State of Washington v. Jackie Lynn Dean ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                          FILED
    MARCH 29, 2022
    In the Office of the Clerk of Court
    WA State Court of Appeals, Division III
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION THREE
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                          )
    )        No. 38564-7-III
    Respondent,              )
    )
    v.                                     )
    )
    JACKIE LYNN DEAN,                             )        UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    )
    Appellant.               )
    SIDDOWAY, C.J. — Jackie Lynn Dean and two others were convicted of second
    degree burglary following their unsuccessful effort to steal a large crane hook block from
    a fenced construction storage yard. Mr. Dean challenges the sufficiency of the evidence
    to establish that he entered or remained unlawfully in a “fenced area” within the meaning
    of RCW 9A.04.110(5), for two reasons. He contends the fenced yard was not the
    curtilage of a building, which he argues is the statutory construction given to “fenced
    area” in State v. Engel, 
    166 Wn.2d 572
    , 580, 
    210 P.3d 1007
     (2009). Alternatively, he
    No. 38564-7-III
    State v. Dean
    argues that if not the curtilage of a building, a “fenced area” must be fully enclosed, and
    here, a panel of the fencing had been cut and spread open.
    Mr. Dean’s first challenge is identical to a challenge advanced by one of Mr.
    Dean’s accomplices, which was rejected last year in State v. Jodie Lee Dean,
    No. 54673-6-II (Wash. Ct. App. Aug. 3, 2021), slip op. at 2 (unpublished).1 We adopt
    the reasoning of that opinion in rejecting the first challenge.
    We reject Mr. Dean’s second challenge on the basis that substantial evidence
    established that the breach in the storage yard’s fencing was recent and temporary, and
    that type of breach does not take the yard outside of the statutory meaning of “fenced
    area.” We affirm.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    At around 6:00 a.m. one summer morning, an employee of Northwest Steel & Pipe
    (Northwest) arrived at work and saw several unknown men (one of them Mr. Dean), a red
    pickup truck, and a large black flatbed truck outside the fence of Northwest’s neighboring
    business, a construction storage yard owned by Atkinson Construction (Atkinson). The
    Northwest employee told his manager about the men’s suspect presence and he, the
    manager, and a third Northwest employee drove to the scene to investigate. The
    interlopers had parked both trucks in an area that was partially blocked off by Jersey
    1
    Available at https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions/pdf/D2%2054673-6
    -II%20Unpublished%20Opinion.pdf.
    2
    No. 38564-7-III
    State v. Dean
    barriers, and the Northwest manager parked his SUV where it would block the only exit
    route.
    While questioning the strangers about the reason for their presence, the Northwest
    employees noticed a large crane hook block that was partially loaded onto the lowered lift
    gate of the flatbed truck. Northwest’s manager called 911. Realizing police had been
    summoned, one of the strangers fled and the others slid the hook block off the lift gate,
    got in their trucks, and asked Northwest’s manager to move his SUV so they could leave.
    When the manager did not, Mr. Dean tried to leave anyway, driving the flatbed truck up
    to one of the Jersey barriers and attempting, unsuccessfully, to push it out of the way.
    When police arrived, Mr. Dean and the two others were detained.
    Atkinson’s yard was fenced, but
    the chain link panel next to where the
    flatbed truck had been parked had been
    cut from top to bottom and spread open.
    The breach was photographed by
    responding police officers, and the
    photograph to the right would later be
    offered at trial. Near the breach, on
    Northwest’s side of the fence, was the
    large, 1,500 to 2,000 pound hook block
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    No. 38564-7-III
    State v. Dean
    the men had been trying to load onto the lift gate of the flatbed truck. The hook block
    belonged to Atkinson, and had previously been stored on a pallet in Atkinson’s storage
    yard. Responding police officers observed what appeared to be drag marks in the dirt and
    on the asphalt, suggesting that the hook block had been dragged from Atkinson’s yard.
    They surmised that a steel cable connected to the flatbed truck was strong enough to pull
    the hook block without breaking.
    Mr. Davis and the two others who had been caught (one of them Jodie Lee Dean)
    were jointly charged and tried for second degree burglary. The condition of the fencing
    around the yard was a focus of evidence and argument at trial. A senior construction
    manager for Atkinson described its storage yard as “fully fenced,” testifying that it was
    “fenced with a chain-link type of fencing, all the way around,” and that the fencing was
    “six to eight feet high with barrier fencing around the top of it.” Report of Proceedings
    (RP) at 378. He testified that the fencing had “been broken into several times, so it’s
    been pieced together throughout the years.” RP at 402. He testified that Atkinson had
    “individuals that work in that yard at all times and they communicate with me if there’s
    been any breaches in the yard.” RP at 395. He testified that when its fencing was cut,
    Atkinson “typically” tried to repair it “the day that it’s discovered.” RP at 389. A project
    engineer for Atkinson also testified that the storage yard was “fully fenced,” describing
    some of the fencing as “fence panels,” and “[s]ome of it is more permanent.” RP at 402.
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    State v. Dean
    Of the Atkinson and Northwest employees who testified at trial, only one, a
    Northwest employee, testified he had previously seen the breach through which the hook
    block was taken, and that was only the day before the attempted theft. Atkinson’s senior
    construction manager had most recently been to the lot a week or two earlier, and the
    breach had not existed at that time.
    The jury received pattern jury instructions that “[a] person commits the crime of
    burglary in the second degree when he or she enters or remains unlawfully in a building
    with intent to commit a crime against a person or property therein,” and that for purposes
    of the crime, “[b]uilding, in addition to its ordinary meaning, includes any fenced area.”
    Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 18, 23 (emphasis added). “Fenced area” was not defined.
    At the conclusion of the evidence, the jury found the three defendants guilty as
    charged.
    Mr. Dean appeals. This Division Three panel considered the appeal without oral
    argument after receiving an administrative transfer from Division Two. Before the date
    for hearing this appeal, Division Two filed its opinion in the appeal filed by Jodie Lee
    Dean.
    ANALYSIS
    Mr. Dean contends the evidence was insufficient to support an essential element of
    second degree burglary: that on the charging date, he “enter[ed] or remain[ed] unlawfully
    in a building other than a vehicle or a dwelling.” See RCW 9A.52.030(1); CP at 18. As
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    No. 38564-7-III
    State v. Dean
    relevant here, RCW 9A.04.110(5) provides that “‘Building,’ in addition to its ordinary
    meaning, includes any dwelling, fenced area, vehicle, railway car, cargo container, or any
    other structure used for lodging of persons or for carrying on business therein.”
    When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, he or she admits the
    truth of all the State’s evidence. State v. Cardenas-Flores, 
    189 Wn.2d 243
    , 265, 
    401 P.3d 19
     (2017). “Evidence is sufficient to support a guilty verdict if any rational trier of fact,
    viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, could find the elements of
    the charged crime beyond a reasonable doubt.” 
    Id.
     “[A]ll reasonable inferences from the
    evidence must be drawn in favor of the State and interpreted most strongly against” the
    defendant: here, Mr. Dean. State v. Salinas, 
    119 Wn.2d 192
    , 201, 
    829 P.2d 1068
     (1992).
    I.     WE REJECT MR. DEAN’S ENGEL-BASED ARGUMENTS FOR THE REASONS EXPLAINED
    IN JODIE LEE DEAN
    Mr. Dean argues that the controlling construction of our Supreme Court in Engel
    limits the meaning of “fenced area” to the curtilage of a building. There is language in
    Engel that, read in isolation, might be read to impose that categorical limitation on the
    meaning of “fenced area.” But in Jodie Lee Dean, a Division Two panel persuasively
    reasoned that since Engel did not retreat from the Supreme Court’s earlier decision in
    State v. Wentz, 
    149 Wn.2d 342
    , 
    68 P.3d 282
     (2003), Engel’s “curtilage” limitation
    applied only because the real estate in Engel was only partially enclosed by fencing.
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    State v. Dean
    As more fully detailed in Jodie Lee Dean, “Wentz established that the ordinary
    meaning of ‘fenced area’ clearly includes an area that is completely surrounded by a
    fence.” Slip op. at 5 (citing Wentz, 
    149 Wn.2d at 352
    ). By contrast, Engel involved an
    industrial yard that was bordered by some natural slopes, but only a third of which was
    fenced. Because “fenced area” is undefined and could be construed to have a broad or
    narrow meaning, the Engel court looked to the common law in arriving at when a
    partially-fenced area is sufficiently building-like. It limited such areas by the concept of
    curtilage to “avoid[ ] absurd results,” noting that under the much broader meaning
    advocated by the State,
    would-be petty criminals who trespass might be liable for burglary even if
    the property line at their point of entry were unfenced and unmarked, even
    if they remained on the property without approaching any buildings or
    structures, and even if the property were such that they could enter and
    remain without being aware that it was fenced. Such examples are well
    outside the category of offenses the legislature intended to punish as
    burglary.
    
    166 Wn.2d at 580
    .
    Jodie Lee Dean concluded that Engel’s curtilage limitation did not apply to Jodie
    Lee Dean’s prosecution because Atkinson’s construction yard was fully fenced. Slip op.
    at 6. Even if it were not, the opinion observed that several large Conexes in Atkinson’s
    storage yard qualified as “cargo containers,” which are themselves included in
    RCW 9A.04.110(5)’s definition of “building” and for which the yard served as curtilage.
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    Id. at 7. We adopt the reasoning of Jodie Lee Dean and reject Mr. Dean’s curtilage-based
    challenge to his conviction.
    II.    THE CONVICTION CAN ALSO BE AFFIRMED EVEN IF THE CONEXES DID NOT QUALIFY
    THE STORAGE YARD AS CURTILAGE
    Mr. Dean raises a second challenge, not addressed by Division Two, that because
    of the breach, Atkinson’s storage yard was not fully fenced. We hold that on the facts of
    this case, the breach in the storage yard’s fencing would not prevent it from qualifying as
    a “fenced area” within the meaning of RCW 9A.52.030(1) even if the Conexes located in
    the yard did not qualify the yard as curtilage under Engel.
    Viewed in the light most favorable to the State, the evidence established that apart
    from the breach, the storage yard was entirely surrounded by six to eight foot fencing,
    with barrier fencing on top. Atkinson’s witnesses testified that employees were on site at
    the yard at all times, and that any breach in the fencing was reported and promptly
    repaired. There was no evidence that anyone observed the hole in the fencing anytime
    earlier than the day before Mr. Dean and his accomplices were caught attempting to
    purloin the hook block.
    As explained in Engel, its concern was that upholding “an overly broad definition
    of ‘fenced area’ would extend criminal liability beyond what is warranted,” subjecting an
    individual to a felony conviction “even if the property were such that they could enter
    and remain without being aware that it was fenced.” 
    166 Wn.2d at 580-81
    ; and see
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    State v. Dean
    Wentz, 
    149 Wn.2d at 357
     (Madsen, J., concurring) (“I do not believe the legislature
    intends that an impenetrable barrier is required, but there must be a barrier designed for
    the security of people or the contents of the enclosed area.”). Here, the intent to fully
    fence the storage yard was apparent. There was only one breach, which the evidence
    establishes would have existed for only a short time, and which would reasonably be
    recognized as illicit. The evidence was sufficient to prove that the fenced area in this
    case qualified as a building under the reasoning of Wentz.
    Affirmed.
    A majority of the panel has determined this opinion will not be printed in the
    Washington Appellate Reports, but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW
    2.06.040.
    _____________________________
    Siddoway, C.J.
    WE CONCUR:
    _____________________________
    Lawrence-Berrey, J.
    _____________________________
    Fearing, J.
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