COATS, Chief Judge.
Justin G. Liddicoat was convicted of several offenses related to his assault on his former girlfriend. He was also convicted of weapons misconduct for not informing the officer who arrested him for these offenses that he was carrying a steak knife.
After the jury returned its verdicts, Liddicoat filed a motion for a new trial, asking the superior court for an evidentiary hearing on his claim that one of the jurors in his case failed to disclose in voir dire that she knew him and was biased against him. In this appeal, Liddicoat argues that the trial court should have granted his request for an evidentiary hearing on this claim. He also claims that he is entitled to reversal of his concealed weapon conviction because, he argues, a steak knife does not meet the statutory definition of a "deadly weapon." We conclude that the trial court did not err in denying Liddicoat's request for an evidentiary hearing. We also conclude that a steak knife falls within the definition of a deadly weapon. We therefore affirm Liddicoat's convictions.
Liddicoat was charged with second-degree assault,
During trial, after the State rested its case, Liddicoat moved for a judgment of acquittal
The jury convicted Liddicoat of all charges. Liddicoat then filed a motion for a new trial, arguing that he had information that one of the jurors, Julia Guthrie, had failed to disclose in voir dire that she knew Liddicoat and was biased against him. Liddicoat also alleged that Guthrie impermissibly discussed the case while she served as a juror. Liddicoat asked for an evidentiary hearing on his claim of juror misconduct. Judge Carey denied the motion without prejudice, concluding that Liddicoat had not met his burden to show that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing. Judge Carey invited Liddicoat to present additional affidavits or other evidence to support his claim, but Liddicoat instead filed this appeal.
A two-part inquiry governs claims of juror misconduct: (1) whether the evidence establishes a serious violation of the juror's duty and, if so, (2) whether the violation deprived the complaining party of a fair trial.
The first part of this test—whether there was a serious violation of a juror's duty—may be shown by evidence of "fraud, bribery, forcible coercion, or any obstruction of justice."
The second part of the test—whether the violation deprived the party of a fair trial—hinges on three considerations:
After reviewing these legal standards, Judge Carey found that Liddicoat would be entitled to a new trial if he could show that, during the jury selection process, Guthrie deliberately withheld information that she was acquainted with Liddicoat and had personal animosity toward him, because that information would likely have led Liddicoat to challenge Guthrie for cause or peremptorily. But the court denied the motion for a new trial because the affidavits submitted by Liddicoat advanced only "unverified allegations by unknown persons and innuendo," and thus did not entitle Liddicoat to an evidentiary hearing.
A court normally must grant an evidentiary hearing on a motion when the pleadings establish a genuine dispute concerning a material fact.
Liddicoat was represented at trial by the Public Defender Agency. Liddicoat's new trial motion alleged that the Agency had learned—from undisclosed sources—that Samantha Turley, a roommate of Julia Guthrie, purportedly had information that Guthrie knew Liddicoat from before trial and that Guthrie was biased against him. These same undisclosed sources said that Turley had reported that Guthrie impermissibly discussed the case while she was serving as a juror. An investigator with the Public Defender Agency made an appointment to interview Turley, but Turley did not show up for the interview or return later phone calls.
In opposition to the new trial motion, the State argued that Liddicoat's allegations, which were not supported by affidavits, did not establish a prima facie case of juror misconduct. In his reply to the State's opposition, Liddicoat provided two affidavits by the Public Defender Agency investigator. In one of those affidavits, the investigator recounted that Turley initially agreed to meet with her to discuss Guthrie's knowledge of, and bias against, Liddicoat, but that Turley did not show up for the interview or return subsequent phone calls. The other affidavit recounted the investigator's interview with David Guthrie, juror Guthrie's stepson, at the Ketchikan Correctional Center. David Guthrie said he had been friends with Liddicoat for eight or nine years, that he and Liddicoat spent time at Julia Guthrie's home, that Julia Guthrie knew Liddicoat, and that she did not like any of David Guthrie's friends.
In denying the motion and the request for an evidentiary hearing, Judge Carey observed that Liddicoat had not identified, or included affidavits from, any of the unnamed individuals who allegedly provided information to the Public Defender Agency about what Turley knew about Guthrie's conduct. With respect to the affidavit recounting the interview with David Guthrie, the court noted that the declarations recounted in the affidavit were hearsay and lacked specificity. Judge Carey also questioned why "Liddicoat apparently [did] not know and recognize [Guthrie] as she underwent the jury selection process and sat through a three-day trial?"
We agree with Judge Carey's conclusion that Liddicoat failed to meet his burden to show that he was entitled to an evidentiary hearing. In the absence of any admissible evidence explaining Turley's reasons for failing to cooperate with the defense investigator, no particular inference can be drawn from the fact that Turley did not show up for
As already discussed, the police found a steak knife in Liddicoat's sweatshirt pocket when they conducted a pat-down search of him. Liddicoat was convicted of fifth-degree weapons misconduct for not immediately disclosing to the police that he was carrying a concealed deadly weapon.
A person commits the crime of fifth-degree weapons misconduct under AS 11.61.220(a)(1)(A)(i) if the person:
For purposes of this statute, "deadly weapon" is defined as "any firearm, or anything designed for and capable of causing death or serious physical injury, including a knife, an axe, a club, metal knuckles, or an explosive."
Liddicoat argues that the concealed weapons charge should not have gone to the jury because the State presented no evidence that a steak knife meets the definition of a "deadly weapon." He concedes that a steak knife is capable of causing death or serious physical injury, but argues that the statute also requires that the knife be specifically designed for that purpose.
We acknowledge that Liddicoat's argument based on the language of the statute defining "deadly weapon" has some force. That statute on its face seems to limit "deadly weapon" to "anything designed for ... causing death or serious physical injury." A steak knife is clearly not "designed" for the purpose of killing or injuring people, as that term is commonly understood.
But when read as a whole, the statutory definition of "deadly weapon" is ambiguous. The examples of deadly weapons actually listed in the statute—a knife, an axe, a club, metal knuckles, or an explosive—are, with the exception of a club and metal knuckles,
To resolve this ambiguity in the meaning of deadly weapon, we look to the legislative history of the statutes at issue. Alaska courts apply a sliding scale approach to statutory interpretation, which considers the legislative history of a statute and whether that history reveals a legislative intent and meaning contrary to the plain meaning of the statute.
Before 1980, when the Revised Criminal Code went into effect,
In the Revised Criminal Code, this statute was split into two statutes: the statute defining a "deadly weapon,"
As just explained, the pre-1980 concealed weapon statute made it unlawful for a person to carry concealed about his person "an instrument by the use of which injury could be inflicted upon the person or property of another." The commentary to the Tentative Draft to the Revised Criminal Code indicates that this language was not included in the definition of "deadly weapon" because it was overbroad, "since virtually any item, even this volume [of the Tentative Draft], would be included in this category."
The history of the concealed weapons statute also provides insight into what the drafters intended when they included "knife" in the definition of a deadly weapon. The pre-1980 statute made it unlawful to carry concealed about the person any knife "other than an ordinary pocketknife." This language was carried over into the current concealed weapons statute.
The later history of the concealed weapons statute is consistent with this view. In 2003, when the legislature repealed the requirement of a concealed weapons permit for handguns, it amended the fifth-degree weapons misconduct statute to require any person contacted by a police officer while carrying a concealed deadly weapon to inform the officer of that possession.
Other statutes that rely on the definition of "deadly weapon" in AS 11.81.900 are also consistent with this view.
(We also note that we have, in previous cases, declared that a kitchen or steak knife falls within the definition of "deadly weapon" in AS 11.81.900
Liddicoat has not advanced any contrary statutory history to show that the legislature intended to exclude a steak knife from the definition of a deadly weapon. The only authority Liddicoat relied on, in superior court and in this court, is Medley v. Runnels,
We therefore conclude that Judge Carey did not err in denying Liddicoat's motion for judgment of acquittal on the fifth-degree weapons misconduct charge.
We AFFIRM Liddicoat's convictions.