James v. State
Decision Date | 14 August 1985 |
Docket Number | No. 1-984,1-984 |
Citation | 481 N.E.2d 417 |
Parties | Nolan L. JAMES, Defendant-Appellant, v. STATE of Indiana, Plaintiff-Appellee. A 224. |
Court | Indiana Appellate Court |
Robert Canada, Evansville, for defendant-appellant.
Linley E. Pearson, Atty. Gen., Michael Gene Worden, Deputy Atty. Gen., Indianapolis, for plaintiff-appellee.
Defendant-appellant, Nolan L. James (James), was convicted of child molesting under IND.CODE 35-42-4-3(b), a Class C felony, by a Vanderburgh Circuit Court jury. From a sentence of five years, with probation and work release, he appeals.
We reverse.
On May 9, 1983, M.J., age ten years, made a taped statement to a police woman stating she was sexually molested by her father, defendant Nolan L. James. The statement disclosed that she lived with James, her mother Vickie, and a brother, age seven years. Her father, she related, had fondled her private parts and had induced her to fondle his private parts regularly over a period of five years. At James' request, some of the alleged fondling by M.J. included masturbation and acts of fellatio. On April 21, 1983, at 6:30 a.m., M.J. stated he came to her room in the home, took off his clothing, took off her clothing and wanted her to touch his penis. She did not want to, but he seized her hand and forced her to touch it, though she resisted. He also touched her vaginal area. She screamed, and her brother woke up as James hurriedly dressed and left the room. Previously she had been afraid to tell anyone because her father had said she wouldn't live if she did. However, on this occasion she did tell her mother, Vickie, who accosted James. James denied the act and said that M.J. was lying. M.J. told this story to her mother, foster parents, and the police woman. James was charged on the facts which occurred on April 21.
However, at trial, M.J. admitted to making the statement, but denied that it was true. The taped statement was then admitted into evidence under the Patterson rule. M.J. first told her brother she had lied, then told her mother. She also denied the truth of the statement to a clinical psychologist with whom she was in counsel. Her in-court testimony revealed that the source of the story was from two neighbor girls, ages eight and six years, who had told her that their uncle had similarly molested them. M.J. stated she told her mother this story because she did not think her mother and father loved her and that her mother did not love her father. She denied being afraid of her father or having been coerced by him to change her testimony.
At trial, Vickie testified that M.J. had told her that James had molested her. Vickie was convinced at the time, but at trial did not feel that he had. However, she admitted to making an out of court statement to the police wherein she allegedly stated that James admitted to the fondling, but denied the acts of fellatio. She stated that her answer was misinterpreted and it was meant that James did not admit to the fondling, but merely never denied it in her presence. She additionally stated that she told the grand jury, sitting in August, that M.J. had repudiated her story on June 16, 1983.
The neighbor children and their mother denied telling M.J. any story about an uncle molesting them.
The only issue is whether substantial evidence of probative value was presented from which the jury could infer that the repudiated statement admitted under the Patterson exception to the hearsay rule was credible.
Parties do not contend on appeal that the acknowledged out of court statement made by M.J. was inadmissible, or that it could not be used as substantive evidence to be utilized by the jury in performing its function as a fact finder. See Patterson v. State, (1975) 263 Ind. 55, 324 N.E.2d 482. The argument here centers around the holding in Peckinpaugh v. State, (1983) Ind., 447 N.E.2d 576. There the court said:
Peckinpaugh, which Justice Prentice acknowledged to be "a close case", involved a father's criminal deviate conduct and the molesting of his minor children. At trial the minor victims repudiated their out of court statements which were then admitted under Patterson. These statements constituted the only evidence of corpus delicti and identification. After making the above quoted statement, the court found corroboration in: (1) flight; (2) independent evidence consisting of defendant's admissions that he had sexually abused all of his children, prior complaints of children, and attempts to fondle others including the children's friends; and (3) intimidation of the minor victims to change their story. Each of these components supported the Patterson statements. The court concluded:
The State contends that corroborative evidence exists in the present case. We will discuss it in turn.
1. The State argues that Vickie made an out of court statement to officers that James admitted to her that he had fondled M.J. The truth of this statement was denied by Vickie at the trial. The out of court statement is as follows:
A. He admitted to the fond ... let's go back to some dates.
Q. Okay.
A. Uh, Tuesday, last Tuesday, we had a hearing.
Q. That was what date?
A. The tenth.
Q. Of May?
A. M-m-h-m.
Q. Okay.
A. And he had called to see how that went and I was angry and I told him that he better get himself an attorney and I told him that he had several charges against him and I had asked about the oral sex part that [M.L.] didn't say anything to me about it.
Q. What did he say?
A. He denied the oral sex but he did not the other.
Q. The fondling.
A. The fondling, right."
Vickie's in-court testimony was that she had misunderstood the question, and that James had never admitted to her that he had fondled M.J. Further, she had never asked him whether or not he did. The main issue was the oral sex, and he denied this. Vickie also stated that the incompleted word "fond ..." on the tape occurred when she realized her answer was incorrect. Different parts of her statement show that he denied it at all times. She also stated that at the initial confrontation on April 21 there was an emotional scene, and amid shouting and screaming he said, "There is no sense in replying, 'cause you're going to believe her anyway".
The corroborative evidence to show that the out of court statements are credible thus consists of a second layer of a Patterson statement. Vickie's in-court testimony flatly denied any admission by James...
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