Marshall v. State

643 N.E.2d 957, 1994 Ind. App. LEXIS 1682, 1994 WL 682750
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 8, 1994
Docket27A02-9404-CR-211
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 643 N.E.2d 957 (Marshall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marshall v. State, 643 N.E.2d 957, 1994 Ind. App. LEXIS 1682, 1994 WL 682750 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

ROBERTSON, Judge.

Thomas F. Marshall appeals his conviction of child molesting, a class D felony for which he received a sentence of one and one-half years. Marshall raises the following allegations of error:

I. The trial court committed error in admitting testimony of a prior consistent statement by the alleged victim in a child molesting case.
II. The trial court committed error in failing to grant Marshall's Motion to Correct Error and to order a new trial when it was determined that the State had failed to turn over an exculpatory statement which corresponded with and supported Marshall's defense to allegations of child molestation.
III. The trial court erred in failing to grant Marshall's Motion to Dismiss at the close of the State's case.
IV. The trial court committed error in overruling Marshall's objection to a final instruction which overemphasized that a conviction could be had on the evidence of
only one witness. V. There was insufficient admissible evidence to support the conviction.
VI. The trial court abused its sentencing discretion in failing to grant Marshall a suspended sentence and probation.

We affirm.

The evidence reveals that Marshall was a deputy marshall for the town of Fairmount. He and his family lived a few lots away from the victim and her family in a mobile home park. The victim was a fourteen-year-old girl who occasionally watched Marshall's children. She liked Marshall and thought she could trust him. She felt he cared about her. She eventually confided in him that she had been using marijuana and alcohol. She thought he would help her quit using these substances. She and Marshall then told her mother, and the three arranged to have Marshall counsel the victim about drugs and aleohol as he had for other juveniles.

Early in the 1992 school year, the victim went to Marshall's home for counseling. She and Marshall were the only ones present. Marshall sat in the rocking chair by the couch and told the victim to come over and sit on the sofa. She did so, and sat on the end closest to Marshall. As she sat there with her legs crossed, Marshall told her she did not have to sit like that and uncrossed her legs. He also told her she did not have to sit with her legs so close together and pushed her legs a little further apart. The victim was wearing a knee-length skirt at the time. Marshall then grabbed her ankle and moved her leg while he asked her where her ankle bracelets were. At the same time, Marshall was looking at her skirt.

Marshall asked the victim to do the splits. She tried, but she could not and returned to the couch. Marshall then told the victim to sit on his lap. She did so but did not feel comfo‘rtable about it. She sat there for three *959 or four minutes as Marshall began to rock the chair, moving up and down. As he did so, she felt his penis rub against her tail bone through his sweat pants. At times, his hands were around her waist. The victim was seared, so she got up and went back to the couch.

Marshall then asked the victim to do the splits again; and, as she did so, Marshall lay underneath her and looked up her skirt. He then told her that her panties were crooked and fixed them by placing his fingers inside the elastic part and running his fingers from the front to the back. As he did so, the backs of his hands touched the insides of her thighs. Marshall returned to the rocking chair, and the victim went back to the couch.

Marshall again told the victim to come back over and sit on his lap, and she did so. He then rocked, moving up and down, in the same manner as before. Marshall told her to stand up for a minute, and she complied. When she turned around, she saw that Marshall had his exposed, erect penis in his hand. Marshall told her to sit back down on his lap, and she did so. Marshall pulled her skirt out so her skin or panties were against his lap. She could feel his penis touching her panties and her vagina. Marshall asked the victim if she could get a hold of it. He then put her hand underneath his penis, so she could feel it in her hand. Marshall continued to rock in the chair, and his penis was moving against her hand. Marshall asked her if she liked it, but she did not respond.

The victim then saw a police car approach and heard a car door shut. Officer Dave Nelson had come to visit his fellow officer, and Marshall let him in. The complainant's boyfriend then arrived and told her she was to return home. When the victim saw Marshall the next day, he said he would appreciate it if she did not tell anyone what had happened, that it would be their little secret.

I

The victim told her friend Cassie Curtis about the incident a few weeks later. Marshall claims the trial court erroneously allowed Cassie to testify about what the vietim had told her because it amounted to a prior consistent statement which was hearsay.

The State counters that the statement is not hearsay because it complies with the decision in Modesitt v. State (1991), Ind., 578 N.E.2d 649:

In balance, we hold that, from this point forward, a prior statement is admissible as substantive evidence only if the declarant testifies at trial and is subject to cross examination concerning the statement, and the statement is ... (b) consistent with the declarant's testimony and is offered to rebut an express or implied charge against the declarant of recent fabrication or improper influence or motive ...

Id. at 653-654 (with guidance from Federal Rule 801(d)(1)). This rule was in effect during Marshall's trial.

The parties contest whether the prior consistent statement must have been made before a motive to fabricate arose. The bulk of federal caselaw on the federal rule and the language of recently adopted Ind.Evidence Rule 801(d)(1)(B) establish such a requirement. The State contends that the rule explicitly articulated in Mode-sitt does not. Our supreme court has decided that the requirement exists. See Evans v. State (Ind.1994), 643 N.E.2d 877. The requirement was satisfied in the present case.

The victim testified at trial about having told Cassie of the incident with Marshall. Later, in his own testimony, Marshall claimed the victim had had several motives to fabricate her story. One of the motives was luere: "somebody stated to her that she could get money out of this" (R482, 484). Marshall presented evidence to support this contention. A neighbor of the victim acknowledged that she had talked with the victim "about this Tom Marshall incident" (R.348). When asked whether Marshall had been messing with her, the victim had said, "that he hadn't done anything with her yet, that-she said if he did she would own him" (R.349). The neighbor's husband corroborated the statement, in that the victim had said that "her mother had told her if she would press charges against Tom over the incident that was said that she could own him" (R.355).

*960

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Bluebook (online)
643 N.E.2d 957, 1994 Ind. App. LEXIS 1682, 1994 WL 682750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-state-indctapp-1994.