Wyatt v. State

981 P.2d 109, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 74, 1999 WL 343672
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 28, 1999
DocketS-8252
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 981 P.2d 109 (Wyatt v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyatt v. State, 981 P.2d 109, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 74, 1999 WL 343672 (Ala. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A jury convicted Ronald Wyatt of murdering his wife, Diane. At trial, a women’s shelter employee testified that Diane called the shelter the day before her death and stated that she wanted to divorce Ronald. Diane also told the shelter employee that if Ronald were to learn of her plan to divorce him, there would be “a possible lethal situation.” The superior court admitted this statement at trial over defense counsel’s objection. The court of appeals concluded that although the statement did not fall within the Alaska Evidence Rule 803(3) hearsay exception for state of mind, the error was harmless. Ronald petitioned for hearing, arguing that such a hearsay statement implicated his right to confrontation and that the error must be “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.”

We agree that if the court of appeals had been correct in its determination that the statement did not qualify for the state-of-mind exception, it should have applied the “harmless beyond a reasonable doubt” standard rather than the “harmless error” standard. But we conclude that the statement does fall within the state-of-mind exception and that the court of appeals appropriately reviewed admission of the statement under the “harmless error” standard. We therefore affirm.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Ronald Wyatt and his wife Diane lived in Ketchikan in Diane’s home from a previous marriage. The State presented evidence that Diane had gradually become unhappy during her marriage of seven years to Ronald. Witnesses testified that her husband made consistent efforts to intimidate and dominate Diane. For example, on vacation in Mexico in 1990, Ronald threatened that if she did not “behave,” they were going to leave and that if she did not leave with him, he would destroy her home.

At trial, the State introduced two alternative theories of Ronald’s motive to kill Diane. First, it contended that Ronald was a domi *111 neering, controlling husband who, when he learned that Diane planned to divorce him, decided he would rather kill her than lose her. Second, the State argued that Ronald was motivated to kill Diane because he would not receive any of Diane’s money if they divorced.

To bolster both theories, the State presented evidence to establish the seriousness of Diane’s intent to obtain a divorce despite her concerns about Ronald’s potential reaction. In a meeting with a marriage counsel- or in early October 1992; Diane expressed her desire for a divorce, stating that the “final straw” was when Ronald had threatened to “torch the house.” On October 21 an employee of Women in Safe Homes (WISH) received a phone call from Diane, requesting information about divorce and making an appointment to discuss her situation. During this phone conversation, Diane stated that “there was a possible lethal situation when she told her husband about it.” The WISH employee testified: “[Ajfter she said that statement, I — I said, well, are — are you going to be safe, you know, until you come in on Friday, and she said, if she kept her mouth shut she would be.” Diane had previously expressed similar concerns to her sister and daughter about Ronald’s reaction to her plan to divorce him.

In support of its theory that Ronald was motivated by his fear of losing Diane’s money, the State offered evidence of recent financial transactions in the Wyatt accounts. The personal representative of Diane’s estate testified that around the first of October, a joint checking account for the Wyatts was first opened. Also during the month of October, about $53,000 was transferred from Diane’s personal accounts in a South Dakota bank into the joint account and a personal account of Ronald Wyatt. Ronald’s co-worker testified that he saw a draft of a letter authorizing such a transfer on Ronald’s computer. The State presented testimony that Diane’s signatures on the actual letter authorizing the transfer and the signature card opening the joint account were forgeries.

The State also presented a strong case of circumstantial evidence. On October 22 Diane disappeared. Earlier that day, Diane informed her sister during lunch that she had made an appointment at WISH for the next day to discuss the divorce. Diane left lunch to meet a co-worker, but she never arrived at that meeting. One of Ronald’s co-workers testified that Ronald left work before noon on October 22 and returned about 4:00 p.m. Sometime in the afternoon, two neighbors saw the Wyatts’ Isuzu Trooper speeding up the driveway to the Wyatt home. Neighbors also saw Ronald burning cardboard boxes on the beach in front of the Wyatt home in the early evening. In the basement, police investigators found cardboard boxes neatly stacked on one side and strewn in disarray on the other and discovered traces of blood. At approximately 10:30 p.m. on October 22, a security guard at the Ketchikan Pulp Mill discovered the Wyatts’ Isuzu Trooper near the gate to the log sorting yard at Ward Cove. As the guard checked the vehicle registration information, a man who was muddy from the waist down, acting nervous, and breathing heavily, approached the vehicle.

Five days later, a search dog and its handler discovered Diane’s body wrapped in a tarp and weighted with anchors and chains in the water near the log sorting yard in Ward Cove. Approximately one month before Diane’s death, Ronald stated in a discussion of a different murder case in Ketchikan with his co-workers that if he wanted to kill his wife, he would dispose of the body by wrapping it in a tarp, tying it securely, and weighting it down so it would never be found.

At trial, the superior court admitted the testimony of the WISH employee that she had talked to Diane on the phone about divorce, and she testified that Diane had stated “there was a possible lethal situation when she told her husband about [the divorce].” Ronald objected to the admissibility of these statements as hearsay during the trial, contending that the two limited purposes for which the statement was relevant— either to prove Diane planned to get a divorce or to prove that Diane had an appointment at WISH — had already been established. Ronald also argued that admitting the statement would have extreme prejudicial impact. The superior court admitted the testimony under the state-of-mind exception *112 to the hearsay rule but provided a limiting instruction to the jury, telling them they could not consider the statement to prove the truth of the matter asserted. The jury convicted Ronald of all charges.

Ronald appealed. He claimed that Diane’s statement that a “lethal situation” would arise when she informed Ronald of her plans to divorce him constituted inadmissible hearsay and that its admission violated his right to confrontation. The court of appeals apparently determined that the statement was hearsay testimony and did not fall within the state-of-mind exception:

[I]t appears to us that it was improper for the court to admit the statement that “there was a possible lethal situation when she told her husband about [the divorce].” The jury might have used this statement for a forbidden hearsay purpose: to conclude that because Diane Wyatt feared possible violence from her husband when she told him of her intent to divorce him, that he had reacted violently.

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Bluebook (online)
981 P.2d 109, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 74, 1999 WL 343672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-state-alaska-1999.