Purvis v. State

829 N.E.2d 572, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2005 WL 1364680
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 7, 2005
Docket49A02-0407-CR-566
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 829 N.E.2d 572 (Purvis v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Purvis v. State, 829 N.E.2d 572, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2005 WL 1364680 (Ind. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, J.

Case Summary

Willard Purvis was convicted of child molesting based in part on statements of his victim, ten-year-old M.B. M.B. made these statements to his mother and her boyfriend immediately after the offense, and he made statements to a police officer within two hours of the offense. On appeal, Purvis argues that M.B.'s evidence was admitted in violation of his confrontation rights. We hold that the statements to the mother and her boyfriend were not testimonial and did not implicate the Confrontation Clause. Further, these statements were properly admitted under state evidence principles governing excited utterances and out-of-court statements by young children. Statements to the officer were not properly admitted, but the error is harmless. Purvis also argues that a letter he wrote to the court and evidence that he previously used the same alias *576 should not have been admitted, and he argues that his fifty-year sentence was inappropriate. Finding no prejudicial error on any of his claims, we affirm the conviction and sentence.

Facts and Procedural History

In 2003, M.B. lived on Albany Street on the South Side of Indianapolis with his mother, Shawn Bowling; his sister, C.B.; and Shawn's boyfriend, Oscar Gray. Although M.B. is chronologically age ten, he functions at approximately age five or six. He suffers from Agenesis Corpus Callo-sum, a disorder in which a nerve connecting the hemispheres of his brain is congenitally absent. Because of this disorder, he takes several medications and participates in special education classes. He has seizures. He also has been diagnosed with attention deficit-hyperactivity disorder.

The family first encountered Purvis on October 11, 2003, when he was walking a dog in the neighborhood. The dog attracted the children's attention, and Purvis had a long conversation with Shawn. He introduced himself as Kyle Gross, said he was fifteen years old (he was actually twenty-five), and provided other false information. He said he was part of a Big Brothers program through his school and offered to provide Shawn with information on the program so that he could become a Big Brother to M.B.

Purvis returned to the Bowling home each day for the next five days, generally around the time the children would get off the school bus, sometimes bringing candy or treats. At first, Shawn did not leave Purvis alone with her children. On the fourth day Purvis visited, Shawn allowed Purvis to play with M.B. in M.B.'s bedroom, but she remained in the room with them.

The fifth day Purvis visited was October 16, 2008. On this day, Shawn permitted Purvis to play with M.B. in M.B.'s room without her presence. She insisted, however, that the bedroom door be left open. She testified at trial that the door was briefly closed, although M.B. stated that Shawn fell asleep during the time Purvis was in his bedroom.

Because it was "too quiet" in the bedroom, Tr. p. 184, Shawn looked in on Pur-vis and M.B. M.B. immediately told her, "Mom, we're not doing nothing." Id. at 136. Shawn observed that Purvis's and M.B.'s shirts were no longer tucked into their pants and that their faces were flushed. She noticed that M.B.'s belt had been removed. She also saw that Purvis's trousers were unzipped, that he was wearing white underwear, and that she could see the tip of his penis through the unzipped fly of his trousers.

Shawn made up a story to get Purvis out of the house. She roused Gray, who had been asleep, and took C.B. to a neighbor's house. When Gray asked M.B. "what happened?" M.B. initially resisted telling him. Then M.B. told Gray that Kyle (a name by which he knew Purvis) put his "private" into M.B.'s mouth and made MB. "suck on it." Id. at 234-85. M.B. indicated to Gray that "private" meant penis. MB. told Gray that Purvis's penis "was nasty looking, nasty tasting." Id. at 285.

When Shawn returned home, MB. asked her, "Did [C.B.] tell you about our secret?" When Shawn implied that C.B. had told her what happened (which she had not), M.B. told her:

that Kyle had took his penis out. Exact words that [M.B.] used. And that he was playing with his self. And then he asked [M.B.] to .... suck on it. And [M.B.] said it tasted nasty. And that Kyle had a round thing that glowed in the dark and wanted to go into the *577 closet. 1 And that Kyle had him to take his belt off and take his [penis] out while Kyle did the same to him.

Id. at 149. MB. told Shawn that Purvis's penis was "hard as a brick" and "had a lot of black hair." Id. at 150.

Shawn thereupon telephoned police. Officer Jeffrey Cuthbertson spoke to M.B. less than two hours after M.B. had first recounted the molestation to Gray. M.B. told Officer Cuthbertson the following, referring to Purvis as "Michael," another alias he had used with M.B.:

[M.B.] said then he, Michael sucked [M.B.'s] penis. After that, he, Michael asked him to suck his. And he said that it smelled bad, tasted bad, and he didn't want to do it. And that after a while, which he said it seemed like a long time, something hot and sticky came out, and that was nasty, so he spat on his room floor where it occurred at.

Id. at 228.

Shawn took M.B. to a hospital, but before leaving for the hospital, M.B. ate a sandwich and drank milk. On the way to the hospital, M.B. vomited. Medical tests found no semen or other physical evidence in M.B.'s mouth, but M.B.'s eating, drinking, and vomiting would have reduced the chance of finding such evidence if it had previously been present.

Police did not arrest Purvis on October 16, the day he molested M.B. On the following day, however, Purvis returned to the Bowling residence to retrieve headphones he had left there the day before. The police were called, and they arrested Purvis. When he was arrested, he identified himself as Kyle Gross and said he was fifteen years old. Because he identified himself as a juvenile, an officer transported him to the location he had provided as his mother's home. In route, Purvis told the officer his real name and age.

Purvis was charged with two counts of Class A felony child molesting. 2 Before trial, the trial court held a hearing on whether M.B. could testify. MB. was cross-examined by Purvis's counsel at that hearing. The trial judge determined that M.B. was not competent to testify because he was unable to appreciate the nature and obligation of an oath. The trial court also found that he did not respond to questioning in an age-appropriate manner. Applying the Protected Persons Statute, Indiana Code § 35-47-4-6, and the rules of evidence, the court ruled that although M.B. could not testify, his statements to Gray, to Shawn, and to Officer Cuthbertson were sufficiently reliable to be admitted at trial.

At trial, Gray, Shawn, and Officer Cuth-bertson testified about the statements M.B. made to them. The trial court also admitted as evidence, over Purvis's objection, a letter Purvis wrote to the court. Additionally, the trial court admitted evidence, under Evidence Rule 404(b), that Purvis had used the name "Michael" as an alias in previous instances when he was involved with the police.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
829 N.E.2d 572, 2005 Ind. App. LEXIS 992, 2005 WL 1364680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purvis-v-state-indctapp-2005.