Meadows v. Commonwealth

178 S.W.3d 527, 2005 WL 1313800
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJuly 8, 2005
Docket2003-CA-002482-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 178 S.W.3d 527 (Meadows v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meadows v. Commonwealth, 178 S.W.3d 527, 2005 WL 1313800 (Ky. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

MINTON, Judge.

INTRODUCTION

Joey Meadows was charged with first-degree rape, 2 first-degree unlawful imprisonment, 3 and two counts of first-degree sodomy. 4 A jury found him guilty of first-degree sexual abuse 5 (a lesser included offense of first-degree rape), first-degree unlawful imprisonment, and one count of first-degree sodomy. The jury found him not guilty of the remaining count of first-degree sodomy. Meadows then waived sentencing by the jury. The circuit court sentenced him to a maximum of fifteen years’ imprisonment. 6

Meadows brings a direct appeal of his judgment of conviction. He asserts three errors by the trial court: failing to instruct the jury on fourth-degree assault, 7 allowing Dr. William Smock to testify as an expert witness regarding a bite mark on Meadows’s penis, and allowing Dr. Russell Compton to testify about T.H.’s account of *531 the sexual assault and to give his expert opinion that T.H.’s injuries were consistent with her account. Finding no reversible error, we affirm.

CONTACT BETWEEN MEADOWS AND T.H.

After spending some time with Jennifer and Corey McDonald and Meadows in the McDonalds’s home, T.H. decided to spend the night there. She had come to the McDonalds’ home with Meadows, who is also Jennifer’s brother, after meeting him in a bar a few hours earlier. Meadows also was staying with the McDonalds. T.H. borrowed pajamas from Jennifer and went to sleep alone in the bedroom to which Jennifer had taken her.

At this point, the accounts of T.H. and Meadows, both of whom testified at trial, diverge. According to T.H., she did not know that the bedroom Jennifer escorted her to was also the same bedroom where Meadows planned to sleep. She testified that she woke up to find that Meadows had removed her pajama bottoms and was on top of her. He was penetrating her vagina with his penis and touching her breast. She resisted, struggling and kicking. He then switched to performing oral sex on her. After more resistance by T.H., Meadows pinned her arms, grabbed her chin, and forced his penis into her mouth. Later, he again attempted sexual intercourse.

T.H. asserted that Meadows forced all of these sexual acts upon her. He pinned her down and physically restrained her. She struggled and kicked and bit Meadows at least once. Meadows repeatedly hit her in the head, choked her, and held or dragged her by her hair. He threatened to rape her anally if she were not cooperative. He once held a pillow over her head and, on multiple occasions, threatened to kill her by breaking her neck or strangling her if she awakened anyone. He added impact to these death threats by telling her that he knew how to kill people because he was trained as a Marine. T.H. was finally able to escape when he fell asleep.

Meadows testified that he and T.H. never discussed where he was to sleep because it was understood that they would sleep together. Moreover, he said that she should have known that it was his bedroom since it was a three-bedroom house and the McDonalds and their baby occupied the other two bedrooms. He stated that when he went to bed, he and T.H. engaged in consensual foreplay, which included him penetrating her vagina with his finger. Then, of her own initiative, T.H. began performing fellatio on him. In the process, she accidentally injured his penis with her teeth, causing it to bleed, which made her laugh. Meadows went to the bathroom to check out the injury. The injury and T.H.’s laughter caused Meadows to lose desire for further sexual contact. At that point, he and T.H. just went to sleep. He testified that all of the sexual contact was consensual. He denied ever engaging in sexual intercourse or cunnilingus with T.H. He also denied that he ever struck T.H., threatened her, or prevented her from leaving. Other relevant facts will be set forth as needed.

JURY INSTRUCTION ON FOURTH-DEGREE ASSAULT

The trial court instructed the jury on two lesser included offenses of first-degree rape: first-degree sexual abuse and sexual misconduct. 8 In fact, Meadows was convicted of first-degree sexual abuse rather than first-degree rape. But Meadows *532 asserts that the trial court erred by denying his request for an additional jury instruction on fourth-degree assault. He preserved this issue for review under RCr 9 9.54(2) 10 by tendering . a jury instruction for fourth-degree assault and by arguing to the trial court that he was entitled to this instruction as a lesser included offense of first-degree rape.

William S. Cooper’s Kentucky Instructions to Juries, does not list fourth-degree assault among the lesser included offenses of first-degree rape by forcible compulsion, 11 raising the question of whether it is a lesser included offense of first-degree rape. The mere “fact that the evidence would support a guilty verdict on a lesser uncharged offense does not establish that it is a lesser included offense of the charged offense.” 12 It might simply be an uncharged offense.

Of the four possible ways set forth in KRS 505.020(2) by which an uncharged lesser offense can be included within a charged offense, only the following might apply in the instant ease: “[the offense] is established by proof of the same or less than all the facts required to establish the commission of the offense charged.” 13

Fourth-degree assault requires proof of “physical injury.” 14 But physical injury is not an element of rape. 15 The Kentucky Supreme Court has held that second-degree assault is not a lesser included offense of first-degree rape precisely because physical injury is an element of the former offense but not the latter. 16 The same reasoning would apply to fourth-degree assault. Also, when it is not based on the use of a deadly weapon or dangerous instrument, 17 fourth-degree assault requires proof that the defendant acted “intentionally or wantonly” in causing the physical injury. 18 In contrast, the statute for first-degree rape does not require any particular state of mind, such as intent or knowledge. 19

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 S.W.3d 527, 2005 WL 1313800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meadows-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-2005.