State v. Taliferro

881 P.2d 1264, 77 Haw. 196
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 1994
Docket16642
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 881 P.2d 1264 (State v. Taliferro) 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. Taliferro, 881 P.2d 1264, 77 Haw. 196 (hawapp 1994).

Opinion

WATANABE, Judge.

Defendant-Appellant Charles Brooks Tali-ferro (Defendant) appeals from the November 18, 1992 judgment and sentence of the District Court of the Third Circuit, convicting him of harassment, in violation of Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 711-1106(l)(b) (1985). 1 We reverse.

BACKGROUND

The charge against Defendant stemmed from an incident which occurred on June 20, 1992. What actually transpired that day, however, was the subject of much dispute at trial.

According to Defendant, he was taking a bath earlier that morning when he heard a noise out on the road fronting his house. He got out of the tub, stood up on a chair, and saw a man and a woman standing on the road, accompanied by three large dogs which were relieving themselves on Defendant’s front lawn. Athough Defendant yelled at the dogs’ owners, Ken Brown (Brown) and Helen Bridge (Bridge), his complaints were ignored. Angered by the action of the dogs and their owners, Defendant dried himself *199 off, dressed, went outside, picked up the dog feces with a thin paper, and carried it to Brown’s house, which was located across the street and two houses away from Defendant’s.

On his way to Brown’s house, Defendant observed a woman, who he claimed was not Bridge, drive past him towards Brown’s house in a station wagon. That woman was standing outside her parked car in Brown’s driveway when Defendant reached Brown’s property. Defendant claims that by this time, the feces had begun to leak through the paper and had gotten on his hands. He consequently dropped- the feces on Brown’s driveway near the road and wiped his hands on the grass. Bridge then appeared, and Brown “came outside,” called Defendant a “Fool N-I-G-G-E-R,” and threatened him. Transcript (Tr.) 10/29/92, at 13-14. Defendant responded by telling Brown that he “wasn’t going to take any more of it because they had brought the dogs down there before in the past, and [he] had seen them walking away.” Id. at 14.

Bridge’s testimony at trial was substantially different. She testified that she had gone to the bank on the day in question and was returning home in her car when she saw Defendant yelling and waving his fist at her as she passed his house. When she drove her ear into the driveway of Brown’s' house, where she lived, she immediately yelled for Brown, her boyfriend, and explained to him what she had just witnessed. She turned around just in time to hear Defendant yell something about her dogs and see Defendant throw the feces at her from a distance of about seven feet. Defendant then wiped both of his hands on the grass on Brown’s property.

Brown testified that he saw Defendant “run up to [Brown’s] driveway,” Tr. 10/12/92, at 32, and throw something at Bridge, which he discovered later was dog feces. Defendant screamed something like, “Your dogs are down my road,” id. at 34, and when he threw the feces, most of it fell apart and either hit Defendant in the head or dropped right in front of Defendant. Brown added further that “it didn’t hit [Bridge], but it came ... in that direction.” Id. Brown also testified that after Defendant threw the feces, Defendant left and “went back, I guess, to his land[J” Id.

Defendant was subsequently arrested, charged, and found guilty of harassment, in violation of HRS § 711-1106(l)(b).

The trial court, in convicting Defendant, explained its ruling as follows:

All right. Court’s ready to rule. After consideration of all the evidence, the testimony, the Court finds that the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt each and every element of the charge of harassment.
I will say that with respect to credibility of the witnesses, I found Miss Bridge to be highly excitable.
And that although it’s—it’s my recollection is that she did answer a very specific question as to how many dogs she owned, her subsequent responses to questions would have led me to believe that she not only owned one dog but walked only one dog and used to walk that dog everyday [sic] when, in fact, it appears that that was somewhat disingenuous. 2
I do not believe that the incident occurred as Miss Bridge and Mr. Brown— well, Miss Bridge described it. I don’t think [Defendant] is capable of running 400 feet after a vehicle. Four hundred feet is longer than the length of a football field, and it’s obvious that [Defendant] is, in fact, disabled. 3
However, I also don’t believe that [Defendant], given his state of mind at the time as he describes it, went to the Brown property and, uh, to—to drop it in Mr. Brown’s—to drop the poop in Mr. Brown’s *200 yard. That I believe that the actions that he took were intentional.
As defined by the statute, “intention” is one—is when it is his conscious object to engage in that conduct. He consciously picked up the poop, deliberately walked over to the property, and deliberately either dropped or flew feces at the Brown property.
The picture is somewhat enlightening in that the poop does not appear, at least as identified in this picture as poor as it is, was not thrown into the yard but, in fact, appears—some of it appears on the driveway. And that’s what leads me to believe that there’s a discrepancy on both parts as to what happened with the, uh, the poop.
When you do that, take that kind of action, [Defendant], somebody’s going to get mad, you know. Whether you drop it on his property or you throw it at them, somebody’s gonna get mad, and it—it—in my mind I think a finding of not guilty in this situation would do you a greater disservice than finding you guilty.

Tr. 10/29/92, at 26-28 (footnotes added).

This timely appeal followed.

Defendant alleges that his conviction should be reversed because: (1) the trial court violated his constitutional rights by failing to adequately inform him of the charge against him; (2) the trial court violated his due process rights when it found him guilty merely to avoid the “greater disservice” of finding him not guilty; (8) there was insufficient evidence for the trial court to convict him of harassment; and (4) Defendant’s conduct toward Bridge was de minimis.

We agree with Defendant that the evidence offered at trial was insufficient to convict him of harassment, in violation of HRS § 711-1106(l)(b). Accordingly, we find it unnecessary to consider Defendant’s other arguments on appeal.

DISCUSSION

Since Defendant was charged with committing harassment, in violation of HRS § 711-1106(l)(b) (1985), 4

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Bluebook (online)
881 P.2d 1264, 77 Haw. 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-taliferro-hawapp-1994.