State Of Washington v. Kevin Lee Grothaus
73562-4
Wash. Ct. App.Aug 1, 2016Background
- Grothaus, a carpenter employed by neighbor Joe Myers, was provided a company truck and numerous tools for work. Between Dec. 2012 and Mar. 2013 Grothaus pawned many of Myers' tools as collateral for loans.
- Myers fired Grothaus on March 5, 2013 and demanded return of the tools; Grothaus returned the truck but many tools were missing.
- Detective Clinko recovered 16 tools from pawnshops that Grothaus had pawned; Grothaus admitted pawning the tools, lacked authority to do so, and intended to redeem them but had not.
- The State charged Grothaus with first-degree trafficking in stolen property and second-degree theft.
- At trial, Myers testified in response to whether Grothaus was permitted to pawn the tools: "That's theft. No." Defense objected and moved for mistrial; court instead struck the portion beyond "no" and instructed the jury to disregard the remainder. Jury convicted Grothaus.
- At sentencing the court imposed mandatory victim penalty assessment and mandatory DNA fee; Grothaus challenged these fees for the first time on appeal as applied to an indigent defendant.
Issues
| Issue | Grothaus' Argument | State's Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Whether witness Myers' statement "That's theft" denied Grothaus a fair trial by offering an opinion on guilt | Myers' opinion on guilt was improper and prejudicial, violating right to jury determination | The comment was waived for harmless error because the court struck it and gave a curative instruction; jurors are presumed to follow instructions | Court held the comment was improper but cured by the court's instruction; any error was harmless because untainted evidence overwhelmingly supported conviction |
| Whether the curative instruction given was legally insufficient | Requested a stronger instruction emphasizing jury's independent duty to determine guilt | State argued the offered instruction was adequate; defense accepted the court's instruction at trial | Court found defense waived any claim the instruction was deficient by not objecting; no reversal |
| Whether imposition of mandatory victim penalty assessment and mandatory DNA fee on indigent defendant violates substantive due process as applied | Imposition violates due process when applied to an indigent defendant | Fees are statutorily mandatory at sentencing; constitutional challenge is not ripe unless State attempts to enforce collection | Court declined to reach the as-applied due process claim on the merits, citing ripeness and controlling precedent; affirmed imposition at sentencing without deciding enforcement issues |
Key Cases Cited
- Quaale v. State, 182 Wn.2d 191 (opinion testimony on guilt impermissible)
- Kirkman v. State, 159 Wn.2d 918 (opinion testimony on guilt violates jury right)
- Haqer v. State, 171 Wn.2d 151 (improper testimony may be cured by instruction)
- Stein v. State, 144 Wn.2d 236 (presumption that juries follow instructions)
- Cross, In re Pers. Restraint of Cross, 180 Wn.2d 664 (harmless error: untainted evidence overwhelming)
- Curry v. State, 118 Wn.2d 911 (victim penalty assessment constitutional concerns arise on enforcement)
