State v. Gongoleski

14 A.3d 218, 2011 R.I. LEXIS 32, 2011 WL 940512
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 18, 2011
Docket2009-120-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 14 A.3d 218 (State v. Gongoleski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Gongoleski, 14 A.3d 218, 2011 R.I. LEXIS 32, 2011 WL 940512 (R.I. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Chief Justice SUTTELL, for the Court.

On June 21, 2007, a disturbance in the Gongoleski household over dirty dishes led to a physical confrontation between a father and his forty-year-old son, as a result of which the son, David Gongoleski (defendant), severely cut his hand. This familial kerfuffle eventually culminated in the defendant’s conviction by a jury for vandalism and disorderly conduct. He now appeals from the judgment of conviction on the sole ground that the trial justice abused her discretion by admitting, for impeachment purposes, evidence of the defendant’s prior convictions for assault and for violation of a no-contact order. The defendant asserts that evidence of the convictions added little, if any, probative value on the issue of his credibility as a witness, and that he was enormously prejudiced by their admission. This case came before the Supreme Court pursuant to an order directing the parties to show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not summarily be decided. After considering the parties’ written and oral submissions and reviewing the record, we conclude that cause has not been shown and that this case may be decided without further briefing or argument. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

I

Facts and Procedural History

On January 4, 2008, defendant was charged in a four-count criminal information with two counts of simple assault (domestic) (counts 1 and 2), one count of vandalism (domestic) (count 3), and one count of disorderly conduct (domestic) (count 4). A two-day trial took place in October 2008. The pertinent evidence adduced at trial is set forth below.

On the evening of June 21, 2007, defendant’s parents, Margaret and Richard Gongoleski, were watching television in the living room of their North Smithfield home when defendant, who resided at the same address, came into the kitchen. Richard Gongoleski testified that his son “was slamming refrigerator doors and other doors, and he got a little boisterous,” and that he could tell by defendant’s “attitude” that he “was a little intoxicated.” Mr. Gongoleski further testified that he “confronted [defendant] in the kitchen” and told him that he had “had enough” and “didn’t want [defendant] in the house.” According to Mr. Gongoleski, when defendant refused to leave, Mr. Gongoleski “pushed him out the door and closed the door,” telling defendant that he “can stay on the porch.” “[H]alf a minute after,” Mr. Gongoleski continued, defendant “punched the window in the door, reached *220 in and opened up the glass that closes the door.” Mr. Gongoleski testified that defendant then came back into the kitchen and “punched [him] in the chest” with a “[cjlosed fist” a “[c]ouple of times,” although Mr. Gongoleski said that defendant did not punch him “hard.” According to Mr. Gongoleski, defendant’s hand was “bleeding severely” from “punching in the window” and left “two red splotches” on the white T-shirt that Mr. Gongoleski was wearing that evening. The defendant then went upstairs, at which point Mr. Gongole-ski told him that he “better come down and clean” up the mess he had made in the kitchen.

The defendant’s mother, Margaret Gon-goleski, also testified at defendant’s trial. Mrs. Gongoleski testified that on the evening of June 21, 2007, while she and her husband were watching television, defendant came downstairs and “was pretty upset, maybe because there [were] dishes in the sink.” Mrs. Gongoleski believed that defendant had been drinking because he “was very boisterous with his voice” and was acting similar to the manner in which he had acted when he “was under the weather” in the past. According to Mrs. Gongoleski, she and her husband “didn’t appreciate [defendant’s] demeanor in the house,” which included defendant “slamming the refrigerator door;” she said that, after about five or ten minutes of it, Mr. Gongoleski asked defendant to leave. 1 Mrs. Gongoleski testified that her husband “put [defendant] out of the house,” and that “two seconds” later defendant “broke the little pane of glass in the window on the back kitchen door, cutting his wrist, and [came] into the house.” When Mrs. Gongoleski heard the glass break, she “came from the living room into the kitchen and saw [defendant] pushing [his father] aside[ ] and blood * * * spurting everywhere.” 2 Blood spurted over Mrs. Gongoleski’s glasses and pajamas, and it was “evident[ ]” to her that “when [defendant] broke that glass he did something to an artery in his arm.” Mrs. Gongoleski testified that after defendant pushed Mr. Gongoleski out of the way and ran upstairs, Mr. Gongoleski “asked [defendant] to come back down to pick up the glass, and when [defendant] did the blood had spurted so much.” Mrs. Gongoleski further testified that she told defendant “to go back up and call 911” because “he needed some medical help.”

Patrolman Frank Gallagher of the North Smithfield police testified that, on the evening of June 21, 2007, he responded to a call at the Gongoleskis’ house and, upon arrival, observed defendant standing “in the driveway with a garment over his right hand.” The defendant appeared to Patrolman Gallagher “to have sustained an injury.” Patrolman Gallagher also testified that defendant’s slurred speech, his bloodshot and watery eyes, and a moderate odor of alcohol coming from his breath led him to believe that defendant was intoxicated.

Before defendant took the stand in his own defense, the trial justice heard arguments from both parties about whether defendant’s prior convictions for assault and for violation of a no-contact order could be used to impeach him. The state *221 argued that, because of a dearth of physical evidence, the case depended on the credibility of the testimony offered by the parties, and that admission of defendant’s convictions was appropriate to impeach his testimony. In response, defendant argued that the potential prejudice from admitting the convictions outweighed any relevance that they may have to impeaching defendant’s credibility. The trial justice ruled that both convictions could be admitted, reasoning that both matters were “very recent in time” and that the state had “a right to show the convictions for purposes of credibility” because the case was “going to come down to credibility between [defendant] and essentially his father.” The trial justice then expressed her “concern[]” about “the nature of the convictions and the prejudice that [they] may have,” and accordingly instructed the state not to refer to the convictions as “domestic” and not “to refer to the victims of the case as mother and father.” 3

The defendant testified in his own defense that on the evening in question, he drank eight ounces of beer in his bedroom before coming into the kitchen and discovering a three-day-old “mess in the sink.” The defendant testified that he cleaned up the mess by arranging things in the dishwasher and moving around pots and pans.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 A.3d 218, 2011 R.I. LEXIS 32, 2011 WL 940512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gongoleski-ri-2011.