State v. Labatad ( 2021 )


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  • NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    Electronically Filed
    Intermediate Court of Appeals
    CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    18-AUG-2021
    07:47 AM
    Dkt. 53 SO
    NO. CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX
    IN THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    OF THE STATE OF HAWAI#I
    STATE OF HAWAI#I,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    SAMANTHA K.K. LABATAD,
    Defendant-Appellant
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    (CASE NO. 1CPC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    SUMMARY DISPOSITION ORDER
    (By:     Ginoza, Chief Judge, Leonard and Nakasone, JJ.)
    Defendant-Appellant Samantha K.K. Labatad aka Samantha
    Labatad (Labatad) appeals from the Judgment of Conviction and
    Sentence, Notice of Entry (Judgment), entered on December 11,
    2017, in the Circuit Court of the First Circuit (Circuit Court).1
    A jury found Labatad guilty of Assault in the Third Degree
    (Assault Third), in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS)
    § 707-712(1)(a) (2014).2 The Circuit Court sentenced Labatad to
    1
    The Honorable Christine E. Kuriyama presided.
    2
    HRS § 707-712 provides:
    (1) A person commits the offense of assault in the third
    degree if the person:
    (a) Intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causes
    bodily injury to another person; or
    (b) Negligently causes bodily injury to another
    person with a dangerous instrument.
    (continued...)
    NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    one year probation and three days in jail, with credit for time
    served.
    On appeal, Labatad contends: (1) the Circuit Court
    erred by omitting a mutual affray jury instruction; (2) the
    Circuit Court erred by denying Labatad's motion for mistrial
    based on prosecutorial misconduct; and (3) there was insufficient
    evidence to negate her claim of self-defense.
    Upon careful review of the record and the briefs
    submitted by the parties and having given due consideration to
    the arguments advanced and the issues raised by the parties, we
    resolve Labatad's points of error as follows, and vacate and
    remand based on instructional error.
    The pertinent background is as follows. Plaintiff-
    Appellee State of Hawai#i's (State) May 15, 2017 Complaint
    against Labatad charged her with Assault Third against Donna
    Peake (Peake).3 The subject incident occurred on the evening of
    November 1, 2016, at the conclusion of a movie showing at the
    Ward Theater in Kaka#ako.
    Peake testified that she and her daughter, Courtney
    Choy (Daughter), entered the screening room around 6:00 p.m.,
    taking seats a few rows from the back, with Peake sitting three
    to four seats from the right aisle, and Daughter to her left.
    Labatad and her boyfriend, Elijah Morris (Morris), then came,
    scooting past them and sitting two seats to their left. As the
    previews began, Labatad and Morris started to talk at a
    conversational volume, not whispering. Peake shushed them, but
    they continued to talk. Morris's phone rang a few times. Peake
    2
    (...continued)
    (2) Assault in the third degree is a misdemeanor unless
    committed in a fight or scuffle entered into by mutual
    consent, in which case it is a petty misdemeanor.
    3
    The Complaint stated:
    On or about November 1, 2016, in the City and County
    of Honolulu, State of Hawai#i, SAMANTHA K.K. LABATAD, also
    known as Samantha Labatad, did intentionally, knowingly, or
    recklessly cause bodily injury to Donna Peake, thereby
    committing the offense of Assault in the Third Degree, in
    violation of Section 707-712(1)(a) of the Hawai#i Revised
    Statutes.
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    shushed them again, for at least three times total, and Daughter
    also shushed them. The couple did not react.
    After the movie ended and credits began to roll, Peake,
    Daughter, Labatad and Morris stood up. In the partially-lit
    theater, Peake approached the couple and said, "[Y]ou know, you
    guys, if you want to talk, talk outside. You know, If [sic]
    you're here to watch the movie, watch the movie. You know, in
    that, kind of auntie kind . . . ." Morris reacted with a
    "humpf," but Labatad "went belligerent." Peake testified that
    Labatad said, "[T]his is [sic] United States of America; I can do
    whatever I want."
    Peake testified that at that moment, Morris was "right
    up against" Daughter's face. He was taller, and Peake "feared
    for her" so she told Morris, "Don't you touch her." Because
    Labatad was "in [Peake's] face" Peake told her, "Don't you touch
    me either; don't you touch any of us -- both of us." Labatad
    responded: "I can touch you if I want," and poked her three
    times on her collarbone, with her right hand.4 Labatad continued
    walking away, but "stepped back and said, Here, as a matter of
    fact, I'll give you this, 'woom.'" Peake claimed Labatad hit
    her, with a closed fist, knocking her off balance. Peake yelled
    at Daughter to call the police and screamed in the theater, "Get
    this girl, . . . she just punched me; she just assaulted me."
    Peake testified that Morris was heading toward the exit
    with Labatad following him, when Labatad turned back and punched
    Peake again, in the lower right cheek. Labatad and Morris pushed
    their way through the crowd and ran out the theater. Peake and
    Daughter moved slowly into the lobby, where they talked to
    police, theater management, and ambulance personnel, and Peake
    gave a written statement to police. Peake was given ice, but
    declined ambulance services, although her face was in "throbbing
    pain." Peake testified she went to the emergency room the next
    morning around 10:30 a.m. During the following week, Daughter
    4
    Daughter's testimony corroborates that Labatad poked her mother on
    the collarbone.
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    took photographs of Peake's face to show bruising on Peake's
    right cheek.
    Daughter's testimony mostly corroborated the relevant
    details of Peake's story. Daughter saw Labatad poke Peake and
    throw a drink at her. Daughter said Peake asked her to call 911
    after being poked, and while Daughter was on the phone Daughter
    heard Peake say Peake had been punched; Daughter did not see the
    hit but saw Peake "gripping her cheek" and saying she'd been
    punched.
    Labatad and Morris admitted at trial they talked during
    the movie, despite knowing that they weren't supposed to. Morris
    said after the movie, Peake and Daughter moved towards them and
    were preventing them from exiting the row, but not creating a
    barrier. Peake "verbally confronted" them "along the lines of us
    being disruptive and how we shouldn't be, kind of scolding us."
    Morris continued to exit the row when Morris saw, out of the
    corner of his eye, "popcorn in the air and, like a -- a
    scuffle[,]" so he turned around and saw Peake and Labatad
    "yelling at each other." Then he heard Peake saying, "[S]he hit
    me; she hit me." Morris "grabbed" Labatad and said, "Let's go."
    They exited the theater.
    Labatad testified that she was apologetic when Peake
    came over, but admitted saying it was a free country. "She was
    looking at me frustratedly. So . . . Yes; I'm sorry you feel
    that way; this is America; I do have a right to freedom of
    speech." Labatad claimed she did not yell at Peake or move her
    body. "I guess I did feel bad for disturbing her, because that's
    when I realized, like, the shushes were directed towards . . . me
    and [Morris], like, figuring out that I really was being
    inconsiderate. So I did apologize to her." Labatad stated that,
    "[I]t totally pissed [Peake] off. . . . [S]he made this really
    angry face at me, like she was going to do something." Labatad
    explained that she and Morris had passed Peake, and Morris was
    passing in front of Daughter, "just trying to leave and avoid any
    problems . . . ." Labatad said it was then that she got hit: "I
    just felt, like, a really brute force, blunt strike to the back
    of my head, like somebody had hit me with their fist or their
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    elbow. It was a really forceful blow, and it, like, put me in
    shock." When cross-examined, Labatad could not pinpoint whether
    the impact was to her head. Labatad described her reactions as
    follows:
    I put my arms up -- both arms up like this . . . . [M]y body
    was, like, a -- in a cross . . . .
    . . . .
    With both my arms out super wide, I, like, 180 spinned [sic]
    around as fast as I could because the person, whoever it was,
    which I would assume it would be [Peake] -- I assumed that it
    wouldn't stop there because the physical violence has already
    started.
    She spun around "with my arms out like this in attempt to push
    away and ward off . . . whoever hit me behind me." Labatad
    testified that after she had turned around, "I seen her [(Peake)]
    behind me, and I seen that I did strike her across her temple –-
    side temple and cheek of the face" with Labatad's right hand.
    Labatad said her hand was open, and she hit Peake with the back
    of her hand. Labatad rushed past Daughter, "because I've been
    struck and I've strucken [sic] [Peake] back." Peake followed her
    out into the aisle, yelling "assault." Labatad denied telling
    Peake she could touch her if she wanted or poking Peake. Labatad
    denied that she hit Peake a second time. Labatad claimed that
    when Peake followed her, Labatad threw the liquid contents of her
    cup at Peake. Morris then turned back toward Daughter and told
    her, "Control your mother." Labatad told the movie theater
    attendant as she left, "I defended myself; this is self-defense."
    Labatad did not file a police report.
    On September 20, 2017, the day that voir dire was
    scheduled to begin, the prosecutor informed the Circuit Court
    that she had learned that Morris had five outstanding district
    court bench warrants, and that she informed defense counsel that
    the sheriffs might serve Morris that day, if he appeared to
    testify. Defense counsel expressed concern that the prosecutor
    notified the sheriffs about the warrants and stated: "I think we
    need to take steps to prevent it from somehow tainting this case
    or tainting this jury." Defense counsel requested that the
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    Circuit Court communicate concerns "through court staff with the
    sheriff's office . . . ." The Circuit Court indicated that it
    would do so, as follows:
    THE COURT: Okay. I agree with both of you. It's
    important that the trial proceed as scheduled without any
    negative impact from [Morris] appearing at court and
    testifying and/or being picked up on these outstanding
    District Court traffic warrants.
    I am willing to contact the sheriff's office. Again,
    I can only ask. They need to do the job they have to do,
    and I am not going to tell them otherwise. But I am going
    to request that if he does show up to court to testify today
    that he be allowed to come to –- into court and testify.
    What happens once he leaves the courtroom is something that
    is out of my hands. Again, I cannot interfere with their
    ability to do their job.
    I will do my best to ensure that nothing that happens is
    done in the presence of the jury. By that point, the jury will
    have been empaneled.
    Later that day, the court clerk spoke with a deputy
    sheriff who wanted more information so the sheriff could track
    down the warrants to determine who, if anyone, would be trying to
    serve them. Defense counsel did not object to the warrant
    numbers being given to the sheriffs, but stated he was "in no way
    asking or endorsing that they take personal action to serve these
    warrants." The Circuit Court instructed the clerk to tell the
    deputy that the Court requested that Morris be allowed, "to
    testify without incident, and . . . to make sure that the jurors
    are not negatively impacted or tainted in any way." The Circuit
    Court stated, "I don't think it's appropriate for the Court to
    say, you know, 'don't serve the warrants' or 'serve the
    warrants.' That's entirely up to them."
    The court clerk provided the sheriffs with the warrant
    information, along with Morris's date of birth. The judge, via
    speaker phone, "instructed the deputy sheriff that the Court's
    request was that [Morris] be allowed to testify today without
    incident and that the Court did not want the proceeding tainted
    or negatively impacted any -- in any way, shape, or form. And
    that would include the prospective jurors." The deputy asked if
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    the court staff would call once Morris had testified; the court
    refused.
    Peake testified the next morning, on September 21,
    2017. Some time before the lunch recess, the Circuit Court
    learned that Morris had been picked up on the outstanding
    warrants; and defense counsel expressed concern that he would not
    be available to testify.
    Before reconvening after lunch, the Circuit Court heard
    testimony from two deputy sheriffs and Labatad's mother,
    regarding circumstances surrounding the service of the warrants
    on Morris. Deputy Sheriff Stephen Huynh (Huynh) told the Circuit
    Court that he and his partner, Deputy Sheriff Kimbrel Kim (Kim),
    arrested Morris on outstanding warrants at approximately 10:30
    a.m., "five minutes, give or take." The sheriffs took Morris
    into custody in the witness room, approximately two rooms away
    from the courtroom. A woman, later identified as the defendant's
    mother, Tammie Labatad, was in the room with Morris. Someone
    leaving the courtroom would have to pass the witness room to exit
    the building. The deputies said they left the witness room door
    "slightly open."5 Three other deputies were outside, along with
    other people whom Huynh believed were involved with another case
    because they sat on the benches further down the hall. The
    deputies handcuffed Morris behind his back, and without incident,
    escorted him down the hallway, downstairs and then took him to
    the Sheriff Receiving Booking Station in Kaka#ako.
    Tammie Labatad testified that one sheriff was standing
    in the foyer, and another, identified as Kim sat, in plain
    clothes, next to her in the back of the courtroom. She was in
    the courtroom for five or ten minutes when both sheriffs
    "disappeared." She said she understood that the sheriffs were
    "supposed to take [Morris] after he testified." She said from
    the time she noticed the sheriffs were gone, and the time Morris
    had been taken from the courthouse, was 15 to 20 minutes.
    Huyhn testified that the deputy prosecuting attorney
    notified him in person the day before to serve the warrants. The
    5
    Tammie Labatad testified that the door was wide open.
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    prosecutor also requested a "standby" because "last time there
    was some disruptive –- or arguing going around –- going on with
    two females." Huyhn said the deputies chose the location to
    serve the warrants. Huyhn said they made an effort to make the
    arrest on the bench warrants outside the presence of the jurors,
    and "[a]s far as I know, they were –- I was understanding the
    jurors are all in here at the time of the arrest."
    At the conclusion of the testimony regarding the
    service of the bench warrants, defense counsel moved for a
    mistrial, arguing that there was no conclusive evidence that the
    jury did not see the arrest. The defense alleged the "bigger
    problem" and basis for the mistrial was because the prosecutor
    took "affirmative steps" to have the warrants served, which
    intimidated Morris and constituted "an attempt to influence the
    outcome of this case . . . ."
    The prosecutor disputed the allegation, asserting that
    she told the sheriffs that Morris "must be made available for
    trial; you can't just pluck him and hold him for the whole day."
    The prosecutor argued that when the arrest for the warrants
    occurred, the jury was in the courtroom listening to a witness,
    and there was no evidence that "their attention was elsewhere."
    The Circuit Court noted that Morris had appeared on the
    first day of trial, September 20, 2017, knowing that he had
    outstanding warrants. The Circuit Court also observed that
    Morris appeared again that morning at 10:00 a.m., pursuant to the
    Court's order that he return to testify. After Morris was booked
    for the warrants, he again returned to the courthouse to testify.
    Defense counsel interpreted the Circuit Court's
    instruction that Morris be allowed to testify as an order that
    Morris was "not to be touched until after he testified."
    (Emphasis added). The Circuit Court corrected him, however,
    clarifying that it was a request and not an order, and stating
    that: "it would be up to the sheriff's office or HPD to dispense
    with the warrants as they . . . were required to do." The
    Circuit Court found it was speculative to say whether Morris had
    been intimidated by the possibility of arrest. The Circuit Court
    also placed its own observations regarding the service of the
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    bench warrant on the record, as follows. The judge noted she had
    a vantage point of the courtroom. Deputy Kim was in plain
    clothes seated in the back of the courtroom, and the jurors could
    not see the other sheriff in the vestibule. The Circuit Court
    found that Morris was taken into custody outside of the presence
    or hearing of the jurors, as the jurors were listening to cross-
    examination, the arrest was done without incident, and anyone in
    the hallway observing the arrest were not the jurors for this
    case. The Circuit Court concluded that the trial had not been
    tainted and denied the motion for mistrial.
    On September 22, 2017, before the jury was instructed
    and closing arguments, defense counsel informed the court that
    Labatad told him that there was "a potential interaction" during
    the break between Morris and two people believed to be relatives
    of Peake, asking him why he was arrested the previous day.
    Defense counsel asked that the jurors be polled individually with
    the question he proposed: "Have you heard of or were you made
    aware of anybody being arrested in the courthouse yesterday?"
    This was done, and each juror answered in the negative. Although
    defense counsel announced he was "satisfied regarding that
    issue[,]" he renewed the objection for mistrial based on "the
    related issue of the impropriety and the possible . . .
    tampering" based on the "fact and circumstances leading to the
    arrest itself." The motion was again denied.
    With regard to jury instructions, both the State and
    Labatad had submitted proposed jury instructions that included an
    instruction on Mutual Affray, taken from Hawai#i Standard Jury
    Instruction Criminal (HAWJIC) 9.21A, which reads:
    If you find that the prosecution has proven the
    offense of Assault in the Third Degree beyond a reasonable
    doubt, then you must also determine whether the prosecution
    has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the fight or
    scuffle was not entered into by mutual consent. This
    determination must be unanimous and is to be indicated by
    answering "Yes" or "No" on a special interrogatory which
    will be provided to you.
    While settling jury instructions, both the State and Labatad
    withdrew their respective requests for the Mutual Affray
    instruction. The jury was instructed on the elements of Assault
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    Third, without Mutual Affray, and self-defense. The jury found
    Labatad guilty of Assault Third. Labatad timely appealed.
    Mutual Affray Instruction
    Labatad first contends the Circuit Court plainly erred
    by failing to instruct the jury on the mitigating defense of
    Mutual Affray. Even though the proposed jury instruction was
    withdrawn by both defense counsel and the prosecutor, Labatad
    argues that there was evidence that Peake's injury was inflicted
    in a fight entered into by "mutual consent" when Peake confronted
    Labatad, hit her first from behind, and Labatad struck back in
    self-defense. This contention has merit.
    "When jury instructions or the omission thereof are at
    issue on appeal, the standard of review is whether, when read
    and considered as a whole, the instructions given are
    prejudicially insufficient, erroneous, inconsistent, or
    misleading." State v. Nichols, 111 Hawai#i 327, 334, 
    141 P.3d 974
    , 981 (2006) (quoting State v. Gonsalves, 108 Hawai#i 289,
    292–93, 
    119 P.3d 597
    , 600–01 (2005)). Because it is the duty of
    the trial court to properly instruct the jury, "once
    instructional error is demonstrated, [the court] will vacate,
    without regard to whether timely objection was made, if there is
    a reasonable possibility that the error contributed to the
    defendant's conviction, i.e., that the erroneous jury
    instruction was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt." Id. at
    337, 
    141 P.3d at 984
     (footnote omitted).
    "Assault in the third degree is a misdemeanor unless
    committed in a fight or scuffle entered into by mutual consent,
    in which case it is a petty misdemeanor." HRS § 707-712(2).
    Mutual Affray "is not a lesser included offense of Assault in
    the Third Degree," but is a "mitigating defense that reduces the
    offense of Assault in the Third Degree to a petty misdemeanor."
    State v. Kikuta, 125 Hawai#i 78, 95-96, 
    253 P.3d 639
    , 656-57
    (2011) (citing HRS § 707-712(2)). The Kikuta Court held that a
    trial court "must submit a mutual affray instruction to the jury
    where there is any evidence in the record that the injury was
    inflicted during the course of a fight or scuffle entered into
    by mutual consent, as indicated in HAWJIC 9.21." Id. at 96, 253
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    P.3d at 657 (emphasis added). "[C]onsent" includes implied
    consent. Id. Consent may be "inferred from one's conduct" or
    may be "implied from an individual's words, gestures, or
    conduct." Id. (citations, internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Kikuta Court determined from its review of the conflicting
    testimonies of the defendant and the complainant, that "there
    was some evidence adduced from which Complainant's consent to
    affray may be implied" and thus, the Mutual Affray instruction
    should have been given. Id.
    In this case, the record does not indicate why defense
    counsel and the prosecutor chose to withdraw their respective
    proposed Mutual Affray instructions. However, their reasons are
    inconsequential given that where there is any evidentiary support
    for a defense, the Circuit Court must instruct the jury on it.
    Kikuta, 125 Hawai#i at 96, 
    253 P.3d at 657
    . This is so even if
    the defendant explicitly waives such an instruction. See State
    v. Adviento, 132 Hawai#i 123, 139, 
    319 P.3d 1131
    , 1147 (2014)
    (holding that a trial court must sua sponte instruct on the
    mitigating defense of extreme mental or emotional disturbance in
    a murder prosecution, where the defense was raised by the
    evidence, even though neither side requested such instruction).
    Here, there was evidence in the record supporting
    Mutual Affray where Labatad testified that Peake confronted her,
    hit her on the back of the head, and "came after her[.]" It is
    undisputed that Peake initiated the encounter by approaching
    Labatad and Morris to confront them for their talking during the
    movie. Labatad's testimony that Peake hit her first, however,
    meets the threshold "any evidence" standard that Peake could have
    consented to a fight or scuffle, and thus, the Mutual Affray
    instruction was required. Kikuta, 125 Hawai#i at 96, 
    253 P.3d at 657
    .
    Without the Mutual Affray instruction and a special
    interrogatory about mutual affray,6 the jury did not consider,
    6
    HAWJIC 9.21C, Assault Third by Mutual Affray Special
    Interrogatory: HRS § 707-712(1)(a), provides as follows: "Did the
    prosecution prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the fight or scuffle was not
    (continued...)
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    once they determined Labatad was guilty of Assault Third, whether
    the parties may have mutually consented to engaging in a fight or
    scuffle. "In a jury trial, the jury is the trier of fact and,
    thus, is the sole judge of the credibility of the witnesses and
    the weight of the evidence." State v. Jhun, 83 Hawai#i 472, 483,
    
    927 P.2d 1355
    , 1366 (1996) (citation omitted). Given the
    conflicting evidence, there is "a reasonable possibility that the
    error" of omitting the Mutual Affray instruction and a special
    interrogatory on Mutual Affray contributed to the jury's guilty
    verdict on Assault Third as a misdemeanor, rather than as a petty
    misdemeanor. Kikuta, 125 Hawai#i at 97, 
    253 P.3d at 658
     (quoting
    Nichols, 111 Hawai#i at 337, 
    141 P.3d at 984
    ); see State v.
    Henley, 136 Hawai#i 471, 479, 
    363 P.3d 319
    , 327 (2015) (holding
    that "we cannot say that the omission of the mutual affray
    instruction was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, as it is
    possible, on this record, that given a choice between convicting
    Henley on misdemeanor Third Degree Assault and the mitigated
    offense of petty misdemeanor assault, the jury could have
    convicted Henley on the latter."). Accordingly, we cannot
    conclude that the omission of the Mutual Affray instruction and
    special interrogatory about Mutual Affray was harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt. Thus, the Circuit Court plainly erred by
    failing to instruct the jury on the mitigating defense of Mutual
    Affray.
    Denial of motions for mistrial
    Labatad contends that the Circuit Court "abused its
    discretion in denying the motion for mistrial where [the
    prosecutor] engaged in prosecutorial misconduct by causing the
    bench warrants to be served on [Morris] at court in violation of
    the de facto ruling of the court prohibiting such action."
    Labatad argues the prosecutor breached her duty of candor to the
    Circuit Court by being evasive and vague about when and how the
    bench warrants would be issued when she "caused bench warrants to
    be served" during trial. This contention is without merit.
    6
    (...continued)
    entered into by mutual consent? (Your answer to this question must be
    unanimous.) Yes _____ No _____"
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    "The denial of a motion for mistrial is within the
    sound discretion of the trial court and will not be upset absent
    a clear abuse of discretion[,]" and the trial court "abuses its
    discretion when it clearly exceeds the bounds of reason or
    disregards rules or principles of law or practice to the
    substantial detriment of a party litigant." State v. Lagat, 97
    Hawai#i 492, 495, 
    40 P.3d 894
    , 897 (2002) (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    In this case, the record reflects that there was no
    court order prohibiting the service of Morris's bench warrants
    during trial. Nor does the record reflect that there was a "de
    facto ruling" prohibiting the service of Morris's bench warrant
    during trial, as Labatad claims. The record indicates that the
    Circuit Court "made a request" to the sheriffs, that Morris be
    allowed to testify, and that "[a]fter he testified, it would be
    up to the sheriff's office or HPD to dispense with the warrants
    as they . . . were required to do." Much of defense counsel's
    argument below appears to be based on counsel's misimpression
    that the Circuit Court had issued an order prohibiting the
    warrants from being served until after Morris testified --
    although the record shows no such order was issued. The Circuit
    Court corrected Labatad's counsel more than once about this
    mischaracterization of the court's action, clarifying that it had
    communicated a "request" to the sheriffs, and this "request" was
    not a court order.7 Because the factual premise for Labatad's
    mistrial argument is not supported by the record, Labatad's
    contention is without merit.
    In addition to the "de facto" ruling argument that we
    have rejected, Labatad also claims that "the basis for the
    7
    In its oral findings ruling on the mistrial, the Circuit Court
    stated, "I made the request. It was not a court order." Later, during the
    same hearing, in response to defense counsel again referring to the "request"
    as an order, the court again corrected him:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Well, I just wanted to make clear that
    I'm not trying to second-guess what the Court's orders were
    yesterday in terms of what was notified to the sheriffs.
    THE COURT:   I'm sorry.   It wasn't an order.   It was a
    request.
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    mistrial alleged herein is [the prosecutor's] misconduct," due to
    her "willful violation of the court's de facto order and
    deliberate lack of candor" regarding her role in the service of
    the warrant. However, the Circuit Court did not make any
    findings regarding the prosecutor's conduct in the service of the
    bench warrants in this case; nor were there any findings
    regarding any "lack of candor" by the prosecutor. Labatad did
    not request the Circuit Court to make such findings below.
    Labatad's arguments on appeal also refer to "prosecutorial
    misconduct," but the record below shows that Labatad never argued
    or referenced the term "prosecutorial misconduct." Labatad
    generally alleged impropriety by the prosecutor, but did not
    specifically make the "prosecutorial misconduct" argument to the
    Circuit Court that she now raises on appeal. Thus, because
    "prosecutorial misconduct" was not raised below, the Circuit
    Court did not enter any findings or conclusions regarding
    prosecutorial misconduct. We conclude that the record is
    inadequate for appellate review of prosecutorial misconduct
    because these specific arguments were not raised below, and are
    waived. See State v. Moses, 102 Hawai#i 449, 456, 
    77 P.3d 940
    ,
    947 (2003) (legal issues and arguments not raised below are
    deemed waived on appeal).
    Even if we were to consider Labatad's prosecutorial
    misconduct argument on its merits, the record here does not show
    that Labatad was denied her right to a fair trial where Morris
    testified, and Morris's arrest did not occur in the presence or
    hearing of any jurors. "Prosecutorial misconduct warrants a new
    trial or the setting aside of a guilty verdict only where the
    actions of the prosecutor have caused prejudice to the
    defendant's right to a fair trial." State v. Mara, 98 Hawai#i 1,
    16, 
    41 P.3d 157
    , 172 (2002) (quoting State v. Clark, 83 Hawai#i
    289, 304, 
    926 P.2d 194
    , 209 (1996)). Labatad argues that
    "dismissal in this case should be with prejudice" and
    reprosecution barred, under the standard set forth in State v.
    Rogan, 91 Hawai#i 405, 423, 
    984 P.2d 1231
    , 1249 (1999) where "the
    prosecutorial misconduct is so egregious that, from an objective
    standpoint, it clearly denied a defendant his or her right to a
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    NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    fair trial." While Labatad did not cite any authority on the
    issue of prosecutorial misconduct in the service of warrants
    during trial, the Hawai#i Supreme Court has stated that the
    government "may not, by its own conduct, render a material
    witness unavailable to the defendant." State v. Bullen, 
    63 Haw. 27
    , 29, 
    620 P.2d 728
    , 730 (1980) (citing Washington v. Texas, 
    388 U.S. 14
     (1967) (other citations omitted).8 In this case,
    however, there are no factual findings establishing what the
    State's conduct was in facilitating the service of the bench
    warrants on Morris. The record here is insufficient to review
    whether there was any prosecutorial misconduct that was "so
    egregious" under Rogan, 91 Hawai#i at 423, 
    984 P.2d at 1249
    , to
    warrant a dismissal with prejudice. Ultimately, Morris was not
    rendered unavailable to Labatad's defense, because Morris
    returned to the courthouse after the bench warrants were served,
    and was able to testify. Cf. Bullen, 63 Haw. at 29, 640 P.2d at
    730.
    Under the specific circumstances of this case, we
    conclude that the Circuit Court did not abuse its discretion in
    determining a mistrial was not warranted, where the defendant's
    ability to call the witness was not compromised.9 In its oral
    ruling denying the motion for mistrial, the Circuit Court found
    that Morris was taken into custody outside of the presence or
    hearing of the jurors, the jurors were listening to cross-
    examination at the time, the arrest was done without incident,
    and anyone in the hallway who saw the arrest were not the jurors
    8
    In Bullen, the Hawai#i Supreme Court held that where the conduct
    of the government rendered a government informant who was a material witness
    for the defendant unavailable, the government was required to produce the
    witness or risk dismissal of the indictment. 63 Haw. at 29, 620 P.3d at 730.
    9
    In affirming the denial of the mistrial in this case, however, we
    do not necessarily condone what occurred, i.e., the service of a bench warrant
    in the courthouse on a defense witness during a jury trial, that the
    prosecution and the Circuit Court knew was likely to be executed during trial,
    possibly in the courthouse. A court may want to consider an order prohibiting
    any service of bench warrants of witnesses during trial in the courthouse, to
    prevent disruption of a trial from occurring in the first instance and
    eliminate the potential of a mistrial. Such a court order could be considered
    pursuant to the circuit court's powers under HRS § 603-21.9(6) (2016) to issue
    orders or "take such other steps as may be necessary . . . for the promotion
    of justice in matters pending before them."
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    NOT FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST'S HAWAI#I REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER
    in this case.   The Circuit Court denied the motion for mistrial
    stating:
    I don't think we can speculate about whether or not
    Mr. Morris was intimated [sic] by what was happening because
    he knew about the outstanding warrants yesterday, yet he
    showed up to court. He returned to court today, as ordered
    by the Court. At your request, we –- I did order him to be
    here at 10:00 A.M. The warrants have been taken care of,
    and he is back at court. So I am unable, on the record and
    in light of the credible and reliable evidence, to make a
    finding that the process has been tainted in any way.
    Morris testified as a defense witness. Labatad does not
    challenge the Circuit Court's oral findings on appeal. On this
    record, we cannot say that Labatad's right to a fair trial was
    violated, and the Circuit Court did not abuse its discretion in
    denying the motion for mistrial. See Lagat, 97 Hawai#i at 495,
    
    40 P.3d at 897
    .
    Self-Defense
    In her final point of error, Labatad contends that the
    State produced insufficient evidence to rebut her proof of self-
    defense. This contention is without merit.
    "[O]nce the issue of self-protection is raised, the
    burden is on the prosecution to disprove the facts that have been
    introduced or to prove facts negativing the defense and to do so
    beyond a reasonable doubt." State v. Lubong, 77 Hawai#i 429,
    431, 
    886 P.2d 766
    , 768 (App. 1994) (citations omitted). When
    reviewing the sufficiency of evidence on appeal, "evidence
    adduced in the trial court must be considered in the strongest
    light for the prosecution . . . ." State v. Kalaola, 124 Hawai#i
    43, 56, 
    237 P.3d 1109
    , 1122 (2010) (citations omitted). "The
    test on appeal is not whether guilt is established beyond a
    reasonable doubt, but whether there was substantial evidence to
    support the conclusion of the trier of fact." 
    Id.
     (citations and
    italics omitted). Substantial evidence is "credible evidence
    which is of sufficient quality and probative value to enable a
    person of reasonable caution to support a conclusion." Id. at
    49, 
    237 P.3d at 1115
     (citations omitted).
    Here, the only evidence establishing that Peake used
    force against Labatad first, was Labatad's own testimony. Peake
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    testified that Labatad punched her "with all her might" after
    poking her in the collarbone. Daughter saw Labatad poke Peake
    and shortly after saw Peake holding her cheek, saying she had
    been punched. The jury's verdict entailed credibility
    determinations, where Labatad and Peake gave opposing accounts of
    who hit whom first. The credibility of witnesses and the weight
    of the evidence is the province of the factfinder –- here, the
    jury. See Jhun, 83 Hawai#i at 483, 
    927 P.2d at 1366
    . Testimony
    from Peake and Daughter constituted sufficient, credible evidence
    to enable a person of reasonable caution to reject Labatad's
    self-defense claim. See Kalaola, 124 Hawai#i at 49, 
    237 P.3d at 1115
    .
    Therefore, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Judgment of
    Conviction and Sentence, Notice of Entry, entered on December 11,
    2017, by the Circuit Court of the First Circuit, is vacated and
    remanded for a new trial consistent with this Summary Disposition
    Order.
    DATED:   Honolulu, Hawai#i, August 18, 2021.
    On the briefs:                         /s/ Lisa M. Ginoza
    Chief Judge
    Alen M. Kaneshiro,
    Attorney at Law                        /s/ Katherine G. Leonard
    for Defendant-Appellant                Associate Judge
    Donn Fudo                              /s/ Karen T. Nakasone
    Deputy Prosecuting Attorney            Associate Judge
    for Plaintiff-Appellee
    17