Deberry v. State

457 A.2d 744, 1983 Del. LEXIS 386
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedJanuary 27, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by110 cases

This text of 457 A.2d 744 (Deberry v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deberry v. State, 457 A.2d 744, 1983 Del. LEXIS 386 (Del. 1983).

Opinion

MOORE, Justice:

The defendant, Tony T. Deberry, challenges his convictions in the Superior Court for first degree rape (11 Del.C. § 764), first degree kidnapping (11 Del.C. § 783A), and possession of a deadly weapon during the commission of a felony (11 Del.C. § 1447). He has been sentenced to life imprisonment.

Deberry first contends that reversible error occurred when the State did not produce or account for potentially exculpatory evidence. We agree and reverse since this deprived Deberry of evidence to which he was entitled under Superior Court Criminal Rule 16(b) and Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83, 83 S.Ct. 1194, 10 L.Ed.2d 215 (1963). He also argues that the victim’s out-of-court identification should have been suppressed, but in our opinion the identification evidence was properly admitted. Because the kidnapping and weapons charges necessarily depend upon the rape conviction and cannot stand independently of it, we reverse all of the convictions and remand the case for a new trial, subject to certain conditions.

I.

A.

The alleged victim, Beverly, and Deberry were both employed by Delaware Park racetrack during the summer of 1980. The State’s evidence was that on August 14, 1980, Beverly, her boyfriend, Mark, and De-berry had been attending a party which began about 12:30 or 1:00 p.m. on the track premises. People were drinking all afternoon and taking drugs. As the party went on into the night, Mark became involved in several fights, and on one occasion Deberry helped break up an altercation. After-wards Deberry invited Beverly and Mark to his room to calm down from these incidents. There, they continued to drink and take drugs. According to Beverly, Deberry tried to persuade her to spend the night with him. Soon after Deberry’s proposition, Beverly went to another bunkhouse to sleep with two other men, one of whom Mark had fought earlier. Mark accompanied her but decided to sleep outside because of his earlier fight with one of the occupants.

Beverly claims she was awakened by De-berry shortly after falling asleep. She told him to leave, and he did so. Sometime later she was again awakened by Deberry, who was attempting to pull her pants off. This time Deberry put a knife to Beverly’s throat. When she saw the knife, she supposedly grabbed for it and cut several fingers.

Beverly and Deberry then went about one hundred yards from the bunkhouse to a spot behind a barn. He threatened to kill her if she screamed, and he ordered her to undress. After partially undressing, Deber-ry had intercourse with her. They spent about thirty minutes behind the barn when Deberry began to fear discovery. He ordered Beverly to dress and led her at knife point to a more secluded area outside the track enclosure. To reach this location, they had to pass a guard station, where a guard observed two people leave the track. When they reached the second spot, Deber-ry made Beverly undress, and for an hour or more they had intercourse.

The two then returned to the track complex. The guard at the gate asked for and examined their employee identification cards. When they separated, Deberry warned Beverly not to mention the incident. Returning to her boyfriend, Beverly woke him to take her to the hospital to have her hand treated (which later required sutures). On the way out of the track complex, she told him that Deberry had raped her. The police were called and arrived about ten minutes later. Beverly explained what happened and led them immediately to Deberry’s bunkhouse. An officer went inside and brought Deberry to the door. Beverly was sitting in a police car about 20-30 feet from Deberry, and the ear’s headlights were aimed toward the door in which Deberry stood. A policeman asked *748 her if Deberry was the assailant, and she answered without hesitation that he was.

Deberry’s version of the facts was that after accompanying Beverly and Mark to the bunkhouse where she wanted to sleep, both Deberry and Mark bedded down outside her door. However, the ground was damp, and after a few minutes he returned to his own bunkhouse where he promptly went to sleep. The next thing he knew was when he was awakened by the police. He has consistently denied any participation in the alleged attack on Beverly.

B.

In a pre-trial discovery request, the defense asked for the following:

3. A list of all books, papers, documents or tangible objects in the possession of the State pursuant to its investigation of the above-captioned case.
******
5. All information and materials in the possession of the State which fall within the scope of Brady v. Maryland ... and its progeny as to the defendant in the above-captioned ease.

The State replied that there were no objects in its possession, and that there was no Brady material.

Immediately before the start of Deberry’s first trial (which resulted in a mistrial), the defense inquired about production of the clothes Deberry wore during the alleged attack. The clothing was of obvious relevance since the likelihood of Beverly’s blood being found on it was very strong. She and the defendant purportedly had intercourse in two places for IV2 hours or longer; she claimed to have been cut when Deberry awoke her; and the injury was severe enough to require stitches several hours later. Under such circumstances the defense argued that Deberry could not avoid getting Beverly’s blood on his clothes if he in fact was her assailant. Counsel asked the court to determine if the clothing was available, and he indicated that the defendant would seek dismissal of the charges if these items were not produced.

In response to the defense allegation that the presence or absence of blood on Deber-ry’s clothing was material to the case, the prosecutor stated that he was unaware of any blood found on Deberry’s clothes. The trial judge observed that if the presence of blood was at issue, testimony that there was no blood on the clothing would be an acceptable substitute for the actual clothing. However, the judge’s ultimate ruling went only to the scope of testimony about the injury on Beverly’s hand, rather than the potentially exculpatory effect of the absence of blood on Deberry’s clothes. 1 The prosecutor was also directed to determine if the clothing was available and to so advise the defense. The clothing, however, was not found.

At the second trial, one state police detective testified, consistent with his testimony at Deberry’s first trial, that a detective assigned to the evidence unit took Deberry’s clothing and the victim’s clothing. The evidence unit detective, however, testified that Deberry’s clothing had not been seized and had not been sent to the FBI for analysis. Furthermore, he did not know what had happened to those items. Deberry testified that the police took all of his clothing from his room. He never returned there, having been incarcerated since his arrest. Thus, he *749 states that the police have had full control over his personal effects since that night.

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457 A.2d 744, 1983 Del. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deberry-v-state-del-1983.