This opinion will be unpublished and
may not be cited except as provided by
Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF APPEALS
A14-0082
State of Minnesota,
Respondent,
vs.
Jeremy Paul Haas,
Appellant.
Filed September 22, 2014
Affirmed
Ross, Judge
Goodhue County District Court
File No. 25-CR-13-1760
Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
Stephen N. Betcher, Goodhue County Attorney, Christopher Schrader, Assistant County
Attorney, Red Wing, Minnesota (for respondent)
Hillary B. Parsons, Joseph P. Tamburino, Caplan Law Firm, P.A., Minneapolis,
Minnesota (for appellant)
Considered and decided by Halbrooks, Presiding Judge; Ross, Judge; and Chutich,
Judge.
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
ROSS, Judge
The district court convicted Jeremy Haas of fifth-degree domestic assault after
eyewitness testimony convinced a jury that witnesses saw him strike his wife inside the
couple’s car despite his wife’s consistent denial that he hit her. Because weighing
evidence and assessing witness credibility are duties we leave to the jury and the disputed
trial evidence can reasonably support the jury’s finding, we affirm the conviction over
Haas’s argument that the evidence is insufficient.
FACTS
Red Wing police charged Jeremy Haas with fifth-degree domestic assault after
they investigated reports that he hit his wife while they were seated in a car on a July
2013 afternoon. Megan Rowan and her boyfriend John Steinhauer saw the incident from
Rowan’s home and called the police. An officer interviewed Rowan and two other
witnesses, nine- and ten-year-old sisters who also lived on that street. A jury heard the
following testimony at Haas’s trial.
Rowan testified that she lives on the street where the incident occurred. She was
watching for a visitor out the entryway when she noticed a green Camaro stop abruptly in
front of her house. A man was in the driver’s seat and a woman sat beside him. Rowan
heard yelling from inside the car, and then she saw the man hit the woman, causing her
head to carom out the open passenger window. Rowan described the blow as a punch,
and she identified Haas as the driver. She said that the woman then left the car and ran
away, and the driver yelled after her. The woman disappeared between some houses. The
car drove off but soon returned. The woman also returned a few minutes later, “crying
hysterically.” Rowan asked the woman if she was alright. She said yes and told Rowan
that she would walk to her grandfather’s house nearby.
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Steinhauer mostly corroborated Rowan’s testimony. He said he was leaving
Rowan’s house to smoke outside when he saw the Camaro arrive. He saw the man’s hand
rise toward the woman and the woman’s head jerk out the window. He could not see
directly into the car, so he could not see the point of the alleged contact. But he inferred
from what he saw that the man had struck the woman on the side of her head. His
testimony differed slightly from Rowan’s in that he said that Rowan was already outside
the house when the car arrived, not in the entryway. Steinhauer called police but gave no
statement when they arrived.
The two sisters also testified. Their accounts mostly mirrored each other. Nine-
year-old Savannah and ten-year-old Sierra were playing tag outside their house when the
Camaro suddenly stopped, drawing their attention. Both girls said they saw through the
car’s rear window that the man who was driving hit the woman sitting next to him. They
saw the woman leave the car crying. Savannah, but not Sierra, said that the woman also
hit the man.
Haas’s wife also testified. She said she was in the car with her husband. Although
she insisted they were not arguing, she contradicted herself by explaining that they were
in a disagreement over a civil case they were contesting and that, in the heat of the
moment, she had put the car in park, removed the key, and exited. She said that Haas did
not follow her but came back to get the key she had taken. She acknowledged that she
was crying, but she denied that Haas hit her or that any physical altercation took place.
She explained that her face had appeared red because she had been in the sun, not
because of an assault.
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Red Wing police officer Kyley Lindholm also testified. She had responded to the
call and investigated. She did not interview Steinhauer because Rowan told her that
Steinhauer had not seen anything. She said that she met with Haas’s wife but did not
notice any bruising or other physical signs of an assault. She had interviewed Rowan and
recorded the discussion, and the jury listened to the recording. In the recording, Rowan
said that the man “must have hit [the woman] pretty hard.” Haas did not testify.
The jury convicted Haas of fifth-degree domestic assault. Haas appeals.
DECISION
Haas argues that the state did not introduce sufficient evidence to support his
misdemeanor domestic assault conviction. The substantive elements of that offense are
that the defendant intentionally inflicted or attempted to inflict bodily harm on the victim
and the victim was a member of the defendant’s family or household. Minn. Stat.
§ 609.2242, subd. 1(2) (2012). We review those aspects of Haas’s sufficiency-of-the-
evidence challenge that do not depend on circumstantial evidence by scrutinizing the
record and deciding whether the evidence was sufficient for the jurors to reach their
verdict. State v. Heiges, 806 N.W.2d 1, 17 (Minn. 2011). We view all evidence in the
light most favorable to the conviction and assume that the jury believed the testimony of
the state’s witnesses and disbelieved all contrary evidence. Id. The jury is best positioned
to weigh the credibility of witnesses, State v. Thao, 649 N.W.2d 414, 421 (Minn. 2002),
and it is exclusively tasked with resolving conflicting testimony. State v. Bliss, 457
N.W.2d 385, 391 (Minn. 1990).
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Haas contends that his conviction relied heavily on circumstantial evidence. But
he mischaracterizes the distinction between direct and circumstantial evidence. Direct
evidence is evidence “based on personal knowledge or observation and that, if true,
proves a fact without inference or presumption,” while circumstantial evidence is “based
on inference and not on personal knowledge or observation.” State v. Silvernail, 831
N.W.2d 594, 604 (Minn. 2013) (Stras, J., concurring) (quotations omitted). All the
witnesses testified about events they observed, and at least two witnesses testified that
they saw Haas strike his wife, not merely that they saw activity from which they inferred
that he struck her. This means the jury received direct evidence (and corroborating
circumstantial evidence) that Haas struck his wife. The only aspect of the state’s case that
relied entirely on circumstantial evidence was Haas’s intent. But Haas argues only that
the evidence is insufficient to show that he delivered the blow, not that it is insufficient to
prove his intent. We therefore consider only whether the evidence supports the physical
element of the crime.
Haas highlights the perceived unreliability of each witness and points out the lack
of physical evidence. His arguments might convince a fact finder that he did not assault
his wife, but we do not sit as a fact-finding body. His arguments cannot overcome our
deference to the jury’s decisions on witness credibility or its conclusions resolving
conflicting testimony. He emphasizes that Rowan admitted on cross-examination that she
did not actually see a strike and that Steinhauer also did not see a strike. But the two girls
did testify unambiguously that they saw Haas hit his wife. He calls our attention to their
youth and maintains that they were too young for him to test their testimony with
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rigorous cross-examination. He also insists that all the witnesses had poor lines of sight
into the car and that inconsistencies peppered their testimony. These are sound arguments
that might have convinced a jury that the witnesses only erroneously testified that they
saw him hit his wife or mistakenly inferred that he hit her. But these arguments did not
convince the jury. And they are not arguments on which we can disregard our customary
deference to the jury as fact finder and second-guess its judgment. Despite Haas’s
reasonable arguments, viewed in the light most favorable to the conviction, the
conflicting evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s finding that Haas struck his wife.
Affirmed.
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