Commonwealth v. Chong Xiong

630 A.2d 446, 428 Pa. Super. 136, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2697
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 19, 1993
Docket3424
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 630 A.2d 446 (Commonwealth v. Chong Xiong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Chong Xiong, 630 A.2d 446, 428 Pa. Super. 136, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2697 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

[139]*139DEL SOLE, Judge:

This case is presented to our court for the determination of whether Appellant’s trial counsel stipulated to the admissibility of a notation contained in a medical record which stated that the child victim had “no hymen”. We find that Appellant’s counsel did stipulate to the admission of the notation and therefore we hold that Appellant’s claim is waived. Appellant’s related claim of ineffectiveness of trial counsel likewise fails because we hold that the notation at issue was admissible under the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act.

Appellant, Xiong Chong, was convicted of rape and corruption of a minor. The charges stemmed from allegations lodged against him by his twelve year old step daughter. The record reveals that the young victim was born in Thailand and moved to this country with her mother. Shortly thereafter, when the victim was two years of age, Appellant, also a Laotian immigrant, and the victim’s mother, married. During the course of their marriage, they had eight children. Testimony offered at trial, established that the family lived in a four room house and, in accordance with Laotian custom, slept together in one room.

The victim claimed that often during the night, her father would wake her up and sexually molest her. She stated that her mother slept through these incidents and therefore was unaware of the attacks. She also testified that additional acts of molestation occurred in the family’s living room, kitchen and bathroom.

After enduring this abuse for more than three years, the victim told her family’s minister and his wife about the assaults. The couple took the victim to Children’s Hospital in Philadelphia where she was examined in the hospital’s emergency room and subsequently, charges of rape and corrupting the morals of a minor were filed against Appellant. Following a jury trial, Appellant was convicted of all of the charges and was sentenced to a five to ten year term of imprisonment for the rape charges and a one to two year sentence for the [140]*140morals charge. Appellant’s post-trial motions were thereafter denied and he filed the present appeal.

Appellant first claims that he properly preserved, for our review, the issue of whether the trial court erred in allowing the admission of the physician’s report that was prepared in conjunction with the victim’s physical exam, as a business record, where the report indicated that the victim had no hymenal tissue. Appellant alleges that the report was inadmissible under the Uniform Business Records as Evidence Act because it contained opinion evidence rather than merely factual information. Appellant claims that because the treating physician did not testify at trial.regarding the contents of the report, Appellant was denied his constitutional right to confrontation and cross-examination of an adverse witness.

A close examination of the record, however, leads us to the conclusion that Appellant stipulated to the admission of the report into evidence. Just prior to calling a medical expert, Dr. DeJong, to the stand, the Commonwealth sought to enter the victim’s medical record into evidence and Appellant’s counsel objected. Counsel stated that while he was willing to stipulate to the custodian of records’ testimony, he was unwilling to stipulate to admission of the report on the grounds that he had not been afforded the opportunity to cross-examine the doctor who prepared it. A discussion was then held off the record in the trial judge’s chambers and the defense’s motion was denied. The following exchange was then held on the record.

MS. RUIZ: Your Honor, the Commonwealth’s next witness will be Dr. Allan DeJong. However, your Honor, before DeJong actually testifies, there is a stipulation by and between counsel as to [the victim’s] hospital records from the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. And I will read that stipulation to the jury. I don’t know if the Court would like to explain the stipulation first before I read it.
THE COURT: Well, a stipulation, ladies and gentlemen, means that the lawyers agree that if a witness is called, that he or she would testify to the particular facts.
[141]*141Specifically what the lawyers are stipulating or agreeing to is that on — Miss Ruiz will tell you the particular day — that [the victim] went to a particular hospital and these are in fact the medical records that exist as a result of that visit to a hospital.
Go ahead [M]iss Ruiz.
MS. RUIZ: Thank you your Honor. If the custodian of records from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia were to testify that the emergency room records of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia which are six pages are kept in the ordinary course of Children’s Hospital business. And that these records do in fact indicate that [the victim] was seen on March 12, 1990, in the early evening hours.
And that when she was seen in the emergency room, she was seen by a doctor John Pope who conducted a physical exam of [the victim]. And that specifically he did examine the child’s genital area; that is, the vaginal, cervix, the uterus and the rectum, and that the vagina was found—
MR. WILSON: Objection, your Honor. That’s not part of the stipulation.
THE COURT: Miss Ruiz, would you speak to Mr. Wilson and be sure of the exact nature of the stipulation, please.
(Pause.)
MS. RUIZ: Your Honor, could we see you at side bar? THE COURT: Sure.
MS. RUIZ: I think maybe we should go in the back. (The following occurred in chambers:)
THE COURT: Yes.
MS. RUIZ: Your Honor, it is my understanding that the stipulation is that Dr. Pope did a genital examination and found the child had no hymen.
THE COURT: What is the stipulation to your way of thinking?
MR. WILSON: Judge, I understood that what I was objecting to was we have a notation. I don’t know who made the [142]*142notation; that there’s no signature, there’s several names of people who talked to her or examined her.
THE COURT: I have a document in front of me, it’s three pages. This is called the physician’s sexual assault checklist. Page one appears to be a history, page two is a diagram, and that’s the page that no hymen is on, and page three has an impression and the signature of Dr. Pope. It all appears to be in the same handwriting to me.
The medical records are of, I guess, a couple of different categories. There’s emergency department record which— so you’re not stipulating to the fact that he found there to be no hymen because you’re not certain that those are his findings, right?
MR. WILSON: That’s correct, Judge.
THE COURT: Well, assuming it’s reflected in the medical records, isn’t that admissible that there’s no hymen?
MR. WILSON: Judge, I would have no objection to the jury being told that the records have a notation no hymen. THE COURT: Because that notation is admissible that the records have no hymen, period.
MR. WILSON: That’s right.

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Commonwealth v. Chong Xiong
630 A.2d 446 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
630 A.2d 446, 428 Pa. Super. 136, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2697, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-chong-xiong-pasuperct-1993.