State Of Washington v. T.s.t. ( 2016 )


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  •       IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                              DIVISION ONE
    Respondent,                   No. 73912-3-1
    v.                                       ORDER GRANTING MOTION
    TO CHANGE CASE TITLE AND
    T.S.T.,                                           REDACT APPELLANT'S FULL
    B.D. 08/23/00,                                    NAME FROM OPINION,
    WITHDRAWING OPINION, AND
    Appellant.                    SUBSTITUTING OPINION
    The appellant, T.S.T., has filed a motion to change case title and redact
    her full name from the opinion. The respondent, State of Washington, has filed a
    response, stating that it does not object to the motion. The court has determined
    that said motion should be granted and that the opinion filed on October 3, 2016
    shall be withdrawn and a substitute unpublished opinion be filed. Now, therefore,
    it is hereby
    ORDERED that the motion to change case title and redact appellant's
    name from the opinion is granted; it is further
    ORDERED that the opinion filed on October 3, 2016 is withdrawn and a
    substitute unpublished opinion shall be filed.
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    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    STATE OF WASHINGTON,                             DIVISION ONE
    Respondent,                 No. 73912-3-1
    v.                                      UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    T.S.T.,
    B.D. 08/23/00,
    Appellant.                   FILED: November 14, 2016           -'
    Dwyer, J. —T.S.T. was charged and convicted of rape of a child in the
    first degree. The complainant was A.W., T.S.T.'s 8-year-old cousin. Following a
    pre-trial hearing, the trial court ruled that A.W.'s statements to her mother, a
    detective, and a child interview specialist would be admissible at trial. On
    appeal, T.S.T. contends that the trial court erred by so ruling. Finding no error,
    we affirm.
    I
    A.W. lived with her mother, Brianna McMillon, in SeaTac between 2012
    and 2013. During this time, McMillon began to visit her niece, 12-year-old T.S.T.,
    who was staying at Ryther, a children's mental health facility. After T.S.T. left
    Ryther and began staying with her father in Seattle, McMillon began inviting
    T.S.T. to spend time with her and A.W. at McMillon's house. T.S.T. stayed with
    McMillon the weekend of August 2-4, 2013.
    No. 73912-3-1/2
    McMillon had a strange feeling about T.S.T. when she arrived for the
    weekend. McMillon observed that T.S.T. and A.W. were spending a lot of time in
    A.W.'s room, and that the door was frequently closed despite McMillon's
    repeated orders to leave it open. McMillon testified that, on that Saturday night,
    she opened the door to the bedroom to find both T.S.T. and A.W. on the floor.
    When T.S.T. and A.W. saw the door open they jumped apart from each other.
    The following night, after T.S.T. and the other guests had left McMillon's
    house, McMillon confronted A.W. about T.S.T. McMillon asked A.W. if T.S.T.
    had touched her private parts. A.W. was unresponsive and asked to go to bed.
    McMillon pressed A.W. to tell her if T.S.T. had touched her private parts, and
    refused to let A.W. go to bed until she answered. McMillon asked A.W. if T.S.T.
    had touched her private parts, put her fingers in her private parts, and kissed her
    on her mouth, all of which A.W. reluctantly confirmed. McMillon asked where this
    had occurred, and A.W. stated that it happened in her bedroom. McMillon asked
    if this happened more than once, and A.W. said that it had. McMillon asked why
    A.W. had not told her earlier, and A.W. responded that T.S.T. had told her not to
    tell. McMillon later asked if T.S.T. had licked A.W.'s private area and if A.W. had
    licked T.S.T.'s private area, and A.W. answered yes to both.
    The following morning, McMillon took A.W. to T.S.T.'s father's house and
    confronted T.S.T. McMillon pinned her arm against T.S.T., wrapped her belt
    around her other hand, and told T.S.T. that she knew that T.S.T. molested her
    child. McMillon told T.S.T. to apologize for molesting A.W. and T.S.T. did so.
    A.W. witnessed the confrontation between her mother and T.S.T.
    No. 73912-3-1/3
    After confronting T.S.T. directly, McMillon took A.W. to the SeaTac police
    station. The police separated McMillon and A.W., and Detective Robin Fry sat
    with A.W. in a conference room. Fry asked A.W. if she knew why she was at the
    police station, and A.W. answered that she did, but that she could not remember
    the word. Fry paused to let A.W. come up with the word and, eventually, A.W.
    stated that she was molested. A.W. told Fry that her cousin touched her private
    parts. A.W. told Fry that this had happened three or four times. Fry asked A.W.
    if she thought anyone should get in trouble, and A.W. expressed that she just
    wanted everybody to be okay.
    After leaving the police station, McMillon took A.W. to the hospital, where
    she was given a sexual assault examination. A.W. told the physician that she
    had been touched and needed to be checked out. The physician asked A.W. if
    she knew who touched her. A.W. replied that it was her cousin.
    The following day, A.W. was interviewed by Carolyn Webster, a child
    interview specialist. In response to open-ended questioning, A.W. told Webster
    that T.S.T. told A.W. to lick her private parts and put her mouth on T.S.T.'s boob.
    A.W. also told Webster that T.S.T. kissed A.W. and put her tongue in A.W.'s
    mouth. A.W. told Webster that she wanted to stop doing those things with
    T.S.T., but T.S.T. suggested putting blankets over the bed so nobody could see
    them. A.W. told Webster that she asked T.S.T. to lick her private parts. A.W.
    told Webster that her mom would not let her go to bed until she told her mom
    what happened; she wanted to go to bed and had no choice but to tell her. A.W.
    could not recall the specifics of any other time that T.S.T. touched her.
    No. 73912-3-1/4
    The trial court found T.S.T. guilty of one count of rape of a child in the first
    degree.1 She now timely appeals.
    II
    T.S.T. asserts that the trial court erred by admitting statements A.W. made
    to her mother, Fry, and Webster. This is so, she contends, because the trial
    court misapplied the Ryan2 factors when it considered whether the child hearsay
    statements were admissible.
    A trial court is afforded broad discretion in determining the reliability of a
    child hearsay statement, as it has the opportunity to observe the child and other
    witnesses. State v. Swanson, 
    62 Wash. App. 186
    , 191 n.1, 
    813 P.2d 614
    (1991).
    We will not reverse such a ruling absent a showing of manifest abuse of
    discretion. State v. Pham, 
    75 Wash. App. 626
    , 631, 
    879 P.2d 321
    (1994) (citing
    State v. Justiniano, 
    48 Wash. App. 572
    , 579, 
    740 P.2d 872
    (1987)). Atrial court
    abuses its discretion when its ruling is manifestly unreasonable, or is exercised
    on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons. State v. Rohrich, 
    149 Wash. 2d 647
    , 654, 
    71 P.3d 638
    (2003). "Erroneous admission ofevidence is not grounds
    for reversal 'unless, within reasonable probabilities, the outcome of the trial would
    have been materially affected had the error not occurred.'" State v. Sanford, 
    128 Wash. App. 280
    , 285, 
    115 P.3d 368
    (2005) (quoting State v. Tharp, 
    96 Wash. 2d 591
    ,
    599, 
    637 P.2d 961
    (1981)).
    1"A person is guilty of rape ofa child in the first degree when the person has sexual
    intercourse with another who is less than twelve years old and not married to the perpetrator and
    the perpetrator is at least twenty-four months older than the victim." RCW 9A.44.073(1). "Sexual
    intercourse" is defined as including any act ofsexual contact between persons involving the sex
    organs ofone person and the mouth ofanother. RCW9A.44.010(1)(c).
    2 State v. Ryan, 103Wn.2d 165, 691 P.2d 197(1984).
    No. 73912-3-1/5
    RCW 9A.44.120, the statute governing the admissibility of child hearsay
    statements, reads, in pertinent part:
    A statement made by a child when under the age of ten describing
    any act of sexual contact performed with or on the child by another,
    [or] describing any attempted act of sexual contact with or on the
    child by another... is admissible in .. . criminal proceedings ... if:
    (1) The court finds, in a hearing conducted outside the
    presence of the jury, that the time, content, and circumstances of
    the statement provide sufficient indicia of reliability; and
    (2) The child either:
    (a) Testifies at the proceedings; or
    (b) Is unavailable as a witness.
    "Adequate indicia of reliability must be found in reference to circumstances
    surrounding the making ofthe out-of-court statement, and not from subsequent
    corroboration of the criminal act." State v. Ryan, 
    103 Wash. 2d 165
    , 174, 691 P.2d
    197(1984).
    The Ryan court identified nine factors applicable to determining the
    reliability of a child's out-of-court declarations: (1) whether there is an apparent
    motive to lie, (2) the general character of the declarant, (3) whether more than
    one person heard the statements, (4) whether the statements were made
    spontaneously, (5) the timing of the declaration and the relationship between the
    declarant and the witness, (6) whether the statement contains express assertions
    about past fact, (7) whether cross-examination could show the declarant's lack of
    knowledge, (8) whether the possibility of the declarant's faulty recollection is
    remote, and (9) whether the circumstances surrounding the statement are such
    that there is no reason to suppose the declarant misrepresented defendant's
    
    involvement. 103 Wash. 2d at 175-76
    .
    5-
    No. 73912-3-1/6
    We have determined that factors (6) and (7) are unhelpful in analyzing
    child hearsay statements. In re Dependency of S.S., 
    61 Wash. App. 488
    , 498, 
    814 P.2d 204
    (1991). Similarly, we have determined that factor (8) is already
    embraced in factor (5), and that factor (9) calls for reconsideration of the other
    factors. State v. Borland, 
    57 Wash. App. 7
    , 19-20, 
    786 P.2d 810
    (1990). Thus, no
    particular Ryan factor determines the reliability of child hearsay, but, rather, the
    Ryan factors must be considered in light of the totality of the circumstances.
    State v. Young, 
    62 Wash. App. 895
    , 902, 
    802 P.2d 829
    , 
    817 P.2d 412
    (1991).
    T.S.T. asserts that the trial court misapplied the Ryan factors when it
    found that (1) A.W. did not have a motive to lie, (2) A.W.'s statements to Fry and
    Webster were "spontaneous," and (3) A.W.'s statements were corroborated by
    McMillon's observations during T.S.T.'s visit. We address each factor in turn.
    T.S.T. first contends that A.W. had a motive to lie during her initial
    disclosure to her mother because McMillon told A.W. that she could not go to bed
    until she admitted that T.S.T. abused her.
    The trial court found that McMillon had no motive to get T.S.T. in trouble.
    McMillon voluntarily went out of her way to spend time with T.S.T., both visiting
    T.S.T. while she was in detention and inviting T.S.T. to her house for the
    weekend. With that in mind, the trial court found that McMillon would not try and
    convince A.W. to lie about the sexual abuse. A.W. only admitted what happened
    after her mother assured A.W. that she would not get in trouble, which the trial
    court found to weigh in favor of A.W.'s admission being truthful. Based on the
    No. 73912-3-1/7
    evidence before it, the trial court properly determined that A.W. had no apparent
    motive to lie.
    T.S.T. next contends that A.W.'s statements to Fry and Webster were not
    spontaneous. This is so, she asserts, both because A.W.'s statements were
    made in response to questioning and because A.W.'s disclosures to Fry and
    Webster cannot be considered independent from the first disclosure to her
    mother.
    For the purpose of analyzing this factor, a declaration is considered to be
    spontaneous if it is made in response to questions that are not leading or
    suggestive. 
    Young, 62 Wash. App. at 901
    . The trial court herein properly found
    that A.W.'s disclosures to Fry and Webster were spontaneous. Both Fry and
    Webster asked A.W. open-ended questions that did not assume facts, and
    A.W.'s responses were consistent and detailed. Because A.W.'s statements
    were made in response to questions by Fry and Webster that were not leading or
    suggestive, the statements were properly classified as spontaneous.
    Although T.S.T. asserts that it is impossible to consider the declarations
    made to Fry and Webster independent from the declaration made to McMillon
    because the disclosures were made less than one day apart, T.S.T. cites to no
    authority to support this assertion. We have previously held that a child's
    statements to multiple people over time, when the statements are substantially
    similar, evidences reliability. State v. Kennealv, 
    151 Wash. App. 861
    , 883, 
    214 P.3d 200
    (2009). Moreover, A.W.'s statements to Fry and Webster shortly after
    her initial disclosure to McMillon were consistent with the trial court's reliability
    -7
    No. 73912-3-1/8
    ruling, as it reduces the chance that A.W.'s recollection was faulty. See State v.
    Swan, 
    114 Wash. 2d 613
    , 651, 
    790 P.2d 610
    (1990) ("[Bjecause the child's
    statements . . . were made soon after the event and were consistent with
    statements made to her aunt and mother, the possibility that she was speaking
    from faulty recollection was remote.").
    Finally, T.S.T. contends that the trial court erred by considering evidence
    that tended to corroborate the crime itself rather than the circumstances
    surrounding A.W.'s statements. This is so, she asserts, because the trial court
    considered McMillon's observations important, notwithstanding that McMillon's
    observations corroborated the crime itself rather than the circumstances
    surrounding the disclosure.
    Reliability of child hearsay statements must be determined by considering
    the circumstances surrounding the statements themselves, not evidence tending
    to corroborate the crime. 
    Ryan, 103 Wash. 2d at 174
    . Although the trial court
    herein did state that McMillon's statements corroborated what A.W. told Webster,
    this is but one of many factors that the court considered before ruling that the
    disclosures were reliable.
    In making the determination that A.W.'s hearsay statements were reliable,
    the trial court carefully analyzed the circumstances surrounding the statements.
    The court first found that A.W. had no motive to lie. Although A.W. was, at first,
    reluctant to tell her mother what happened with T.S.T., the court found that this
    reluctance was because A.W. did not want to get in trouble. It was only after
    McMillon assured A.W. that she would not get in trouble that A.W. revealed what
    8-
    No. 73912-3-1/9
    happened. Additionally, the court found that McMillon had no reason to convince
    A.W. to say these things—McMillon had gone out of her way to visit T.S.T. and
    would have no reason to get T.S.T. in trouble.
    The trial court next found that A.W.'s statements to Fry and Webster were
    spontaneous, as the statements were made in response to open-ended
    questioning. The court also found that the statements to Fry and Webster were
    consistent with each other and with A.W.'s initial disclosure to McMillon. That
    A.W. made substantially similar statements to multiple people supports the
    court's ruling that the statements were reliable.
    Finally, the trial court noted that A.W.'s statements to Webster about what
    happened between her and T.S.T. were consistent with what McMillon observed.
    The consistency between A.W.'s statements and the observations made by
    McMillon extend beyond the crime itself. For example, the trial court noted that
    A.W. told Webster that T.S.T. came over on Friday, and that nothing happened
    between her and T.S.T. on Sunday. The consistency between A.W.'s statements
    and McMillon's observations, beyond the crime itself, support the trial court's
    ruling that A.W.'s statements were reliable.
    Consideration of the reliability of child hearsay statements requires an
    overall evaluation of the Ryan factors. The trial court demonstrated that it
    sufficiently considered these factors before ruling that A.W.'s statements were
    admissible.
    No. 73912-3-1/10
    Affirmed.
    We concur:
    13r Ace 6+
    10