Bruce McCafferty v. Walter Leapley, Warden, South Dakota State Penitentiary, and Roger Tellinghuisen, Attorney General of the State of South Dakota

944 F.2d 445
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 22, 1991
Docket90-5594
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 944 F.2d 445 (Bruce McCafferty v. Walter Leapley, Warden, South Dakota State Penitentiary, and Roger Tellinghuisen, Attorney General of the State of South Dakota) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bruce McCafferty v. Walter Leapley, Warden, South Dakota State Penitentiary, and Roger Tellinghuisen, Attorney General of the State of South Dakota, 944 F.2d 445 (8th Cir. 1991).

Opinion

*447 LARSON, Senior District Judge.

Defendant Bruce McCafferty appeals from the district court’s 1 dismissal of his petition for a writ of habeas corpus. McCafferty was convicted of knowingly engaging in sexual contact with a child under fifteen years of age, in violation of South Dakota Codified Laws § 22-22-7. The conviction stemmed from an investigation which began when a kindergarten teacher observed a hickey on S.F., the daughter of the woman that the defendant was living with at the time. When the teacher asked S.F. what had happened to her neck, the girl, who called the defendant her “daddy,” replied, “[m]y daddy sucked on it.”

Further questioning by S.F.’s special education teacher elicited responses from S.F. that revealed an unusual level of knowledge about sexual matters. S.F.’s responses also further implicated defendant in these activities. Because of the nature of S.F.’s responses, school officials contacted police and requested that a psychologist talk to S.F. In response to their request, Dr. Mary Curran, a clinical psychologist and Director of Psychological Services in Clinical Training for Catholic Family Services, came to S.F.’s school on May 3, 1983. S.F. recognized Dr. Curran, 2 and came running, up across the playground to meet her. Based on the interview with S.F. that day, Dr. Curran believed that the defendant had engaged- in various sexual behaviors with S.F.

The defendant was interviewed by police the same day S.F. saw Dr. Curran. After being informed of his rights and questioned for a short time, the defendant composed his own written statement and signed it. In the statement, the defendant indicated that he had a “fatherly” relationship with S.F. Defendant stated that when he saw the hickey on S.F.’s neck, he assumed it had resulted from a “nip” he had given her when they were playing a game. In describing his “nightly routine” of tucking S.F. into bed, defendant stated:

In [S.F.’s] room, I give her a kiss, she then arches her back and says, “Here is your tush,” I give her bottom a pinch and then leave, turning off the light. On this nightly routine I may have inserted my finger into her vagina while pinching her bottom but I declare I have never done so knowingly.

S.F. was unable to testify meaningfully at trial, and the district court allowed her special education teacher and Dr. Curran to testify concerning what S.F. had told them. Defendant argues this testimony violated his sixth amendment right to confront the witnesses against him. Defendant further claims his right to due process was violated when (1) the court allowed testimony which defendant claims amounted to a “stamp of believability” on S.F.’s statements; (2) the court allowed the prosecutor to ask, in cross-examination, whether the defendant had ever been convicted of a felony; and (3) the court refused defendant’s request for a court-appointed psychiatrist to examine S.F. for the defense.

I.

Prior to trial, defendant moved to exclude as hearsay all statements S.F. had made to others concerning the alleged abuse. The trial court denied the motion, and the first witness in defendant’s trial was S.F.’s mother, Debby. Debby testified that S.F. became very close to the defendant after he moved into her home in 1982 and called him “daddy.” Debby testified that S.F. told her that her daddy had sucked her on the neck and was involved in other “touching” incidents, but the prosecutor did not ask Debby to describe any of these incidents.

S.F. was called to the stand next. She had been questioned by counsel and the court in chambers for purposes of determining her competency to testify, and the *448 court had ruled she was a competent witness who understood the difference between telling the truth and telling a lie. S.F. was unable to respond to many of counsel’s preliminary questions, however, and was excused before any questions regarding the alleged abuse were asked. 3

Elizabeth Zeplin, S.F.’s kindergarten teacher, told the jury how she had noticed a mark on S.F.’s neck when S.F. came into her classroom on the morning of May 2, 1983. When Zeplin asked S.F. what happened to her neck, S.F. said, “My daddy sucked on it.” Zeplin did not talk with S.F. further about the mark, because the bell had rung and the room was full of children. Zeplin, who had been a teacher for thirty-nine years, described S.F. as someone who often needed extra help, who would become confused and upset when she was confronted with a subject or task she had trouble comprehending.

S.F.’s preschool teacher, Pam Haugland, spoke with S.F. in more detail about the defendant’s actions. Haugland testified that she had known S.F. since 1980, when S.F. began to attend Haugland’s preschool program for developmentally disabled children. When S.F. began kindergarten in the fall of 1982, she would attend kindergarten class in the morning and then go to preschool classes with Haugland in the afternoon. S.F.’s kindergarten teacher had spoken with Haugland at noon about the hickey on S.F.’s neck, and Haugland testified she “was asked to see, to go a little further and see what the mark on her neck was. To see if [S.F.] would open up and tell me anything more.”

Haugland then testified about her conversation with S.F. She indicated that she took S.F. on her lap in her classroom that afternoon,

And I said, “how did you get that on your neck?” And she said, “Well, my daddy sucked me there.” And I said, “Show me.” And she showed me on “me.”

Haugland then took some ordinary dolls she had in her playroom and S.F. demonstrated the same behavior with the dolls. After they played some more with the dolls, S.F. responded to Haugland’s question, “[s]how me where you touch daddy and where daddy touches you,” by demonstrating lots of long hugs and long kisses over all parts of the dolls’ bodies. During this time, Haugland testified, “she was just talking and she put the [S.F.] doll on the daddy doll and told me this is how she could sit on her daddy’s weenie.” When Haugland inquired further about whether her daddy “ever put anything in her,” S.F. said “no,” and Haugland accepted this statement without further questioning.

Dr. Curran’s testimony began with a brief description of her first contact with S.F., when S.F.’s mother was in prison. She then described how S.F. ran to meet her on the playground on May 3, 1983, and asked about the bird S.F. had seen on one of her visits to Dr. Curran’s office. Once alone in the classroom with S.F., Dr. Cur-ran began to tape record their conversation. After some preliminary .discussion and play with Dr. Curran’s dolls, 4 Dr. Cur-ran testified that she asked S.F. about the *449 hickey on her neck. In response to the question, “Where did that come from?,” S.F. replied, “Daddy bit it,” and later “Daddy sucked it.” S.F. then talked further about “playing house and kisses, you know, that she and daddy plays [sic] house and daddy kisses her. And ...

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Bluebook (online)
944 F.2d 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-mccafferty-v-walter-leapley-warden-south-dakota-state-ca8-1991.