Opinion: Failure to instruct jury on meaning of "personality disorder" results in retrial
In re Det. of Pouncy, No. 81769-3 (briefs and argument). Curtis Pouncy has a long incarceration history after several sexual assaults. In 2003 the state filed a petition to have Pouncy committed as a sexually violent predator. In order to establish an individual is an SVP, the state must prove the person “has been convicted of or charged with a crime of sexual violence and who suffers from a mental abnormality or personality disorder which makes the person likely to engage in predatory acts of sexual violence if not confined in a secure facility.” Defense counsel proposed a jury instruction defining “personality disorder” but the trial court rejected the instruction and no other guidance defining “personality disorder” was offered the jury. The defendant also objected to the court’s decision to permit the state to attack the credibility of the defendant’s psychological expert.
The Supreme Court, with Justice Debra Stephens writing, held that the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the meaning of “personality disorder.” At the time of Pouncy’s trial, this phrase was not defined by statute, though the legislature later supplied a definition. The Court wrote that the phrase is not one of common usage and requires definition to ensure jurors are not forced to define the term based on their collective understanding.
The Court reversed Pouncy’s SVP determination and ordered a new commitment trial. The Court also held that the impeachment evidence the state introduced against the defendant’s expert witness was inadmissible and should not be used on retrial.
Chief Justice Barbara Madsen wrote separately, concurring with the Court’s order for retrial. She however, wrote that the inadmissibility of the impeachment evidence was enough to justify a new trial, and she disagreed with the Court’s analysis of the personality disorder issue.
UPDATE: Nina Shapiro at the Seattle Weekly has this article criticizing the Court's decision in Pouncy's case.
