Harris v. State

195 P.3d 161, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 96, 2008 WL 4757154
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedOctober 31, 2008
DocketA-9548
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 195 P.3d 161 (Harris v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. State, 195 P.3d 161, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 96, 2008 WL 4757154 (Ala. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

The primary issue presented in this appeal is whether, and under what cireumstances, a trial judge has the authority to exclude or restrict expert testimony offered by the defendant in a criminal case if the judge finds that the defense attorney has willfully (that is, purposely) violated the duty imposed by Alaska Criminal Rule 16(c)(4) to disclose that evidence before trial.

Under federal law, a judge clearly has this authority. In Taylor v. Illinois, 484 U.S. 400, 108 S.Ct. 646, 98 L.Ed.2d 798 (1988), the United States Supreme Court upheld a trial judge's exclusion of a defense witness after the defense attorney willfully violated the duty under Illinois law to disclose this witness. 1 The defendant in Taylor argued that the Sixth Amendment absolutely barred the states from exeluding potentially exeulpatory evidence as a penalty for a discovery violation, but the Supreme Court rejected that *165 contention. 2 The defendant in Taylor also argued that it was fundamentally "unfair to visit the sins of the lawyer upon [the] client". 3 The Supreme Court rejected that contention as well:

Putting to one side the exceptional cases in which counsel is ineffective, the client must accept the consequences of the lawyer's decision to forgo cross-examination, to decide not to put certain witnesses on the stand, or to decide not to disclose the identity of certain witnesses in advance of trial. In this case, [the] petitioner has no greater right to disavow his lawyer's decision to conceal [the witness's] identity until after the trial had commenced than he has to disavow the decision to refrain from adducing testimony from the eyewitnesses who were [properly] identified [before triall.

Taylor, 484 U.S. at 418, 108 S.Ct. at 658.

Alaska Criminal Rule 16(c)(d)-the rule that governs a defendant's duty to disclose expert testimony to the government before trial-also explicitly grants trial judges the authority to exclude the expert testimony if the judge concludes (1) that the defense attorney has violated the duty of pre-trial disclosure, and (2) that a continuance is not an adequate remedy for the defense attorney's violation:

Failure to provide timely disclosure under this rule shall entitle the prosecutor to a continuance. If the court finds that a continuance is not an adequate remedy under the circumstances of the case, the court may impose other sanctions, including prohibiting the defendant from calling the expert at trial.

In the present appeal, the defendant makes alternative arguments. First, the defendant argues that his trial attorney did not willfully violate the duty of disclosure imposed by Criminal Rule 16(c)(4). But this is a question of fact. The trial judge expressly found that the defense attorney acted willfally-i.e., that he knowingly violated the duty of disclosure with a conscious motive to handicap the State at trial. The record supports this finding.

Next, the defendant argues that even if his attorney willfully violated Criminal Rule 16(c)(4), the trial judge abused his discretion when the judge concluded that the attorney's violation of the rule could not be adequately remedied by a continuance. But as we explain in this opinion, the defendant's trial had previously been continued, several months before, to give the defense attorney time to comply with Criminal Rule 16(c)(4). Under the cireumstances presented here, it was not an abuse of discretion for the trial judge to conclude that another continuance was not adequate to cure the prejudice to the State and to ensure that there would be no further violations.

Finally, the defendant asks us to reject Taylor as a matter of state constitutional law, and to declare that Alaska Criminal Rule 16(c)(4) is unconstitutional to the extent that it authorizes exelusion or restriction of expert testimony as a sanction for a willful discovery violation. In other words, the defendant asks us to hold that, under the Alaska Constitution, it is never permissible for a trial judge to use exclusion of evidence as a sanction for a defense attorney's violation of the duty of pre-trial disclosure-no matter how egregious the violation, and no matter how much the violation prejudices the government.

But like the statutes enacted by the Alaska Legislature, all rules promulgated by the Alaska Supreme Court are presumed to be constitutional. For the reasons explained in this opinion, we conclude that the defendant has failed to rebut the presumption of constitutionality that attaches to Criminal Rule 16(c)(4).

The underlying criminal allegation

A Juneau grand jury indicted Robert Leo Harris Jr. for both first- and second-degree assault upon an infant. The indictment charged that, sometime between July 1, 2003 (the date of the infant's birth) and October 13, 20083, Harris inflicted brain injury on the infant (first-degree assault) and also broke several of his ribs (second-degree assault). *166 Harris was also indicted on a separate count of second-degree assault for allegedly breaking the infant's arm on November 7, 2003.

The baby was born on July 1, 2008 to Harris and his girlfriend, Shannon Renton. According to the State's evidence, the baby suffered a seizure on the afternoon of October 12, 2008. Just before this seizure, the baby vomited, had a slight fever, and appeared to be "out of it". Then the baby's eyes rolled upward and began to "flicker", the baby's fingers started jerking, and his body began to twitch. Harris and Renton took the baby to the hospital.

At the hospital, a pediatrician administered anti-seizure medicine, and the baby's condition stabilized. However, during the night, the baby again began to seize, and it took a long time to stabilize him. The pediatrician decided to have the baby medevacked to Seattle. In preparation for transporting the baby, x-rays were taken. These x-rays showed that the baby had healing rib fractures.

In Seattle, doctors confirmed that the baby had healing fractures on at least five of his ribs. The doctors also found signs that the baby had been deprived of oxygen for a significant period of time, causing severe and irreversible damage to his brain.

According to the treating physician, unless an infant has been in a car crash or has fallen from a great height, rib fractures of the type observed in this case are most likely caused by non-accidental trauma (ie, physical abuse). Moreover, the location of this baby's fractures was typical for the fractures caused by holding a baby and applying inappropriate pressure to its body. Harris's and Renton's baby was born prematurely. At trial, a physician who reviewed the baby's x-rays acknowledged that premature babies sometimes have problems with weak bones. However, this physician testified that there was no evidence of any abnormalities in this baby's bones that might have caused the rib injuries.

While the baby was being treated in Seattle, the police interviewed Harris's daughter, A.H. The police asked A.H. whether she had ever seen her father or Renton hurt the baby. AH. said no.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P.3d 161, 2008 Alas. App. LEXIS 96, 2008 WL 4757154, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-state-alaskactapp-2008.