State v. Dowling

263 P.3d 116, 125 Haw. 406, 2011 Haw. App. LEXIS 935
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 30, 2011
Docket30506
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 263 P.3d 116 (State v. Dowling) 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. Dowling, 263 P.3d 116, 125 Haw. 406, 2011 Haw. App. LEXIS 935 (hawapp 2011).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

FOLEY, J.

Defendant-Appellant Richard D. Dowling, Jr. (Dowling) appeals from the Judgment of Probation filed on April 15, 2010 in the Family Court of the Second Circuit (family court).1

The family court found Dowling guilty of Abuse of Family or Household Member, in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 709-906 (Supp. 2010).2

On appeal, Dowling contends (1) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction because the State of Hawai'i (State) did not prove beyond a reasonable doubt facts that negate his claim of parental discipline; (2) the mental distress suffered by the complaining witness, Dowling’s eleven-year-old son (Minor), did not satisfy HRS § 703-309(1) (1993)3; and (3) Dowling’s discipline was reasonably proportional to Minor’s misconduct and reasonably necessary to protect Minor’s welfare.

I.

On January 28, 2010, the State charged Dowling by written complaint with Abuse of Family or Household Member. On April 7, 2010, the family court presided over Dowl-ing’s one-day, jury-waived trial.

[408]*408The State called Minor to testify. Minor was first shown several photographs, which he identified as having been taken around Christmas 2009. Minor stated that the pho'tographs showed bruises on his legs.

Minor testified that after he finished vacuuming the house, he put the vacuum back into the hall closet and tried to close the closet door. He could not close the door because a rug was stuck under it. Dowling was walking past the closet to get to his room, but could not get past the open closet door. Dowling tried to fix the door, but could not, and he started getting angry. Minor testified that he had caused the rug to get stuck under the closet door, but when Dowling asked Minor if he had caused the door to become stuck, Minor repeatedly denied doing so. Dowling became angry because he thought Minor was lying. Dowling then pushed Minor on the shoulder, and Minor fell onto a bed in the parlor. At that point, Minor thought he was going to get “lickin’s” because he had lied about the closet door. Dowling then hit Minor on the left leg twice while Minor was in a fetal position with his knees up and his hands protecting his face. Minor thought Dowling punched him with a closed fist. Dowling stopped hitting him when Minor yelled, began crying out loud, and told Dowling to stop. Minor stated that when Dowling hit his leg, it hurt and his leg hurt “a little bit” after the incident. He also stated that he was scared at the time of the incident.

Minor informed his great grandmother about the incident approximately one week later. Minor explained that he had bruises on both his legs from falling down with a wheelbarrow when he was cleaning the yard. Minor pointed out on his left leg the bruises that were made by Dowling and the bruises that were a result of his fall with the wheelbarrow.

Minor’s great grandmother testified that after church services on Sunday, Minor asked her to come over to his house for lunch. Minor began to cry when they were in the car and then showed her his injuries.

Dowling’s wife (Wife) testified that Minor complained to her that it was unfair he had to vacuum the house while his younger siblings were allowed to play outside. She stated that she believed Minor denied three times that he had shoved the closet door after Dowling confronted Minor and told him, “I am right here watching you do what needs to be done, and you are denying me in front of my face.” Although she did not directly observe Dowling hit Minor, she did see Dowling’s body gesture and concluded that Dowling had hit Minor. After being hit, Minor admitted that he shoved the stuck door, and Dowling walked away. After the incident, Wife told Minor to continue doing his chores, and Minor again complained that it was unfair. She testified that three to seven days prior to the closet incident she had seen braising on Minor’s left leg near his butt. She stated that Minor did not appear more anxious and did not exhibit signs of anxiety more than normal the week following the incident.

Dowling testified that he saw Minor open the door to put the vacuum cleaner in the closet without moving the rug in front of the door and observed how the door got stuck on the rug. He asked Minor three or four times how the door got stuck, and each time Minor denied opening the door on the rug. Dowl-ing demanded to know why Minor was lying and informed Minor that he had observed what Minor did, but Minor “kept saying no, that he never.” Dowling became angry because Minor was lying in front of him and Wife, and because lying was against the rules in the house, he spanked Minor. He pushed Minor onto a bed that was in the parlor. Dowling testified that he did not punch Minor on the leg, but rather hit Minor twice on the butt with an open palm and his fingers together.

The family court found Minor’s testimony to be credible and believed that Dowling was extremely angry and pushed Minor onto the bed, the last thing Minor saw was Dowling’s fist, and Minor got hit twice on his left side while covering his eyes. After acknowledging that Dowling had a right to discipline his child, the family court stated: “But I think this ease just went a little bit too far. I think you lost your temper and you punched your son.” The family court went on to state:

[409]*409Did you go overboard or not?
You know, there is [sie] bruises on him. They are not huge bruises, but there are bruises.
You know, if I read 309 — 709-309 (l)(b), which states the force used is not designed to cause, or known to cause, or risk of causing substantial bodily injury.
Yes, you didn’t break his bones. You didn’t do anything like that. It wasn’t — it didn’t rise to that occasion. But, I do — I do believe that it rose to mental distress, and not just that he was going to get lickings at the time.
I think the evidence that the Court heard and [Minor’s] testimony of what happened the Sunday following it, it was still on his mind. You know, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and he went to the person he testified he tasted the most who would help him. And he was that concerned about it, five days after the fact to tell somebody about it. And I think that is what rises, just this ease goes over the edge just a little, you know, that it did cause mental distress.
So I’m going to find you guilty of the offense of abuse [of] family and household member.

After finding Dowling guilty of Abuse of Family or Household Member, the family court filed the Judgment of Probation on April 15, 2010. Dowling timely appealed.

II.

A.

On appeal, Dowling contends the family court erred by convicting him of Abuse of Family or Household Member because the State failed to adduce substantial evidence negating his justification defense of parental discipline.

To invoke the defense of justification under HRS § 703-309

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Related

State v. Dowling
263 P.3d 116 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 P.3d 116, 125 Haw. 406, 2011 Haw. App. LEXIS 935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dowling-hawapp-2011.