State v. Yamamoto

216 P.3d 127
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 26, 2009
Docket28820
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 216 P.3d 127 (State v. Yamamoto) 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. Yamamoto, 216 P.3d 127 (hawapp 2009).

Opinion

STATE OF HAWAI'I, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
KEITH T. YAMAMOTO, Defendant-Appellant.

No. 28820

Intermediate Court of Appeals of Hawaii.

August 26, 2009.

On the briefs:

Cynthia A. Kagiwada for Defendant-Appellant.

Delanie D. Prescott-Tate, Deputy Prosecuting Attorney, City and County of Honolulu, for Plaintiff-Appellee.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

WATANABE, Acting C.J., FOLEY, and LEONARD, JJ.

Defendant-Appellant Keith T. Yamamoto (Yamamoto) appeals from the judgment entered by the Circuit Court of the First Circuit[1] (circuit court) on September 26, 2007 that convicted and sentenced him for (1) Count One, the lesser included offense of Assault in the First Degree (Assault 1)[2] in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 707-710 (1993);[3] and (2) Counts Three and Four, Criminal Property Damage in the First Degree (Property Damage 1) in violation of HRS § 708-820 (1) (a) (Supp. 2004).[4] The judgment sentenced Yamamoto to serve three consecutive ten-year terms of incarceration.

We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand this case to the circuit court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

BACKGROUND

A.

The charges against Yamamoto stemmed from an incident that occurred on the morning of October 4, 2004 as the complaining witness (CW) prepared to leave home and drive to work with his family. CW was in the driver's seat of his sedan, and CW's sister (Sister); wife (Wife), and infant daughter (Daughter) were all in the back seat. As CW was about to reverse out of his garage, Yamamoto parked his truck behind CW's car and blocked its path.

Yamamoto exited his truck, holding a wooden spear gun, and loudly yelled, "Fuck you guys." Following a loud popping sound, Yamamoto swung an object and struck the rear window of CW's car two times, creating a small hole and causing some glass to shatter. Yamamoto then proceeded to the driver's side of CW's car and struck the driver's window with a "hammer or stick[,]" creating a hole about the size of a baseball, then took a plastic squeeze bottle, squirted gasoline onto CW through the hole, lit a book of matches, tossed it into the car, and set CW and the areas surrounding the driver's seat on fire.

Sister and Wife struggled to unseat Daughter and unlock the car doors and escaped relatively unharmed through the rear passenger-side door, except that Sister's hair was singed. CW exited through the front passenger door and ran down the street, screaming in pain, his shirt in flames. Yamamoto followed CW, who, while running, was able to pull off his burning shirt and toss it to the ground. A neighbor who noticed the commotion at CW's residence unsuccessfully attempted to stop Yamamoto from pursuing CW. The neighbor then extinguished the car fire.

A passing motorist picked up CW and they drove several blocks before spotting a police officer. Yamamoto was arrested a short while later. CW was taken to the hospital and treated for first-, second-, and third-degree burns to his arm, face, neck, back, and upper body. A police evidence specialist recovered various items at the scene, including hammers, a spear gun, a black pipe, a yellow box cutter, a carpenter's belt, and containers of gasoline.

B.

On October 12, 2004, Plaintiff-Appellee State of Hawai'i (State) filed a complaint that charged Yamamoto with committing the following offenses: `(1) Count One, Attempted Murder in the Second Degree as to CW; (2) Count Two, Terroristic Threatening in the First Degree as to CW; (3) Count Three, Property Damage 1 as to Sister, Wife, and/or Daughter, based on the fire damage to the car's interior; and (4) Count Four, Property Damage 1 as to Sister, Wife, and/or Daughter, based on the damage to the car's rear window.

At trial, Wife testified that she observed Yamamoto "trying to crack" the driver's window. However, Wife stated that she could not recall any fire or smoke damage to the car's interior and did not witness CW being set on fire because she had already exited the car "carry[ing Daughter] and then ran into the house." Sister testified that she was still inside the car when she noticed fire and smoke coming from the driver's seat. Sister noted that Wife carried Daughter and "left first."

At the close of evidence, the circuit court acquitted Yamamoto of Count Two, Terroristic Threatening in the First Degree. With respect to Counts Three and Four, Yamamoto did not request a merger instruction or a specific-person unanimity instruction. The circuit court did not sua sponte provide either jury instruction.

The jury convicted Yamamoto for (1) Count One, the lesser included offense of Assault 1; and (2) Counts Three and Four, Property Damage 1. The circuit court sentenced Yamamoto to serve three consecutive ten-year terms of incarceration.

C.

On appeal, Yamamoto advances the following points of error:

(1) "The circuit court plainly erred by allowing the State to charge Yamamoto with two counts of criminal property damage in the first degree instead of only one";

(2) "The circuit court plainly erred by failing to instruct the jury on the issue of merger of the two counts of property damage pursuant to [HRS §] 701-109(1)(e) [(1993)]" "because Yamamoto's acts could have been part of one continuous course of conduct";

(3) "The circuit court plainly erred by failing to instruct the jury on the requirement that their [sic] verdict on the two counts of property damage be unanimous with respect to the alleged person endangered" because "the jury had seven choices regarding the people who were recklessly endangered"; and

(4) The circuit court "abused its discretion when it imposed consecutive sentences for Yamamoto's assault and criminal property damage convictions, resulting in a total term of imprisonment of thirty years" and the sentence "was so excessively disproportionate to the offense that it amounted to cruel and unusual punishment."

Aside from the consecutive sentence, Yamamoto's Assault-1 conviction is uncontested on appeal. Yamamoto requests that this court "vacate his judgment and remand for a new trial or alternatively remand with instructions to dismiss one count of property damage" and "remand for resentencing."

DISCUSSION

Upon a careful review of the record and the briefs submitted, and having given due consideration to the case law and statutes relevant to the arguments advanced and the issues raised, we resolve Yamamoto's points of error as follows:

A.

The circuit court did not plainly err by failing to sua sponte dismiss one of the Property-Damage-1 charges. See State v. Nichols, 111 Hawai'i 327, 335, 141 P.3d 974, 982 (2006) (stating that an appellate court's "power to deal with plain error is one to be exercised sparingly and with caution"); State v. Radcliffe, 9 Haw. App. 628, 640, 859 P.2d 925, 932 (1993) (observing that the State has "complete discretion as to whether to charge, . . . when charges will be filed, what charges will be filed, how many charges will be filed, and under what statutes the charges will be made"); and State v. Padilla, 114 Hawai'i 507, 517, 164 P.3d 765, 775 (App. 2007) (holding that the merger statute, "HRS § 701-109(1) (e) [,] only prohibits conviction

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216 P.3d 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-yamamoto-hawapp-2009.