Leshe v. State

803 S.W.2d 522, 304 Ark. 442, 1991 Ark. LEXIS 50
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedFebruary 4, 1991
DocketCR 90-171
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 803 S.W.2d 522 (Leshe v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leshe v. State, 803 S.W.2d 522, 304 Ark. 442, 1991 Ark. LEXIS 50 (Ark. 1991).

Opinions

David Newbern, Justice.

The appellant, James Dominic Leshe, was charged with two counts of rape, one by deviate sexual act and the other by sexual intercourse, of his 10-year-old stepdaughter. He was acquitted of the sexual intercourse count and convicted of rape by deviate sexual act. He has stated seven points of appeal. Reversible error occurred when a social worker was allowed to give hearsay evidence of the victim’s statement to her. The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded. We will discuss other points as necessary for guidance in the event of retrial.

1. Sufficiency of the evidence

The state produced sufficient evidence to take the question of Leshe’s guilt to the jury. There was testimony of Ms. Weindorf, an Ashley County social worker, relating a statement of the victim to her that Leshe had engaged the victim in oral intercourse. There was also Ms. Weindorf s testimony and that of Deputy Sheriff Harris that Leshe, when confronted with Ms. Weindorf s statement of what the child had said, made a statement which could have been considered inculpatory. The problems here are with the admissibility of that evidence, but we do not consider trial errors until after we have determined sufficiency of the evidence, including that which perhaps should not have been before the jury. Harris v. State, 284 Ark. 247, 681 S.W.2d 334 (1984).

2. Hearsay testimony of victim’s statement

The trial occurred on March 21,1990. On the previous day, the prosecution notified Leshe’s counsel that the victim might not be present to testify and thus the state would rely on the testimony of Ms. Weindorf. When the trial began, Leshe’s lawyer moved in limine to disallow Ms. Weindorf s testimony on the ground that it was hearsay. He asserted that the state could not show that the witness was unavailable and claimed that Leshe’s right to confront the witness was at stake.

At a hearing on the motion, Ms. Weindorf stated she knew the victim and her mother had moved from Ashley County, where the offense allegedly occurred, to Desha County, where the victim’s mother had married a man named Streeter, and then to the State of Mississippi. She had this information a month before the trial date. Ms. Campbell, a Desha County social worker to whom the case file had been transferred, testified that she obtained the address of the victim and her mother in Leland, Mississippi, and had a Mississippi social worker check on the family. She said the Mississippi social worker said she went to the address where she found the victim, her mother, and Leshe. Ms. Campbell’s information was, however, that Leshe was living in Greenville, Mississippi. Ms. Campbell notified the prosecutor of the victim’s Mississippi address around February 12, 1990.

The case had been set for trial in mid-February but was continued at the defendant’s request. An employee of the prosecutor testified that in February the victim’s mother called the office to say she wanted to drop the charges. At a hearing in connection with the first trial setting, the prosecution asked the court to require Leshe’s counsel to assure the presence of the victim when the trial was reset. The request was refused.

It was clear that the prosecutor knew more than a month before the second trial date that his witness had moved out of the state and he might have a problem getting her to appear.

A Deputy Circuit Clerk for Ashley County testified that the prosecutor’s office requested that a subpoena for the victim and her mother be mailed to a middle school in Mississippi. It was placed in the U.S. mail, without a request for a receipt upon delivery, on March 16, 1990. The prosecutor stated that the school principal had agreed to deliver the subpoena but it was not received by him. The prosecutor also stated that he knew from talking to Mississippi officials that Leshe was living with the victim and her mother and would show that Leshe’s influence was the reason the victim was not present to testify.

A deputy sheriff from Mississippi testified that he was told by the victim’s mother that Leshe was living with her in Mississippi.

The court found that the victim was living in a household with her mother and Leshe and was thus not in a position to exercise her desire to testify. He also stated the Confrontation Clause was not a problem because the victim had made statements to different persons, and “that to me, constitutes reliability.”

a. Rule 804(b)(5)

i. Unavailability

The argument of the state at the trial and here is that the witness was unavailable and thus Ms. Weindorf s hearsay testimony could be admitted under ARE 804(b)(5) which makes an exception if the declarant is unavailable as a witness and there are circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness equivalent to those stated for other exceptions.

In Holloway v. State, 268 Ark. 24, 594 S.W.2d 2 (1980), this court stated it was error to permit introduction of testimony from a prior trial because the state had dallied too long in its pursuit of the witness for the second trial to use the uniform act by which witnesses are obtained from other states for criminal trials. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-43-403 (1987). The state’s failure to utilize the uniform act procedure when it could have done so was also held fatal to an attempt to substitute hearsay evidence in Doles v. State, 275 Ark. 448, 631 S.W.2d 281 (1982).

While a trial court has discretion in determining whether a witness is “unavailable,” that discretion is not unlimited. Bussard v. State, 300 Ark. 174, 778 S.W.2d 213 (1989). In this case no effort whatever was made to serve a subpoena on the state’s key witness at her Mississippi address which was readily available. There was no “good faith effort” of which the Supreme Court wrote in Barber v. Page, 390 U.S. 719 (1968), and of which we wrote in Satterfield v. State, 248 Ark. 395, 451 S.W.2d 730 (1970). The trial court erred in finding the victim was unavailable in these circumstances.

if. Reliability

The state argues that the hearsay evidence was admissible under Rule 803(24) if not under Rule 804(b)(5). The former rule is identical to the latter with the exception that the latter contains the unavailability requirement. Both require “equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness.”

It was error to conclude that because the child allegedly had made statements about being abused to “others” that the narrative read to the court by Ms. Weindorf was reliable evidence of what the child had said. The court’s remark about the child having made the accusation to others than Ms. Weindorf related to the general reliability of the child. The court’s concern, however, must be with respect to the reliability of the statement reported by Ms. Weindorf. As we pointed out in Ward v. State, 298 Ark. 448, 770 S.W.2d 109

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Leshe v. State
803 S.W.2d 522 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1991)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
803 S.W.2d 522, 304 Ark. 442, 1991 Ark. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leshe-v-state-ark-1991.