State Of Washington, Resp. v. James Schumacher, App. ( 2015 )


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  •                                                             CCUHT OF APF'FA3 $ r-
    2015 FEB-9 AH 10: 3
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                            No. 70807-4-
    Respondent,
    v.
    JAMES WILLIAM SCHUMACHER,                       UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    Appellant.                  FILED: February 9, 2015
    Verellen, A.C.J. — James Schumacher appeals from a second degree
    murder conviction for the murder of his wife, Jean.1 He contends that the trial court
    erred by admitting evidence of Jean's state of mind, his past abuse of Jean, general
    marital discord, and statements Jean made to medical providers about past abuse.
    Because Schumacher put at issue the tumultuous nature of the marital relationship,
    evidence that Jean feared him was relevant and properly admitted. And because the
    other challenged evidence was properly admitted as evidence of Schumacher's intent
    and motive, we affirm the conviction.
    Schumacher further challenges his exceptional sentence, contending that the
    sentencing aggravator of an ongoing pattern of psychological abuse is
    unconstitutionally vague and that the evidence was insufficient to support a finding of
    To avoid confusion, we refer to Schumacher's wife by first name.
    No. 70807-4-1/2
    that aggravator. Because the void for vagueness doctrine does not apply to a
    sentencing aggravator, and the record supports the jury's finding that there was an
    ongoing pattern of physical or psychological abuse, we affirm the exceptional
    sentence.
    FACTS
    On March 23, 2012, James Schumacher walked into the Bellevue Police
    Department headquarters and confessed to murdering his wife of 46 years, Jean. He
    told the first officer he met that he and Jean had been arguing for over 15 years and
    that a few days earlier, during an argument, she approached him with a hammer and
    threatened to divorce him. She did not strike him with the hammer, but put it away
    and went to bed, telling him she did not want to be bothered. She went to her
    separate bedroom and locked the door.
    Schumacher stayed up all night "seething" about the incident.2 The next
    morning, he got up and retrieved a hatchet from the garage. He picked the lock on
    Jean's bedroom door and while she was still sleeping, struck her in the face with the
    hatchet five to six times, killing her.
    He hid the body under the bed. He put the hatchet back in the garage, packed
    up some belongings and considered fleeing. He went to the bank, withdrew money,
    and took the family dog to an animal shelter to be boarded for an extended period.
    He then reconsidered leaving town and contemplated killing himself, but ultimately
    decided to turn himself in.
    Report of Proceedings (RP) (May 21, 2013) at 37.
    No. 70807^-1/3
    After Schumacher confessed, the officer asked him if he felt okay, and
    Schumacher responded that he felt "a weight had been lifted."3 He proceeded to give
    a full videotaped confession, detailing how he murdered his wife and that he did so
    because he was tired of her constant nagging. He stated that he decided that
    morning that "he just [couldn't] take it anymore" and hit her with the hatchet five or six
    times "to make sure that it was done . . . [t]hat she was dead."4
    Police found the body hidden under the bed, as he had indicated. The
    medical examiner confirmed that Jean had suffered at least five chopping wounds to
    her head and found no defensive wounds on her body.
    The State charged Schumacher with first degree murder with a deadly weapon
    sentencing enhancement. The State also alleged as a sentencing aggravator that
    the crime was a domestic violence offense that was part of an ongoing pattern of
    psychological, physical, or sexual abuse of the victim.
    At trial, Schumacher asserted a defense of diminished capacity. He offered
    the expert testimony of Dr. Craig Beaver, who opined that Schumacher has early
    stage dementia and that his unmanaged diabetes, depression, poor nutrition, and
    illness contributed to his diminished mental state. He further testified that the stress
    of Schumacher's tumultuous marriage contributed to his mental impairment.
    Dr. Beaver concluded that, as a result of this impairment, Schumacher was unable to
    intend or premeditate the murder. The State offered expert testimony from Dr. Brian
    Judd, who testified that even if Schumacher had mild dementia, neither this condition
    3 Id, at 46.
    4 Ex. 241 at 19, 24.
    No. 70807-4-1/4
    nor his other health ailments rendered him incapable of forming premeditated intent
    at the time of the murder.
    Over defense objection, the State also offered evidence of prior marital discord
    between Schumacher and Jean, including a domestic violence incident in November
    2010 that resulted in Schumacher's conviction for fourth degree assault. The State
    also offered statements Jean made to her daughter that she feared Schumacher
    would kill her when he was released from jail following the November 2010 incident
    and statements that Jean made to medical providers in 2010 about past abuse. The
    court ruled that all of this evidence was admissible and probative of motive and
    intent.
    A jury found Schumacher guilty of the lesser included offense of second
    degree murder and also found that the State proved the sentencing enhancement
    and the sentencing aggravator. The court imposed an exceptional sentence of 300
    months based on the sentencing aggravator. The standard range was 147 to 244
    months. Schumacher appeals.
    DISCUSSION
    Evidence of the Victim's State of Mind
    Schumacher contends that the trial court erred by admitting Jean's statement
    that she feared he would kill her upon his release from jail in November 2010
    because her state of mind was not at issue in the case. We disagree.
    Over defense objection, the trial court admitted evidence of Jean's statements
    to her daughter, Susan Schumacher (Susan), made after Schumacher had been
    arrested in November 2010 on a domestic violence charge. The court permitted
    No. 70807-4-1/5
    Susan to testify that after Jean learned Schumacher was going to be released from
    jail following the November 2010 incident, Jean "started screaming and crying" and
    said, "He is going to kill me. Oh my God, what am I going to do?"5 The court ruled:
    [W]ith respect to the statements made on hearing [of] his release from
    jail, and certainly, the State will have to lay a foundation for an excited
    utterance, but it appears to meet all the criteria for an excited utterance.
    I can't imagine what could be a more startling event than knowing
    someone that you fear, that assaulted you in the past, is now going to
    be released and will have access to you again. . .. And again, because
    there is no question of identity and whether, in fact, the killing—whether
    in fact, he actually killed her, while a limiting instruction may be
    appropriate, it's not—we could certainly offer, if someone wants to
    prepare a limiting instruction, we can certainly indicate, I suppose, that
    they are not to consider it for the fact of whether her opinion was
    accurate that in fact he was going to kill her, although I'm not sure how
    that would benefit the defense or State of the factual circumstances, I'm
    not sure that that's necessary. But rather, it is to show the depth of the
    dysfunctionality of their relationship; that she would think not only that
    he would be angry, but that she was so fearful that she would have an
    opinion, rightly or wrongly, and wrongly as it turned out, because of
    course, he did not kill her upon being released from jail, that he was
    going to kill her as a result of being arrested. For that reason, the Court
    finds that it's not unfairly prejudicial and is more probative than unfairly
    prejudicial and will allow it.[6]
    ER 803(a)(3) provides an exception to the hearsay rule for statements "of the
    declarant's then existing state of mind."7 But the declarant's state of mind must still
    be "relevant to a material issue in the case."8 Thus, "[i]n a homicide case, ifthere is
    no defense which brings into issue the state of mind of the deceased, evidence of
    5 RP (May 29, 2013) at 54-55.
    6 RP (May 16, 2013) at 118-19.
    7 As the trial court also found, Jean's hearsay statements fall within the excited
    utterance exception to the hearsay rule.
    8 State v. Johnson. 
    61 Wash. App. 539
    , 545, 
    811 P.2d 687
    (1991).
    No. 70807-4-1/6
    fears or other emotions is ordinarily not relevant."9 But in cases where the defendant
    asserts accident or self-defense, admission of evidence of the victim's fears is
    relevant to whether the victim would have been likely to act as the defendant
    claimed.10
    In State v. Athan. the court held it was not an abuse of discretion to admit a
    murder victim's statements under ER 803(a)(3) as evidence of state of mind because
    the defendant put the victim's state of mind at issue.11 There, the State alleged the
    defendant sexually assaulted the victim before murdering her, but at trial, the
    defendant's theory was that he had had consensual sex with her and that she was
    murdered by someone else.12 The trial court admitted statements the victim made to
    her friends that she had no romantic interest in the defendant and that he gave her
    "the creeps."13 On appeal, the court rejected the defendant's argument that the
    victim's state of mind was irrelevant because he did not raise a claim of accident or
    self-defense. Rather, the court concluded that, by suggesting that he had a romantic
    relationship with the victim, her statements about her feelings toward him became
    relevant.14
    Likewise here, Schumacher put at issue the nature of his relationship with
    Jean. He claimed that the tumultuous nature of the relationship contributed to his
    9 State v. Parr, 
    93 Wash. 2d 95
    , 103, 
    606 P.2d 263
    (1980).
    10 jd
    11 
    160 Wash. 2d 354
    , 383, 
    158 P.3d 27
    (2007).
    12 IdL at 381-82.
    13]dL at 381.
    14 
    Id. at 383.
    No. 70807-4-1/7
    impaired mental state and offered expert testimony from Dr. Beaver that the stress of
    the relationship affected his ability to form intent. Thus, as in Athan, Jean's
    perspective of the relationship, which included her fears of him, became relevant.
    Indeed, Dr. Beaver agreed that an understanding of the nature of the marital
    relationship was helpful to determining whether he had the ability to form the requisite
    intent to commit the murder.
    Dr. Beaver testified that Schumacher told him that he was very unhappy in his
    marriage, that Jean had a separate bedroom with a lock on the door, and that Jean
    always criticized him. Dr. Beaver further testified that "there was a lot of stress and
    tension between he and his wife, some indication that he felt threatened,"15 and that
    Schumacher said that there were threats to kill made by both of them. He also
    testified that Schumacher described an incident where Jean came into his room and
    waived a hammer at him because she was upset with him for not getting out of bed
    and taking care of chores around the house. Dr. Beaver opined that the increasing
    conflict was a factor that contributed to Schumacher's stress and impacted his
    cognitive ability to form the requisite intent. Thus, evidence that Jean in fact feared
    him was relevant to address these claims and present the complete picture of the
    relationship that he claimed contributed to his diminished mental state. The trial court
    did not abuse its discretion by admitting the statements.
    Schumacher's reliance on State v. Cameron is misplaced.16 In Cameron, the
    court held it was reversible error to admit evidence that the murder victim expressed
    15 RP (May 22, 2013) at 70.
    16 
    100 Wash. 2d 520
    , 
    674 P.2d 650
    (1983).
    No. 70807-4-1/8
    fear of the defendant because "the victim's state of mind itself was not relevant to any
    material issue before the before the jury."17 There, the defendant asserted an
    insanity defense, claiming that he killed the victim because she was possessed by an
    evil spirit and on a "strong sorcery trip."18 The victim's daughter and ex-husband
    testified that before the murder, the victim told them she feared the defendant.
    Because self-defense was not at issue and these statements were about the victim's
    state of mind, the court held that they were not admissible to prove the defendant's
    thought process at the time of the murder.19
    But unlike here, Cameron did not involve a spousal murder, and there was no
    history of conflict and abuse between the defendant and the victim. And more
    importantly, the defendant in Cameron did not put at issue the nature of his
    relationship with the victim, nor did he claim that it affected his ability to form intent,
    as Schumacher did here. Thus, unlike here, what the victim in Cameron feared in the
    past was irrelevant to the defendant's state of mind at the time of the murder.
    ER 404(b) Evidence
    Schumacher also challenges the trial court's admission of evidence of his
    assault conviction in November 2010, testimony from his son and daughter about his
    past verbal and physical abuse of Jean, and Jean's statements to police that he had
    hit her in the past and had verbally and emotionally abused her for years before the
    17 id, at 531.
    18 id, at 523.
    19 
    Id. at 530-31.
    8
    No. 70807-4-1/9
    November 2010 incident. He contends that such evidence was inadmissible under
    ER 404(b) because it was not probative of his motive or intent at the time of the
    murder. We disagree.
    We review the decision to admit evidence of a defendant's prior bad acts for
    an abuse of discretion.20 ER 404(b) provides that evidence of a defendant's prior
    misconduct may be admissible for a purpose other than to prove propensity, "such as
    proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity or absence
    of mistake or accident." In cases of marital homicide, courts may properly admit
    evidence of prior bad acts to show motive, intent, opportunity, premeditation, and res
    gestae.21 A diminished capacity defense puts at issue the defendant's state of mind
    because it allows the defendant to negate the requisite intent that is an element of a
    crime.22
    Here, the trial court ruled that the prior incidents of domestic violence and
    conflict between Schumacher and his wife were relevant to prove Schumacher's
    motive and intent to cause the death of his wife and that the probative value
    outweighed any prejudice to Schumacher. As the court explained:
    Here, we have a first degree murder case where the State must prove
    not only intent, but the intent was a settled intent, and also must, in
    order to prevail, rebut the claim of diminished capacity. Although it's
    true that diminished capacity merely allows the jury to take evidence of
    mental illness or disorder into consideration in determining whether the
    defendant had the capacity to form a settled intent or a premeditated
    intent, the jury will not only look at expert evidence, such as the two
    doctors, but they will look at their—they will draw on their own common
    20 State v. Brown. 
    132 Wash. 2d 529
    , 571-72, 
    940 P.2d 546
    (1997).
    21 State v. Powell. 
    126 Wash. 2d 244
    , 260-64, 
    893 P.2d 615
    (1995).
    22 See State v. Stumpf. 
    64 Wash. App. 522
    , 525, 
    827 P.2d 294
    (1992).
    No. 70807-4-1/10
    sense as to whether an older man, who has been married for 46 years
    to a woman, would suddenly bludgeon her to death without there being
    any discord or difficulties in the relationship, or whether, if this were to
    come out of the blue, what must it necessarily be or more likely be as a
    result of some sort of diminished capacity. So it's relevant to those
    claims, generally speaking. Moreover, while the 2010 incident in itself
    might not be evidence of settled intent, it is material to the State's
    argument that the defendant had a settled intent to do everything he
    could to prevent his wife from leaving him, and that over pretty much
    the entirety of their relationship, he had that intent, that he expressed it
    in violent and abusive ways to her, and was willing to do whatever was
    necessary to make sure she did not leave himJ23'
    . . . The evidence is not too remote. Certainly in 2010, there
    seemed to be some evidence that could come in that some people
    were seeing some changes in his thinking or behavior. And given his
    age, a jury might well speculate that, well, in 2010, he was also,
    perhaps, having some early dementia, and maybe this is what caused
    his behavior. So the issue is relevant to the issue of whether there is
    premeditated intent, and it is more probative than prejudicial; certainly,
    not unfairly prejudicial.1241
    The trial court's ruling was a proper exercise of discretion. The evidence was
    directly related to Schumacher's state of mind and intent at the time of the murder.
    He told police that he and Jean had been arguing for years and that this most recent
    argument is what caused him to finally act. He talked about his assault of Jean in
    2010, being charged with a crime, having a protection order against him, having to
    stay away from the home for eight months, and that when he was allowed to go back
    home, "the bullshit started again."25 He further stated that in the last few weeks
    before the murder, "she really started pissing and moaning" and that he decided he'd
    23 RP (May 14, 2013) at 133-35.
    24 RP (May 15, 2013) at 63-64.
    25 Ex. 241 at 14.
    10
    No. 70807-4-1/11
    "had enough" and "could not take this anymore."26 Finally, he stated that he was
    "seething" and did not sleep at all the night before the murder, and in the morning, he
    said to himself "[t]his is it" before proceeding to kill her.27 Additionally, Schumacher
    himself put the nature of the marital relationship at issue. As discussed above,
    Schumacher's expert testified about the nature of the marital relationship and how
    the increasing conflict had an impact on his state of mind and ability to form the
    requisite intent.
    Schumacher contends that evidence of the prior abuse and marital discord
    was not relevant because these acts were not close in time to the current offense.
    He notes that the most recent incident occurred in November 2010, nearly a year and
    a half before the charged offense. He cites State v. Acosta. where the court held
    inadmissible evidence of the defendant's prior arrests and convictions that were all at
    least two years old because they were irrelevant to his intent to commit the current
    offense.28 But in Acosta. the State offered evidence of 23 arrests and convictions
    unrelated to the charged offense that dated back more than a decade to rebut a
    claim of diminished capacity.29 The court held that because they involved unproven
    charges and charges unrelated to the crime charged, the prior arrests and
    convictions were not relevant to the defendant's state of mind during the current
    offenses.30 As discussed above, this case is demonstrably different. The history of
    26 jd at 15-16.
    27 Id, at 19.
    28 
    123 Wash. App. 424
    , 435, 
    98 P.3d 503
    (2004).
    29 Id, at 429-30.
    30 
    Id. at 434.
    11
    No. 70807-4-1/12
    conflict and abuse was directly related to, and was what eventually led to, the
    charged offense.31
    Evidence of Statements Made to Medical Providers
    Schumacher contends that the trial court erroneously admitted evidence of
    statements Jean made to medical providers who treated her for injuries she
    sustained as a result of the November 2010 domestic violence assault incident. He
    contends that these statements do not fall within the scope of ER 803(a)(4), the
    medical diagnosis exception to the hearsay rule. But because Schumacher did not
    challenge the admission of this evidence on this basis at trial, he has waived the
    issue on appeal.32 Nonetheless, his claim is without merit.
    ER 803(a)(4) provides an exception to the hearsay rule for "[statements made
    for purposes of medical diagnosis or treatment and describing medical history, or
    past or present symptoms, pain, or sensations, or the inception or general character
    of the cause or external source thereof insofar as reasonably pertinent to diagnosis
    or treatment." Such statements are admissible if (1) the declarant's motive in making
    the statement is consistent with the purpose of promoting treatment, and (2) the
    content of the statement must be that upon which a medical provider would
    reasonably rely in treatment or diagnosis.33 "Medical diagnosis and treatment"
    31 This evidence was also material to the pattern of abuse aggravator.
    32 See State v. Simms. 
    77 Wash. App. 236
    , 240-41, 
    890 P.2d 521
    (1995)
    (refusing to consider for the first time on appeal defendant's challenge to statements
    as not falling within ER 803(a)(4) hearsay exception).
    33 State v. Carol M.P.. 
    89 Wash. App. 77
    , 85, 
    948 P.2d 837
    (1997).
    12
    No. 70807-4-1/13
    includes both physical and psychological treatment.34 In domestic violence cases,
    our courts have routinely held admissible victims' statements to medical providers
    about the nature of the abuse and the identity of the abuser, recognizing the unique
    circumstances of such cases where the patient is in an intimate or familial
    relationship with the abuser, may be suffering from emotional or psychological injury
    due to long term abuse, and may be at risk of future harm from the same abuser.35
    Here, an emergency room physician testified that Jean told him Schumacher
    verbally and emotionally abused her for years. A social worker also testified that
    Jean told her there was a history of verbal and emotional abuse and that
    Schumacher had hit and shoved her once before in the past. The court properly
    admitted these statements as reasonably pertinent to treatment because they
    contained information that enabled both providers to evaluate her condition and
    recommend treatment.
    Schumacher contends that because these statements relate to a history of
    prior abuse, they are not reasonably pertinent to treatment of a present injury or
    condition and therefore do not fall with the medical diagnosis exception to the
    hearsay rule. But the scope of the rule is not limited to statements about treatment
    for injuries related to the charged offense, and Schumacher provides no authority to
    the contrary. Rather, the focus of the rule is reliability of the statements; so long as
    34 State v. Woods. 
    143 Wash. 2d 561
    , 602, 23 P.3d 1046(2001).
    35 See, e.g.. 
    Simms. 77 Wash. App. at 239-40
    ; State v. Butler. 
    53 Wash. App. 214
    ;
    222, 
    766 P.2d 505
    (1989); In re Dependency of S.S.. 
    61 Wash. App. 488
    , 503, 
    814 P.2d 204
    (1991).
    13
    No. 70807-4-1/14
    they were made to facilitate treatment, they are sufficiently reliable hearsay.36 Of
    course, they still must be relevant to a material issue in the case, but as discussed
    above, the court properly found that they were relevant to Schumacher's motive and
    intent to commit premeditated murder.
    Schumacher also asserts that because these statements were in response to
    questions aimed solely at ensuring patient safety, they do not fall within the hearsay
    exception for statements of treatment or diagnosis, citing the Ninth Circuit's opinion in
    People of the Territory of Guam v. Iqnacio.37 Schumacher's reliance on Iqnacio is
    misplaced. There, the court held inadmissible a child abuse victim's statements to a
    social worker where the record showed that the social worker questioned her simply
    to determine whether to report the suspected abuse to Child Protective Services, not
    for the purpose of treating or diagnosing the child's physical or psychological
    needs.38 Statements the child made to the medical provider who initially examined
    her, however, were properly admitted.39 Here, the testimony established that Jean's
    statements were not made solely to report the allegations but were made for the
    purpose of medical treatment and diagnosis.
    36 See 
    Butler. 53 Wash. App. at 220
    ("'[l]t is assumed that a patient has a strong
    motive to speak truthfully and accurately because the treatment or diagnosis will
    depend in part upon the information conveyed. The declarant's motive thus provides
    a sufficient guarantee of trustworthiness to permit an exception to the hearsay.'"
    (quoting United States v. Iron Shell. 
    633 F.2d 77
    , 84 (8th Cir. 1980))).
    3710F.3d608(9thCir. 1993).
    38 Id, at 613.
    39 
    Id. 14 No.
    70807-4-1/15
    Sentencing Aggravator
    Schumacher challenges as unconstitutionally vague the sentencing aggravator
    of an ongoing pattern of psychological, physical, or sexual abuse of a victim and
    contends that his exceptional sentence based on this aggravator must be reversed.
    He concedes that our Supreme Court has expressly held in State v. Baldwin that the
    "the due process considerations that underlie the void-for-vagueness doctrine have
    no application in the context of sentencing guidelines,"40 but asserts that Baldwin is
    no longer good law after the United States Supreme Court's decision in Blakely v.
    Washington.41 Blakely held that a judge may not impose a sentencing enhancement
    without findings by the jury or a stipulation by the defendant.42
    Schumacher focuses on Blakelv's treatment of aggravator factors as
    equivalent to elements of a crime, arguing that this establishes a due process right
    that encompasses vagueness challenges to sentencing enhancements. But Blakely
    implicated the right to a jury trial, while the vagueness doctrine focuses on providing
    notice to the public and protecting against arbitrary state intrusion.43 Schumacher
    provides no cogent legal argument that Baldwin does not survive Blakely. Because
    we are bound by the court's decision in Baldwin, we reject the vagueness challenge.
    Finally, Schumacher challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the
    finding of the aggravating factor of an ongoing pattern of psychological or physical
    40 
    150 Wash. 2d 448
    , 459, 
    78 P.3d 1005
    (2003).
    41 
    542 U.S. 296
    , 
    124 S. Ct. 2531
    , 
    159 L. Ed. 2d 403
    (2004).
    42 jd, at 303-04.
    43 
    Baldwin. 150 Wash. 2d at 458
    .
    15
    No. 70807-4-1/16
    abuse. Viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence supports the
    finding.
    A jury must find any facts supporting aggravating circumstances beyond a
    reasonable doubt.44 We review the jury's finding under the standard for challenges to
    the sufficiency of the evidence.45 Under that standard, we view the evidence in the
    light most favorable to the State to determine whether any rational trier of fact could
    have found the existence of the aggravating circumstance beyond a reasonable
    doubt.46 We must draw all reasonable inferences from the evidence in favor of the
    State and construe the evidence most strongly against the defendant.47
    Schumacher contends that the evidence shows only one or two prior incidents
    of past physical abuse and vague accounts of psychological abuse and is therefore
    insufficient to support an ongoing pattern of abuse. We disagree. Viewed in the light
    most favorable to the State, the evidence sufficiently demonstrates such a pattern.
    Courts use the common meaning of "pattern," which is "'a regular, mainly
    unvarying way of acting or doing.'"48 The evidence here establishes such a pattern.
    Schumacher's son recalled that for his "entire life," Schumacher would lose control
    and scream at Jean, calling her derogatory names.49 His daughter similarly testified
    44 State v. Stubbs. 
    170 Wash. 2d 117
    , 123, 
    240 P.3d 143
    (2010).
    45 id,
    46 State v. Zigan. 
    166 Wash. App. 597
    , 601-02, 
    270 P.3d 625
    (2012).
    47 State v. Salinas. 
    119 Wash. 2d 192
    , 201, 
    829 P.2d 1068
    (1992).
    48 State v. Russell. 
    69 Wash. App. 237
    , 247, 
    848 P.2d 743
    (1993) (quoting
    Webster's New World Dictionary 1042 (1976)).
    49 See RP (May 29, 2013) at 14-15 (he called her a "fucking bitch," and
    "honky," a similar derogatory term used for Eastern European immigrants).
    16
    No. 70807-4-1/17
    that he called Jean derogatory names while the daughter lived at home and after she
    moved out.50 Schumacher also admitted to his son and at the hearing for a
    protection order in 2010 that he had been physically and verbally abusive many times
    in the past. Additionally, as discussed above, Jean told medical personnel in 2010
    that he had been physically and verbally abusive to her for 43 years. Schumacher
    also stated that he argued with her one to two times a weeks for 40 years and
    admitted that he had threatened to kill her several times in the past. Based on this
    evidence, a rational trier of fact could find beyond a reasonable doubt that
    Schumacher engaged in a pattern of physical and emotional abuse of Jean for a
    prolonged period of time.
    We affirm the judgment and sentence.
    WE CONCUR:
    50 See jd, at 52 ("[T]he defendant would call my mother a bitch, a whore, a
    cunt, a mother fucking cunt, a honky, an asshole, bitch.").
    17