JULIAN ROWLAND v. STATE OF MISSOURI

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 16, 2020
DocketSD36154
StatusPublished

This text of JULIAN ROWLAND v. STATE OF MISSOURI (JULIAN ROWLAND v. STATE OF MISSOURI) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JULIAN ROWLAND v. STATE OF MISSOURI, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Missouri Court of Appeals Southern District Division One

JULIAN ROWLAND, ) ) Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD36154 ) STATE OF MISSOURI, ) FILED: June 16, 2020 ) Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF PULASKI COUNTY

Honorable William E. Hickle, Judge

AFFIRMED

After his first trial resulted in a hung jury, Julian Rowland (“Movant”) was tried a second

time on the same charges and found guilty of one count of first-degree rape and two counts of

first-degree sodomy against G.F. Movant thereafter sought and the motion court granted Rule

29.15 1 post-conviction relief (“PCR”) on Movant’s claim that the attorney who represented him

in the underlying criminal proceedings, Daniel Dodson (“trial counsel”), was ineffective for

failing to call Alicia Toothman (“Toothman”) as a witness at Movant’s trial because she could

have provided testimony supporting his defense theory.

1 All rule references are to Missouri Court Rules (2019).

1 The State appeals, asserting in three points that the motion court clearly erred because

Movant 1) failed to prove Toothman would have testified at his trial, 2) failed to overcome the

presumption that defense counsel’s failure to call Toothman as a witness was reasonable trial

strategy, and 3) failed to prove that the absence of Toothman’s trial testimony was prejudicial.

Finding no merit in any of the State’s points, we affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

The criminal charges against Movant alleged generally that, on June 16, 2015, Movant

engaged in acts of sexual intercourse with G.F. by the use of forcible compulsion. At Movant’s

second trial on those charges, the jury heard two different accounts of what transpired between

Movant and G.F. on the date in question. The undisputed facts from both accounts are that G.F,

an employee and representative for a property management company, drove Movant, a

prospective client, in her car to tour various available rental properties. During the tour of one of

the preselected properties, which happened to be vacant, G.F. was showing Movant around and

opened a closet door in a bedroom. Movant then approached G.F. from behind and put his hands

on her waist.

The testimony provided by G.F. and Movant differ as to what then followed. In brief,

G.F. claimed that Movant forcibly subjected her to acts of rape and sodomy, while Movant

claimed that they engaged in a consensual sexual encounter.

Thereafter, G.F and Movant departed the property together and drove to G.F.’s office, a

two-minute drive. Each testified to a different account of what transpired during that drive.

According to G.F., she was tearful but was trying to hold it together because she thought Movant

might try to run away. She claims she did not, however, try to joke or laugh with Movant.

Sometime during the drive, Movant asked if he could get a deal on the apartment. G.F.

responded, “maybe, let me see, I can call George right now” and placed a call to her office, 2 asking for George. G.F. explained that George was not a real person but a code word to be used

when an employee was in trouble or needed help.

The fellow employee who received G.F.’s call testified that the call was placed sometime

around 1:15 p.m. or 1:30 p.m. and described G.F.’s voice as sounding “quivery” during their

conversation.

Movant testified that before G.F. placed her phone call during the drive, he and she were

joking and laughing about their sexual encounter. Movant claimed that, while G.F. was

laughing, he received a phone call from his nurse. It was not until after he got off of the phone

that he asked if G.F. could get him a deal on the apartment, at which point G.F.’s mood changed

and she made the phone call asking for George.

Following the close of all evidence, the jury began their deliberations at 6:33 p.m. on

June 17, 2016. After nearly three hours of deliberation, the jury sent the following note to the

trial court:

After discussion, our jury is not unanimous as to the guilt of Julian Rowland. There are at least 4 of our panel to [sic] disagree that [G.F.] did not give consent to the physical act. Can we as a jury disagree and be considered a “hung jury” or must we decide guilty beyond a reasonable doubt or “not guilty” if we are not unanimous.

At 9:28 p.m., the trial court read the “hammer” instruction, 2 and, at approximately 10:20 p.m.,

the jury returned guilty verdicts on all charged counts.

Following his convictions, the trial court sentenced Movant to three consecutive seven-

year terms of imprisonment. His convictions and sentences were later affirmed on direct appeal

in State v. Rowland, 528 S.W.3d 449 (Mo.App. 2017).

2 See MAI-CR 3d 312.10.

3 Thereafter, Movant filed timely pro se and amended PCR motions. Movant’s amended

PCR motion claimed, in pertinent part, that “Trial counsel was ineffective for failure to

investigate and call [Toothman] as a defense witness” (“IAC claim”). In support of his IAC

claim, Movant alleged that Toothman was the nurse who called Movant’s cell phone while G.F.

was driving Movant back to her office, that Movant informed trial counsel about Toothman and

how to contact her, that Toothman would have testified if called at Movant’s trial that she

overheard a woman laughing in the background during the call with Movant, that a reasonably

competent attorney would have called Toothman to testify because doing so would have

contradicted G.F.’s testimony and corroborated Movant’s testimony, and that a reasonable

probability exists that Movant would not have been convicted had Toothman been called.

The same judge who presided over the two trials involving the underlying charges against

Movant also served as the PCR motion court. An evidentiary hearing on the amended PCR

motion was held at which Movant presented, in pertinent part, testimony from Toothman and

trial counsel addressing the allegations of the IAC claim. 3 Ultimately, the motion court granted

the IAC claim. Its findings of fact and conclusions of law, in pertinent part, were as follows:

[Toothman] testified that had she been subpoenaed and called as a witness at trial, her testimony would be substantially the same as her testimony at post-conviction hearing. She would have testified if called as a witness.

[Trial] counsel failed to exercise the customary skill and diligence that a reasonably competent attorney would exercise under similar circumstances by failing to call [Toothman] as a defense witness to testify at trial. [Toothman]’s testimony would have contradicted G.F.’s testimony that she and Movant were not laughing and joking in the car. Her testimony would have corroborated Movant’s testimony on the crucial, disputed issue of G.F.’s demeanor just minutes after the sexual activity had taken place. The testimony would have supported the defense’s theory of the case that the sexual contact was consensual.

3 The relevant specifics of Toothman’s and trial counsel’s testimonies are detailed throughout our discussion of the State’s three points, infra.

4 Though Movant informed trial counsel of [Toothman]’s whereabouts and of her anticipated testimony, trial counsel failed to call her as a witness and failed to request a continuance to ensure her presence at trial. No reasonable trial strategy accounts for trial counsel’s failure to investigate and call [Toothman] as a witness and Movant was prejudiced by [trial counsel]’s failure to do so.

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