People v. Morgan

631 N.E.2d 1224, 259 Ill. App. 3d 770, 197 Ill. Dec. 765, 1994 Ill. App. LEXIS 355
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 16, 1994
Docket1-91-1226
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 631 N.E.2d 1224 (People v. Morgan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Morgan, 631 N.E.2d 1224, 259 Ill. App. 3d 770, 197 Ill. Dec. 765, 1994 Ill. App. LEXIS 355 (Ill. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

JUSTICE McCORMICK

delivered the opinion of the court:

A jury found defendant, Troy Morgan, guilty of aggravated criminal sexual assault. The trial court ordered defendant to pay $1,800 restitution and sentenced him to 91/2 years in the Department of Corrections. Defendant contends that prosecutorial misconduct deprived him of a fair trial, he did not receive effective assistance of counsel, and the trial court erred by admitting hearsay testimony, answering a jury question and ordering restitution. We find that any errors had no prejudicial effect, so we affirm.

Defendant met B.J. in February 1987. B.J. was then living with her husband, Mr. J., and their three-year-old son, R.J. B.J. also had a daughter, Celise, from a previous marriage, who sometimes stayed with B.J. B.J. and R.J. moved out of the home in March 1987 and B.J. began dating defendant. Celise, who was then 12, stayed with B.J. and R.J. from May until August 1987. Shortly after R.J. turned four, in June 1987, B.J. had lung surgery which kept her hospitalized for two weeks. Although R.J. visited his father before and after B.J.’s hospitalization, he did not see his father for about five weeks through B.J.’s hospitalization and recuperation.

Mr. J. filed a petition for divorce from B.J. in November 1987. After R.J. came to visit his father on December 15, 1987, Mr. J. decided to seek custody of R.J. Mr. J. met Lynette Donerson, who needed a place to live, so he invited her to move into his home and help him take care of R.J. She moved in during January 1988. B.J. did not contest custody, so R.J. moved in with his father in February 1988, when the divorce became final. R.J. continued to stay over at his mother’s home periodically.

Defendant moved in with B.J. in early March and married her on March 19, 1988. In late April 1988, R.J., Mr. J. and Donerson went to visit Mr. J.’s brother Paul and his wife and son. The next day Paul called Mr. J. to discuss R.J.’s behavior. Mr. J. told Donerson about the conversation, and Donerson had a discussion with R.J. concerning sexual behavior.

On May 3, 1988, Donerson took R.J. to a nearby hospital where Dr. Orwen Mason examined him for signs of sexual abuse. Donerson then took R.J. to the local police station. The detective told her to set up an appointment for an evaluation at Mt. Sinai Hospital. Dr. Stanley Luke and Dr. Sharon Ahart examined R.J. on May 17, 1988, and concluded that he had been sexually abused. Police came to B.J.’s home that day and asked defendant to come to the station soon. When he arrived at the station the next day, police arrested him.

Prior to trial the State argued that statements R.J. made to Mr. J., Donerson, Dr. Luke, Dr. Ahart and the detective were admissible under section 115 — 10 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of 1963 (Code) (Ill . Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, par. 115 — 10). The prosecutor described the testimony he expected to educe. Defendant’s attorney disagreed with the prosecutor’s description of the expected testimony, and he objected to the testimony he anticipated from all witnesses except Mr. J. Based solely on the conflicting statements of counsel, and without hearing any evidence, the trial court decided that the witnesses apart from the detective could testify to statements R.J. made to them. The court found statements to Dr. Luke and Dr. Ahart admissible under section 115 — 13 (Ill Rev. Stat. 1991, ch. 38, par. 115 — 13), because those doctors were treating physicians.

The trial court determined that R.J., who was seven at the time of trial, was competent to testify. Although R.J. remembered going to the hospital when he was four, he did not remember why he went. When his mother went into the hospital he lived with defendant and Celise. He did not remember being touched in a way he did not like. He started to answer questions about something that happened to him while B.J. was in the hospital, saying that it happened at night in the living room, but he could not say what had happened. He said he knew what the prosecutor was talking about, someone did something to him, but he would not answer more specifically.

After a recess R.J. answered that he remembered telling the prosecutor what had happened, and he remembered using dolls to show him. R.J. agreed that he had used a boy doll and a man doll to describe the incident. The prosecutor handed R.J. those dolls on the witness stand. R.J. said the boy doll was him, and he showed the man doll putting its penis in the boy doll’s mouth and anus. When the incident he described happened, only R.J., Celise and defendant were in the home. No other man was present.

The prosecutor asked who did this to him. R.J. did not answer. The prosecutor asked if R.J. could point out the man who did this to him. R.J. said no, but he agreed that if the prosecutor pointed to him he could say yes. The prosecutor pointed to every male in the courtroom, and after pointing to each he asked R.J. whether that man did that to him. R.J. said no to each male until the prosecutor pointed to defendant, and then R.J. said yes. The prosecutor asked if anyone else did that type of thing to him. R.J. said yes, a woman he had seen once in a restaurant did.

On cross-examination R.J. said that his mother had also done something similar to him, on the day she came home from the hospital. With dolls he showed that his mother undressed and laid on top of him, then took his penis in her mouth. Celise also laid on top of him. Defense counsel asked what the woman in the restaurant had done, and R.J. said she asked if he wanted something to eat. Counsel asked if that was the woman who did something bad to him and R.J. said, "[no], that was mom.” He was not sure whether he lived at his grandmother’s house while his mother was in the hospital.

Mr. J. testified that when R.J. visited him on December 15, 1987, while they were watching television, R.J. began moving his buttocks up and down and from side to side. Mr. J. asked what he was doing and R.J. said, "[T]his is the way that Troy and momma got the pussy.” R.J. then got up on his hands and feet, with his buttocks up in the air. His father asked what he was doing, and R.J. said that was how defendant made him stand when he "put his pee-pee in [R.J.’s] bubu.” Mr. J. asked why he was telling him this, and R.J. said, "Daddy, I don’t like that ***. I just thought I would tell you.”

Mr. J. thought that R.J. might have seen defendant having sex with B.J. and then imagined things, possibly because of the divorce. Mr. J. did not report the incident to the police or take R.J. to the hospital.

Mr. J. testified that after he and Donerson took R.J. to visit Paul J.’s family in April 1988, Paul called to tell him that Paul’s son said R.J. asked to suck his cousin’s penis. Paul said, "I don’t know what they did to this kid over there. *** You better get him some help.” Defense counsel did not object to the testimony.

Donerson testified that R.J. engaged in inappropriate sexual behavior before the incident with his cousin in April 1988. Mr. J. told Donerson what Paul had told him about the incident, and Mr. J. asked Donerson to talk with R.J. about this behavior. The prosecutor asked Donerson what Mr. J. said Paul told him. The court overruled defendant’s objection to the question, noting that the substance of the conversation was in evidence from Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
631 N.E.2d 1224, 259 Ill. App. 3d 770, 197 Ill. Dec. 765, 1994 Ill. App. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morgan-illappct-1994.