State Of Washington v. Juliana Cratsenberg ( 2015 )


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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                            No. 71448-1-1
    Respondent,                      DIVISION ONE
    v.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    JULIANA MIN CRATSENBERG,
    Appellant.                       FILED: October 26, 2015
    Leach, J. — Juliana Cratsenberg appeals her conviction for theft in the
    first degree based on her withdrawal of funds from a bank account held jointly in
    her name and her former husband's name.1 She challenges the trial court jury
    instructions about ownership of joint account funds. Also, she claims her counsel
    provided ineffective assistance by failing to request certain instructions and
    failing to request a mistrial when a witness violated an order limiting trial
    testimony. Because the record supports no inference that the disputed account
    contained community property, the court properly instructed the jury, and counsel
    did not provide deficient representation by failing to request a community
    property instruction. And because trial counsel strategically elicited the excluded
    Juliana and Andrew Cratsenberg divorced in 2011. He died in 2013.
    NO. 71448-1-1/2
    testimony for tactical reasons, counsel did not provide Juliana ineffective
    assistance when he did not request a mistrial. We affirm.
    FACTS
    Andrew Cratsenberg Sr. began to see Juliana, also known as Young Min
    Song, in 2008. Andrew's wife of many years died in January 2008. Andrew and
    his deceased wife created and grew Cratsenberg Companies and its subsidiary,
    Cratsenberg Properties, which owned commercial real estate in Federal Way.
    Their sons, Andrew Jr. (Butch) and Larry, worked for the company at various
    times during their lives.
    In March 2008, Andrew's sons expressed concern to his physician, Dr.
    Brian McDonald, about Andrew's declining cognitive abilities.        In April, Dr.
    McDonald administered a mini mental status exam to Andrew. An exam score
    under 24 suggests patient dementia. Andrew scored a 21.
    The next month, Andrew introduced his sons to Juliana. In June, Andrew
    asked Butch to help Juliana move into Andrew's house. Larry disapproved of his
    father's relationship with Juliana. Later that year, Larry confronted Juliana when
    he found her wearing his mother's ring. Andrew fired Larry from Cratsenberg
    Companies over the incident. By the fall of 2008, Butch had also left the family
    business.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/3
    With both sons gone, Andrew and Juliana managed the business.         But
    they failed to properly maintain the company's main property, Center Plaza. And
    while Andrew had authorized Juliana's use of his KeyBank checking account,
    Larry prevented Andrew from adding Juliana to the business accounts.
    In January 2009, Butch and Larry filed a guardianship action against their
    father.      Julie Schisel, the guardian ad litem, asked psychologist Renee
    Eisenhauer to evaluate Andrew.           Eisenhauer concluded that Andrew was
    "cognitively compromised" due to his progressive dementia.          She stated that
    Andrew needed assistance managing his business and financial affairs but could
    live independently with support and might need more assistance as his dementia
    progressed.        Schisel suggested an alternative to guardianship.            She
    recommended that Andrew place his assets in a revocable living trust
    administered by a trustee and transfer a majority interest in Cratsenberg
    Companies to Butch and Larry.
    Andrew and Juliana married on March 26, 2009. When Butch and Larry
    learned of the marriage, they filed a petition under the vulnerable adult protection
    act, chapter 74.34 RCW. They obtained a temporary order that froze Andrew's
    assets and prevented Juliana from accessing them. The order placed Larry in
    control of Cratsenberg Companies' operations.
    NO. 71448-1-1/4
    To resolve the guardianship and vulnerable adult cases, Andrew, Juliana,
    Butch, Larry, their respective counsel, and Schisel signed a CR 2A agreement on
    August 24, 2009. The agreement required that Andrew transfer certain assets to
    family businesses and place all his remaining assets, including "[a]ll personal
    bank accounts," into a living trust.   The agreement declared all of Andrew's
    assets his separate property and required that Andrew and Juliana sign a
    postnuptial agreement.
    Andrew and Juliana executed the postnuptial agreement on the same day.
    It declared that each party's separate property shall remain that spouse's
    separate property and that all future income would be the separate property of
    the spouse generating it. In September, Andrew executed the living trust. The
    trust named Commencement Bay Guardian Services director Robin Balsam and
    Andrew cotrustees and designated Andrew the trust's primary beneficiary. The
    trust agreement gave Commencement Bay sole control over Andrew's finances
    but required it to consider Andrew's suggestions.
    After execution of the documents, the Cratsenbergs refused to give
    Balsam the financial information she requested, claiming it was not her business.
    The couple also requested a monthly disbursement of $17,267.46, lowering the
    request to $13,100.00 per month when Balsam refused.         Eventually, Balsam
    NO. 71448-1-1/5
    approved a monthly budget of $4,592.00, paying many of the Cratsenbergs' bills
    directly.
    The Cratsenbergs continued to use credit cards. When Balsam noticed
    large charges for cash advances and household expenses, she asked the
    Cratsenbergs for an explanation. Also, she asked them to stop using the card for
    cash, which defeated the purpose of the budget. When Balsam saw Andrew in
    June 2010, she thought that he had declined because he appeared agitated and
    was shuffling and confused. When she saw a charge for Juliana's daughter's
    tuition, Balsam filed a petition with the trial court asking for instructions.
    By court order, Balsam acquired the requested bank account statements.
    These showed that the Cratsenbergs had been using a previously undisclosed
    account at Heritage Bank. This account was opened in the names of Juliana and
    Andrew in mid-July 2009.       Each time the living trust made a direct deposit of
    Andrew's monthly allowance into his KeyBank account, those funds were
    immediately withdrawn in full or nearly in full, in cash, and deposited in the
    Heritage account. Andrew's social security check was deposited directly into the
    Heritage account.
    The statements showed many withdrawals plus cash advances at local
    casinos.    For the period of September 10, 2009, to October 27, 2010, the
    statements showed withdrawals of $25,304.75 at casinos and withdrawals of
    NO. 71448-1-1/6
    $14,000.00 from noncasino ATMs. During the charging period, all but one of the
    ATM withdrawals was made with Juliana's card.
    Shortly after this, Andrew suffered a stroke.       Dr. McDonald and Dr.
    Eisenhauer each found that Andrew displayed fairly severe symptoms of
    dementia afterward.   Butch and Larry visited Andrew to discuss the spending
    shown in the bank account records. Butch reported that Andrew said, "I didn't
    know that she was taking this money." Larry testified similarly. In November
    2010, Butch and Larry filed a new guardianship petition and a petition for a
    vulnerable adult protection order based on this information. They obtained a
    restraining order, preventing Juliana from contacting Andrew, despite a
    declaration filed on behalf of Andrew that he loved his wife, wanted to live with
    her, and that they had discussed Juliana's expenditures and he did not want her
    punished. Andrew and Juliana divorced in 2011.
    The State charged Juliana with one count of theft in the first degree with
    the aggravating circumstance that she knew or should have known that her
    husband was particularly vulnerable or could not resist. The State alleged that
    Juliana stole over $5,000 from her husband between September 10, 2009, and
    October 27, 2010, by exerting unauthorized control over Andrew's money.
    Butch testified that his father did not go to local casinos to gamble, and he
    had never seen Andrew use an ATM machine.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/7
    Rebecca Tyrell, a financial analyst for the State, testified about the bank
    account and credit card transactions. She testified that Andrew added Juliana to
    the KeyBank joint checking account in November 2008. In 2009, from October to
    December, cash, checks, and cash withdrawals increased. ATM withdrawals
    from that account began on November 25, 2009, at a casino, and became more
    frequent. After December 2009, Juliana began to sign all checks. She was also
    responsible for all counter withdrawals and ATM withdrawals. All the deposits
    into the account came from Andrew's resources, but the account contract
    authorized both Andrew and Juliana to withdraw funds. Money withdrawn from
    the KeyBank account was deposited into the Heritage Bank account. This
    pattern began in the fall and winter of 2009.       Juliana made most of the
    withdrawals from this account. The MasterCard account with KeyBank belonged
    to Andrew and his deceased wife, but in January 2010 only Andrew's name was
    on the account and spending increased, including cash withdrawal transactions.
    In 2010, Andrew's credit card was charged a total of $63,239.93, and an
    additional $19,888.75 was withdrawn in cash advances. From September 10,
    2009, to October 27, 2010, a total of $25,304.75 was withdrawn from casinos
    and nearly $14,000.00 more from noncasino ATMs. In closing, the State relied
    upon the credit card advances and ATM withdrawals as the acts of theft. The
    juryfound Juliana guilty as charged.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/8
    Juliana appeals.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    This court reviews jury instructions de novo.2 This court reviews a claim of
    ineffective   assistance of counsel to see if counsel           provided    deficient
    representation and if that deficient performance prejudiced the defendant.3
    ANALYSIS
    Juliana first asserts that the court improperly instructed the jury on the law
    for ownership of funds in joint bank accounts under former RCW 30.22.090(2)
    (1981)4 because it did not also include necessary instructions on community
    property law. Jury instructions are sufficient where they allow parties to argue
    their theories of the case, do not mislead the jury, and when read as a whole
    inform the jury of the applicable law.5
    Former RCW 30.22.090(2) provides that subject to community property
    rights, individuals with a joint bank account own the funds in that account in
    proportion to what each person deposited, unless the contract of deposit states
    otherwise or at the time the account was created clear and convincing evidence
    2 State v. Johnson, 
    180 Wn.2d 295
    , 300, 
    325 P.3d 135
     (2014).
    3 State v. McFarland, 
    127 Wn.2d 322
    , 334-35, 
    899 P.2d 1251
     (1995).
    4 Effective January 5, 2015, the legislature recodified former RCW
    30 22.090 as RCW 30A.22.090 (Laws of 2015, ch. 37, § 4).
    5 State v. Sibert, 
    168 Wn.2d 306
    , 315, 
    230 P.3d 142
     (2010).
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    NO. 71448-1-1/9
    of a contrary intent exists.    Over Juliana's objection, the trial court gave
    instruction 14 to the jury. It tracked the language in former RCW 30.22.090(2):
    Funds on deposit in a joint bank account belong to each
    depositor in proportion to their ownership of the funds, unless the
    contract for deposit provides otherwise or there is evidence of a
    contrary intent at the time the account was created. A joint bank
    account holder may have the right to withdraw funds, but this does
    not mean that the joint bank account holder owns the funds.
    The State contends that State v. Mora6 supports the instruction. In Mora,
    a widow opened three bank accounts. After her son and his wife were added to
    the accounts, they depleted the accounts. The State charged them with 20
    counts of theft.7   In affirming their convictions on all counts, the Mora court
    rejected their claim that adding their names to the accounts provided them with
    lawful authority to exert control over account funds.8 The court held that former
    RCW 30.22.090(2) governed ownership of account funds, absent evidence of
    intent to make a gift or authority to spend funds without the owner's permission.9
    Juliana contends that Mora does not control when the State accuses one
    spouse of stealing joint account funds from the other spouse. She correctly
    notes that former RCW 30.22.090 makes the statutory account ownership rules
    subject to community property rights and that a spouse generally does not
    6 
    110 Wn. App. 850
    , 
    43 P.3d 38
     (2002).
    7 Mora, 110 Wn. App. at 853-55.
    8 Mora, 110 Wn. App. at 856-57.
    9 Mora, 110 Wn. App. at 856-57.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/10
    commit theft by withdrawing community funds from an account held jointly with
    the other spouse.10 As a result, she claims that the trial court must include
    community property principles in its instructions to the jury about joint account
    fund ownership.
    Juliana identifies three community property principles that she claims may
    apply. First, a spouse may give the other interest in community or separate
    property.11 Second, when married parties commingle separate and community
    funds so that the funds may not be traced or identified, the commingled funds
    become community property.12 And third, where parties do not mutually observe
    a separate property agreement, the property becomes community property.13
    She contends that because the trial court gave no community property
    instructions, the State could argue that all assets belonged to Andrew as
    separate property but Juliana could not effectively argue that she had legal
    authority to access and spend community funds in the accounts.
    The State responds that by signing the CR 2A and postnuptial
    agreements, Juliana agreed that she did not have and would not acquire any
    community property interest in the accounts.       It asserts those agreements
    10 State v. Coria, 
    146 Wn.2d 631
    , 638, 
    48 P.3d 980
     (2002).
    11 Dean v. Lehman, 
    143 Wn.2d 12
    , 22, 
    18 P.3d 523
     (2001); In re Estate of
    Borghi, 
    167 Wn.2d 480
    , 484, 
    219 P.3d 932
     (2009).
    12 Mummv.Mumm, 
    63 Wn.2d 349
    , 352, 
    387 P.2d 547
     (1963).
    13Mumm, 
    63 Wn.2d at 352
    .
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    NO. 71448-1-1/11
    eliminated any possibility that the accounts contained any community property
    funds. And it argues that the record includes no evidence showing that Andrew
    intended to disregard the agreements. It also contends that the absence of
    instructions about community property did not prevent Juliana from arguing that
    Andrew consented to her withdrawals from the joint account. We agree with the
    State.
    The record   contains no evidence implicating community         property
    principles. No evidence supports any inference that Andrew had the intent to gift
    his separate property to the community. He signed a postnuptial agreement that
    eliminated any possibility of community property in the accounts. He showed
    signs of severe dementia at the same time Juliana withdrew and spent funds
    from the account. Although he wrote a letter showing his support for Juliana, this
    letter makes no indication of any intent to change the status of the funds or
    approval of Juliana's exercise of control over account funds. Indeed, Butch and
    Larry testified that Andrew told them that he did not know Juliana was taking
    money from the accounts.
    Undisputed evidence traced all the funds in each account to Andrew,
    eliminating any commingling claim.      The record contains no evidence that
    Andrew failed to observe the agreements' property status provisions. Juliana
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    NO. 71448-1-1/12
    has not identified any evidence implicating any community property principle in
    this case.
    The court's instruction defining "property of another" allowed Juliana to
    defend on the basis that she acted with Andrew's permission.14 The trial court
    also instructed the jury about the "good faith" defense.15           The trial court's
    instruction about ownership of funds in joint accounts without any community
    property law principles correctly advised the jury about the applicable law and its
    instructions, as a whole, allowed each party to argue its theory of the case.
    Juliana next asserts that her trial counsel provided deficient assistance
    when he failed to offer the court instructions on community property principles.
    Because the record does not support giving these instructions, Juliana was not
    14 Instruction 11 stated, "To constitute 'the property of another,' an item
    must be one in which another person has an interest, and the defendant may not
    lawfully exert control over the item absent the permission of that other person."
    15 Instruction 15 stated,
    It is a defense to a charge of theft that the property or
    service was appropriated openly and avowedly under a good
    faith claim of title, even if the claim is untenable. The phrase
    "claim of title" means a right of ownership or entitlement to
    possession.
    The State has the burden of proving beyond a reasonable
    doubt that the defendant did not appropriate the property openly
    and avowedly under a good faith claim of title. If you find that the
    State has not proved the absence of this defense beyond a
    reasonable doubt, it will be your duty to return a verdict of not
    guilty.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/13
    entitled to them. Her counsel did not provide deficient representation by failing to
    offer community property instructions.
    Juliana further asserts that her trial counsel was ineffective because he
    failed to move for a mistrial after a witness testified to previously excluded
    evidence.
    At the beginning of trial, the court excluded evidence about an earlier civil
    case brought by Butch and Larry where a different trial judge found Juliana
    violated the CR 2A agreement and the vulnerable adult protection order. The
    trial court also excluded use of the term "vulnerable adult" in reference to
    Andrew.     During defense counsel's cross-examination of Butch, counsel asked
    Butch why Juliana did not receive money as provided in the postnuptial
    agreement.     Butch responded that it had to do with the civil lawsuit filed by
    Commencement Bay. Defense counsel then asked, "What lawsuit was filed by
    Commencement Bay Guardianship [sic] Services?"                Butch testified that
    Commencement Bay "filed a VAPO action, a Vulnerable Adult petition [order],
    against Juliana, alleging that she financially exploited my dad and she physically
    abused him. They were successful."         Defense counsel later clarified through
    Butch's attorney's testimony that the attorney had filed the VAPO action on
    behalf of Butch and Larry and that Commencement Bay was never a petitioner in
    a VAPO action or guardianship proceeding.
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    NO. 71448-1-1/14
    To establish ineffective assistance of counsel, a "defendant must show in
    the record the absence of legitimate strategic or tactical reasons supporting the
    challenged conduct by counsel."16 Juliana claims that no legitimate tactic could
    have supported trial counsel's discussion of this information and that Butch's
    testimony prejudiced her.
    Trial counsel explained his approach to mitigating any prejudice caused by
    Butch's improper testimony about the VAPO action.            When the trial court
    questioned defense counsel about why he asked the court to exclude certain
    testimony only to bring it up at trial, counsel responded,
    [l]t [came] as a surprise to me that [Commencement Bay Guardian
    Services] were the plaintiffs in the Vulnerable Adult Protection
    Order [action].... I think it is important what happens with this
    money. It clearly shows there is potential for bias issues there and
    what happened with it.
    When the trial court stated that the evidence is mostly not favorable to Juliana,
    defense counsel responded, "I think it cuts both ways.        If the nature of the
    proceedings were known, it might not hurt as much."
    Juliana's trial counsel later asked to question a witness to show the jury
    that Juliana was not represented by counsel during the VAPO proceedings.
    Counsel explained to the trial court, "[The State is] painting a picture of civil
    proceedings, Vulnerable Adult Protection Order, that is incomplete because there
    16 McFarland. 
    127 Wn.2d at 336
    .
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    NO. 71448-1-1/15
    is all this talk about Juliana being represented by counsel, and she wasn't,
    necessarily."   Thus, Juliana's trial counsel chose to address evidence of the
    previous VAPO action, improperly before the jury due to Butch's testimony, not
    by asking for a mistrial but by giving the jury a more complete picture of Juliana's
    vulnerable position in that action.     He also used this evidence in closing
    argument to attack the "guardianship industry" and Andrew's two sons by
    describing them as the ones who exercised unauthorized control over Andrew's
    assets.
    Thus, counsel made a tactical decision not to request a mistrial. Juliana
    has not shown this decision was objectively unreasonable. Because this court
    gives trial counsel wide latitude to control tactical decisions,17 counsel's
    performance was not deficient.
    CONCLUSION
    Because the record includes no evidence that the funds in the joint
    accounts could be community property, the trial court did not err when it did not
    include community property principles in an instruction about ownership of funds
    in a joint account.    Because Juliana was not entitled to instructions about
    community property principles and because trial counsel engaged in an
    objectively reasonable trial tactic when he asked about previously excluded
    17 In re Pers. Restraint of Stenson, 
    142 Wn.2d 710
    , 733, 
    16 P.3d 1
     (2001).
    -15-
    NO. 71448-1-1/16
    evidence and did not move for a mistrial, Juliana's ineffective assistance of
    counsel claim fails. We affirm.
    WE CONCUR:
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