Fuller v. State

363 P.3d 373, 303 Kan. 478, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 1021
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 23, 2015
Docket108714
StatusPublished
Cited by65 cases

This text of 363 P.3d 373 (Fuller v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fuller v. State, 363 P.3d 373, 303 Kan. 478, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 1021 (kan 2015).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beier, J.:

Defendant Raymond Fuller challenges the Court of Appeals’ decision affirming the district court judge’s denial of his K.S.A. 60-1507 motion alleging ineffective assistance of counsel. Fuller argues that he was blindsided by his lawyer’s aggressive questioning of him during his trial for rape, aggravated sexual *480 battery, and aggravated burglary. He also challenges his lawyers failure to call a witness who would have testified about the victim’s flirtatious nature, and he asserts his lawyer had a conflict of interest at a hearing on a motion for new trial.

We recognize the conflict that existed between Fuller and his lawyer at the hearing on the motion for new trial and we fashion an appropriate remedy. We reject Fullers other appellate arguments.

Factual and Procedural Background

The charges against Fuller were based on allegations made by his next-door neighbor, C.K., after an encounter in C.K. s home. Fuller admitted to sexual contact with C.K., but he defended on the basis that the contact was consensual.

The Court of Appeals panel summarized the conflicting trial testimony as follows:

“Fuller and the victim, C.K., were neighbors who had sporadic contact prior to the incident which resulted in charges against Fuller.... [T]he day prior to the incident, C.K. helped Fuller jump-start his vehicle. . ..
[[Image here]]
“C.K. testified that at the time Fuller rang her doorbell, she was in her bathrobe and talking on tire phone with her friend Brenon Odie. Her two children, ages 3 years and 22 months, were at home with her. C.K. told Odie to call her back in a few minutes and then stuck her head outside the door and told Fuller to ‘give [her] a minute.’ C.K. went to her bedroom to put some clothes on. Without C.K.’s permission, Fuller entered the house and walked into her bedroom doorway and told C.K., 1 like what I’m looking at.’ Startled and caught off-guard, C.K. asked Fuller to give her ‘just a minute’ and directed him to wait in the living room. Fuller complied.
“C.K. finished dressing and went to the living room, where she seated herself f[a]rthest from Fuller on the couch. C.K.’s children were also with them in the living room. Fuller told C.K. diat he had some photographs on his cell phone that he wanted to show her. C.K. leaned across the couch and saw that the photographs were of Fuller’s penis. As she leaned over, Fuller grabbed C.K.’s hair and pulled her head toward[] his lap. He then pulled C.K.’s shirt down, exposing her chest, and grabbed her breast. After removing his hand from her chest, Fuller put his hand inside C.K.’s shorts and placed his fingers inside her vagna.
“The encounter ended when the phone rang and C.K. answered it. Although it was Odie calling her back, C.K. told Fuller that her husband was on the phone, and that her husband knew Fuller was there and Fuller should ‘get the hell out of here.’ Fuller left, but only after telling C.K. that he would kill her if she told anyone what happened. C.K. then told Odie what had happened.
*481 [[Image here]]
“Fuller testified that after he rang the doorbell, C.K. smiled and invited him in, and the two made ‘small talk’ as they walked to C.K.’s bedroom. Once in the bedroom, C.K. dropped her bathrobe and exposed herself to Fuller. Fuller retreated to the couch because the presence of C.K.’s children in the bedroom made him feel ‘weird.’ C.K. joined him on the couch and[,] after they talked briefly, C.K. exposed her vagina to him. Fuller admitted he placed his finger in C.K.’s vagina, but testified tlrat C.K. smiled after he did so. Fuller then began performing oral sex on C.K. but stopped because the children were nearby. C.K. told Fuller she liked having her hair pulled, so Fuller playfully pulled her hair. Fuller agreed that the encounter ended when C.K.’s phone rang.” State v. Fuller, No. 100,026, 2009 WL 4639506, at °1-2 (Kan. App. 2009) (unpublished opinion).

After Fullers jury convicted him as charged, his lawyer, Quentin Pittman, filed a motion for new trial and a motion for judgment of acquittal, both attacking the sufficiency of the evidence. Fuller also filed a pro se motion, which the district judge construed as a motion for new trial, in which Fuller raised issues related to members of his jury. At the hearing on the motions, Pittman described the trial as “extremely clean.” The district judge ruled that sufficient evidence supported the convictions and denied the two motions Pittman had filed.

The district judge then turned to Fullers motion. Pittman suggested that Fuller should argue his motion because “we kind of get into a mine field.” Fullers oral statement included issues beyond those in his written motion. He argued that his jury was not impartial, that the State had violated an order in limine, and that Pittman had failed to put on evidence in Fullers defense. When the judge asked Pittman if he had anything to add to Fullers argument, Pittman said that he had “a slightly different take on those issues.” Pittman then defended his decisions about the evidence to put on at trial as strategic calls properly within the province of defense counsel. Pittman also defended his juror selections as strategic decisions and said he thought Fuller might “be mistaken in his recollection of several things.”

Characterizing Fuller’s arguments as allegations of ineffective assistance of counsel, the district judge concluded that—“for the reasons expressed by Mr. Pittman”—the challenged decisions qualified as trial strategy and did not support a finding of ineffective assistance of counsel.

*482 On direct appeal before the Court of Appeals, Fuller asserted that “his trial counsel was so grossly ineffective that he entirely failed to subject the prosecution’s case to meaningful adversarial testing,” Fuller, 2009 WL 4639506 at *1, supporting this assertion with specific arguments different from those he raised before the district court. In particular, Fuller attacked Pittmans tone during Fullers direct examination at trial and Pittmans failure to advocate for Fuller at his motion for new trial hearing. 2009 WL 4639506, at *5. A panel of the Court of Appeals declined to address the allegations because the record on appeal was not sufficiently developed, but it noted that “some of Fullers allegations, viewed from a cold record, are troubling.” 2009 WL 4639506, at *5. The panel said that Fuller could challenge Pittman’s effectiveness through a later motion under K.S.A. 60-1507.

As contemplated by the panel, Fuller filed a K.S.A. 60-1507 motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 P.3d 373, 303 Kan. 478, 2015 Kan. LEXIS 1021, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-state-kan-2015.