State v. Pond

181 P.3d 415, 117 Haw. 336, 2007 Haw. App. LEXIS 580
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 11, 2007
Docket27847
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 181 P.3d 415 (State v. Pond) 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. Pond, 181 P.3d 415, 117 Haw. 336, 2007 Haw. App. LEXIS 580 (hawapp 2007).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

WATANABE, Presiding J.

Following an incident that occurred on December 12, 2005 (the December 12, 2005 incident), Defendant-Appellant Kevin Pond (Pond or Mr. Pond) was charged with, and convicted and sentenced for, Abuse of Family or Household Member in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 709-906 (Supp. 2004) 1 (Count 1) and Interference with Re *338 porting an Emergency or Crime (the Interference offense) in violation of HRS § 710-1010.5 (Supp.2006) 2 (Count 2). Pond now appeals the Judgment entered by the Family Court of the Second Circuit 3 (the family court) on March 2, 2006, alleging that:

(1) The family court erred in (a) precluding evidence relevant to his self-protection defense that the complaining witness (CW) attacked Pond less than two weeks before the December 12, 2005 incident; and (b) denying defense counsel’s motion to continue trial so he could file written notice of intention to use evidence of CW’s prior attack, pursuant to Hawaii Rules of Evidence (HRE) Rule 404(b);

(2) The family court erred in preventing Pond from cross-examining CW about her use of marijuana on the night of the incident to attack her perception and recollection of the incident;

(3) The family court erroneously instructed the jury about the justifiable use of protective force;

(4) The family court erroneously instructed the jury as to the state of mind required for conviction on Count 2; and

(5) Misconduct occurred when the deputy prosecutor made comments about the elements of the Interference offense during Plaintiff-Appellee State of Hawaii’s (the State) closing argument.

We affirm.

BACKGROUND

A. The Pre-trial Proceedings

On February 27, 2006, just prior to the commencement of Pond’s jury trial, Pond’s defense counsel orally moved for a continuance of trial on grounds that “I don’t feel that I’m adequately defending this client at this point in time with the evidence that ... we don’t have going in.” Defense counsel explained that the heart of Pond’s defense was self-protection and crucial to this defense was evidence that “[t]wo weeks prior to the [December 12, 2005] incident [CW] attacked [Pond] physically.” Defense counsel argued that a continuance was necessary because Pond had not pinpointed until that morning the date on which Pond had been attacked by CW and therefore defense counsel could not have, until that time, filed a notice of intent to introduce such evidence at trial, pursuant to HRE Rule 404(b) (Supp.2006). 4

The family court acknowledged that HRE Rule 404(b) allows “notice [of the intent to introduce evidence of prior bad acts to] be given before trial, or at trial, or even during trial[.]” It also acknowledged that because *339 notice pursuant to HRE Rule 404(b) requires the date of the prior bad act, “[t]here [was] nothing that [defense counsel] could have done before [that day.]” Nevertheless, the family court denied the motion as “untimely” and remarked as follows:

If [the evidence] goes to the heart of the defense, then it should have been something given more prominence earlier. I can’t believe that it’s that much to the heart of it based on the way it’s dribbling in. I think that’s how your client felt.

The case then immediately proceeded to trial.

B. The Trial Testimony of the State’s Witnesses

CW testified that she met Pond during the summer of 2005 and they “dat[ed] for a while” before she moved in with him in October 2005. On the evening of December 12, 2005, she was alone in Pond’s residence. At about 5:30 p.m., she had spoken by telephone with Pond, who was then at the Outback Steakhouse.

When Pond arrived home at around 10:30 p.m., she was already asleep. She woke up when she heard noises from the sliding glass door in the living room, which she had locked. CW testified that she got up and walked to the living room to see who was outside and Pond “walked in through the bedroom screen door.” She then got back in bed and Pond “was jumping on [her] and climbing on [her], and was kind of like—he was drunk.” CW testified that she knew Pond was drunk because “[h]e smelled really bad” and “when [she] spoke to him at five-thirty he also told [her] he was drinking.”

CW testified that after she told Pond to get off her, he responded by jumping on her more. Pond “was piling the blankets on top of [her], and [she] was trying to kick them off. And then [Pond] went into the bathroom, and [CW] was trying to fix the blankets.” CW then “asked [Pond] what that smell was.” In response, Pond “came walking towards [her] and then he slammed [her] face into the bed” with one arm and “had his knee or something behind ... [her] arm,” so that her arm and face were in a “weird position” and she “was just buried into the bed and [she] couldn’t move.” CW testified that she “hurt a lot,” “could not breathe[,]” and thought her jaw and arm were going to break. She also explained that while Pond was holding her down, he told her that “the reason why [she] was being punished was because [she] didn’t know how to be obedient. And that’s the last thing that he wanted to do, was to hurt [her], but that [she] needed to learn how to respect him.” CW related that “[eventually, [Pond] let go[,]” and after he got off of her, he was “just ranting.” She was crying, still on her knees on her bed, and “screaming for help.”

Pond approached her again, “grabbed the back of [her] head[,]” told her “to shut up, and he bit down on [CW’s] mouth and ... punctured the bottom part of [CW’s] mouth” so hard that it “went all the way through. And the other side, it was just very swollen and hard.... and there was blood.” She received a sear from Pond’s bite.

CW was then asked how she got loose after Pond bit her. She responded, “I think he just let go, and I got up and I was reaching for my purse and phone, and I tried to call the police.” Thereafter, CW testified as follows:

[Pond] came over and grabbed the phone from me and knocked it out of my hand, because we were fighting for it, and everything got knocked on to the floor, the phone came apart, the battery came out. And by that time I was on my hands and knees on the floor and trying to pick everything up. And I—my stuff was right to the left of me, and I was also grabbing my things so that I could just get my things and leave.

According to CW, she told Pond she was calling the police and dialed 911 on her phone. She wasn’t sure if she pushed the enter button, “but [she] think[s she] did, because when [she] went to the police station, [she] looked at the phone [and] it was on there.” She further testified that as she was gathering her things and crying, Pond “said that he would help [her] cany it out or something.

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Related

State v. Kekona
209 P.3d 1234 (Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals, 2009)
State v. Pond
193 P.3d 368 (Hawaii Supreme Court, 2008)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 P.3d 415, 117 Haw. 336, 2007 Haw. App. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pond-hawapp-2007.