State v. Cordero

105 P.3d 258, 106 Haw. 381, 2004 Haw. App. LEXIS 455
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 30, 2004
Docket26158
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 105 P.3d 258 (State v. Cordero) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cordero, 105 P.3d 258, 106 Haw. 381, 2004 Haw. App. LEXIS 455 (hawapp 2004).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

LIM, J.

Mario Thomas Cordero, Sr. (Cordero) appeals the August 18, 2003 judgment upon a bench trial in the family court of the third circuit1 that convicted him of abuse of family or household member, a violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) §§ 709-906(1) and - 906(4) (Supp.2003).2

[382]*382Cordero contends “there was insufficient evidence to show that ... the police had reasonable grounds to believe that there was physical abuse or harm inflicted by Mr. Cordero upon Julia[ Hoke, the complaining witness].” Opening Brief at 18. We agree, and reverse.

I. Background.

On September 27, 2002, the State filed a complaint against Cordero, which read as follows:

On or about the 26th day of September, 2002, in South Hilo, County and State of Hawaii, MARIO CORDERO did intentionally, knowingly or recklessly refuse compliance with the lawful order of a police officer to leave the premises at 622A Wainaku Street, Hilo, Hawaii, thereby committing the offense of Abuse of Family or Household Member, in violation of Section 709-906(1) and (4), Hawaii Revised Statutes, as amended.

Cordero went to trial on March 7, 2003.

Julia testified first for the State. Cordero is her father. On September 26, 2002, she and her family (her husband and their five children) were living with her parents in a house owned by her uncle. The house connects to the county roadway via a private driveway that also serves several other lots. At around 5:50 p.m., Julia called the police' because

my father and I was getting into a argument, and it was getting really bad. There was a lot of shoving and pushing.
And he was threatening to call the police on a Saturday, and I just said, “Why not call the police now?” And he said, “Go ahead.” So I called the police.

When a police officer arrived, Julia told him her side of the story, then Cordero had his turn. Julia interrupted and cajoled, “You [383]*383know, dad, tell the truth.” Cordero got “really upset,” and started yelling and confronting the officer about doing his job. The officer asked Julia if she and her family would leave the premises, but the family had no place of their own and there was no room at the homeless shelter. The officer then asked Julia’s parents if they would leave, but they demurred. In the course of these colloquies, Cordero remained loudly vociferous and upset. The officer threatened to arrest Cordero, but another police officer arrived and removed Cordero from the house. Then,

My father was ranting and raving up and down the road saying all kinda t’ings, um, just going off, um, for about an hour.
Um, the officers came to me and they was explaining to me that they’re gonna ask him, um, my father, if he would sign the citation and if he would leave.
He wouldn’t leave. He wouldn’t sign the citation so they told me that they were gonna arrest him. For Abuse of a Family Household member.

On cross-examination, Julia remembered that when her argument with her father first became heated, her mother stepped between them and exhorted them to stop, but to no avail: “my father kept coming towards me so I kept going towards him.” Julia also recalled that when the first police officer arrived, she and her father were sitting at the kitchen table.

Police officer Derek Morimoto (Officer Morimoto) testified that he was dispatched to a “domestic dispute” that evening. When Officer Morimoto arrived at the Cordero household, Officer Asuncion was already in the house. Officer Morimoto saw Julia and her father arguing in the dining room area. He> noticed that Cordero’s hands were clenched. There were at least three or four people in the dining room area. Cordero was yelling in a loud voice. Cordero was also yelling at Officer Asuncion. The confrontation appeared to escalate, so Officer Morimo-to took Cordero out of the house into the garage area and tried to talk him down:

Uh, that time I tried to talk to him, you know, to calm him down. Uh, at this time he just started, uh, you know, yelling, uh, at me, getting in — in my face, uh, pointing his finger in my face; and he was also telling me, uh, about, uh, that another family member was gonna get evicted out of the house soon. And at that time he started to walk up and down the, uh, driveway.

As Cordero walked up and down the driveway, Officer Morimoto kept trying to pacify him, but Cordero continued to yell at Officer Morimoto. Cordero was also yelling at Julia’s husband, Arthur Hoke (Arthur), who was sitting in the garage, “about evicting him in a few days.” Officer Asuncion then told Officer Morimoto that Cordero would be issued a “warning citation.” After the citation was issued, Officer Morimoto helped Officer Asuncion handcuff Cordero. Cordero did not resist. On cross-examination, Officer Mori-moto acknowledged that he “never saw Mr. Cordero hit anyone or anything[.]”

Officer Asuncion testified that he responded to “a domestic” on the evening in question. When he arrived at the house, he knocked on the door and Cordero invited him in. Officer Asuncion entered and asked the assemblage whether. everything was okay. He noticed Julia off to the side, crying. Cordero “appeared to be very agitated. He was yelling and, uh, screaming at his daughter and at myself.” After Officer Morimoto escorted Cordero out of the house, Officer Asuncion spoke with Julia. Officer Asuncion believed that Cordero was “the aggressor[.]” Officer Asuncion decided that’ Cordero could not remain at the house, because “we felt that if we left him there things would’ve get little bit more worse, possibly become physical.” Officer Asuncion asked Cordero to leave the premises voluntarily, but Cordero balked. Cordero’s wife was asked to call someone to come and take Cordero away, so she called their daughter-in-law. But when the daughter-in-law arrived, Cordero refused to go with her. Officer Asuncion thereupon issued a “24-hour citation” to Cordero.

Officer Asuncion confirmed that he read the citation to Cordero, verbatim, and explained it. Officer Asuncion told Cordero that if he did not comply with the citation by leaving the premises, he would be subject to arrest. This did not faze.Cordero, who told Officer Asuncion, “the only way we was gonna have him leave is to arrest him.” Officer [384]*384Asuncion asked Cordero to sign the citation, to no avail. Cordero’s daughter-in-law signed the citation instead, thereby purportedly acknowledging that the police explained the citation to her father-in-law. Officer Asuncion estimated that Cordero was asked to leave “at least half a dozen times.” But Cordero continued to insist that the only way he would go was under arrest, so he was placed under arrest. Officer Asuncion figured that he spent about an hour trying to get Cordero to go. Officer Asuncion described Julia’s demeanor during the incident: “Well, she was, uh, crying so she was, I guess, afraid. Um, but other than that she— she spoke like she was, um, at the time, uh, able to comprehend what I was — what I was asking her.” On cross-examination, Officer Asuncion admitted that he did not see Corde-ro take a swing at anyone, or hit or damage any property.

Cordero was the only witness for the defense. He explained that the whole thing started when he was making dinner.

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Related

State v. Cordero
105 P.3d 258 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2004)

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Bluebook (online)
105 P.3d 258, 106 Haw. 381, 2004 Haw. App. LEXIS 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cordero-hawapp-2004.