Siemon v. Stoughton

Decision Date07 July 1981
Citation440 A.2d 210,184 Conn. 547
CourtConnecticut Supreme Court
PartiesCharles SIEMON v. George D. STOUGHTON. Charles SIEMON v. WARDEN.

Hubert J. Santos, Hartford, for appellant (plaintiff).

Arnold M. Schwolsky, Asst. State's Atty., with whom, on the brief, was, John Bailey, State's Atty., for appellee (defendant).

Before BOGDANSKI, C. J., and PETERS, HEALEY, ARMENTANO and WRIGHT, JJ.

BOGDANSKI, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff was found guilty of the crime of deviate sexual intercourse in the first degree. On appeal, this court affirmed his conviction in State v. Siemon, 172 Conn. 19, 372 A.2d 140 (1976). Thereafter the plaintiff moved for a new trial and also filed a writ of habeas corpus alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court granted the motion for a new trial but denied the writ of habeas corpus. The defendant has appealed from the granting of the new trial and the plaintiff has appealed the denial of the writ of habeas corpus.

The facts as developed at trial are: On March 17, 1975, the victim was a sixteen-year-old girl who lived in East Hartford with her parents, two sisters and a fifteen-year-old brother. In the early evening of March 17, 1975, the victim, her brother and her ten-year-old sister were playing on property in their neighborhood. The two girls locked their brother in an unused chicken coop. Thereafter a naked man appeared and sexually assaulted the victim. Both the brother, because he was able to see through openings in the chicken coop, and the sister saw the attack. Some fifteen days later, after being seen in an automobile in front of the victim's home, the plaintiff was arrested. He claimed to have been looking for someone in that vicinity.

All three children testified at the trial. The brother testified that the assailant's hair was "brownish brown tan," 1 he had a "big nose," "a little goatee," a mustache and curly hair. The victim described him as having a beard, wide nose, brown hair and no accent. The sister testified that he had a "funny nose" and "long, curly, wavy hair." In the courtroom all three identified the plaintiff as the assailant. The plaintiff speaks with a Spanish accent.

The plaintiff contends that the court-appointed public defender provided ineffective assistance of counsel prior to and during his trial. One basis for this claim is that the trial lawyer did not investigate an incident alleged to have occurred on Silver Place in East Hartford in 1974, less than one year before the present assault. The earlier incident is described in a report made by East Hartford police officer DeBastiani on March 19, 1975. On that date Joseph Wengzn came to police headquarters wanting to know why police officers were present at his mother's home on Silver Place in East Hartford. Officer DeBastiani explained that the department was investigating a case in that area. The officer asked him if he or his family had seen anyone in the area who would fit the description of the assailant. Wengzn then told officer DeBastiani that, during the previous summer, his sister, Mrs. Fitzpatrick, came upon the property on Silver Place, and saw a nude white man with some sort of a beard approaching her elderly mother. At Fitzpatrick's exclamations the man fled the scene. In his report the officer wrote, "(i)f this is so it maybe is the same person who did assault victim in this case."

After reading the police records the state's investigator, Detective Ventura, called Wengzn. Wengzn stated that his mother was somewhat senile and that she and his sister lived in seclusion on the property. He had indicated to his mother and sister that they should speak to the police. They took the attitude that this was not their problem. Wengzn felt that because of their attitudes and the amount of time that had lapsed, their testimony would be of no value. The investigator prepared a memorandum of his observations, which was placed in the state's attorney's file.

An investigator assigned to the public defender's office testified at the habeas proceeding. He testified that he advised the plaintiff's lawyer that the earlier East Hartford incident was relevant to the case. His advice, however, was not taken and the public defender told him not to interview Fitzpatrick.

The public defender was aware of this information. He had access to the state's files. He did not pursue this item because of a determination that it would be of no consequence. This was based upon the report that the elderly lady was senile and that she and her daughter wished not to involve themselves. His decision was also based upon the proposition that he had a strong case notwithstanding this evidence. 2

The first time anyone interviewed Fitzpatrick was on June 22, 1979, when the plaintiff's present counsel visited her at Silver Place in East Hartford. She testified, at the habeas hearing, that her home and property occupy approximately six and one-half acres and are surrounded by fields and woods. Fitzpatrick further testified that in the summer of 1974 she saw a white, nude male standing behind her mother in her garden on Silver Place. Thereafter she saw this same nude male twice on her property. On one occasion he was riding a bicycle and told her he was looking for his dog. On that occasion she testified that she did not detect a Spanish accent. Fitzpatrick described the person as being between the ages of sixteen and twenty-two and as having black hair. She was shown a number of photographs, four of which were photographs of the plaintiff. She could not identify any of the persons depicted in the photographs as the white, nude male she saw in the summer of 1974.

Also introduced at the habeas hearing was a composite drawing prepared by the East Hartford police based on interviews with the three children. A pencil sketch prepared by the victim's brother was also introduced. Both sketches depict the person as having a beard or goatee. The composite describes the person as having black hair. This sketch matches the description of the nude man.

In addition to claiming that his court-appointed public defender failed to investigate adequately the 1974 nude man incident, the plaintiff claims that his attorney failed to investigate adequately the victim's mental and emotional condition.

In 1975, Detective Ventura spoke to the victim's mother. The mother indicated that her daughter was a "borderline retard" but that she felt that her daughter would have no problem in testifying. She stated that the child is incapable of telling lies but could be confused if the defense attorney deliberately chose to confuse her. Detective Ventura recorded this information in his memo which was placed in the state's attorney's file. Other than a telephone call to the victim's school, the plaintiff's lawyer did not pursue this matter. He made no effort to examine her school records. He did not interview the professionals with whom she was involved and he instructed his investigator not to pursue this line of defense.

There was little reference to the victim's mental condition at the criminal trial. The victim's mother testified that her daughter was in a special education class in the East Hartford public school system ; but that her I.Q. was "close to normal"; that her daughter was incapable of fabrication; that she became confused as to measures of distance; and that she was quite good at identifying people.

At the habeas hearing the plaintiff introduced records which showed that the victim was retarded and mentally and emotionally disturbed. In 1962, at the age of four, she was evaluated at Yale-New Haven Hospital and diagnosed as suffering from "retardation of growth and retardation of psychological development of unknown etiology." In 1964 she was psychologically evaluated at Manchester Hospital and scored an estimated I.Q. of seventy-seven. Some time thereafter her mother removed her from kindergarten, claiming that her daughter suffered a nervous breakdown. Later in 1964 she had another evaluation at the Hartford Health Department and scored an I.Q. of seventy-seven on the Stanford Binet test and seventy-two on the Merril-Palmer Scale.

In 1973 she was referred for a psychological evaluation for numerous reasons including her leaving the school grounds before the school day's end and for stealing from other students. The 1973 evaluation revealed an I.Q. of seventy-four which was characterized as being in the "borderline classifications of intellectual functioning." In addition, the evaluation indicated that the following factors were present in the victim: (1) repression; (2) interference with her powers of abstraction and concentration; (3) tension and anxiety; (4) difficulty in use of analysis and synthesis of ideas to see the total picture-which would indicate maladjustments influenced by inhibitions; (5) disruptions of planning ability and of judgment; and (6) at certain points a significant distance from reality. Her sentence completion test reflected a maladjusted family situation. Another report dated May, 1975, which was before the plaintiff's trial, indicated that the plaintiff was "difficult to contain because of unacceptable behavior i.e. lying ...."

The plaintiff contends that the failure to investigate the nude man information and the victim's mental and emotional background constitutes a denial of the right to effective assistance of counsel in violation of the sixth and fourteenth amendments to the United States constitution and article first § 8 of the constitution of the state of Connecticut.

It is fundamental that a defendant in a criminal matter is guaranteed the right to the assistance of counsel. Gideon v. Wainwright, 372 U.S. 335, 344, 83 S.Ct. 792, 9 L.Ed.2d 799 (1963). The right to counsel is the right to the effective assistance of counsel. McMann v. Richardson, 397 U.S. 759, 771 n.14, 90 S.Ct. 1441, 25 L.Ed.2d 763 (1970); Reece v. Georgia, 350 U.S....

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