Corky Joe Maurer v. Minnesota Department of Corrections

32 F.3d 1286
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 1994
Docket93-3653
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 32 F.3d 1286 (Corky Joe Maurer v. Minnesota Department of Corrections) 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
Corky Joe Maurer v. Minnesota Department of Corrections, 32 F.3d 1286 (8th Cir. 1994).

Opinions

BEAM, Circuit Judge.

Corky Joe Maurer was convicted, after a 1991 Minnesota jury trial, of criminal sexual conduct of the third degree and sentenced to 48 months imprisonment. He appealed to the Minnesota Court of Appeals, arguing that the victim’s witnesses were allowed to vouch for her sincerity, and that such vouching had deprived him of a fair trial. That court reversed his conviction. The Supreme Court of Minnesota later reinstated the conviction, finding the error harmless. Maurer then filed this petition for a writ of habeas corpus under 28 U.S.C. § 2254. After considering the petition, the magistrate judge recommended that the writ be granted. The district court disagreed and denied the writ. Maurer appeals and we reverse.

I. BACKGROUND

This case of alleged acquaintance or date rape arose in the following context.1 The events of the evening in question began at about 8:00 p.m., in Redwood Falls, Minnesota, when L.S. joined some of her friends, including Maurer, in visiting various bars in a rented limousine. The group finally finished the evening at a dance. L.S. and Maurer ended up with the same ride home. They went to Maurer’s trailer, where the alleged rape took place.

During the limousine ride, L.S.’s friend, Sperl, sat in Maurer’s lap. Maurer unhooked Sperl’s bra, squeezed her breasts, and rubbed his hands between her legs. When L.S. complainéd that her bra was bothering her, Maurer unhooked it for her at Sperl’s behest. Everyone, including L.S., was drinking beer during the limousine ride. After the group returned the limousine, Sperl, her sister, and L.S. followed Maurer to his trailer in Sperl’s car, and brought him to the dance. Sperl testified that Maurer’s advances were unwanted and that she was sore later from resisting him, but her sister and others testified that Sperl seemed to be using Maurer’s attentions to arouse the jealousy of the dance host, her erstwhile boyfriend, Ei-[1288]*1288sel. At the dance, Maurer became angry when Sperl danced with another man. Eisel intervened, and Maurer calmed down.

L.S. and Maurer then started dancing, lifting their shirts and flashing their chests at one another. At about 1:00 a.m., L.S. decided to go home. She had consumed twelve beers during the night, and was getting tired. Sperl refused to give L.S. a ride home. Maurer could not find a ride home either. Eventually another friend, Sanson, offered to give both L.S. and Maurer a ride. Sperl told L.S. not to go with Maurer. L.S. and Maurer hugged and kissed during the ride. They both exited Hanson’s truck at Maurer’s trailer, waved good-bye and walked inside hand-in-hand. Once inside, they continued kissing on the couch and eventually had intercourse. The only dispute is whether their ensuing intercourse was consensual or whether Maurer purposefully intimidated L.S. into the act through his demeanor and tone of voice.

The two versions of what happened inside the trailer are remarkably similar. According to L.S., once inside, Maurer took his shirt off. He and L.S. began kissing on the couch. L.S. reminded Maurer that she wanted to go home and that he had promised her a ride home. L.S. told Maurer “that kissing was fine, but [she] did [not] want to go any further,” to which Maurer replied she “would like it.” Maurer disrobed L.S. while she again told him that she wanted to go home. He pulled her on top of him, and they had intercourse for about twenty minutes. L.S. testified that Maurer did not have an orgasm. She testified that although she did not want to have intercourse, she did not seriously resist Maurer. She also testified that she had once been badly beaten by her ex-husband and was afraid Maurer would hurt her if she made him angry by resisting. L.S. testified that Maurer permitted her to get off of him after she refused his request for oral sex.

L.S. dressed and asked Maurer for a ride home. He refused. L.S. called a taxi, but thought the price too high. She decided to walk home. Once outside, she realized it was too cold and the walk too far. She returned, and again asked Maurer for a ride home. He refused again, so she took a taxi anyway. She left in the cab at about 3:00 a.m. She testified that she was hysterical and told the cab driver that she had been raped.

Sperl and L.S. lived in the same apartment complex. From the taxi, L.S. went to Sperl’s home. Sperl had just arrived with Eisel. L.S. was visibly upset. At Sperl’s suggestion, L.S. said that Maurer had raped her. She also “babbled” about her boyfriend and how she did not want him to find out about what had happened with Maurer. L.S. said she did not want Sperl to call the police because she did not want her children to find out either. L.S. went home with a friend, and Sperl and Eisel went to the police station. An officer went to L.S.’s home and took a statement at about 4:30 a.m. She was crying when the officer arrived. There was no bruising or trauma on her body. Her clothing apparently was not torn. Officers arrested Maurer that morning. They also interviewed the now-deceased cab driver who said that L.S. had not told him that she had been raped.

Maurer testified that during the ride home in Hanson’s truck, L.S. asked Maurer if she could stay with him. He told her that would be fine. After arriving at the trailer, L.S. and Maurer sat on the couch discussing the evening and having several more drinks. They subsequently engaged in mutual foreplay and had consensual intercourse. Maurer testified that during the sex act, L.S. abruptly changed her mind about continuing. She disengaged and they dressed. She requested a ride home and became angry when he declined due to his intoxication and fear of a receiving a D.W.I. citation. When L.S. became further upset over the price of a cab, Maurer offered to split the cost with her. After she left, he smoked a cigarette, went to bed, and was awakened the next morning by police.

The trial was essentially a credibility contest between Maurer and L.S. To bolster L.S.’s credibility, the prosecution, over the defense’s continuing objections, asked each of the four prosecution witnesses to whom L.S. complained of rape whether L.S. seemed sin[1289]*1289cere when she said she was raped.2 Each witness replied that L.S. was sincere. In closing, the prosecution went through these witnesses’ testimony and emphasized that they considered L.S.’s complaint of rape to be sincere.

Maurer claims that the trial court’s admission of the “vouching” testimony and admission of other crimes evidence denied him due process of law.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Vouching Testimony

Maurer contends that the prosecution witnesses’ testimony that L.S. was sincere, and the prosecution’s use of that testimony, rendered his trial fundamentally unfair. The Minnesota courts have decided, and the state concedes, that the trial court erred in allowing such “vouching” testimony. See State v. Maurer, 491 N.W.2d 661, 662 (Minn.1992); see also United States v. Azure, 801 F.2d 386, 340-41 (8th Cir.1986) (it is hornbook law that opinion testimony as to the credibility of a particular statement is inadmissible and invades the jury’s exclusive province of determining the credibility and weight of any evidence). We, however, do not concern ourselves with state evidentiary errors on habe-as.

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Bluebook (online)
32 F.3d 1286, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corky-joe-maurer-v-minnesota-department-of-corrections-ca8-1994.