IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 42166
STATE OF IDAHO, ) 2015 Unpublished Opinion No. 707
)
Plaintiff-Respondent, ) Filed: November 13, 2015
)
v. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
)
PRESTON ADAM JOY, ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED
) OPINION AND SHALL NOT
Defendant-Appellant. ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY
)
Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District, State of Idaho,
Kootenai County. Hon. John T. Mitchell, District Judge.
Judgment of conviction and unified ten-year sentence with nine years determinate
for felony domestic battery, affirmed.
Sara B. Thomas, State Appellate Public Defender; Ben P. McGreevy, Deputy
Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Russell J. Spencer, Deputy
Attorney General, Boise, for respondent.
________________________________________________
GRATTON, Judge
Preston Adam Joy appeals from the district court’s judgment of conviction and unified
ten-year sentence with nine years determinate for felony domestic battery. We affirm.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Joy and his wife, Jennifer, were involved in a domestic dispute. The State charged Joy
with second degree kidnapping, domestic battery, and penetration by a foreign object. The
district court held a preliminary hearing in which Jennifer testified about the altercation and the
manner in which the offenses were allegedly committed. After a jury trial, the jury was hung on
the second degree kidnapping charge, but convicted Joy of the felony domestic battery charge
and acquitted him of the penetration by a foreign object charge. Before the district court could
retry the second degree kidnapping charge, Joy entered a conditional guilty plea, reserving the
1
right to appeal the court’s pretrial, trial, and post-trial rulings. Joy appealed, and the Idaho
Supreme Court vacated Joy’s judgment of conviction and remanded the case for a new trial on
all the charges. State v. Joy, 155 Idaho 1, 304 P.3d 276 (2013). Before the second trial, the State
sought to amend the information by removing the penetration by a foreign object charge. The
amended information was otherwise the same as the information in the first trial. Joy objected to
the motion to amend on due process grounds, but the district court granted the motion.
At the second trial, Jennifer testified that Joy became physically abusive during an
argument about Joy texting a former girlfriend and the location of his keys and cell phone.
According to Jennifer, the altercation began in the couple’s bathroom where Joy pushed her into
a cold tub of water, dunked her head in the water, pulled her hair, hit her face, took off her
clothes, and tied her wrists to her left ankle. Jennifer testified that Joy then left the room, came
back, gagged her with a washcloth, dragged her to his pickup, put her in his pickup, and hit and
kicked her. She further testified that Joy drove his pickup to a remote part of the property, hit
and kicked her, pulled her hair, and threatened to tie her to a tree unless she told him where his
keys and phone were. According to Jennifer, she then falsely told him that she would tell him
where his keys and phone were, and the altercation ended.
Joy’s account of the altercation during his case-in-chief was markedly different. Joy
testified that Jennifer was intoxicated and she initiated the physical violence. According to Joy,
he used his arms to block Jennifer’s attacks and defended himself by kicking at her. He testified
that despite his efforts to defend himself, Jennifer struck him in the face with her knee and
stomped on and kicked him. He further testified that he shoved her to escape and left the house,
but Jennifer followed him and tripped and fell off the deck. Then, according to Joy, she charged
at him and he threw her over a fence and down an embankment. Joy testified that he then left in
his pickup and when he returned, Jennifer voluntarily got into his pickup with him and after he
moved the pickup away from the house, convinced him not to leave.
On cross-examination, Joy stated that Jennifer injured his mouth and legs in their
altercation. However, he also stated that bruising and swelling from these injuries did not appear
until after he was booked into jail and he did not tell the booking officer about the injuries. Joy
did not offer any further evidence of the injuries on redirect. During the State’s rebuttal, the
State called the booking officer who testified that Joy told the officer that he was not injured.
The booking officer testified that booking procedures require officers to note any signs of injury
2
to arrestees, and the officer did not observe any sign of Joy’s alleged injuries. Joy sought to offer
surrebuttal evidence that he had an unrelated back injury at booking that he did not reveal to the
booking officer. According to Joy, his failure to disclose the back injury showed he was not
engaged in the booking process which explained his failure to disclose the injuries allegedly
inflicted by Jennifer. The district court excluded the proffered surrebuttal evidence.
After the second trial, the jury convicted Joy of the felony domestic battery charge and
acquitted him of the second degree kidnapping charge. Joy timely appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
Joy argues the State’s amended information did not provide sufficient notice to comply
with due process. He also claims the district court abused its discretion by excluding his
proffered surrebuttal evidence. Finally, he argues the district court erred by failing to give the
jury an instruction that it must unanimously agree on the facts giving rise to the domestic battery.
A. Sufficiency of the Amended Information
Joy argues the amended information did not provide sufficient notice of the facts giving
rise to the domestic battery charge or the means by which he committed the alleged crime, thus
depriving him of due process. Idaho’s felony domestic battery statute borrows the three-part
definition of battery from Idaho Code § 18-903. See I.C. § 18-918(2)(a). Because the amended
information did not specify which part of I.C. § 18-903 the State charged Joy under, Joy asserts
the amended information did not provide sufficient notice to comply with due process. Joy
claims the lack of notice prejudiced him because the State did not supplement the amended
information and Joy implied he would have conducted his defense differently if the amended
information had specified which part of I.C. § 18-903 the State charged him under.
The sufficiency of an information is a question of law over which we exercise free
review. State v. Jones, 140 Idaho 41, 46, 89 P.3d 881, 886 (Ct. App. 2003). To be legally
sufficient, an information must impart jurisdiction and satisfy due process. State v. Severson,
147 Idaho 694, 708, 215 P.3d 414, 428 (2009). Joy challenges the amended information’s
sufficiency only on due process grounds. Due process requires an information to be “specific
enough to ensure that the defendant has a meaningful opportunity to prepare his defense and to
protect the defendant from a subsequent prosecution for the same act.” Id. at 709, 215 P.3d at
429. However, “a defendant generally cannot be prejudiced by the absence of specific details in
3
the information when those details are either already known to the defendant or are provided to
him by means other than the information, such as through preliminary hearing testimony.”
Jones, 140 Idaho at 46, 89 P.3d at 886.
The district court held that the manner in which the amended information charged the
domestic battery offense did not prejudice Joy. The court reasoned that Joy’s preliminary
hearing and first trial gave him notice of the facts underlying the domestic battery charge and the
means by which he committed the alleged crime. Thus, the court could not “locate even a shred
of prejudice to the defense.” While the amended information could have been more specific, Joy
was fully apprised of the facts underlying the domestic battery charge and the means by which he
committed the alleged crime. The district court held a preliminary hearing where Jennifer
testified about the altercation and the manner in which the crimes were allegedly committed.
Further, the evidence presented in the first jury trial informed Joy, in detail, of the facts
underlying the domestic battery charge and the means by which he committed the alleged crime.
Thus, the district court properly held that Joy was not prejudiced by the manner in which the
amended information charged the domestic battery offense. Joy has not alleged, and the record
does not show, that the State pursued new theories for the domestic battery charge in Joy’s
second trial. Thus, the State was not required to supplement the amended information, and the
preliminary hearing, prior trial, and amended information apprised Joy of the facts he needed to
meaningfully prepare his defense in the second trial.1
B. Exclusion of Surrebuttal Evidence
Joy argues the district court abused its discretion when it excluded his proffered
surrebuttal evidence. After the State’s rebuttal, Joy sought to offer surrebuttal evidence that he
1
In addition, as the State claims and the appellant concedes, res judicata bars a challenge
to the sufficiency of the amended information. The issue of whether a claim is barred by res
judicata is a question of law over which we exercise free review. State v. Rhoades, 134 Idaho
862, 863, 11 P.3d 481, 482 (2000). The doctrine of res judicata bars relitigation between the
same parties on the same claim. Hindmarsh v. Mock, 138 Idaho 92, 94, 57 P.3d 803, 805 (2002).
Res judicata bars “not only subsequent relitigation of a claim previously asserted, but also
subsequent relitigation of any claims relating to the same cause of action which were actually
made or which might have been made.” Id. The amended information charged the domestic
battery offense in the same manner as the information filed in Joy’s first trial. Joy did not
challenge the sufficiency of the information filed in his first trial. Because Joy might have
challenged the sufficiency of the information in his first trial but did not do so, we agree that res
judicata precludes challenging the sufficiency of the amended information here.
4
had an unrelated back injury at booking that he did not reveal to the booking officer. Joy asserts
that he offered this evidence to show he “had injuries when he was booked into jail, thereby
counteracting the State’s rebuttal evidence that he did not have any injuries when he was
booked.” Joy claims the evidence of his back injury properly counteracted the State’s rebuttal
evidence, and the district court therefore improperly refused to allow his surrebuttal evidence.
We review the district court’s decision to exclude surrebuttal evidence for an abuse of
discretion. See State v. Moses, 156 Idaho 855, 867, 332 P.3d 767, 779 (2014). When a trial
court’s discretionary decision is reviewed on appeal, the appellate court conducts a multi-tiered
inquiry to determine: (1) whether the lower court correctly perceived the issue as one of
discretion; (2) whether the lower court acted within the boundaries of such discretion and
consistently with any legal standards applicable to the specific choices before it; and (3) whether
the lower court reached its decision by an exercise of reason. State v. Hedger, 115 Idaho 598,
600, 768 P.2d 1331, 1333 (1989). Rebuttal and surrebuttal evidence “explains, repels,
counteracts, or disproves evidence which has been introduced by or on behalf of the adverse
party. The mere fact that testimony might well have been presented during [a party’s] case in
chief does not, by itself, make it inadmissible for rebuttal” or surrebuttal. Moses, 156 Idaho at
867, 332 P.3d at 779 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). However, rebuttal and
surrebuttal evidence must be responsive to evidence presented by the opposing party. Id.
The district court held the proper time to present evidence of Joy’s back injury was
during Joy’s case-in-chief and not surrebuttal because the evidence was not responsive to the
State’s rebuttal evidence. We agree. On cross-examination during Joy’s case-in-chief, Joy
alleged that he had injuries that existed before booking by testifying that Jennifer had injured his
mouth and legs in their altercation, bruising and swelling from these injuries did not appear until
after booking, and he did not tell the booking officer about the injuries. The State rebutted the
existence of Joy’s alleged injuries at booking by calling the booking officer, who testified that
(1) Joy told the officer he was not injured, (2) booking procedures required the officer to note
any signs of injury on Joy, and (3) the officer did not observe any sign of Joy’s alleged injuries at
booking. Joy then sought to offer surrebuttal evidence that he had an unrelated back injury at
booking that he did not reveal to the booking officer.
Evidence of Joy’s back injury was not responsive to the State’s rebuttal evidence. Only
the second and third portions of the booking officer’s testimony actually rebutted Joy’s
5
testimony. The second and third portions of the booking officer’s testimony asserted that Joy’s
alleged altercation injuries did not exist at booking, thus rebutting Joy’s testimony that his
alleged injuries did exist at booking. The first portion of the booking officer’s testimony merely
restated what the State had already elicited from Joy during his case-in-chief (i.e. that he did not
tell the booking officer about his alleged injuries). Because evidence of Joy’s back injury would
have addressed only his failure to disclose his alleged injuries to the booking officer (evidence
initially presented during Joy’s case-in-chief), the evidence would not have responded to the
State’s rebuttal evidence showing Joy’s alleged altercation injuries did not exist at booking.
Thus, Joy’s case-in-chief (not surrebuttal) was the proper place for the district court to admit the
evidence, if at all, and the court did not abuse its discretion by excluding Joy’s proffered
surrebuttal evidence.
Furthermore, Joy’s argument that evidence of his back injury counteracts “the State’s
rebuttal evidence that he did not have any injuries when he was booked” is without merit. The
State’s rebuttal evidence was not presented to show Joy did not have any injuries at booking, but
to show he did not have injuries inflicted by Jennifer at booking; thereby rebutting Joy’s claims
that Jennifer injured him before booking. While Joy correctly points out that evidence of his
back injury would show he had an injury when he was booked, the evidence does not show he
had injuries inflicted by Jennifer at booking and therefore is neither relevant nor responsive to
the State’s rebuttal evidence.
C. Failure to Give Unanimity Instruction
Joy argues the district court erred when it failed to instruct the jury that it must
unanimously agree on the facts giving rise to the domestic battery offense. Joy made no
contemporaneous objection to the court’s failure to give a unanimity instruction at trial.
Generally, issues not raised below may not be considered for the first time on appeal. State v.
Fodge, 121 Idaho 192, 195, 824 P.2d 123, 126 (1992). Idaho decisional law, however, has long
allowed appellate courts to consider a claim of error to which no objection was made below if
the issue presented rises to the level of fundamental error. See State v. Field, 144 Idaho 559,
571, 165 P.3d 273, 285 (2007); State v. Haggard, 94 Idaho 249, 251, 486 P.2d 260, 262 (1971).
In State v. Perry, 150 Idaho 209, 245 P.3d 961 (2010), the Idaho Supreme Court abandoned the
definitions it had previously utilized to describe what may constitute fundamental error. The
Perry Court held that an appellate court should reverse an unobjected-to error when the
6
defendant persuades the court that the alleged error: (1) violates one or more of the defendant’s
unwaived constitutional rights; (2) is clear or obvious without the need for reference to any
additional information not contained in the appellate record; and (3) affected the outcome of the
trial proceedings. Id. at 226, 245 P.3d at 978.
Joy argues the court’s failure to give the unanimity instruction violated his unwaived
constitutional right to due process. Further, he claims that the court’s failure to give the
unanimity instruction prejudiced him because “there is no way to tell how many jurors believed
Mrs. Joy’s testimony on the events in the bathroom while not believing her testimony on the
events in the truck, or vice versa.”
We first address whether the court’s failure to give the unanimity instruction violates one
or more of Joy’s unwaived constitutional rights. Whether a jury has been properly instructed is a
question of law over which we exercise free review. Severson, 147 Idaho at 710, 215 P.3d at
430. When reviewing jury instructions, we ask whether the instructions as a whole, and not
individually, fairly and accurately reflect applicable law. See id.
Under Idaho law, a trial court is required to instruct the jury that it must
unanimously agree on the defendant’s guilt in order to convict the defendant of a
crime. An instruction that the jury must unanimously agree on the facts giving
rise to the offense, however, is generally not required.
Id. at 711, 215 P.3d at 431 (citations omitted). Such an instruction is required, however, when a
defendant commits several temporally discrete acts, each of which involves “distinct union[s] of
mens rea and actus reus” and “independently support[s] a conviction for the crime charged.” Id.
The question in this case, then, is whether Joy’s course of conduct constituted a single offense or
multiple offenses.
Joy claims that, according to Jennifer’s version of the events, “at least two discrete acts
occurred.” At trial, Jennifer testified that the altercation began in the couple’s bathroom where
Joy pushed her into a cold tub of water, dunked her head in the water, pulled her hair, hit her
face, took off her clothes, and tied her wrists to her left ankle. Joy asserts that these acts were
motivated by Joy’s anger arising from the couple’s argument. Jennifer testified that Joy then left
the room, came back, gagged her with a washcloth, dragged her to his pickup, put her in the
pickup, and hit and kicked her. She further testified that Joy drove the pickup to a remote part of
the property, hit and kicked her, pulled her hair, and threatened to tie her to a tree unless she told
him where his keys and phone were. Joy asserts that these acts were motivated by a desire to
7
locate his keys and phone. According to Joy, the acts in the bathroom were removed in time and
place and had distinct motivations from the acts in the pickup, so they each support a conviction
for domestic battery. Thus, Joy asserts the district court should have instructed the jury that it
must unanimously agree on the facts giving rise to the domestic battery.
We are not convinced that the violent acts in the bathroom were separate and distinct
offenses from the violent acts in the pickup. Jennifer’s testimony only reflects a continual course
of conduct that was initiated by Joy and continued until Jennifer agreed to tell him the location of
his keys and cell phone. Her testimony suggests that the acts occurred in succession, with each
act precipitating and motivating the next act. Although there was a brief interruption while Joy
retrieved a washcloth, Jennifer’s testimony suggests that Joy likely conceived this act while he
was still in the bathroom and deliberately carried out the act without delay or change in
motivation. The record does not demonstrate that Joy spent a discernable amount of time out of
the room or that his motivations suddenly changed when he left the room. Further, while the acts
in the bathroom were spatially removed from the acts in the pickup, Jennifer testified that the
acts in the pickup occurred immediately after Joy gagged her in the bathroom and dragged her
naked body to the pickup. Thus, Jennifer’s testimony shows that Joy’s acts constituted a
continual course of conduct with almost no temporal separation, beginning in the bathroom,
continuing through the bedroom doors, going into the yard, and ending in Joy’s pickup.
Further, Jennifer’s testimony reflects that there was no clear point at which Joy began to
focus on locating his keys and cell phone. Rather, the whole argument seemed to focus both on
Joy texting a former girlfriend and the location of his keys and cell phone. Thus, the record does
not show that the acts in the bathroom and the acts in the pickup had distinct motivations.
Finally, Joy’s version of the events also reveals a continual course of conduct. Joy
testified that Jennifer was intoxicated and she initiated the physical violence. According to Joy,
he used his arms to block Jennifer’s attacks and defended himself by kicking at her. He testified
that despite his efforts to defend himself, Jennifer struck him in the face with her knee and
stomped on and kicked him. He further testified that he shoved her to escape and left the house,
but Jennifer followed him and tripped and fell off the deck. Then, according to Joy, she charged
at him and he threw her over a fence and down an embankment. Like Jennifer’s testimony, Joy’s
testimony reflects that the events occurred in succession with each act precipitating and
motivating the next act. Therefore, based on the record, we conclude that the underlying acts
8
were not separated by discernible time periods, but instead occurred one after another from one
place to the next; thus, the entire altercation constituted one continual course of conduct resulting
in one criminal offense. Accordingly, the district court did not violate Joy’s right to due process
by failing to give a unanimity instruction.
Because the district court’s failure to give the unanimity instruction did not violate any of
Joy’s unwaived constitutional rights, there was no fundamental error and we need not address the
last two prongs of the Perry analysis.
III.
CONCLUSION
The State’s amended information did not prejudice Joy, the district court did not abuse its
discretion by excluding Joy’s proffered surrebuttal evidence, and the district court did not err by
failing to give the jury a unanimity instruction. Joy’s judgment of conviction and sentence is
affirmed.
Chief Judge MELANSON and Judge GUTIERREZ CONCUR.
9