Born v. State

633 P.2d 1021, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedSeptember 10, 1981
Docket5095
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 633 P.2d 1021 (Born v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Born v. State, 633 P.2d 1021, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 148 (Ala. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal brought by Daniel Born following conviction by a jury of the crime of rape. At issue is the conflicting testimony presented at trial concerning the offense.

On the evening of June 11,1979, M.I. met Daniel Born by shooting a few games of pool with him in the Savoy Bar in Fairbanks. Born was there with a friend, Brad Morton. Around closing time, M.I. agreed to Born’s suggestion that they go snort some coke. Born asked M.I. to ask her friend M.H. if she wanted to come along with Born, Morton and M.I., which M.H. agreed to do. All four had been drinking at the Savoy Bar; they stopped at another bar for a drink; and finally they stopped at a liquor store for some vodka. They proceeded to Born’s mother’s house on Farmer’s Loop Road where everybody smoked some marijuana and snorted some cocaine. Then M.H. and Morton disappeared into a bedroom, leaving M.I. and Born alone in the living room. There is little dispute as to the facts stated thus far; at this point, however, accounts of the events occurring on that night diverge.

Born’s account of what transpired indicates that no rape was committed. According to Born, after M.H. and Morton left the living room, he and M.I. went into another bedroom and engaged in consensual intercourse. They then returned to the living room and M.I. noticed that some money was missing from her purse. She accused Born of taking it, which he denied, and they began to fight and call each other names. Born admitted that in the course of the fight, he grabbed M.I. by the throat and may have caused bruises. After the fight, Born went into the other bedroom to ask M.H. and Morton if they knew about the money, but he became distracted when he found M.H. there alone; he ended up having sex with her.

Born maintains that Morton and M.I. then came into this same bedroom and engaged in an act of intercourse with M.I. on top. After Morton and M.I. had finished, Born attempted anal intercourse with M.I., but when she objected because of discomfort, he withdrew and proceeded to have intercourse vaginally. Afterward, all four went on to Born’s aunt’s apartment, where they had pizza and fell asleep. According to Born, he and M.I. had another argument over the missing money before they left.

M.I.’s account differs significantly from Born’s. According to M.I., when Morton and M.H. left the living room, M.I. asked Born to take her home. Instead, he grabbed her by the neck, forcing her down on the floor and choking her until she could not see. He started to undress her, then led her into a bedroom and had intercourse with her; she was too frightened to protest.

Born left the room. Then Morton came in and had intercourse with M.I.; again she did not protest out of fear. Morton then led M.I. into the other bedroom, where Born was with M.H. Morton went with M.I. to the bed and again began to have intercourse with her, placing M.I. on top of him; at this point he urged Born to “climb on” in back. When Born attempted anal intercourse, M.I. cried out in pain; Born then had vaginal intercourse with her. According to M.I., a short time later everyone left Born’s mother’s house; they went to an apartment in town, from which M.I. escaped when the other three eventually fell asleep. M.I. ran to a nearby house and called a cab. Some time later the next day, M.I. decided to go to the hospital and to make a report to the Alaska State Troopers.

Morton and M.H. also testified, each giving a different version of what transpired. Morton testified that he had intercourse with M.I. only once, in the presence of Born and M.H., after which Born engaged M.I. in *1023 anal intercourse. Morton said he heard no choking, and the first fight he heard between M.I. and Born was when they were cleaning up the apartment after completing their sexual activities. Morton confirmed Born’s observation that all of M.I.’s activities appeared to be consensual.

The testimony of M.H., by contrast, more or less corroborated that of M.I. M.H. testified that she heard a choking sound from another room while she was in one of the bedrooms with Morton, but that Morton prevented her from going to check on M.I. When Born and M.I. later came into the bedroom which she occupied, M.H. pretended to be asleep. She heard what she believed to be sounds of sexual activity, heard M.I. say that it hurt, and believed that M.I. sounded hurt.

Based on M.I.’s report, Daniel Born and Bradford Morton were charged in a four-count indictment with committing several separate acts of rape on M.I. Counts I and II charged Born and Morton respectively with forcible vaginal rape of M.I. The defendants were acquitted by the jury of these two counts. In Count III, Born and Morton were charged with a separate act of forcible vaginal rape of M.I. committed together or with the assistance of one another. A motion for judgment of acquittal was granted as to Count III upon conclusion of the state’s case in chief. In count IV, Born was accused of anal rape and Morton was accused of vaginal rape of M.I., committed together or assisting one another. Morton was acquitted of this count by the jury, but Born was convicted.

After trial, Born twice moved for a judgment NOV, new trial, and acquittal based on inconsistent verdicts, and the motions were denied. Born was sentenced to 20 years imprisonment, which was made consecutive to a five-year sentence received by Born when his parole from a prior rape conviction was revoked as a result of that same incident. Born now appeals both his conviction and sentence.

1. INCONSISTENT VERDICTS

Born contends that the court erred in denying his motion for new trial based on the theory of inconsistent verdicts. Born’s claim is that his acquittal by the jury on count I amounted to a complete rejection of M.I.’s testimony, thus rendering the jury’s verdict on Count IV, finding him guilty of forcible anal intercourse, inconsistent and irrational. Born argues that the force employed is the critical element of the case. If the jury believed M.I.’s version, it would have convicted on all counts; if it believed Born, it would have found that his forcible treatment of M.I. related only to the argument over M.I.’s money and thus would have acquitted on all counts.

Born urges that the purported inconsistency in this case is governed by DeSacia v. State, 469 P.2d 369 (Alaska 1970). In DeSacia, the supreme court found that verdicts were irreconcilably in conflict when the conduct and intent of the defendant was the same as to two victims of a single act, and yet the defendant was acquitted as to one victim and convicted as to the other. 1 The court did not require that all verdicts be strictly consistent, but only that they not be strictly inconsistent. This is clearly distinguishable from the case at bar, where the indictment charged Born with different crimes arising out of related but different sexual incidents. The conduct charged in Counts I and IV was not the same. Furthermore, there is the possibility, as mentioned in DeSacia, that since two separate acts were charged, the defendant’s intent *1024 differed between the two.

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Bluebook (online)
633 P.2d 1021, 1981 Alas. App. LEXIS 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/born-v-state-alaskactapp-1981.