State v. Crist ( 1992 )


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  •                                               NO.    91-424
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    1992
    STATE OF MONTANA,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    -v5-
    STEPHEN DALE CRIST,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:         District Court of the Fourth Judicial District,
    In and for the County of Missoula,
    The Honorable Ed McLean, Judge presiding.
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    John E. Smith and Marcia M. Jacobson, Public
    Defender's Office, Missoula, Montana
    For Respondent :
    Hon. Marc Racicot, Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Carol Schmidt, Assistant Attorney General, Helena
    Robert L. Deschamps, 111, County Attorney,
    Missoula, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs:   April 2, 1992
    Decided:   June 1 , 1992
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    Justice R. C. McDonough delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    This is an appeal from the Fourth Judicial District, Missoula
    County.      Defendant, Stephen Crist (Crist) appeals from a ruling of
    the District Court allowing evidence of 'other acts' to be admitted
    under Rule 404(b), M.R.Evid.            Subsequently, a jury found Crist
    guilty of sexually assaulting 9 year old B.L.           We reverse.
    The issues for our review are:
    I.   Did the District Court err by admitting 'other acts'
    evidence to be presented to the jury through the testimony of Kathy
    Lamb?
    11. Did the District Court err by denying Crist's request for
    psychological     evaluation       of   the   complaining witnesses   by   a
    qualified expert of Crist's choosing?
    Crist was charged with three counts of sexual assault. In the
    first count he was charged for sexual contact without consent for
    touching 9 year old B.L. on the chest and in the vaginal area with
    his hand.      Count two alleged that Crist sexually assaulted B.C.,
    Crist's 8 year old son, by fondling his penis. Count three alleged
    Crist sexually assaulted J.L., a 14 year old baby sitter, by
    fondling her breasts.
    The State, pursuant to the requirements of State v. Just
    (1979), 
    184 Mont. 262
    ,   
    602 P.2d 957
    , filed a 'Notice of Intent to
    Introduce Evidence      of Other Acts'          seeking to   admit alleged
    incidents of sexual assault upon Kathy Lamb (Lamb).             The notice
    provided that the State would seek to introduce evidence of 'other
    acts' :
    2
    for the purpose of proving motive, intent, preparation,
    plan, knowledge, absence of mistake or accident, or any
    other permissible factor such as consciousness of guilt.
    The State further provided that the evidence of         'other actst
    expected to be presented consisted of the following:
    On or about the fall of 1984 the defendant touched the
    breast and legs of Kathy Lamb, d/o/b July 24, 1971, on
    approximately twelve different occasions. One time he
    showed her a pornographic magazine and on another
    occasion he gave her an alcoholic beverage and joked that
    he would get her drunk and then "take advantage" of her.
    Later the same night he tried to get her to dress in a
    nightgown. The touching all occurred when she was in bed
    and he entered the bedroom and reached under her covers.
    The court allowed the evidence to be introduced and at trial Lamb
    testified to each of the prior acts as listed above. However, Lamb
    did not recall defendant having touched her breasts but did testify
    that on three or four occasions (rather than the 12 described in
    the notice) Crist had come into the room where she was sleeping
    (with B.L.),   put his hand under her covers and rubbed her upper
    leg.    Crist was only found guilty of the charges involving B.L.
    Rule 404(b), M.R.Evid., provides that:
    Evidence of other crimes, wrongs or acts is not
    admissible to prove the character of a person in order to
    show action in conformity therewith. It may, however, be
    admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge,
    identity, or absence of mistake or accident.
    Rule 404(b), M.R.Evid., must be strictly enforced, except where
    clearly justified and exceptions to the rule must be carefully
    limited. 
    Just, 184 Mont. at 271-272
    , 602 P.2d at 962, citing State
    v. Tiedemann (l96l), 
    139 Mont. 237
    , 242-243, 
    362 P.2d 529
    , 531. We
    have developed four substantive criterion for the admission of
    evidence of other acts or crimes. State v. Just (1979), 
    184 Mont. 262
    , 
    602 P.2d 957
    ; State v. Matt (1991), 
    814 P.2d 521
    , 48 St. Rep.
    614.   The so called 'Modified Just Rule' requires that:
    1) there is a similarity between the crime charged and
    the previous crime, act or wrong;
    2) the other crime, act or wrong must not be remote in
    time ;
    3) the evidence of other acts is not admissible to prove
    the character of a person in order to show that he acted
    in conformity with such character; but may be admissible
    for other purposes, such as proof of motive, opportunity,
    intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or
    absence of mistake or accident; and
    4) a determination that the probative value of the
    evidence is not substantially outweighed by the prejudice
    to the defendant.
    When reviewing evidentiary rulings, this Court will determine
    if the District Court misused or abused its discretion. Steer Inc.
    v. Department of Revenue (1990), 
    245 Mont. 470
    , 
    803 P.2d 601
    .
    Absent a showing of abuse of discretion, the District Court's
    determination will not be overturned.     State v. Oman (1985), 
    218 Mont. 260
    , 264, 
    707 P.2d 1117
    , 1119-20.     On review, we will apply
    the Just criterion to the facts of the present case
    The first requirement of the Modified Just Rule is that there
    be a similarity between the crime charged and the prior act.       Here
    the crime charged was the perpetration of sexual assaults upon an
    8, 9 and 14 year old child.     In State v. Tecca (1986), 
    220 Mont. 168
    , 
    714 P.2d 136
    , we held that a prior act need not be identical
    to the offense committed but that there must be a sufficient
    similarity. In Tecca, the crime charged was the sexual assault of
    an 11 year old who was sleeping in the defendant's house.             We
    determined that evidence of other children who had awakened in
    defendant's house to find defendant sitting next to their bed in
    his underwear bore sufficient similarity to the crime charged to
    uphold its admission.     On the basis of Tecca, we refuse to adopt
    Cristls argument that a prior act in order to be admissible in a
    sexual assault case must involve actual ltouching'.
    In State v. Long (1986), 
    223 Mont. 502
    , 
    726 P.2d 1364
    , we
    determined that defendant's having "rubbedo1
    the clothed bottom of
    a 5 year old was sufficiently similar to the crime charged of
    pulling down the pants of two four year old children and rubbing
    their vaginas. We noted that sexual abuse of children takes subtle
    forms and deferred to the perceptions of the trier of fact to
    properly admit the testimony.
    In the instant case, Lamb testified that Crist assaulted her
    late at night in the same bed in which Crist assaulted B.L.         Lamb
    testified that Crist rubbed the inside and outside of her thighs in
    an attempt to "move his hand up."      We conclude that this act is
    sufficiently similar to the assault perpetrated on B.L. to uphold
    its admission.    See also State v. Gilpin (1988), 
    232 Mont. 56
    , 
    756 P.2d 445
    .     We now apply Lamb's testimony, regarding Cristls
    touching her, to the remaining Just criterion.
    Whether 'other acts1 evidence is too remote is directed to the
    discretion of the District Court to determine whether a remoteness
    is so great that the proffered evidence has no value.           Here, the
    acts    about   which   Lamb   testified   appear   to   have    occurred
    approximately four years prior to the act against B.L.          We have
    refused to establish an arbitrary time limit for admitting prior
    acts. 
    Tecca, 220 Mont. at 173
    ; State v. Medina (1990), 
    245 Mont. 25
    , 30, 
    798 P.2d 1032
    , 1036.      In similar cases we have determined
    that remoteness does not bar admission where the intervening period
    of time is three and one half years, State v. Stroud (1984), 
    210 Mont. 58
    , 71, 
    683 P.2d 459
    , 466; five years, State v. Eiler (1988),
    
    234 Mont. 38
    , 48, 
    762 P.2d 210
    , 217; and nine years where there has
    been a "continuing pattern of similar conduct.''      
    Tecca, 220 Mont. at 172
    .
    We conclude that Lamb's testimony is not too remote and that
    the District Court acted within its discretion by allowing its
    admission.       Furthermore, we    conclude   that   Lamb's   testimony
    regarding Crist's touching her tends to establish Crist's intent to
    commit sexual acts with minors, and therefore satisfies the third
    prong of the     Just   test.
    The fourth prong of the Just test requires that the probative
    value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by unfair
    prejudice to the defendant.          We have clarified that unfair
    prejudice occurs when the evidence is offered to "horrify, evoke
    sympathy or increase a desire to punish and whose probative value
    is slight."       State v. Paulson (lggl), 
    817 P.2d 1137
    , 1144, 48
    St.Rep.   838,   841.     We again conclude the District Court acted
    within its discretion and uphold the admission of Lamb's testimony
    regarding Crist's touching her.
    The remaining acts to which Lamb testified, we conclude, fail
    to reach the requisite standard of sufficient similarity.   Showing
    Lamb a pornographic magazine, teasing her about getting her drunk
    and "taking advantage of her," and attempting to get her to dress
    in a nightgown are innuendos too broad to meet the standard of
    similarity. We cannot say that these incidents are similar to the
    actual assaults with which Crist is charged. The record is void of
    Crist having ever acted similarly towards any of the alleged
    victims. Not inconsistent with   m, we continue to recognize that
    sexual abuse of children takes subtle forms.    However, the 'other
    acts' admitted   in the    instant case cannot     all be   properly
    characterized as sexual abuse.     These acts are, however, evidence
    of character. These innuendos would tend to distract the trier of
    fact from the main question of what actually happened on the
    occasions charged.   Therefore, we conclude, with the exception of
    Crist's touching Lamb while she was in bed, Lamb's testimony lacks
    the requisite similarity to the crime charged and therefore fails
    the first prong of the    Just   test and is inadmissible character
    evidence. The District Court is reversed and the case remanded for
    a new trial.
    Because we reverse, we need not address Cristlsclaim that the
    State failed to provide proper notice of which purpose the State
    intended to introduce the 'other acts' evidence.        However, we
    reiterate our previous holding that the purposes listed in Rule
    404(b), M.R.Evid.,   may not be listed in ushotgunllfashion but
    instead the notice must provide the specific purpose upon which a
    party intends to offer 'other acts' evidence. See State v. Croteau
    (1991), 
    248 Mont. 403
    , 
    812 P.2d 1251
    .
    Lastly, we turn to Crist's request to have the District Court
    compel a psychological evaluation of B.L.      by an expert of his
    choosing.    Contrary to Crist's contentions, no legal authority
    exists in Montana to compel a victim in a sexual assault case to be
    examined by a defendant's psychologist.     State v. Liddell (1984),
    
    211 Mont. 180
    , 
    685 P.2d 918
    .     We addressed this issue in State v.
    Gilpin (1988), 
    232 Mont. 56
    , 
    756 P.2d 445
    , wherein we held:
    The defendant cannot force psychological evaluation of a
    child victim of sexual assault.
    We are not persuaded by Cristlsconstitutional arguments that he is
    being denied his right to reciprocal discovery. We decline to hold
    that denial of a request to compel a psychological examination of
    a   child    sexual    assault    victim   jeopardizes   defendant's
    constitutional rights.    We hold the District Court did not abuse
    its discretion by denying Crist's request to compel psychological
    evaluation of B.L.
    We Concur:
    Chief Justice
    Chief Justice J. A. Turnage, dissenting:
    I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion reversing the
    conviction of Stephen Dale Crist.    Crist was found guilty on March
    26, 1991, by a Missoula County jury of sexual assault upon a nine-
    year-old girl, B.L.,     committed between November 15, 1989, and
    January 31, 1990.
    The majority opinion approves the admissibility of prior act
    testimony given at the trial by K.L., sister of B.L., that Crist
    sexually assaulted her in 1984 when K.L. was thirteen years old.
    Crist was not charged with this assault. I agree with the majority
    opinion's holding that this testimony of a prior act was admissible
    and that the requirements of the "modified Just rule" with relation
    to this prior act had been satisfied.
    The majority opinion, however, reverses the conviction based
    upon testimony of K.L., that she was subjected to three other prior
    acts of Crist.
    It must be noted that the three other prior acts, which the
    majority holds to be      inadmissible and reversible error, all
    occurred within a short span of time before the prior act of sexual
    assault by Crist upon K.L. which the majority held to be admissi-
    ble.
    The testimony of K.L.   relating to these three other prior
    acts, taken from the trial transcript of the direct testimony of
    K.L., is as follows:
    Q.  Were there any other incidents involving
    the Defendant that you can recall?
    A. Yeah, I went over to the house one night,
    and I was sitting there and on the floor
    watching TV, and I don't remember how this
    started, but Steve said something like --
    yeah, right in front of Collette he said,
    "Yeah, I'm going to --" I'm stumped. I can't
    remember.
    He goes, "I'm going to get her drunk and take
    advantage of her," and Collette was sitting
    right there, and they just kind of laughed
    about it, and they go, "Well, we're going to
    bed now," and I said, "Okay."
    And I was just watching TV. So Steve came
    back out a few minutes later, and he brought
    this nightgown out, and he goes, "Come here,"
    and he grabs me and takes me into the bath-
    room, and he said, "Put this on,'' and I went,
    "No." Then he walked out and he got mad, and
    that was the end of it.
    Q. Did anything else happen, either before or
    after this, involving the Defendant?
    A.   What do you mean?
    Q. Did he ever pick you up at Sentinel High
    School or Hellgate High School?
    A.   Yes
    Q.   Can you explain to the jury about that
    incident?
    A. Well, I was at work, and I was at Human
    Resources, and I called up because I wanted to
    spend the day with [B.L.], my sister. So I
    called up, and I said, "Well, Steve, will you
    bring me over so I can see [B.L.]?"     And he
    said, "Sure." He said, "There's something I
    want you to do, and I will pay you for it."
    And I said,           He goes, "Well, I will
    meet you at Hellgate." I did [sic],
    So he picked me up at Hellgate, and when I got
    in the truck, I go, "Well, what was it you
    wanted me to do?" He goes, "1'11 just tell
    you later," and I go, What, clean the house,
    clean dishes, some sewing?"      And he goes,
    "NO," and I go "Um." So he said, "1'11 tell
    you when we get back to the house,1tand I go,
    ' Okay .I8
    I
    So when we get back to the house, he was
    cleaning out the camper, either to go camping
    or just got back, and after that he goes,
    "Well, why don't you come in here and sit and
    talk to me," and I said, "Okay."
    Q.   In where?
    A. In the camper -- because we never had any
    problems before this. We had always gotten
    along okay.
    Q.   So this incident with the camper was
    before he touched you?
    A. This was before anything started. And so
    we were sitting in the camper just talking and
    everything.   He said, "I want to show you
    something," and he said, "1 will be right
    back." So he went in the house, came back in
    the camper, and he threw a magazine that was
    covered up on the table, and he went back in
    and he goes, "1'11 be back in a minute." And
    so I uncovered it, and it was like a Penthouse
    or something like that.
    Q.   Then what happened?
    A.  He came back in and he goes, "What do you
    think?" [I] go, "What do you mean, what do I
    think?" And I went, "I don't think so." So I
    went in and kissed my sister and I left.
    The majority opinion holds that the testimony of K.L. as to
    the three other prior acts fails to reach the requisite standard of
    sufficient similarity and is only evidence of Cristls character.
    I disagree with this analysis.
    The showing of a pornographic magazine to K.L.,        then a
    thirteen-year-old girl, stating that he was Ifgoing to get her
    [K.L. ] drunk and take advantage of her" and telling her to take her
    clothes off and put on a nightgown are indeed subtle forms of
    grooming a child for an act of sexual abuse. The sexual assault to
    which K.L. testified Crist subjected her followed very closely
    after his three other acts grooming K.L. for the sexual assault
    that followed.
    If, as the majority opinion holds, the actual sexual assault
    upon K.L. is admissible as a prior act of Crist, then certainly
    these other three prior acts are also admissible as a grooming of
    K.L. for the sexual assault upon her, and cannot be held as not
    similar.   These acts of grooming of K.L. are not only similar to
    the actual sexual assault committed upon her but are a prelude and
    inextricably a part of Cristls plan and sexual assault.
    Crist cannot complain that the admission of the testimony
    concerning the other three prior acts prejudiced him.        He was
    charged in Count Two with sexual abuse against B.C., an eight-year-
    old boy, and the jury found him not guilty on this count. In Count
    Three, Crist was charged with sexual assault upon J.S., a fourteen-
    year-old girl, and the jury hung on this charge--eight for guilty
    and four for innocent.   Count Three was thereafter dismissed.
    I would affirm the jury conviction and sentence imposed by the
    District Court.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 91-424

Judges: McDonough, Turnage, Gray, Trieweiler

Filed Date: 6/11/1992

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/11/2024