Brian Nelson v. Catherine Farrey

874 F.2d 1222
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1989
Docket88-2292
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 874 F.2d 1222 (Brian Nelson v. Catherine Farrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brian Nelson v. Catherine Farrey, 874 F.2d 1222 (7th Cir. 1989).

Opinions

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

A Wisconsin jury convicted Brian Nelson of first-degree sexual assault on his daughter, “T.,” who had been three years old at the time of the crime. The judge sentenced Nelson to five years in prison. After exhausting his state remedies, see State v. Nelson, 138 Wis.2d 418, 406 N.W.2d 385 (1987), Nelson sought federal habeas corpus. The district court held that he had been convicted in violation of his rights under the confrontation clause of the Sixth Amendment (“In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him”). 688 F.Supp. 1304 (E.D.Wis.1988). T. had not testified at Nelson’s trial, but statements that she had made to a psychologist had been admitted into evidence through the psychologist’s testimony, improperly in the district judge’s view. The state appeals.

A growing sensitivity to the prevalence of child abuse in our society has caused an upsurge of prosecutions. See generally Note, To Keep the Balance True: The Case of Coy v. Iowa, 40 Hastings L. J. 437 (1989). Such prosecutions place a strain on traditional notions of procedural justice. See, e.g., Mosteller, Child Sexual Abuse and Statements for the Purpose of Medical Diagnosis or Treatment, 67 N.C.L. Rev. 257 (1989); Tuerkheimer, Convictions Through Hearsay in Child Sexual Abuse Cases: A Logical Progression Back to Square One, 72 Marq.L.Rev. 47 (1988). This is especially so when, as in the present case, the crime has left no physical traces, the child is very young and is directly or indirectly the principal witness against the alleged abuser, and the case involves incest, thus pitting child against parent.

Brian and Susan Nelson, T.’s parents, were divorced in 1982, when T. was two years old. Susan received custody of the child, and Brian received visitation rights. According to Susan Nelson’s testimony, beginning in August 1983 T. would become apprehensive and even hysterical when Brian Nelson came to pick her up. After one of the visits T. begged her mother not to make her go to her father’s house again. By October, T. would go “berserk” when told she was going to her father’s house; she would cry and scream and beg not to be forced to go. The visits ceased for a time but resumed around Christmas. Shortly after their resumption, T. tried to pull her mother’s pants down while playing tag, explaining that daddy had taught her to play tag this way. T. also insisted to her mother that a picture of Michael Jackson, the popular singer, be brought into the bathroom to watch her. T. pointed to her vagina and said that Michael Jackson doesn’t look like this and “daddy doesn’t look like this either.” When her mother asked her how she knew this, T. replied, “I pulled his underpants down.” Susan told T. it must have been an accident, but T. insisted that daddy had told her to pull down his underpants and that it was all right because Cheryl (the defendant’s new wife) was not at home. T.’s visits to her father now ceased for good. Suspecting that Nelson was sexually abusing T., Susan retained Dr. Donald McLean, a clinical psychologist whose name Susan had been given by the domestic relations court when she had asked the court whether she “had to force” T. to visit Brian Nelson.

All this was according to Susan Nelson, to whose testimony the defendant did not object. The spotlight now switches to Dr. McLean, who testified for the state as an [1225]*1225expert witness and whose testimony was objected to on the grounds both that it was inadmissible hearsay and that its admission infringed Nelson’s constitutional right to confront his accuser.

McLean had held 59 evaluation and treatment sessions with T. between January and September 1984. (The sessions ended on the eve of Brian Nelson’s criminal trial; he had been indicted in April.) The sessions were conducted mainly in McLean’s “play therapy room,” which was equipped with dolls and other toys. “Play therapy” is an established technique for obtaining information about the feelings and problems of young children. See, e.g., Axline, Play Therapy: The Inner Dynamics of Childhood (1947). According to McLean’s testimony, T. revealed at several sessions that (in his words) she had “touched daddy where he went to the bathroom.” McLean placed “anatomically correct” male and female dolls in the play therapy room and T. in one of the early sessions placed the female doll’s face against the male doll’s genitalia and said, “she gets mud on her face.” Asked what she meant, she replied, “it’s white and sticky.” T. told McLean that her father had told her not to talk about the incident and also had told her to say that Mitch (Mitchell Blada, who had moved in with Susan after the divorce) had done it.

McLean related the following conversation he had had with T. at one of the sessions: “Do yon pull someone’s underpants down and touch him where he goes to the bathroom, and the child said yes ... and I said, well, who is it that you touch where he goes to the bathroom, and the child answered Mitch. And I said you told me it was Daddy. Was it Mitch or Daddy, and the child said Daddy. And I said then why did you say Mitch, and she said it was Mitch, and I said then it was not Daddy. She said it was Daddy, then Mitch, then Daddy, and she answered with he told me to say it was Mitch. I said who told you to say it was Mitch. She said Daddy.” When Dr. McLean asked T. whether she would tell only the truth to anyone who talked to her, she replied, “I don’t have to tell the truth.” McLean further testified that throughout the sessions T. was very anxious, and that she was both reluctant to talk about the incidents involving her father and very hostile to him. At one session, after again describing fellatio with her father in the bathroom, she became extremely agitated and said she was “mad” at her father. She began beating the male anatomically correct doll and throwing it around the room. She said she was beating “Daddy Brian.”

The state called another clinical psychologist, Dr. Burton Silberglitt, as an expert witness. The defendant did not object to his testimony, which was based on a single interview with T. in March 1984. Dr. Sil-berglitt testified that T. had tried to avoid discussing her father because, in his words, it was “discomforting to her and frightening to her and traumatic to her to get into this.” She had, however, told Silberglitt that she “played with his thing that he put in the toilet.” Silberglitt also testified that T. had said, referring to her father, that “whatever came out of his pants was sticking out, and [she] indicated to me, you know, made a motion of an erect penis.” He also testified that T. was very agitated and required therapy. Another witness who testified for the state without objection was a social worker, Mary Anne Jensen. She testified that in January 1984 T. had drawn a picture of herself and her father. The picture, which was admitted into evidence without objection, depicts the defendant as an erect penis.

When the state rested its case, Nelson moved for dismissal on the ground that the testimony about what T. had said was hearsay and that the state had failed to show that T. was unavailable to testify either in person or, at the very least, through a videotape of the play therapy sessions; therefore the admission of the hearsay violated his right of confrontation.

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874 F.2d 1222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brian-nelson-v-catherine-farrey-ca7-1989.