Lattimer v. State

952 So. 2d 206, 2006 WL 1073190
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedApril 25, 2006
Docket2004-KA-00806-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 952 So. 2d 206 (Lattimer v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lattimer v. State, 952 So. 2d 206, 2006 WL 1073190 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

952 So.2d 206 (2006)

Patrick Dean LATTIMER, Appellant
v.
STATE of Mississippi, Appellee.

No. 2004-KA-00806-COA.

Court of Appeals of Mississippi.

April 25, 2006.
Rehearing Denied October 31, 2006.

*209 Matthew Warren Kitchens, James W. Kitchens, Jackson, attorneys for appellant.

Office of the Attorney General by Deirdre McCrory, attorney for appellee.

Before KING, C.J., BARNES and ROBERTS, JJ.

ROBERTS, J., for the Court.

SUMMARY OF THE CASE

¶ 1. On March 16, 2004, a jury sitting before the Walthall County Circuit Court found Patrick Dean Lattimer guilty of two counts of sexual battery. On April 8, 2004, the circuit court sentenced Lattimer to two thirty-year sentences. However, the circuit court modified the two sentences and sentenced Lattimer to twenty years incarceration, to be followed by ten years of post-release supervision. Additionally, the circuit court set the two sentences to run consecutively.

¶ 2. Posttrial, Lattimer filed an unsuccessful motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, alternatively, a motion for new trial. Aggrieved, Lattimer appeals *210 and raises eight issues, listed verbatim:

I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED DURING JURY SELECTION.
II. THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED BY ALLOWING TESTIMONY REGARDING EVIDENCE OF OTHER CRIMES.
III. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED DURING THE TESTIMONY OF KEITH STOVALL.
IV. LATTIMER'S TRIAL ATTORNEY RENDERED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL.
V. THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED IN ALLOWING M.R.E. 803(25) TESTIMONY.
VI. THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED REGARDING JURY INSTRUCTIONS.
VII. THE TRIAL JUDGE ERRED BY DENYING LATTIMER'S DISPOSITIVE MOTIONS BECAUSE THE EVIDENCE ADDUCED WAS INSUFFICIENT TO SUPPORT THE VERDICT.
VIII. THE CUMULATIVE EFFECT OF THE NUMEROUS ERRORS IN THE TRIAL DENIED THE DEFENDANT HIS FUNDAMENTAL RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL.

Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS

¶ 3. Amy lived in Walthall County with her parents, Mark and Ruth, and her two older sisters Cathy and Beth.[1] When Ruth was thirteen years old, she developed a close friendship with a girl named Tuawanna Kennedy. They remained close friends over the years. Ruth married Mark and started a family. Tuawanna married a man named Patrick Lattimer. They both lived in Walthall County, Mississippi.

¶ 4. On Friday July 18, 2003, both Mark and Ruth had to work. Since school was out for the summer, Amy, then ten years old, stayed home with her older sisters, Cathy and Beth. Amy sat in Cathy's bedroom. As Beth played on the computer, Cathy read an article in Seventeen magazine. Having heard mention of the word "rape," Amy asked Cathy, her oldest sister, about the meaning of the word. At trial, Cathy testified that she responded, "it's like when someone touches you where you don't want to be touched." Amy told Cathy that Patrick Lattimer touched her inappropriately on at least three separate occasions.

¶ 5. Cathy telephoned Mark and asked him to come home immediately. Mark was remodeling a house at the time. Mark called Ruth and then drove home. Ruth worked in a medical capacity. Because of the nature of her duties at work, Ruth could not leave immediately. After Ruth talked to Mark, she called Tuawanna. Ruth relayed her conversation with Mark. In response, Tuawanna told Ruth that she was going to talk to Amy.

¶ 6. Tuawanna arrived before Mark. Tuawanna took Amy into Cathy's bedroom and talked to her. Amy told Tuawanna what she said to Cathy. That is, Amy told Tuawanna that her husband molested her. Cathy testified that Tuawanna told them that she loved them and that she was sorry. Tuawanna left before Mark arrived.

¶ 7. That evening, Mark and Ruth spoke with the girls individually and as a family. Amy told Ruth and Mark the same thing she told Cathy and Tuawanna. The following Monday, Amy spoke with Kelli McKenzie, a social worker employed by the Walthall County Department of Human *211 Services. Ms. McKenzie interviewed Amy.

¶ 8. The next day, Mark and Ruth took Amy to speak with Truett Simmons, an investigator with the Walthall County Sheriff's Office. Deputy Simmons did not speak with Amy at that time. Instead, he contacted the Southwest Mississippi Children's Advocacy Center and scheduled an appointment for Amy. During his trial testimony, Deputy Simmons explained why he did not interview Amy that day. Deputy Simmons explained:

if an incident had just occurred and it's necessary for me to talk to the victim, I will, but because the things that occurred were months prior to this, the thing that we do with young children is to really not talk to them unless it's necessary. The Children's Advocacy Center has trained interviewers, specifically trained interviewers, who are trained to talk to children and a lot more in depth than I am trained to.

¶ 9. On July 31, 2003, Keith Stovall, a therapist with the Southwest Mississippi Children's Advocacy Center, interviewed Amy and her sisters. Deputy Simmons and Ms. McKenzie observed that interview from a separate room. Additionally, Mr. Stovall recorded the interviews on videotape.

¶ 10. At trial, the prosecution called Deputy Simmons, Kelli McKenzie, Keith Stovall, Cathy, Mark, Ruth, and Amy as witnesses. Deputy Simmons, Ms. McKenzie, Mr. Stovall, and Cathy all testified under the tender years exception. Additionally, Mr. Stovall testified as an expert witness in the field of forensic interviewing — an interviewing method in which the counsel asks open-ended and non-leading questions to generate an objective and non-suggestive interview. Mark and Ruth testified about the events that led up to trial.

¶ 11. As for Amy, the prosecution asked her about the first time Lattimer touched her inappropriately. Amy testified that she and her sisters were helping Lattimer and his son clean the Lattimer's house. The prosecution then asked Amy to tell the jury what happened during that visit. Amy testified that Lattimer told her two sisters and his son to clean one part of the house. Then, Amy testified:

And I said, what do I do. And he [Lattimer] said, you're going to clean my room with me. I said yes, sir.
I sat on the bed and said what do I do first. And then he came up toward me and started to hump me and then he french kissed me. And then he, then he unzipped the pants, took out his ding dong and he told, and then he put my mouth up to it like that or something and he made me suck it. And then he, then he peed in my hands.
And then he looked out the window and said, Wannie [Tuawanna] is coming. And then he washed my hands out in the sink. And then he opened the door. Dried my hands off with a towel. Before he opened the door, he dried out my hands with a towel.

Amy explained that the events described above happened before Lattimer's youngest son was born.

¶ 12. Next, Amy testified about the second incident. That time, Lattimer's youngest son was an infant. Amy testified that she visited the Lattimers with her sisters. Further, Amy testified that her sisters left with Tuawanna and went to feed a dog at Tuawanna's mother's house. Amy stayed behind because she wanted to visit with Lattimer's infant son. Amy then testified as follows:

Q. What happened after he did that?
*212 A. I think he told me to go to his room, and I did. I went to his room, like he said.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
952 So. 2d 206, 2006 WL 1073190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lattimer-v-state-missctapp-2006.