Montana v. Ogle

841 P.2d 1133, 255 Mont. 246, 49 State Rptr. 932, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 287
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 1992
Docket91-334
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 841 P.2d 1133 (Montana v. Ogle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montana v. Ogle, 841 P.2d 1133, 255 Mont. 246, 49 State Rptr. 932, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 287 (Mo. 1992).

Opinion

JUSTICE HUNT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant Sean Dean Ogle was tried by a jury and convicted of sexual assault, a felony, pursuant to § 45-5-502, MCA (1989), in the Twentieth Judicial District Court, Lake County. Appellant appeals from this conviction. We affirm.

Appellant offers three issues for this Court to consider.

1. Was appellant denied his right to a fair trial by repeated instances of alleged prosecutorial misconduct?

2. Did the District Court err by instructing the jury that sexual assault was a lesser included offense of sexual intercourse without consent?

3. Did the District Court err by instructing the jury that “without consent” was an essential element of the offense of sexual assault?

Appellant lived in Poison with his parents across the street from K.B. and S.B. and their children, including their 13-year-old adopted daughter, J.C.B. K.B. was the pastor of a local church and appellant became active in church activities. At the same time, appellant also developed a friendship with J.C.B., who was developmentally disabled and needed special education. J.C.B. enjoyed fishing and fre *248 quently would go fishing at the public boat docks near her home. Appellant would sometimes go with J.C.B. and play guitar while she fished.

On October 11, 1990, the family planned to attend a local high school basketball game. J.C.B. told her parents that she would rather go fishing and they agreed. At some point, appellant said that he would watch J.C.B. to ensure her safety. When her parents returned from the game, J.C.B. was at home and they did not notice anything ■unusual.

The following Saturday, S.B. was doing the weekly laundry when she found a note in the pocket of J.C.B.’s jeans. The note was addressed to appellant and was signed “your sex girlfriend.” A few days later, J.C.B.’s mother spoke with her about the note and during the conversation J.C.B. admitted to having sex with appellant. Later in the evening, J.C.B. repeated her story to her father, who then informed the Lake County Sheriff’s Office. After J.C.B. was privately interviewed by Officer Walrod, a Justice Court complaint was filed against appellant and he was arrested and taken into custody on October 17, 1990.

The next morning appellant voluntarily confessed during two taped interviews to having sexual contact with J.C.B. On the night of the arrest, he also confessed to a fellow jail inmate, Corey White. At trial, White testified that appellant said he had touched J.C.B. ■with his penis.

An information was filed in Lake County District Court charging appellant with sexual intercourse without consent, a felony, and failure to register as a sexual offender, a misdemeanor. Appellant pled guilty to the misdemeanor, with sentencing deferred until after the completion of trial on the charge of sexual intercourse without consent. A jury trial was held on January 21, 1991, and appellant was found guilty of the lesser-included offense of sexual assault, a felony.

On direct examination, the Lake County Attorney questioned J.C.B. in the following manner:

Q. We talked about what promising to tell the truth “so help you God” meant, remember?
A. (Witness nodded.)
Q. What would it mean if you lied?
A. I don’t know.
Q. Would it be a bad thing towards God?
A. Yeah.
Q. Okay. Do you love God?
*249 A. Yeah.
Q. And you’re very — you attend church at your father’s church?

J.C.B. also testified at trial that appellant placed his penis in her vagina and rubbed his penis on her buttocks. This testimony was consistent with what J.C.B. had previously told her father, and the Lake County Undersheriff, both of whom testified at trial. At trial, the appellant denied he had any sexual contact with J.C.B.

Appellant also testified that after reading a law book provided to him on his first night in jail, he decided to confess to the lesser-included offense of sexual assault in hope of securing a deal with the interviewing undersheriff and receiving half the prison sentence possible for sexual intercourse without consent. During cross-examination, the following exchange took place between appellant and the Lake County Attorney.

Q. You’re married, are you not?
A. Yes.
Q. You have a small baby?
A. She has a baby.
Q. It’s not yours?
A. It’s not mine.
Q. But she is still married to you?
A. I’m not sure. She put in for a divorce and that’s the last I heard about it. I haven’t talked to her. She moved. Well, I had asked her for a divorce because I caught her in bed with my best friend and some other things that happened.
Q. And you don’t find her any more attractive than you found [J.C.B.], right?
A. I loved my wife a great deal.
Q. You loved [J.C.B.], too, didn’t you?
A. No.
Q. You used her and threw her away the same way you threw your wife away?
A. I never told [Corey White] anything had happened.
Q. All of those things were lies; is that right?
A. I never told Corey White I had anything to do with her. I had told Walrod what was necessary to make it through to the next day to where I could try and fight that tape because I can fight a tape and I can’t fight death.
Q. Let’s get this straight. [J.C.B.] lied, right?
A. Apparently, yes.
*250 Q. Corey White lied?
A. Yes, and he had plenty of reason to. [Emphasis added.]
During closing argument the State made the following comments:
You have to accept his version of the facts as he testified today and reject his version of the facts as he gave it at other times. You have to find that little [J.C.B.], when she came in and testified, lied. You have to find that Corey White, who heard the confession from the defendant, lied. You would have to find that both the previous confessions of the defendant on tape are lies.
Today one of the worst lies I would suggest you may have heard is when he said he didn’t find her desirable.

During the settling of jury instructions, the prosecution requested that certain instructions be given on sexual assault.

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Bluebook (online)
841 P.2d 1133, 255 Mont. 246, 49 State Rptr. 932, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montana-v-ogle-mont-1992.