Marshall v. State

812 So. 2d 1068, 2001 WL 291176
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 27, 2001
Docket2000-KA-00518-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 812 So. 2d 1068 (Marshall 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
Marshall v. State, 812 So. 2d 1068, 2001 WL 291176 (Mich. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 1070

¶ 1. Willie C. Marshall was indicted by the grand jury on two counts: Count I-capital rape and Count II-sexual battery. The State elected to call up Count II-sexual battery for trial. Marshall filed a pre-trial motion to suppress his statement given to law enforcement officers with the Circuit Court of Tallahatchie County, Mississippi. The motion was denied.

¶ 2. Following a jury trial on February 7-9, 2000, Honorable Andrew C. Baker presiding, Marshall was convicted of the crime of sexual battery. Marshall was thereafter sentenced to twenty years in the custody of the Mississippi Department of Corrections, with five years suspended pending good behavior. Marshall appeals from his conviction citing the following issues to be addressed:

1. Whether the trial court erred in overruling Marshall's motion to suppress his statements to law enforcement officers confessing to the sexual battery of the victim?

2. Whether the trial court erred in allowing inadmissible hearsay during the State's case in chief?

FACTS
¶ 3. Marshall was found guilty by a jury of his peers of the crime of sexual battery against a female child, D.B., who was ten years old at the time of the incident. The jury heard testimony that D.B. and D.B.'s mother had, in the past, seen Marshall loitering around the area close to their home, hanging out and smoking cigarettes. Evidence was also presented at trial that, on the afternoon of Friday, October 16, 1998, while D.B. was on her way home from school, Marshall came out from behind some bushes and accosted D.B. Marshall dragged D.B. into the bushes with him, laid her face down on the ground and penetrated her anus with his penis. D.B. described the events by saying that Marshall touched her private parts with his private part and that he put his private part into her bottom.

¶ 4. D.B. testified that she did not tell anyone what had happened to her until the *Page 1071 following Monday. At that time, she disclosed how she was accosted and raped by Marshall to her school nurse, Sherry Petit. Petit then called D.B.'s mother and asked her to come to the school. Petit also called the police department to tell them what had happened to D.B. and the identity of Marshall, whom D.B. had accused of the sexual battery against her. Upon the mother's arrival at the school that Monday, Petit repeated D.B.'s account of the ordeal to D.B.'s mother. D.B.'s mother immediately took her daughter to the hospital for examination. There, D.B. encountered Debra Beavers, an emergency room nurse, and Angela Blount, a medical technologist, who both examined D.B. and listened to D.B. communicate, yet again, what Marshall had done to her the previous Friday. D.B. also disclosed this information to Linda Chidester, a medical doctor who began seeing D.B. as a patient on October 21, 1998. Chidester was tendered as an expert witness for the State in the field of family medicine with a special emphasis in the area of child sexual abuse.

¶ 5. Hearings were held outside the presence of the jury to determine whether the statements of Petit, Beavers, Blount and Chidester were admissible at trial under exceptions to the hearsay rule. After hearing arguments from both the prosecution and defense, the trial court held that the testimony of these witnesses were admissible under M.R.E. 803(4), the medical diagnosis exception and 803(25), the tender years exception. The testimony of Petit, Beavers, Blount and Chidester regarding what D.B. had told them about the events of October 16, 1998, including the identity of Marshall, was subsequently heard by the jury. The statements of these four witnesses recounting D.B.'s version of the events revealed that D.B. had been consistent in her account of the incident that took place on October 16, 1998. It was also declared that, from a medical standpoint, D.B. suffered from trauma associated with the sexual battery and exhibited definite signs of a child who has been sexually abused.

¶ 6. The jury also heard the testimony of John Page, a deputy with the Tallahatchie County Sheriff's Department. Page was the officer involved in the investigation of D.B.'s complaint against Marshall. Page testified that Marshall was arrested and placed in jail for his crime against D.B. on October 19, 1998. Page further stated that on October 21, 1998, he was told by a trusty that Marshall wanted to speak with him. Page testified that after Marshall was brought to see him, Page gave Marshall his Miranda warnings before Marshall began to talk. There was no testimony or other evidence that Marshall ever asked for the presence of his attorney before he gave his statement to Page. Page testified that Marshall waived his Miranda rights in writing and then began to confess to having sex with D.B. on October 16, 1998. Page stated that, at the time that Marshall was giving this statement, Marshall appeared to be coherent and showed no signs of being under the influence of any drugs or medication. He testified that Marshall had not been threatened or coerced into confessing to the crime of sexual battery against D.B. or making any other statements. After Marshall's confession was typed and Page read the contents to Marshall paragraph by paragraph, Marshall signed the confession voluntarily.

¶ 7. Marshall now claims that he did not give the confession knowingly and voluntarily. Rather, he asserts that he was under the influence of medication, specifically Mellaril, a drug that he revealed had been prescribed for him for his mental well-being. Marshall contends that because of this drug, he did not know what he was signing and he did not know he was *Page 1072 executing something that would "hurt" him. He therefore claims that his confession should be suppressed. However, Page testified that he was not aware that any medications had been given to Marshall in the two days that Marshall had been in jail. Marshall admitted that he had not been given Mellaril or any other drug while in jail for those two days, but still charges that the drug was still in his system and that, as a result, he was not in a lucid state when he signed the confession presented to him and read to him by Page. The trial judge denied Marshall's pre-trial motion to suppress his confession. The jury weighed the conflicting testimony of Page and Marshall and apparently found that Page was the more credible witness. After hearing all the testimony and evidence presented to them, the jury returned with a guilty verdict against Marshall for the crime of sexual battery.

STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶ 8. Where the lower court has denied a defendant's motion to suppress his confession, this Court is confined to certain limits in our scope of review. Greenlee v. State, 725 So.2d 816, 825 (Miss. 1998);McGowan v. State, 706 So.2d 231, 235 (Miss. 1997); Morgan v. State,681 So.2d 82, 87 (Miss. 1996). In resolving the question of admissibility of such a confession, this Court may reverse the trial court's ruling only when that ruling is "manifestly in error or contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence." McGowan, 706 So.2d at 235 (quotingWhite v. State,

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Bluebook (online)
812 So. 2d 1068, 2001 WL 291176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marshall-v-state-missctapp-2001.