Lytle v. Jordan

2001 NMSC 016, 22 P.3d 666, 130 N.M. 198
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 2001
Docket25,786
StatusPublished
Cited by190 cases

This text of 2001 NMSC 016 (Lytle v. Jordan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lytle v. Jordan, 2001 NMSC 016, 22 P.3d 666, 130 N.M. 198 (N.M. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

SERNA, Chief Justice.

{1} The State appeals from the district court’s grant of Defendant Lloyd Keith Jordan’s petition for writ of habeas corpus on the ground of ineffective assistance of counsel. See Rule 12-102(A)(3) NMRA 2001 (appeal from the granting of writs of habeas corpus taken to the Supreme Court). Jordan was convicted in 1991 of two counts of criminal sexual penetration in the first degree and four counts of criminal sexual contact of a minor in the third degree. Jordan’s convictions were affirmed on direct appeal by the Court of Appeals, State v. Jordan, 116 N.M. 76, 860 P.2d 206 (Ct.App.1993), and this Court subsequently denied his petition for writ of certiorari to the Court of Appeals, State v. Jordan, 115 N.M. 795, 858 P.2d 1274 (1993). Following an evidentiary hearing, the district court found that trial counsel had rendered ineffective assistance of counsel and issued the writ of habeas corpus. We reverse the district court.

I. Facts and Background

{2} Two members of the Public Defender’s office, Jeff Rein and Ralph Odenwald, represented Jordan at trial. The State charged Jordan with two counts of criminal sexual penetration in the first degree and six counts of criminal sexual penetration of a minor in the third degree. Based on pretrial motions, the trial court prohibited Jordan from introducing testimony by the victim’s mother that the victim had previously accused her father of sexual abuse. The trial court allowed the defense to introduce evidence of the victim’s dysfunctional family situation and allowed the prosecution to introduce evidence that Jordan had previously fondled the victim and had also previously exposed himself to the victim from his window. The trial court admitted a statement describing the juvenile adjudication of a prior incident of sexual assault by a juvenile against the victim, but did not allow specific evidence of the incident.

A. The State’s Evidence at Trial

{3} At Jordan’s trial, the State presented the testimony of the victim, who was twelve years old at the time of trial and ten years old at the time of the incident. The victim testified that she and her family lived next door to Jordan and that she, her brother, and her mother lived with Jordan for three days in July of 1989 because her parents had a fight. On the second night of staying with Jordan, while her mother was showering, the victim went into a bedroom with her brother and Jordan, where they told ghost stories. She testified that Jordan told a story about a Mexican man picking up a naked woman, taking her home, and getting on top of her. Jordan suggested to the victim that they act out the ghost story, with him playing the man and her playing the woman. The victim told Jordan that she did not want to do it, but Jordan insisted and started touching her.

{4} The victim testified that Jordan put his finger and tongue inside her vagina, touched her breasts and buttocks with his hands, and rubbed his penis on her vagina and her stomach. The victim also testified that Jordan ejaculated. According to the victim, her brother jumped on Jordan’s back while Jordan was touching her, but Jordan threw him off. Jordan stopped touching the victim once her mother finished her shower. Jordan told the victim not to tell anyone what had happened or they would think she “was a bad girl.” The victim did not tell her mother what had happened that night, but she told her father when he came to Jordan’s trailer the next morning. After the victim’s father called the police and the victim made a statement, the victim and her brother were taken to a foster home and lived apart from their parents for approximately a year* and a half. The victim testified that on a previous occasion Jordan put his hand under her bathing suit in a swimming pool and that Jordan had repeatedly exposed himself to her while he was standing at a window in his trailer across from the victim’s bedroom window.

{5} The State also introduced the testimony of the victim’s brother, who was eight years old at the time of the incident and ten years old at the time of trial. The victim’s brother testified that he saw Jordan touch the victim’s “private” with his “private.” The victim’s brother also testified that he jumped on Jordan’s back to stop him from hurting his sister.

{6} The victim’s father also testified at trial. He stated that about a year before the incident with which Jordan was charged, the victim told him and her mother about the incident in the swimming pool and about Jordan exposing himself to her through his window. The victim’s father testified that he shaded her window to prevent her from being able to see Jordan. He also stated that he told her to stay away from Jordan and not to go swimming with him in the pool. The victim’s father testified that, against his wishes, the victim’s mother cleaned Jordan’s house. He testified that he had an argument with the victim’s mother about this situation and that she took the children to Jordan’s house. The victim’s father was concerned for the children due to the prior incidents and called the police on the first night of their stay with Jordan, before the event at issue in the present case, to express concern for his children’s safety. The police came to Jordan’s trailer and talked to the victim’s mother and the children. According to the victim’s father, he went over to Jordan’s trailer in the morning two days later and, because of the prior incidents, asked the victim if anything had happened. The victim described to her father Jordan’s sexual conduct toward her while her mother was in the shower.

{7} The State also introduced the testimony of three expert witnesses. The trial court accepted Dr. Geoffrey Sutton as an expert in clinical psychology with a subspeeialty of children. Dr. Sutton performed a psychological screening on the victim and her brother for the Department of Human Services shortly after the incident at Jordan’s trailer: Dr. Sutton testified that the victim’s use of certain terms, such as “middle” instead of vagina, indicated that her description of the incident was that of a child rather than an adult. Dr. Sutton testified that there were several other aspects of the victim’s account of the incident that indicated that it was both reliable and valid, including her ability, despite living in a dysfunctional family, to distinguish fact from fantasy, her consistency in telling different individuals what had occurred, the fact that she had an average long-term memory and an above-average short-term memory, and her strong emotion about the incident two years after it occurred. Dr. Sutton opined that the victim had not been coached with respect to the incident involving Jordan, and he testified that, due to the amount of anger and emotion still present in her two years after the event, it was unlikely that she could have fabricated the story.

{8} The State also introduced the testimony of Dr. Carol Geil, whom the trial court accepted as an expert in pediatric medicine and child sexual abuse. Dr. Geil testified that she performed a physical examination of the victim the day after the incident with Jordan. For purposes of treatment, the victim told Dr. Geil a version of the incident similar to one related during her testimony. The victim then demonstrated to Dr. Geil where Jordan had touched her by using anatomically correct dolls provided by Dr. Geil.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 NMSC 016, 22 P.3d 666, 130 N.M. 198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lytle-v-jordan-nm-2001.