christiansen did not object to these questions. However, after the testimony had been given, he did move for a mistrial. The district court denied the motion because it did not believe that Christiansen would be deprived of a fair trial. It offered Christiansen an opportunity for a jury instruction on the issue, but Christiansen declined because he did not want to draw further attention to the issue.

The prosecuting attorney then elicited testimony from Sergeant Clark regarding his training to determine whether someone was being deceptive during an interview and the mannerisms he had been trained to observe as indicators of deception. The obvious purpose of the questioning was to lay a foundation for the officer’s opinion that Christian-sen was deceptive during the interview. When the prosecuting attorney asked Sergeant Clark what he had noticed about Christiansen’s behavior during the interview, Christiansen objected. The district court sustained that objection.

The district court denied Christiansen s motion for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial. Christiansen appealed, and the appeal was initially heard by the Idaho Court of Appeals. It upheld Christiansen’s conviction, and he requested review by this Court. In cases that come before this Court on a petition for review of a Court of Appeals decision, this Court gives serious consideration to the views of the Court of Appeals, but directly reviews the decision of the lower court. Head v. State, 137 Idaho 1, 43 P.3d 760 (2002).

II. ANALYSIS

Christiansen contends that the district court erred in failing to grant his motion for a judgment of acquittal or a new trial. We will discuss each one separately.

Motion for a judgment of acquittal. Rule 29 of the Idaho Criminal Rules provides that a court can grant a motion for acquittal if the evidence is insufficient to sustain a conviction of the offenses. The district court found that the evidence in this case, although circumstantial, was sufficient to support the jury’s verdict.

The evidence was uncontroverted that the fire was deliberately set. Three fire investigators examined the premises and came to the same conclusion. It was an arson fire. Christiansen stated that he had been working late cleaning and organizing. As a result, he had made a trail of cardboard boxes filled with papers and crumpled newspaper stretching from his office down a hallway past the back door and a bathroom to a storage room where he had left a five-gallon container of aviation gas. The vent on the gas container was open. The expert testimony showed that one fire started in papers on *466 Christiansen’s desk, but it self-extinguished and did not spread beyond the desk top. One or more other fires started in the boxes left in the hallway. There was no innocent cause for any of these fires. The investigators ruled out any possible causes other than arson.

Christiansen offered a hypothesis based upon the testimony of his mother. She recounted an incident that occurred approximately one year before the fire when she was burning a candle that was the same type left by Christiansen on his desk. It was a candle in a glass jar. She stated that after it had burned all the way down to the point that there was no wax remaining it suddenly flamed up very briefly. She described what occurred as follows:

I had it [the candle] sitting on my stereo, and it was just almost gone. You know, it was just right at the bottom. And I got up to go into the kitchen, and all of a sudden, it made this really loud whish noise and flames went up the candle about this far up above the jar (indicating), but just for a blink of an eye. I mean, it was just a very short time. But it scared me. It sounded like a sparkler. And I have burnt several of those type of candles, and it’s the only one that ever did it.

On cross-examination she testified that the candle had burned down to the small metal disc on the bottom of the candle and that the wax was gone. She also said that she had told Christiansen about what had happened. Although Christiansen’s mother said that the candle sounded like a sparkler, she did not testify that it shot out any sparks. It only flamed up very briefly.

The fire investigators all testified that from their examination the candle left on Christiansen’s desk did not start the fire. The physical evidence was simply not consistent with that possibility. The candle was offered into evidence during the trial.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Herrera v. Tewalt
D. Idaho, 2022
State v. Reyes
Idaho Supreme Court, 2022
State v. Smith
483 P.3d 1006 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2021)
State v. Hatfield
Idaho Court of Appeals, 2020
State v. Smith
Idaho Court of Appeals, 2020
State v. Davis
451 P.3d 422 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2019)
State v. Godwin, Sr.
436 P.3d 1252 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2019)
State v. Jeske
Idaho Supreme Court, 2019
State v. Alwin
426 P.3d 1260 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2018)
State v. Jeffrey Allen Jeske
Idaho Court of Appeals, 2018
State v. Robert Benjamin Brackett
Idaho Court of Appeals, 2017
State v. Mark Lankford
399 P.3d 804 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2017)
BOSSE v. STATE
2017 OK CR 10 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 2017)
State v. Mark H. Lankford
Idaho Supreme Court, 2016
State v. John Joseph Fairchild
349 P.3d 431 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 2015)
State v. Azad Haji Abdullah
348 P.3d 1 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2015)
State v. Russell James Parker
Idaho Supreme Court, 2014
State v. Thompson
2014 UT App 14 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2014)
State v. Darren Carmouche
317 P.3d 728 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 2013)
Robert J. Frauenberger
297 P.3d 257 (Idaho Court of Appeals, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
163 P.3d 1175, 144 Idaho 463, 2007 Ida. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-christiansen-idaho-2007.