In the evening of March 21, 1978, defendant Norman Dean Tarman became involved in a fight with a Pierce County sheriff's deputy who was attempting to arrest him for driving while intoxicated and for refusing to give information to or cooperate with a police officer. Defendant was acquitted in Eatonville District Court of the charge of driving while intoxicated, but was convicted of the other charge. As a result of the fight, defendant also was convicted in Superior Court of third degree assault. He appeals, contending it was error for the Superior Court to exclude evidence of his district court acquittal. We affirm.
On direct examination in Superior Court, Deputy Wiemer testified that when he first encountered defendant that evening he could smell alcohol on defendant's breath and that defendant was unsteady on his feet. The deputy further stated that he had arrested defendant "for failing to obey a police officer and drunk driving," and without objection that he later filed charges for those offenses.
*647 On cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to elicit from the deputy that defendant had been acquitted of driving while intoxicated. The prosecutor objected on relevancy grounds and the objection was sustained.
Defendant argues that such testimony was necessary to rebut prejudicial evidence of intoxication introduced by the State. We do not find this argument convincing. Any evidence of defendant's intoxicated condition was relevant to the charge of third degree assault to the extent that it would demonstrate whether Deputy Wiemer had probable cause to stop defendant, and therefore whether the arrest defendant resisted was lawful. While evidence of acquittal of the drunk driving charge may have had some probative value on the issue of probable cause, we agree with the trial court that its limited probative value was outweighed4 by potential confusion of issues and misleading of the jury. See 4 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Evidence ¶ 803(22) [01], at 803-280 (1979). Under the circumstances of this case, proof that a trier of fact in another trial failed to find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant was guilty of drunk driving is not sufficiently relevant and does not constitute proper rebuttal evidence. 1
No previous reported Washington case has addressed this precise issue. The only Washington case dealing with a related problem is
State v. Russell,
*648 The fact of acquittal of the criminal offense of which evidence is offered, does not affect its admissibility but goes only to its weight.
State v. Russell, supra
at 637. Although this statement might inferentially support the view that proof of acquittal is always admissible,
see
Annot.,
We believe
Nordgren v. United States,
We are aware that courts in several jurisdictions have held that where proof of another offense has been introduced by the State, the defendant must be permitted to
*649
prove his prior acquittal of that offense.
Ex parte Bayne,
The instant case is quite different, however. Here, Mr. Tarman's misconduct was not merely intimately related to, but formed an inseparable part of, the entire episode. It would have been virtually impossible for the State to present its case without bringing in the totality of circumstances leading to the attempted arrest and ensuing assault. E. Cleary, McCormick's Evidence § 190 (2d ed. 1972); 1 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 218 (3d ed. 1940); 2 J. Weinstein & M. Berger, Evidence ¶ 404[10] (1980). This was no attempt by the State either to impugn defendant's general character or to show a propensity for assault by introducing evidence of independent criminal conduct. With all the facts surrounding the arrest before the jury, evidence of acquittal on the drunk driving charge would have little, if any, probative value. Nor would evidence of acquittal be necessary to combat the dangers to which we have alluded when the evidence concerns independent criminal acts. For these reasons, had the State limited its evidence to the grounds for arrest, we are satisfied the trial judge would not have abused his discretion in keeping the fact of acquittal from the jury.
An additional problem arises, however, because the State also elicited the irrelevant fact that charges were filed. The question thus becomes whether by "opening the door" the State is precluded from keeping out the additional irrelevant fact of acquittal. In the particular setting of this case, we think it was not.
*651 One eminent authority, under the heading Curative Admissibility, lists three basic approaches to this problem which the courts have taken:
(1) . . . the admission of an inadmissible fact, without objection by the opponent, does not justify the opponent in rebutting by other inadmissible facts:
(2) . . . the opponent may resort to similar inadmissible evidence:
(3) . . . the opponent may reply with similar evidence whenever it is needed for removing an unfair prejudice which might otherwise have ensued from the original evidence, but in no other case.
1 J. Wigmore, Evidence § 15 (3d ed. 1940). See also E. Cleary, McCormick's Evidence, supra at § 57.
In Washington the early case of
Dutcher v. Howard,
So, too, in the instant case, we believe the decision as to whether to permit evidence of acquittal was a matter for
*652
the sound discretion of the trial judge. We are convinced that discretion was not abused. We see no "plain and unfair prejudice" to the defendant from the proof the deputy "filed" a charge.
Gillett v. Lydon,
As his second assignment of error, defendant contends for the first time on appeal that certain questions and comments by the prosecutor concerning defendant's previous testimony constituted prejudicial prosecutorial misconduct requiring a new trial. During cross-examination of defendant, the following interchange occurred.
Q Now, after the fight was all over with, you were handcuffed, placed in a patrol car, is that your testimony that the officer let you out of the patrol car to look for your wallet?
A No, they did not let me out and I didn't testify to that.
Q You didn't, I'm sorry. That's not what I heard. Now, had you had anything to drink this day?
[Defense counsel]: Objection.[ 5 ]
[The Court]: Overruled.
A Yes, I had two cans of beer in a period of two hours.
*653 Q Didn't you, in fact, have a six-pack?
A No, I did not.
Q Do you recall being up in the courtroom at Eatonville when the other parts of this matter were tried?
A That's correct, I do recall.
Q Do you recall testifying that, in fact, you had a six-pack that you drank between where you left work and on the way home?
A I did not testify to that in Eatonville.
[Prosecutor]: I have no other questions, Your Honor.
(Italics ours.) Washington appellate courts repeatedly have held that the the trial court must be given an opportunity to correct trial errors, and that claimed errors not raised in any manner before the trial court will not be considered on appeal. An exception to this general rule is made only when prosecutorial misconduct is so flagrant that no instruction could cure it.
State v. Basford,
Judgment affirmed.
Pearson and Petrie, JJ., concur.
Notes
Evidence such as testimony of witnesses who observed defendant that evening or physical evidence of sobriety would have been more probative of whether probable cause existed to arrest defendant for drunk driving.
In support of his argument that the State's introduction of evidence of intoxication was improper, defendant cites
State v. Lindsey,
Doubt about whether the other crime occurred and unnecessary delay and confusion that can arise when such a subsidiary issue is contested,
see Dandridge v. State,
The following Washington cases have upheld the trial court's admission of otherwise irrelevant evidence, where the objecting party first "opened the door."
Nordstrom v. White Metal Rolling & Stamping Corp.,
In the following cases, the appellate court upheld the trial court's ruling in refusing to admit evidence admissible only to counter evidence admitted without objection by the other side.
Haysom v. Coleman Lantern Co.,
This testimony took place after the trial court thwarted defendant's attempt to introduce his acquittal on the drunk driving charge. A review of the entire transcript unquestionably indicates that trial counsel's objection was directed to the question concerning intoxication, not to the comment on defendant's previous testimony.
