State v. J. Warren

2020 MT 92N
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 2020
DocketDA 18-0542
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2020 MT 92N (State v. J. Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. J. Warren, 2020 MT 92N (Mo. 2020).

Opinion

04/21/2020

DA 18-0542 Case Number: DA 18-0542

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2020 MT 92N

STATE OF MONTANA,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

JAMES MICHAEL WARREN,

Defendant and Appellant.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the First Judicial District, In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. BDC 17-175 Honorable Michael F. McMahon, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellant:

John Ferguson, Ferguson Law Office, Missoula, Montana

For Appellee:

Timothy C. Fox, Montana Attorney General, J. Stuart Segrest, Assistant Attorney General, Helena, Montana

Leo Gallagher, Lewis and Clark County Attorney, Melissa Broch, Deputy County Attorney, Helena, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: February 26, 2020

Decided: April 21, 2020

Filed:

cir-641.—if __________________________________________ Clerk Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating

Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not

serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this

Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana

Reports.

¶2 Defendant and Appellant James Michael Warren (Warren) appeals the Judgment

and Commitment issued by the First Judicial District Court, Lewis and Clark County, on

July 24, 2018, following his felony assault with a weapon conviction after a jury trial. We

affirm.

¶3 On March 22, 2017, Warren was riding his bicycle when he came across a fiberglass

rod in the street and picked it up. Warren then ran into two of his acquaintances, Brian

Owens (Owens) and Heather Servoss (Servoss), looking through a dumpster behind a thrift

store near the Little Caesars restaurant on North Last Chance Gulch in Helena. Warren

invited Owens and Servoss to share a pizza with him, and the three made their way to Little

Caesars. After the group finished eating, Warren left on his bicycle.

¶4 Shortly after leaving Little Caesars, Warren realized his rear bicycle tire was flat.

Warren, who believed Owens had previously stolen from him and owed him $120 from an

incident the previous year, became convinced Owens was responsible for the flat tire. As

such, Warren returned to Little Caesars, where Owens and Servoss remained, to confront

Owens. Warren approached with the fiberglass rod in his hand, asked Owens if he “thought

he was pretty slick, you know, flattening my rear tire,” and then proceeded to attack Owens

2 with the fiberglass rod. Warren struck Owens roughly five times with the rod—knocking

him to the ground and causing injury and bleeding—stopping when Servoss intervened and

told him to stop. Warren then left the scene.

¶5 After Warren left, Servoss called an ambulance. Paramedics assessed Owens’s

injuries, but he refused to go to the hospital. Two weeks later, on April 5, 2017, Warren

was interviewed by Helena Police Officer John Kaleczyc about the incident with Owens.

Officer Kaleczyc read Warren his Miranda1 rights, and Warren agreed to speak with him

in an interview recorded on Officer Kaleczyc’s body camera. Warren described his actions

against Owens, stating that he was angry over Owens stealing from him and flattening his

bike tire and “just [came] unhinged,” “lost it,” and that “what I did probably wasn’t cool

but every once in a while sometimes people need that shit.” During the interview, Warren

did not mention to Officer Kaleczyc that he thought he was in danger or acting in

self-defense or that Owens was reaching into his backpack for a knife when Warren

approached.

¶6 On May 3, 2017, Warren was charged with a single count of Assault with a Weapon,

a felony, in violation of § 45-5-213(1)(a), MCA. The matter went to jury trial May 1-2,

2018. At trial, Warren presented a justifiable use of force defense, claiming he beat Owens

with the fiberglass rod in self-defense, as he believed Owens was reaching into his

backpack to grab a knife to attack him. At trial, Warren did not testify to seeing a knife in

1 Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 86 S. Ct. 1602 (1966). 3 Owens’s backpack at the time of the assault, stating only that he “knew . . . from the

previous year that [Owens] had knives in his backpack[.]”

¶7 After the parties completed evidentiary presentation of their cases, but before

closing arguments, the District Court read the jury instructions to the jury. These

instructions included Instruction No. 28, the first aggressor instruction, which stated:

The use of force in defense of a person is not available to a person who purposely or knowingly provokes the use of force against himself unless such force is so great that he reasonably believes that he is in imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm and that he has exhausted every reasonable means to escape such danger other than the use of force which is likely to cause death or serious bodily harm to the assailant.

After the District Court read the instructions, it reminded the jury that the full instructions

would be available in the jury room and “that the attorneys are not witnesses and statements

made by counsel during this trial are not evidence.”

¶8 The prosecutor then began his closing argument, asking the jury to “look at the

evidence and look at the law and make a decision.” The prosecutor discussed how he

intended to talk about the instructions and how they might apply to the case, but that the

jury should go with their collective memories if he said “something that doesn’t square

with what the Judge has told you.” The prosecutor then discussed how the jury instructions

worked together, explaining the jury did not need to consider the lesser-included offense

of assault if the State proved assault with a weapon. Turning then to the self-defense

instructions, the prosecutor made the following statement:

[S]o before you get to the self-defense instruction as it pertains to threat against him, the door you have to walk through is the aggressor statute, and that’s instruction 28. So, as we discussed during voir dire, if somebody is the aggressor, if he starts it, he [then] cannot use self-defense. So as it

4 pertains to his need to act to defend himself, if you make a determination that he was the aggressor, then you don’t even need to discuss self-defense.

Warren’s counsel did not object to this statement, and the prosecutor continued discussing

the jury instructions and elements of self-defense in his closing argument. After the

prosecutor finished, Warren’s counsel made her closing argument. Warren’s counsel

mentioned the justifiable use of force instruction before stating, “[Warren] thought

[Owens] was reaching for the knife first, and then he defended himself. I don’t think he

started - - he didn’t seem to start the situation.” Warren’s counsel argued Warren was

justified in his use of force and asked the jury to find him not guilty of assault with a

weapon. The prosecutor did not make a rebuttal argument and the matter was thereafter

submitted to the jury for deliberation.

¶9 Partway through the jury’s deliberations, the jury asked the District Court for

clarification on Instruction Nos. 26 and 27, the justifiable use of force instructions. Without

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2020 MT 92N, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-j-warren-mont-2020.