Morgan v. State

139 P.3d 1272, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 119, 2006 WL 2089370
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 28, 2006
DocketA-8639
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 139 P.3d 1272 (Morgan 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
Morgan v. State, 139 P.3d 1272, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 119, 2006 WL 2089370 (Ala. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Frederick W. Morgan III appeals his conviction for second-degree sexual assault. This is the third time that his ease has come before this Court.

Originally, Morgan’s primary point on appeal was that the superior court should have allowed him to introduce evidence that the victim of the alleged sexual assault had knowingly made false accusations of sexual assault in the past. In our first decision in Morgan’s case, Morgan v. State (Morgan I), 54 P.3d 382 (Alaska App.2002), we remanded Morgan’s case to the superior court with directions to re-evaluate Morgan’s offer of proof regarding this matter. And, because Morgan was tried by a judge sitting without a jury, we told the superior court that, if the court decided that Morgan’s proposed impeachment evidence should have been admitted at his trial, the court was to then reevaluate Morgan’s guilt or innocence in light of this new evidence.1

By the time Morgan’s case returned to the superior court, his original trial judge had retired and was no longer available to hear the continued proceedings. A new judge— Superior Court Judge Larry R. Weeks — was assigned to Morgan’s case.

After hearing Morgan’s offer of proof, and applying the law that we announced in Morgan I, Judge Weeks concluded that Morgan should have been permitted to introduce evidence at his trial regarding a prior incident in which the victim (1) privately accused another man of raping her (that is, she voiced the accusation to a friend rather than to the police), but then (2) withdrew the accusation a few days later and apologized to the man involved. See Morgan v. State (Morgan II), Alaska App. Memorandum Opinion No. 4981 (April 20, 2005), slip opinion at 2; 2005 WL 901769 at *1.

Following this ruling, Judge Weeks reviewed the record of Morgan’s trial, weighing [1274]*1274the evidence presented at the trial in light of the new impeachment evidence that he had just heard, to re-assess whether the State had proved Morgan’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Judge Weeks concluded that, even with the new evidence concerning the false accusation of rape, the evidence as a whole still proved Morgan’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. Morgan II, Memorandum Opinion No. 4981 at 2-3, 2005 WL 901769 at *1. Judge Weeks therefore upheld Morgan’s conviction, and the case came to this Court a second time.

In Morgan II, we upheld the renewed proceedings in most respects, but we noted that Judge Weeks’s entry into the case had created a new legal issue: Given Judge Weeks’s ruling that the impeachment evidence should have been admitted at Morgan’s trial, and given the fact that Morgan’s original trial judge was now unavailable, was it lawful for Judge Weeks (or any other new judge) to re-assess the totality of the evidence and re-determine Morgan’s guilt? Or, was - Morgan entitled to a new trial — a trial in which a single fact-finder would hear the entirety of the testimony (that is, actually view the witnesses as they gave their testimony)?

We deferred a final decision in Morgan’s case until the parties briefed this issue. Morgan II, Memorandum Opinion No. 4981 at 18, 2005 WL 901769 at *9. We have now received and considered the parties’ supplemental briefs, and we have again reviewed the proceedings in the superior court (both the original trial and the proceedings on remand).

As we explain in more detail here, we conclude that Alaska Criminal Rule 25(b) authorizes a mid-trial substitution of judges, even in a judge-tried case — that is, even in a case where the judge is sitting as the trier of fact. But the authority granted by Rule 25(b) is circumscribed by the constitutional guarantee of due process. Given the facts of Morgan’s case, we conclude that the new impeachment evidence was potentially very important to assessing the credibility of the victim and the overall credibility of the State’s allegations — so potentially important that it was improper for Judge Weeks to redetermine Morgan’s guilt by simply reviewing the record of the trial and factoring in the new evidence. Under the facts of Morgan’s case, due process requires that Morgan receive a new trial in which the finder of fact can personally observe the witnesses as they give their testimony.

A brief summary of the evidence presented at Morgan’s trial, and a description of the impeachment evidence that Judge Weeks ruled should have been admitted at that trial

Morgan was accused of second-degree sexual assault under AS 11.41.420(a)(3)(B) and (3)(C). The State alleged (1) that Morgan engaged in sexual penetration with a woman, T.F.; (2) that T.F., because of extreme intoxication, was either incapacitated or unaware that a sexual act was occurring; and (3) that Morgan knew that T.F. was incapacitated or unaware that a sexual act was occurring.

According to T.F.’s testimony, she passed out on Morgan’s couch after several hours of drinking with Morgan’s wife and another friend. T.F. awoke to find Morgan engaging in sexual intercourse with her, and she immediately pushed him off. T.F. called her mother, who persuaded her to contact the police and accompanied her to the hospital for a sexual assault examination.

Morgan initially denied having sexual relations with T.F. On the night of the incident, Morgan claimed that he had “never touched her”. But at trial, Morgan conceded that he had engaged in sexual penetration with T.F. Morgan now asserted that his sexual relations with T.F. had been consensual.

Morgan’s original trial judge resolved this conflict in favor of T.F.’s version of events; he convicted Morgan of second-degree sexual assault.

One aspect of T.F.’s testimony at Morgan’s trial became more significant following our remand of Morgan’s case to the superior court. During cross-examination by Morgan’s attorney, T.F. was questioned about an alleged earlier incident in which she falsely accused a man, Chris Bevis, of rape. T.F. declared that she had never accused Bevis of rape — and that anyone who said the contrary would be lying.

[1275]*1275Although Morgan’s trial judge allowed the defense attorney to- cross-examine T.F. regarding her alleged prior false accusation, the trial judge refused to allow the defense attorney to present extrinsic evidence on this point (ie., extrinsic evidence tending to show that T.F. had in fact made a false accusation of rape).

As we explained at the beginning of this opinion, the trial judge’s refusal to allow Morgan to present extrinsic evidence on this point was the primary issue originally raised in Morgan’s appeal. In Morgan I, we clarified the rules governing the admission of this evidence, and we directed the superior court to re-evaluate the admissibility of the extrinsic evidence that Morgan offered.

Pursuant to our decision in Morgan I, the superior court (with Judge Weeks now presiding) held an evidentiary hearing to reexamine the extrinsic evidence tending to show that T.F. had knowingly made a prior false accusation of rape. At this evidentiary hearing, Judge Weeks heard the testimony of two witnesses, Sally Garton and Chris Bevis.

Garton testified that, on one occasion, T.F. came home early in the morning and claimed that she had been raped by Bevis at a party. Following Garton’s testimony, Bevis took the stand and testified that, after a night of drinking, he and T.F.

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Morgan v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 P.3d 1272, 2006 Alas. App. LEXIS 119, 2006 WL 2089370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-state-alaskactapp-2006.