State Of Washington v. Nick T. Arquette ( 2013 )


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    COL'       O     A PL-AL S
    D l " l' S I O I II
    2013 DEC 10         AM o, 5 R
    Sc ,^— C"IRF .     S 1. -        TOII
    B
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                                                               No. 42546 -7 -II
    Respondent,                                  Consolidated)
    V.
    PUBLISHED OPINION
    NICK TAYLOR ARQUETTE,
    No. 42974 -8 -II
    In re the Personal Restraint Petition of,
    NICK TAYLOR ARQUETTE,
    Petitioner.
    BJORGEN, J. —            Following a bench trial, Nick Taylor Arquette was found guilty of first
    degree perjury. Arquette appeals his conviction, asserting that ( 1) sufficient evidence did not
    support his conviction and ( 2) his conviction subjected him to double jeopardy. We consolidated
    Arquette'   s   direct   appeal with   his   personal restraint petition ( PRP),    in which he argues that ( 1)
    sufficient evidence       did   not support    his   previous conviction   for   second   degree perjury   following          a
    No. 42546 -7 -II (Cons. With
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    jury trial and ( 2) his previous appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to challenge the
    sufficiency of evidence in his previous direct appeal. Holding that the State' s corroborating
    evidence was not inconsistent with Arquette' s innocence, we grant Arquette' s PRP, reverse his
    convictions, and remand to the trial court to dismiss both charges with prejudice.
    FACTS
    A.      Background
    In March 2009,      Gary   McKee       paid   Robert Tribble $ 140 for a 1970 Datsun truck that,
    unknown to McKee, belonged to Tribble' s roommate, Arquette. When Tribble failed to deliver
    the truck, McKee went to Tribble' s home to look for him. There McKee met Arquette, who
    explained to McKee that he was the owner of the Datsun truck and not Tribble. The parties
    disagree as to what happened next.
    According      to McKee, Arquette told him that " he         would give me         the title ...   as soon as I
    brought [ Tribble] there,    so   he   could   tell [ Tribble] to no longer   come   to   his property." Clerk' s
    Papers ( CP)   at   57. McKee stated that after he brought Tribble to Arquette' s home a couple of
    days later, Arquette retrieved the Datsun' s title from another truck, went into the house to sign it,
    and then handed the title to him. McKee also stated that, because the truck was not in running
    order, he came back to the house a couple of days later to tow it away. McKee said that Arquette
    was present on the day he came to tow the Datsun away and that Arquette had to move another
    truck to provide him access to the Datsun.
    In contrast with McKee' s account of events, Arquette stated that he did not agree to turn
    over possession of his Datsun and that McKee became aggressive toward him. Arquette
    described one occasion where McKee and McKee' s brother came to his house and assaulted one
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    of Arquette' s guests. Arquette also described another occasion where McKee came to his house
    and asked him to move another truck to allow McKee access to the Datsun. Arquette stated that
    he had   refused    to   move   his truck   and   that   he had   warned   McKee, "[       I] f it' s off my property, I' m
    gonna report   it   stolen."    CP at 25. Arquette further stated that he had reported the Datsun stolen
    the following day when he came home from work and saw that it had been taken.
    On March 29, 2009, Arquette called the police to report that a friend had told him the
    missing Datsun       was " somewhere on           the 200 ...     block   of   Cypress."    CP   at   28. Longview police
    officer Charles Meadows responded to the report and found the Datsun parked in McKee' s
    carport. When Meadows found the Datsun, he noted that the truck was parked in plain sight with
    the correct license plates attached and that there was no damage to the truck' s ignition or locks.
    Meadows called Arquette to tell him that the Datsun had been located and asked Arquette to pick
    up the vehicle; Arquette told Meadows that he was unable to pick up the truck and that he would
    make arrangements to pick it up later.
    Later that same day, McKee called the police and asked why an officer had been behind
    his residence looking at the Datsun. Meadows arranged to speak with McKee in person at
    McKee' s residence. When Meadows told McKee that the Datsun had been reported stolen,
    McKee became upset and told Meadows that the truck belonged to him. McKee showed
    Meadows the title to the Datsun, which contained a signature from Arquette appearing to release
    Arquette' s ownership interest in the truck.
    That same day, Meadows called Arquette and asked him to come to the Longview Police
    Department to       speak with    him. Arquette          agreed   to   meet with   Meadows       on   April 1, but he did
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    not show up on that date. Meadows again called Arquette on April 18, and after he did not
    receive an answer, went to Arquette' s residence. Meadows asked Arquette about the Datsun' s
    title and Arquette explained that he believed the title had been taken by Tribble, his former
    roommate.
    Meadows asked Arquette to fill out a police statement form and left the form with
    Arquette.             Arquette wrote the following on the form:
    McKee] came by two or three times; one of those times I found out why he came
    over.        He   said     he bought the truck      off [ Tribble],   and then I told him it wasn' t
    Tribble' s] to sell. Then he said that he paid a hundred and forty bucks for it, and
    I told him it wasn' t for sale and if you [ take] it off my property I was go[ ing to]
    report it stolen, and he ( sic) came home from work on a Friday, it was gone, so I
    reported it stolen.
    1
    CP    at   14.        The   police   form;   which   Arquette   signed,   included   a provision   stating, " I have read the
    above statement; certify and declare it to be true and correct under the penalty of perjury under
    the laws         of   the State   of   Washington." CP at 127. Arquette left the signed statement in the door
    of his house, and Meadows retrieved the statement while Arquette was away at work.
    1
    The record on appeal does not contain a copy of Arquette' s signed police statement form and,
    instead, only contains testimony paraphrasing the statement. At trial, Longview Police Officer
    Meadows provided a similar, but not identical, description of Arquette' s signed statement:
    That a person, [ McKee], came by two or three times. One of the times, I found
    out       why he    was     coming by. He said that he bought a truck off [Tribble], then I
    told       him it   was     not [ Tribble' s] to sell, it was my truck. Then he said he had
    already paid for it, and, in parentheses he says a hundred and forty dollars, and he
    was going to take the truck. Then I told him if you take the truck, I will report the
    truck stolen.
    Then, on Thursday night, after I got off work and came home, he was here
    to            truck that was his. On Friday evening when I came home from
    get another
    work my truck was gone, and I filed a police report on my truck.
    CP at 127 -28.
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    B.     Procedural
    1.   2010 Second Degree Perjury Conviction and First Appeal
    In October 2009, the State charged Arquette with two counts of second degree perjury.
    The first count related to Arquette' s March 27 signed Longview Police Department Incident
    Report and the second count related to his April 18 signed police statement form. The trial court
    dismissed the first count,2 and the second count was tried to a jury on May 5, 2010.
    At Arquette' s jury trial, McKee testified as stated above. The State also called Doyle
    Ash, who testified that he went with McKee and McKee' s brother to Arquette' s home to help
    tow away the Datsun. Ash stated that Arquette moved his truck to allow McKee access to the
    Datsun without incident. However, on cross examination Ash admitted that he did not clearly
    see Arquette on the day he helped to tow the Datsun and that he had been unable to identify
    Arquette in a photograph lineup when questioned by police.
    Arquette testified that he had signed the Datsun' s title on March 11, 2009, the day he
    received the title from United Finance after making his final payment for the truck. Arquette
    stated that he signed the title in anticipation of a pending sale to an individual in Kelso,
    Washington. Arquette further stated that he had placed the title on a dresser and that he
    suspected that Tribble had taken the title along with some of his other possessions.
    Defense witness Greg Rupert testified that he was at Arquette' s home when two men
    showed up and told Arquette that they were going to pick up the Datsun. Rupert stated that he
    heard Arquette tell the   men, " I'   ll   call   the   cops   if you take it." CP   at   155.   Defense witness
    2 The record does not state the trial court' s reasons for dismissing the first count.
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    Christopher Hawkins testified that he was at Arquette' s home when McKee and McKee' s
    brother came over and demanded possession of the Datsun. Hawkins stated that McKee was
    aggressive and that Arquette told McKee that the truck was not Tribble' s to sell. Hawkins also
    stated that he heard Arquette tell McKee that he would call the cops if McKee hauled the truck
    away. The jury returned a verdict finding Arquette guilty of second degree perjury.
    Arquette appealed his conviction to our court, asserting that " one of the trial court' s jury
    instructions   incorrectly   stated   the law     and   lowered the burden     of proof   for perjury." State v.
    Arquette, 
    162 Wn. App. 1025
    , 
    2011 WL 2464682
     at * 1 ( Wash. App. Div 2) .3 His direct appeal
    did not challenge the sufficiency of evidence used to convict him of second degree perjury. On
    June 21, 2011, we affirmed Arquette' s second degree perjury conviction in an unpublished
    decision. Arquette, 
    162 Wn. App. 1025
    .
    2. New 2011 First Degree Perjury Bench Trial Conviction and Direct Appeal
    On December 10, 2010, while Arquette' s appeal was still pending, the State filed a new
    charge alleging that Arquette had committed first degree perjury based on his testimony at his
    1   2010 trial on the second degree perjury charge. Arquette waived his jury trial right on the new
    perjury charge and agreed to a bench trial. Arquette stipulated that he had
    signed the title to the Datsun and that he had knowingly made the statements contained in his
    2010 trial testimony. After reviewing a video of Arquette' s 2010 trial and hearing arguments
    3 " This court may rely on unpublished opinions as evidence of the facts established in earlier
    proceedings    in the   same case or    in   a   different   case   involving the   same parties."   Martin v.
    Wilbert, 
    162 Wn. App. 90
    , 93 n. 1, 
    253 P. 3d 108
    , review denied, 
    172 Wn.2d 1002
    , 
    268 P. 3d 941
    2011) ( citing Island County v. Mackie, 
    36 Wn. App. 391
     n.3, 
    675 P. 2d 607
     ( 1984)).
    6
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    from counsel, the trial court found Arquette guilty of first degree perjury. Arquette timely
    appealed this first degree bench trial perjury conviction on grounds that sufficient evidence did
    not support the conviction and that the conviction constituted double jeopardy.
    3.   PRP Challenge to 2010 Perjury Conviction; Consolidation with Direct Appeal of 2011
    Conviction
    On January 17, 2012, Arquette filed a PRP challenging his 2010 second degree jury trial
    perjury conviction on the grounds that sufficient evidence did not support the conviction and that
    his appellate counsel was ineffective for failing to raise a sufficiency challenge in his direct
    appeal. We consolidated Arquette' s PRP with his direct appeal of his new conviction and
    remanded to the Cowlitz County Superior Court for entry of findings of fact and conclusions of
    law   as required under   CrR 6. 1( d).   The trial court entered its findings and conclusions on July 18,
    2012. We now address Arquette' s PRP challenge to his 2010 second degree perjury conviction
    and.his direct appeal of his 2011 first degree perjury conviction.
    ANALYSIS
    I. PRP CHALLENGING 2010 SECOND DEGREE PERJURY CONVICTION
    In his timely consolidated PRP, Arquette contends that sufficient evidence did not
    support his 2010 second degree perjury conviction. We agree, grant Arquette' s PRP, and vacate
    his second degree perjury conviction. In light of the policy underlying the heightened standard
    of proof to support perjury convictions, we hold that to support a perjury conviction the
    independent corroborating evidence must be inconsistent with the defendant' s innocence.
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    To obtain relief by means of a PRP, Arquette must establish either ( 1) constitutional error
    that caused actual and substantial prejudice to his case or ( 2) nonconstitutional error that caused
    a fundamental defect resulting in a complete miscarriage of justice. In re Pers. Restraint of
    Cook, 
    114 Wn.2d 802
    , 810 -13, 
    792 P. 2d 506
     ( 1990). Here, Arquette alleges a constitutional
    error, asserting that the State failed to present sufficient evidence to support his second degree
    perjury conviction. See In re Pers. Restraint ofMartinez, 
    171 Wn.2d 354
    , 364, 
    256 P. 3d 277
    2011) ( " A conviction based on insufficient evidence contravenes the due process clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment           and    thus   results   in   unlawful restraint. ") (   citing Jackson v. Virginia, 
    443 U.S. 307
    , 316, 
    99 S. Ct. 2781
    , 
    61 L. Ed. 2d 560
     ( 1979); RAP 16. 4( c)( 2)).
    Sufficient evidence exists to support a conviction if any rational trier of fact could find
    the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt when viewing the evidence in the
    light   most   favorable to the State. State       v.   Hosier, 
    157 Wn.2d 1
    , 8, 
    133 P. 3d 936
     ( 2006). A
    defendant claiming insufficiency of the evidence admits the truth of the State' s evidence and all
    inferences that reasonably          can   be drawn from the        evidence.   4 State v. Salinas, 
    119 Wn.2d 192
    ,
    4
    Arquette asserts in his opening brief that " the general rule that a sufficiency challenge admits
    the truth of the State' s evidence and all reasonable inferences such that the evidence is viewed in
    the light most favorable to the State simply does not apply" in an appeal from a perjury
    conviction,     citing State   v.   Olson, 
    92 Wn. 2d 134
    , 135 -36, 
    594 P. 2d 1337
     ( 1979). Br. of Appellant
    at 18. This is a misstatement of the law that ignores the following language in the Olson
    opinion: "     A challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence admits the truth of the opposing party' s
    evidence and all inferences which reasonably may be drawn from such evidence, and requires
    that the   evidence     be interpreted in the light         most   favorable to that party."    Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d at
    135 -36.
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    201, 
    829 P. 2d 1068
     ( 1992).             Circumstantial evidence and direct evidence are equally reliable.
    State   v.   Delmarter, 
    94 Wn.2d 634
    , 638, 
    618 P. 2d 99
     ( 1980). We defer to the trier of fact on
    issues of conflicting testimony, credibility of witnesses, and the persuasiveness of the evidence.
    State v. Walton, 
    64 Wn. App. 410
    , 415 -16, 
    824 P. 2d 533
     ( 1992).
    RCW 9A.72. 030( 1) provides:
    A person is guilty of perjury in the second degree if, in an examination under oath
    under the terms of a contract of insurance, or with intent to mislead a public
    servant in the performance of his or her duty, he or she makes a materially false
    statement, which he or she knows to be false under an oath required or authorized
    by law.
    The requirements of proof in perjury cases are the strictest known to law, outside of
    treason.       State   v.   Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d 134
    , 136, 
    594 P. 2d 1337
     ( 1979).                   In addition to the above
    elements, the State must present:
    1. the testimony of at least one credible witness which is positive and
    directly contradictory of the defendant' s oath; and
    2. another such direct witness or independent evidence of corroborating
    circumstances of such a character as clearly to turn the scale and overcome the
    oath of the defendant and the legal presumption of his innocence.
    Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d at 136
     ( emphasis     added).     The direct testimony required to support a perjury
    conviction " must come `` from someone in a position to know of his or her own experience that
    the   facts   sworn    to   by    defendant   are   false. "'   State v. Singh, 
    167 Wn. App. 971
    , 976, 
    275 P. 3d 1156
     ( 2012) ( quoting Nessman                v.   Sumpter, 
    27 Wn. App. 18
    , 24, 
    615 P. 2d 522
     ( 1980)).   The
    unique heightened standard of proof to support perjury convictions " reflects the underlying
    policy in Anglo- American jurisprudence of encouraging witnesses to testify freely without fear
    of reprisals."     Nessman, 27 Wn.            App.     at   23 -24 ( citing 7 J. WIGMORE, EVIDENCE, §§ 2032 at 324,
    2041 at 361 ( 1978)).
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    In asserting that the State failed to meet its burden to prove second degree perjury,
    Arquette does not contend that the State failed to present evidence in support of the essential
    elements of the charge as set forth in RCW 9A.72. 030. Instead, Arquette argues that the State
    failed to meet its heightened burden of proof for a perjury conviction by failing to present the
    testimony of two credible direct witnesses or a credible direct witness and sufficient
    corroborating evidence.
    In response, the State first asserts that it met its burden by presenting the testimony of a
    direct witness, McKee, and a second direct witness, Ash. In his testimony, McKee stated that
    Arquette agreed to turn over possession of the Datsun, gave him the signed title, and assisted him
    in removing the Datsun from Arquette' s property. McKee' s testimony thus directly contradicted
    Arquette' s signed statement to the police that his Datsun had been stolen. Accordingly, the State
    met its evidentiary burden of presenting " the testimony of at least one credible witness which is
    positive and   directly   contradictory   of   the defendant'   s oath."   Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d at 136
    .
    However, nothing contained in Ash' s testimony directly contradicted Arquette' s signed
    police statement and, thus, is insufficient to sustain Arquette' s second degree perjury conviction.
    Although Ash testified consistently with McKee, he was unable to positively identify Arquette as
    the person present at Ash' s home when McKee took possession of the Datsun pickup truck.
    Moreover, Ash had no direct knowledge of the circumstances surrounding the conflict over
    Although Arquette appears to concede in his PRP that the State presented sufficient evidence of
    one credible witness in the form of McKee' s testimony, his supplemental brief addressing the
    trial court' s findings and conclusions asserts that McKee' s testimony did " not constitute the
    requisite `` directly contradictory testimony. "' See PRP at 7; Suppl. Br. of Appellant at 5.
    10
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    ownership      of   the Datsun        and,    thus,   was not "``   in   a position   to know   of   his ...   own experience
    that the   facts    sworn   to   by [ Arquette         were]   false. "'     See Singh, 
    167 Wn. App. at 976
     ( quoting
    Nessman, 27 Wn.            App.   at   24).    Because Ash' s direct testimony was insufficient to support the
    State' s heightened burden of proof in a second degree perjury conviction, we turn to whether the
    State presented sufficient " independent evidence of corroborating circumstances of such a
    character as clearly to turn the scale and overcome [ Arquette' s oath] and the legal presumption
    of   his innocence."        Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d at 136
    .
    At the outset of our analysis, we note that there is scant Washington law discussing the
    standard by which corroborating evidence may support a perjury conviction. More to the point,
    there is no Washington case that squarely addresses whether such independent corroborating
    evidence must merely support the direct witness' s testimony in any manner or whether such
    evidence must also be inconsistent with the innocence of the defendant.
    In State v. Rutledge, our Supreme Court noted that such corroborating evidence " need not
    equal   in   weight   the   testimony         of a second witness."           
    37 Wash. 523
    , 527, 
    79 P. 1123
     ( 1905). The
    corroborating        evidence,        though, "``      must be clear and positive and so strong that, with the
    evidence of the witness who testifies directly to be the falsity of the defendant' s testimony, it will
    convince     the    jury   beyond      a reasonable       doubt. "'     Rutledge, 
    37 Wash. at 527
     ( quoting H.C.
    UNDERHILL, CRIMINAL EVIDENCE § 468); 7 WHARTON' S CRIMINAL EVIDENCE § 387 ( 9th ed.).
    Additionally, in State           v.   Buchanan,        our   Supreme Court held, " Admissions             and contradictory
    statements of the defendant, even though not made under oath, are sufficient, given in
    corroboration of the single witness to satisfy the quantum of evidence required to support a
    conviction of       perjury."         
    79 Wn.2d 740
    , 745, 
    489 P. 2d 744
     ( 1971) (               citing United States v
    11
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    Goldberg,     
    290 F. 2d 729
    , 733, 744 ( 2d Cir. 1961);             People v. Sagehorn, 
    140 Cal. App.2d 138
    , 
    294 P. 2d 1062
     ( 1956); 70 C. J. S. PERJURY § 70c( 3),            at   541 ( 1951); 41 Am. JUR. PERJURY § 69, at 38
    1942)).    With sparse Washington case law on the issue, we examine also several federal cases
    addressing the nature of independent corroborating evidence to support a perjury conviction.
    In United States v. Neff, 
    212 F.2d 297
    , 306 -07 ( 3d Cir. 1954), the Third Circuit Court of
    Appeals noted,
    To sustain a conviction for perjury the evidence must be strong, clear, convincing
    and direct. Where the government seeks to establish perjury by the testimony of
    one witness and cor[ r] oborating evidence, the latter must be independent of the
    former and inconsistent with the innocence of the defendant.
    Internal footnotes      omitted.)   Citing to Neff, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals has similarly held
    that   independent corroborating       evidence     in   support of a    perjury   conviction must       be "`` inconsistent
    with   the innocence     of   the defendant. "'   Paternostro v. United States, 
    311 F. 2d 298
    , 308 ( 5th Cir.
    1962),   abrogated on other grounds by Brogan v. United States, 
    522 U.S. 398
    , 
    118 S. Ct. 805
    ,
    
    139 L. Ed. 2d 830
     ( 1998). In United States              v.   Buckner, 
    118 F. 2d 468
    , 469 ( 2d Cir. 1941), the
    Second Circuit Court of Appeals also endorsed the requirement that independent corroborating
    evidence be inconsistent with the defendant' s innocence to support a perjury conviction, but has
    since clarified
    the ...   rule requiring that the independent corroborating evidence be `` inconsistent
    with the innocence of the defendant' to mean no more than that such evidence
    must tend to substantiate that part of the testimony of the principal prosecution
    witness which is material in showing that the statement made by the accused
    under oath was false.
    United States v. Weiner, 
    479 F. 2d 923
    , 927 -28 ( 2d Cir. 1973).
    The remaining federal circuit courts addressing this issue are split on the nature of the
    required     corroborating     evidence   to   support a   perjury    conviction.   See,   e. g.,   United States v.
    12
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    Erhardt, 
    381 F.2d 173
    , 174 ( 6th Cir. 1967) ( " This              court has held that to support a perjury
    conviction the testimony of a single witness must be corroborated by circumstances inconsistent
    with   the innocence   of   the   accused. ");   Arena v. United States, 
    226 F.2d 227
    , 236 ( 9th Cir. 1955)
    It is sufficient if the corroborating evidence tends to establish the defendant' s guilt and if such
    evidence together with the direct evidence is `` inconsistent with the innocence of the
    defendant. "'); Brightman         v.   United States, 3 
    86 F. 2d 695
     ( 1 st Cir. 1967) (    adopting test in Arena).
    Following Neff and cases in accord with Neff,we hold that when the State relies on
    independent corroborating evidence together with the testimony of a direct witness to support a
    perjury conviction, such corroborating evidence must be inconsistent with the defendant' s
    innocence. To hold otherwise would risk sustaining a perjury conviction merely upon the
    testimony of a single witness, uncorroborated by any other witness' s testimony or by evidence of
    circumstances inconsistent with the defendant' s innocence. Such a result diminishes the
    heightened standard of proof required for a perjury conviction and contravenes the well-
    established. rule that " the uncorroborated oath of one witness is not enough to establish the falsity
    of the testimony of the accused" in a prosecution for perjury. Hammer v. United States 
    271 U.S. 620
    , 626, 
    46 S. Ct. 603
    , 
    70 L. Ed. 1118
     ( 1926).
    Having determined that corroborating evidence must be inconsistent with the innocence
    of the defendant to support a perjury conviction, we turn to evidence presented in this case. The
    State argues that the following facts were sufficient to meet the independent corroborating
    evidence standard: (    1) McKee'         s possession of   the    signed   title to the Datsun, ( 2)   the manner in
    which    the Datsun   was stored        in McKee'   s carport, (   3) McKee' s inquiry to the police asking why
    an officer was looking at the Datsun, and ( 4) Arquette' s conduct in failing to retrieve the Datsun
    13
    No. 42546 -7 -II (Cons. With
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    after Meadows informed him that it had been located. Although this evidence corroborated
    McKee' s testimony that Arquette freely turned over possession of the Datsun to him, it was also
    not inconsistent with Arquette' s innocence and is thus insufficient to support his second degree
    perjury conviction.
    The statement upon which the State relied to prosecute Arquette for second degree
    perjury provided:
    McKee] came by two or three times; one of those times I found out why he came
    over.   He    said   he bought the truck   off [ Tribble],   and then I told him it wasn' t
    Tribble' s] to sell. Then he said that he paid a hundred and forty bucks for it, and
    I told him it wasn' t for sale and if you took it off my property I was go[ ing to]
    report it stolen, and he ( sic) came home from work on a Friday, it was gone, so I
    reported it stolen.
    CP at 14. The manner in which the Datsun was stored and McKee' s inquiry into why the police
    were looking at the vehicle do tend to show that McKee believed he rightfully had possession of
    the truck. However, this evidence was also consistent with Arquette' s police statement, in which
    he stated that McKee believed he had purchased the vehicle from Tribble despite Arquette' s
    claims that the truck belonged to him. Similarly, evidence related to the signed vehicle title was
    not inconsistent. with Arquette' s innocence because he maintained that he had previously signed
    the title in anticipation of a sale to someone else and that the title had been taken from his room,
    likely by Tribble. Finally, evidence of Arquette' s failure to immediately retrieve the vehicle was
    also not inconsistent with his innocence because the evidence at trial showed that the vehicle was
    not in running order and would be a burden to retrieve given Arquette' s work schedule and the
    relatively low value of the vehicle. Because the State' s corroborating evidence was not
    inconsistent with Arquette' s innocence, it was insufficient to support his second degree perjury
    conviction. Accordingly, we grant Arquette' s PRP; vacate his 2010 second degree perjury
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    No. 42546 -7 -II (Cons. With
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    conviction, and remand to the trial court to dismiss the 2009 second degree perjury charge with
    6
    prejudice.
    H. DIRECT APPEAL OF 2011 FIRST DEGREE PERJURY CONVICTION
    Next, Arquette contends that sufficient evidence does not support his 2011 conviction for
    first degree perjury. For the reasons stated in our above analysis, we agree and vacate his first
    degree perjury conviction as well.
    The basis for the State' s charges against Arquette for first degree perjury arose from the
    following sworn testimony at his first trial, to which Arquette stipulated at his second trial that he
    had knowingly made:
    Defense     counsel]:   Did you read through [ the stolen vehicle waiver] before you
    signed it?
    Arquette] : Yeah.
    Defense   counsel]:     And you signed it?
    Arquette]:    Yeah.
    Defense   counsel]:     Freely and voluntarily?
    Arquette] : Yeah.
    Defense   counsel]:  Why.is that?
    Arquette]:    Because my truck was stolen.
    CP at 13 - 14.
    RCW 9A. 72. 020( 1)      provides, "   A person is guilty of perjury in the first degree if in any
    official proceeding he or she makes a materially false statement which he or she knows to be
    false   under an oath required or authorized       by   law." As was required to support a conviction for
    second degree perjury, to support a first degree perjury conviction the State must also have
    presented:
    6 Because we hold that sufficient evidence did not support Arquette' s second degree perjury
    conviction, we need not address his ineffective assistance of appellate counsel claim for failing
    to raise the sufficiency issue in his direct appeal.
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    No. 42974 -8 -11)
    1. the testimony of at least one credible witness which is positive and
    directly contradictory of the defendant' s oath; and
    2. another such direct witness or independent evidence of corroborating
    circumstances of such a character as clearly to turn the scale and overcome the
    oath of the defendant and the legal presumption of his innocence.
    Olson, 
    92 Wn.2d at 136
    .
    The State argues that the same evidence it cited in support of Arquette' s second degree
    perjury conviction supports his first degree perjury conviction, specifically the direct testimony
    of McKee and Ash or, in the alternative, McKee' s direct testimony together with corroborating
    evidence showing that the Datsun had not been stolen. As we explained above, Ash' s testimony
    was insufficient to meet the standard required to support a perjury conviction because he was not
    in a position to know whether Arquette' s sworn testimony that his truck had been stolen was
    false. See Singh, 27 Wn. App. at 976. As also explained, the State' s corroborating evidence was
    insufficient to meet the standard required to support a perjury conviction because it was not
    inconsistent with Arquette' s innocence. Accordingly, we reverse Arquette' s first degree perjury
    conviction.7
    We grant Arquette' s PRP, reverse both his 2010 second degree perjury conviction and the
    2011 first degree perjury conviction, and remand to the trial court to dismiss both charges with
    7 Because we reverse Arquette' s first degree perjury conviction for lack of sufficient evidence,
    we need not address his double jeopardy argument.
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    No. 42546 -7 -II (Cons. With
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    prejudice.
    BT      RGEN
    8
    J
    17