Payne v. Commonwealth

364 S.E.2d 765, 5 Va. App. 498, 4 Va. Law Rep. 1785, 1988 Va. App. LEXIS 9
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 2, 1988
DocketRecord No. 0209-86-4
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 364 S.E.2d 765 (Payne v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Payne v. Commonwealth, 364 S.E.2d 765, 5 Va. App. 498, 4 Va. Law Rep. 1785, 1988 Va. App. LEXIS 9 (Va. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Opinion

BENTON, J.

Kevin Marshall Payne was convicted of statutory rape of a 12 year old child and sentenced by jury to fifteen years in the penitentiary. Payne contends that his conviction should be overturned because he was denied his right to effective assistance of counsel as guaranteed under the sixth and fourteenth amendments. We conclude that the record is insufficient for this matter to be raised on direct appeal. 1 Accordingly, we dismiss this appeal without prejudice.

Payne employed both the victim and the victim’s mother as laborers in a lawn care business that Payne and his wife jointly owned. The Paynes were also friends with the victim’s family and often socialized with them after work hours.

*500 In opening argument, defense counsel proposed two theories that would support the defendant’s innocence. He first proposed that the evidence would show that the Paynes had marital difficulties and that the victim’s parents sided with Payne’s wife. He stated the evidence would further show that the victim’s parents encouraged the victim to fabricate the rape so that they and Payne’s wife could take over the landscaping business. As an alternative theory, defense counsel proposed that the evidence would show that the victim fabricated the rape in response to an unrequited crush on Payne.

On the Commonwealth’s direct examination, the victim testified that on June 21, 1985, while she was working for Payne cutting grass on a farm, he started kissing her and asked her if she wanted “to make a little.” She then walked with Payne into the woods where he again kissed her and began to fondle her. He again asked her if she would like to “make a little.” The victim at first was silent; however, upon Payne’s third request she replied that she would. The two walked out of the woods into a field where Payne proceeded to have sexual intercourse with her. She testified that, at this time, she did not want the intercourse to happen. When the Commonwealth’s attorney asked her why she did not run or tell Payne no, the victim replied, “Because I knew he could run faster than me.” He then asked her if she feared Payne for any reason and she replied that she did “because I thought of him beating up his wife.” Defense counsel made no objection. The victim did not tell her parents what had happened until several weeks later after they questioned her concerning a letter that she had written to a friend. The letter stated that she loved Payne and that she could not like the friend because she and Payne had “shared too many things.”

The victim also testified that prior to the rape, Payne twice masturbated in her presence while he was sitting in the driver’s seat of his car and she was sitting in the back seat. One incident occurred in a parking lot after the victim’s father went into a restaurant for a few minutes. She testified that Payne said nothing to her while he masturbated. The other incident occurred while Payne’s wife and a friend were making a call in a nearby phone booth. The victim testified that during this occasion Payne asked her if she wanted to make a little money on the side. Defense counsel raised no objection to this testimony.

*501 On cross-examination, the victim testified that Payne masturbated in daylight on both occasions and that the incident at the restaurant took place as people were passing by. She also testified that after the rape, she fell in love with Payne and that she sometimes thought she and Payne would go off and live somewhere together. She revealed that she felt rejected by him.

The Commonwealth’s attorney also called the victim’s father as a witness and asked him, “Did there come a time when you and Payne ceased to be friends? Was there any particular incident that occurred at that time? What was that?” The victim’s father answered “Yes. He assaulted me.” The victim’s father further testified that on June 30, 1985, while he and his family were taking Payne’s wife to the hospital, Payne insisted that they put his wife out of the car. When the victim’s father rolled the car window partially down, Payne struck him. Defense counsel made no objection at this time.

On cross-examination, defense counsel asked the victim’s father, “What precipitated this altercation or argument or assault, however you wish to characterize it, of the night of June 30?” He responded, “Mr. Payne had beat his wife.” He further testified that the beating took place on June 26 in the presence of the victim. Upon defense counsel’s request, the victim’s father described the nature of Payne’s wife’s injuries. He also stated that a few days after they had taken Payne’s wife to the hospital for treatment of these injuries, she moved in with them.

On redirect examination, the Commonwealth’s attorney asked the victim’s father if he had ever discussed, prior to June 25, Payne beating his wife. He replied, “I overheard discussions. Not with me, no.” The Commonwealth’s attorney then asked, “But other people talking about it?” He answered, “Yes, sir.” In response to the question, “What did he do to her on the 26th of June?,” the victim’s father described how Payne hit his wife across the nose and eyes with a telephone causing blood to run out of her nose. On recross-examination, defense counsel asked whether the injury could have been the result of an accident during a struggle for the phone. The victim’s father replied, “Yes, I can determine that they struggled for it.”

The Commonwealth’s attorney also called the victim’s mother as a witness and asked her if anything unusual had occurred on *502 June 26. She replied, “[Payne] and his wife were in an argument, and he took the telephone off the wall and smashed her in the face with it.” Defense counsel made no objection. On cross-examination, the victim’s mother admitted that she and Payne’s wife were good friends.

In closing argument, the Commonwealth’s attorney told the jury that Payne, when testifying, did not deny masturbating in the presence of the victim nor did he deny striking his wife in the presence of the victim. The Commonwealth’s attorney described Payne’s blow to his wife as being so hard “that blood ran down.” The Commonwealth’s attorney asked the jury to remember the victim’s mother’s testimony that she later found Payne’s wife on the bed with her eyes rolled back in her head. In his rebuttal argument, the Commonwealth’s attorney told the jury: “You may consider the character of the defendant, whether good or bad, along with the other facts and circumstances. He did not deny beating his wife, attacking [the victim’s father], masturbating on two different occasions, all in the presence of this child. You may consider all that. . . .” Defense counsel made no objection to the Commonwealth’s closing or rebuttal arguments.

Payne contends that the Commonwealth improperly established his bad character and proved other crimes by evidence of his assaults upon his wife and the victim’s father and by evidence of masturbation. Payne asserts that this evidence created a manifest probability that his defense was prejudiced. See Fleenor v. Commonwealth, 200 Va. 270, 275, 105 S.E.2d 160, 163 (1958); Zirkle v. Commonwealth, 189 Va.

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Bluebook (online)
364 S.E.2d 765, 5 Va. App. 498, 4 Va. Law Rep. 1785, 1988 Va. App. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payne-v-commonwealth-vactapp-1988.