McGill v. State

18 P.3d 77, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 114246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedFebruary 9, 2001
DocketA-7218
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 18 P.3d 77 (McGill v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGill v. State, 18 P.3d 77, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 114246 (Ala. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

*79 OPINION

STEWART, Judge.

A jury convicted Tracy J. McGill of first-degree sexual assault. 1 McGill argues that the superior court erroneously admitted evidence of his prior bad acts. McGill also contends that a jury instruction was faulty. We conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the challenged evidence, or, at worst, committed harmless error. We further conclude that the instruction was not an abuse of disceretion. Therefore, we affirm.

Facts and proceedings

On November 7, 1997, Priscilla Dayton called the Fairbanks police and reported that a woman was being sexually assaulted outside Dayton's apartment door. Fairbanks Police Officer Burlyn Rigdon responded to Dayton's apartment complex and found McGill and C.S. in the stairwell outside Dayton's apartment, apparently having sexual intercourse. McGill stood when he saw Officer Rigdon and pulled up his pants. McGill told Officer Rigdon that he and C.S. were having sex. C.S. was erying and was "pretty hysterical."

C.S. was transported to Fairbanks Memorial Hospital where she was examined by a nurse. The nurse found that C.S. had injuries consistent with non-consensual sex. The grand jury indicted McGill on one count of first-degree sexual assault.

Discussion

The admissibility of McGill's prior bad acts

C.S. testified at trial that she met Sandra Davis, McGill's girlfriend, at a bar where they spent the evening of November 6 drinking,. C.S. also had a small amount of crack cocaine. Not long before the 2:00 a.m. bar closing, C.S. and Davis went to Davis's apartment. McGill arrived there a short time later, and McGill and Davis immediately began arguing. Davis told McGill to leave and picked up the phone, but McGill took the phone from her. Davis left the apartment stating that she would call the police.

McGill left the apartment. C.S. followed McGill, apparently because she had no other way to get home and wanted to share a cab with him. McQill entered another apartment building nearby, purportedly to use a friend's phone. After C.S. and McGill entered the other building, McGill grabbed C.S. by the legs, pulled her onto the stairs, and sexually assaulted her.

Dayton, whose apartment was adjacent to the stairs, heard a woman "screaming and hollering" and hitting up against the wall. Dayton heard the woman say "get off me" and "somebody please help." At times the woman's voice was muffled, as if someone was covering her mouth. Dayton also heard a male voice say "wait, wait, I'm almost done." Dayton testified that she hesitated for a few minutes before calling the police because she did not want to get involved.

McGill defended by claiming that C.S. consented to have sex with him in exchange for crack cocaine. McGill called Davis to the stand. Davis testified that after McGill arrived at her apartment, C.S. sat on McGill's lap and kissed him. Davis said McGill rebuffed C.S., but that C.S. persisted. Davis said she became upset and told McGill and C.S. to leave and threatened to call the police. McGill took the phone from her and put it outside her door. Davis then went upstairs and asked her neighbor to call the police.

During direct examination, McGill questioned Davis about a domestic violence restraining order she had obtained against McGill:

Defense attorney: Now, did Mr. McGill enter your house without permission last year, last May I believe?
Davis: Yes.
[[Image here]]
Defense attorney: And were you home when this happened?
No. Davis:
Defense Attorney: Were the police called when you got home?
Davis: Yes.
*80 Defense Attorney: And by virtue of that incident, did you secure what's called a domestic violence restraining order?
Davis: Yes.
[[Image here]]
Defense Attorney: Did the order [stay] in effect from that time through at least November?
Davis: No, I dropped it.
Defense Attorney: Do you know whether you were successful in dropping it or not?
Davis: Yes, I was.

The State sought to impeach Davis's eredi-bility and establish her bias by questioning Davis about the application she filed in support of the restraining order. The application described incidents where MecCill had assaulted her. The State also planned to ask about McGill's threats against Davis after she obtained the protective order. Superior Court Judge Charles R. Pengilly ruled that this evidence was admissible to establish Davis's bias and attack her credibility. Judge Pengilly also ruled that this evidence cured the impression created during Davis's direct examination that Davis had obtained a protective order against McGill because of one relatively benign incident of eriminal trespass. Judge Pengilly asked McGill if he wanted a limiting instruction on the permissible use of this evidence and McGill said that he did.

The State queried Davis about three incidents of domestic violence by McGill that Davis described in the application for the restraining order: the trespass in July 1997 that prompted her request for a restraining order; her claim that in May 1997, McGill poured beer on her, pushed her, and covered her mouth so she could not ery for help; and her claim that in March 1997 McGill hit her, pulled her hair, and told her to be quiet or "I'll hurt you." Davis admitted on cross-examination that McGill had poured beer on her, pulled her hair, and threatened to hurt her if she did not keep quiet, but said that she either could not remember or had lied to the police about the other incidents.

Davis also denied that she had problems with McGill after the restraining order was issued. The State then questioned Davis about her statements to the police that McGill had threatened her and asked her to drop the restraining order. Davis said she did not remember those incidents because she had been drinking. Davis did admit, contrary to her claim on direct examination, that the restraining order was still in effect on November 7.

McGill does not dispute that Davis's prior statements to the police about his domestic violence were admissible under Evidence Rule 613(a) to impeach Davis's claim that the relationship was peaceful. But he argues that the evidence was not relevant for two other purposes relied on by the court: to establish Davis's bias and to correct a misleading impression created by McGill's questioning of Davis that the restraining order was issued because of one trespass. He also argues that the court admitted far more detail regarding McGill's conduct than was nee-essary for the jury to assess Davis's eredibility, and that this additional evidence should have been excluded as cumulative and unduly prejudicial under Evidence Rule 403. 2

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.3d 77, 2001 Alas. App. LEXIS 35, 2001 WL 114246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgill-v-state-alaskactapp-2001.