State v. Eastman

913 P.2d 57, 81 Haw. 131, 1996 Haw. LEXIS 21
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1996
Docket18686
StatusPublished
Cited by164 cases

This text of 913 P.2d 57 (State v. Eastman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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. Eastman, 913 P.2d 57, 81 Haw. 131, 1996 Haw. LEXIS 21 (haw 1996).

Opinion

NAKAYAMA, Justice.

After a bench trial, defendant-appellant Thomas Eastman (Eastman) was found guilty of abuse of a family or household member in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 709-906(1) (Supp.1994). 1 On appeal, Eastman contends that the State of Hawaii (prosecution) presented insufficient evidence to convict him of the offense. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the family court’s judgment.

I. BACKGROUND

Eastman lived together with his wife, Renee Bautista (Bautista), and Bautista’s baby at the time of the alleged incident of physical abuse in this case. At Eastman’s bench trial, Bautista testified that, prior to the incident, Eastman and Bautista had moved their furniture into their kitchen so that their carpets could be cleaned. By the evening of September 30,1994, the carpet had been cleaned and Eastman was supposed to move all the furniture out of the kitchen again, but Eastman failed to do so because he was late returning home from work on that particular day. As a result, Bautista became angry at Eastman and told him that she was going to go to a nearby friend’s home to wait while he moved the furniture out of the kitchen. Bautista picked up a telephone receiver to call her friend, but Eastman thought Bautista was trying to make a long distance telephone call. Eastman and Bautista had just paid over five hundred dollars for a telephone phone bill, so Eastman became angry and told Bautista she was “not calling long distance, and he yanked the phone out” of the telephone jack. Bau-tista took the telephone receiver and “conked him over the back of the head with it until [she] saw blood running.” Eastman walked out of the house saying that he was going to report Bautista to the police.

Bautista further testified that she feared the police would arrest her and take her away from her baby, so Bautista went with her baby to her friend’s nearby home. When Police Officer Thomas Martins (Officer Martins) and Police Officer Walter Whitten 2 (Officer Whitten) arrived at the friend’s home to speak with Bautista about Eastman’s complaint, they noticed that Bautista had a swollen left eyebrow, and at that time Bautista told the officers that Eastman had slapped her. However, when Bautista testified at Eastman’s subsequent trial, she proceeded to recant this prior statement, explaining instead that Eastman had not struck her at all, but rather, Bautista had actually struck her left eyebrow repeatedly with her own hand before the officers arrived in order to deceive the officers into believing that Eastman had slapped her on the side of her head. Bautis-ta further testified that she was able to hit herself in the left eyebrow without experiencing pain because she was intoxicated at that time. Thus, when Officer Martins and Offi *134 cer Whitten arrived to speak with Bautista about Eastman’s complaint, she was able to convince them that they should arrest Eastman for physical abuse.

Bautista also testified at trial that she could not tell whether Eastman had been drinking that night, but Bautista admitted that her left eyebrow was swollen on September 80, 1994, when Officer Martins and Officer Whitten arrived at her friend’s house, and she acknowledged that police photographs clearly and accurately depicted her swollen left eyebrow as it appeared on that particular evening. The prosecution eventually introduced these police photographs into evidence.

When the prosecution asked Bautista whether she told the police officers that she had been dialing 911 when Eastman pulled the telephone out of the telephone jack, Bau-tista answered:

No, I said no. I remember that. I did say, no. I wasn’t dialing the police. I was dialing my girlfriend’s house, and I couldn’t figure out why they kept asking me that. They kept asking me that, and I kept saying, no, I was calling my girlfriend. That’s how I remember.

Although Bautista said that the police officers “kept pressuring” Bautista to make a written statement in a Victim’s Voluntary Statement Form (WSF), Bautista conceded that the police officers did not tell her what to write; Officer Whitten merely told Bautis-ta to “write it out whatever happened.” The prosecution showed Bautista a photocopy of the WSF with Bautista’s signature, and Bautista agreed that it clearly and accurately represented her own prior statements and her own signature which she had written in the WSF. The prosecution eventually introduced the WSF into evidence.

The first question in the WSF asked whether Bautista had been “physically hurt, harmed, or abused,” and Bautista had answered by writing in the word, “Yes[.]” Bautista had also stated in the WSF that immediately prior to the alleged abuse she had “Yelled, Ragged [sic], provided, needed a wacking [sic] He [sic] was upset about me moving & took the stroller so I got in his face[.]” Bautista had further stated in the WSF that Eastman “slapped me” on the “left side of my head[,]” after which Bautista “grab[bed]- for phone Then [sic] hit him w/Receiver [sic] after he pulled the phone out of socket [sic] [.] ”

However, when asked on the stand whether her prior statements in the WSF were true, Bautista answered, “No, it’s not true.” Bautista admitted that she had willingly lied to the police officers and had made the false statements in the WSF because on the night of the alleged abuse she “would say or do anything not to go to jail.” In contrast, Bautista now wanted to tell the truth about Eastman because she could not “just sit there and let him go to jail when he never did hit me.” She also indicated that she and Eastman had reconciled since their altercation, and when the prosecution asked Bautis-ta whether it would be fair to say that she would do anything to keep Eastman from going to jail, Bautista answered, “That would be fair, too. I have a child.” However, Bautista also stated that she “would never lie under oath.”

Officer Martins testified that on September 30, 1994, he first met Eastman when Eastman entered the Lahaina Police Station and “wanted me to go arrest his wife who he said had struck him over the head with a telephone[.]” However, Eastman’s eyes were “red and watery” and Officer Martins detected “liquor on his breath.” Furthermore, Eastman gave more than one version of why his wife had attacked him.

According to Officer Whitten’s testimony, when he and Officer Martin eventually spoke with Bautista, she “had a knot on her head, and she was very incoherent and constantly crying.” Officer Whitten “tried to calm her down” because “she was very hysterical.” Bautista told Officer Whitten that Eastman had become angry because she had wanted to leave him, and in his anger Eastman had slapped Bautista on the side of her head. Bautista told Officer Whitten that after Eastman had hit her, she went to her telephone and “was attempting to call 911” when the altercation escalated further and Bautista struck Eastman in the back of his head with the telephone receiver.

*135

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Bluebook (online)
913 P.2d 57, 81 Haw. 131, 1996 Haw. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-eastman-haw-1996.