Pennycuff v. State

745 N.E.2d 804, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 344, 2001 WL 393012
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 2001
Docket49S02-0104-CR-213
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 745 N.E.2d 804 (Pennycuff v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennycuff v. State, 745 N.E.2d 804, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 344, 2001 WL 393012 (Ind. 2001).

Opinions

SHEPARD, Chief Justice.

A jury found appellant Terry Pennyceuff guilty on two counts of incest, three counts of child molesting, and one count of sexual misconduct with a minor for carrying on a sexual relationship with his teenage daughter over a three-year period. The Court of Appeals ordered a new trial, holding that Pennycuff's lawyer was ineffective for failing to object to evidence that violated Pen-nycuff's rights under Doyle v. Ohio.1 Pennycuff v. State, 727 N.E.2d 723 (Ind.Ct. App.2000).

We conclude that the caselaw points to a different outcome.

How Pennycuff's Trial Unfolded

The State's first witness at trial was Pennycuffs daughter, T.P. (R. at 225.) T.P. described in detail numerous sexual advances by, and contacts with, her father. (R. at 227-88, 244-54, 257-58.) Among other things, T.P. accused her father of videotaping and photographing her in the nude on two separate occasions. (R. at 283-34, 246.) She testified that her father gave her money after some of their sexual encounters. (R. at 228, 234, 244.) She also said that some of these incidents occurred at home while her brother was in another room, (R. at 245), although no one besides herself actually witnessed any of the occurrences.

TP. testified that Pennyceuff had written words and initials on certain pages of a calendar to memorialize some of these incidents. (R. at 250-51, 253-54.) For example, she testified that early on Christmas morning in 1995, she had intercourse with her father before they woke her brother and sister, and that Pennyeuff entered an "I" in the calendar to document the occurrence. (R. at 252-58.)

T.P. explained that she kept silent about her father's misconduct because he told her she could be jailed for prostitution, and that he would kill them both if she spoke. (R. at 248-49.) She eventually disclosed what had been going on because her father, by then divorced from T.P.'s mother, described his new girlfriend's daughter as "cute." (R. at 260.) TP. became concerned for the safety of that child and of her own eight-year-old sister. (Id.) T.P. testified that she got along well with this new girlfriend. (R. at 256.) Regarding her relationship with her father, T.P. testified:

Q. [TP.], how do you feel about your dad right now?
A. Ilove him.
Q. You still love him?
A. (No audible answer.)
THE COURT: You have to answer yes or no.
A. Yes.
Q. Is there any anger?
A. Yes.
Q. Why?
A. Because I want him to pay for what he did to me. I want him to stop lying. I wish he'd tell the truth.

(R. at 263.)

On cross-examination, the defense methodically sought to undermine T.P.'s eredi-bility by delving into T.P.'s relationship with each of her parents. T.P.'s father first had inappropriate sexual contact with her in May 1998. (R. at 226.) When her parents separated in October 1994, however, T.P. elected to stay with her father [807]*807(although her brother and sister lived with their mother) because she and her mother did not get along and even physically fought at times. (R. at 270, 280.) Appellant Pennyeuff got custody of TP. and her brother in April 1995, but T.P. moved back in with her mother during the summer of 1995 to avoid further molestation by her father. (R. at 288.) However, TP., who admitted to being "rebellious," (R. at 270), again quarreled with her mother, (R. at 284-85), and moved back in with her father in the fall of 1995, (R. at 286). Subsequently, T.P.'s relationship with her mother improved, although T.P. still did not confide in her mother about the molestation for another month or two. (R. at 296-97.)

After establishing this sequence of events, defense counsel asked TP., "During this period of time-you-you have always kind of just vacillated between your mother and father, whichever-depending upon whichever person kind of treated you the best; is that right?" (R. at 299-300.) T.P. replied, "Yes." (R. at 300.) Defense counsel went on to establish that four months after T.P.'s accusations, T.P. paged her father because she and her mother were fighting. (Id.) T.P. asked her father to come over to her mother's house where TP. was staying, which he did. She asked her father to take her home with him, but he declined because he was under a no contact order. (R. at 301-02.)

The defense also attacked T.P.'s claim that her father paid her for sex by eliciting admissions that T.P. helped with housework, (R. at 308), and that he had given her money at times before the molestation began, (R. at 807).

The State's next witness was TP.'s brother, who is a year and a half younger than she. (R. at 225, 328.) He testified that Pennyeuff sometimes went into another room with T.P., and ordered the boy to stay in the living room. (R. at 826-27.) He also testified that, although he had no knowledge of any sexual relationship between Pennyceuff and T.P., Pennyceuff had sometimes given T.P. money. (R. at 827.)

On - cross-examination, the defense sought to elicit testimony from the brother that TP. disliked their father's new fian-cée, Jane, and had threatened to ruin the planned wedding. (R. at 831.) The boy acknowledged that T.P. had expressed dislike for Jane, but he denied having heard T.P. make any such threat. (Id.)

The State next called Marion County Sheriff's Department Detective Sergeant Carmic Godan. (R. at 8383.) Detective Godan testified about T.P.'s demeanor when she gave her initial statement. (R. at 336.) Detective Godan described TP. as confused and embarrassed, and said that TP. blamed herself for the relationship. (Id.) Godan also testified that, during a search of Pennyeuff's apartment, police found the calendar that T.P. described. (R. at 340.)

On cross-examination, Godan conceded that during their search the police found no videotape or photographs showing T.P. nude. (R. at 355-56.) Defense counsel also established that Pennycuff had no advance warning of the search. (R. at 358.)

The State then called T.P.'s mother, who testified that the night T.P. disclosed what Pennyeuff had done, TP. was upset and afraid of going to jail. (R. at 390.) She said Pennycuff had given T.P. money at times and that, when asked, he said he had paid T.P. for helping with various household chores. (R. at 391-92.)

On cross-examination, T.P.'s mother admitted that before T.P. accused Pennyeuff of sexual misconduct, the mother herself had twice broached the subject of molestation. (R. at 397-98.) The first time was during custody negotiations, when the [808]*808mother asked T.P. if her father had ever touched her and T.P. responded that the mother was crazy for asking such a question. (Id.) Then, about a year before her divorce, the mother asked T.P. in the presence of a therapist whether there had been any molestation, and T.P. said no. (R. at 398.)

The State's final witness was a psychiatric social worker, (R. at 405), who testified about T.P.'s demeanor during their meetings, (R. at 407), and said that children who are sexually abused by a family member rarely come forward immediately, (R. at 408).

When the State rested, then, the testimony of TP. stood as the centerpiece of its case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
745 N.E.2d 804, 2001 Ind. LEXIS 344, 2001 WL 393012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennycuff-v-state-ind-2001.