Sea v. State

49 So. 3d 614, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 641, 2010 WL 4982954
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 2010
DocketNo. 2009-KA-01052-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 49 So. 3d 614 (Sea v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sea v. State, 49 So. 3d 614, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 641, 2010 WL 4982954 (Mich. 2010).

Opinions

DICKINSON, Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A Yalobusha County jury found Curtis Sea not guilty on three counts of statutory rape and one count of sexual battery, but guilty on five counts of sexual battery. Without filing a pretrial motion or obtaining a ruling on the issue, Sea’s counsel introduced evidence of his own client’s two prior criminal convictions— both of which had occurred approximately twenty-five years prior to trial. Evidence of a party’s prior criminal conduct, the confinement for which ended more than ten years earlier, is not admissible to impeach credibility, unless the trial court makes certain findings (which were not even requested in this case). Additionally, Sea’s counsel sat silent as the State introduced into evidence four videotapes of damaging forensic interviews of the four victims.1 Sea now claims his trial counsel was ineffective. We agree.

BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. During 2006 and 2007, Lashawn Joyner and her four daughters, D.D., B.J., T.J., and A.W,2 lived with D.D.’s father, David Delaney, under less than wholesome circumstances. Delaney admitted at trial that he produced pornographic movies for [616]*616a living, some of which were viewed by at least two of the children. When Lashawn was at work or school, she would often leave the girls with her aunt, Ollie May Joyner, who lived with Curtis' Sea.

¶ 3. One day, upon finding the kids “kind of on top of each other,” Lashawn asked what was going on. When B.J. replied, “[w]e are doing nasty stuff,” which she said Sea had shown them how to do, La-shawn contacted the authorities. The girls were taken to Baptist Memorial Hospital in Oxford where a physician examined the girls, but found “no tearing or any signs of abuse.” The girls were then taken to Oxford Family Crisis Services, where forensic interviews of each child were videotaped. During the interviews — comprised almost entirely of leading and suggestive questions — the children made numerous incriminating statements about Sea.

¶ 4. The Yalobusha County grand jury handed down a nine-count indictment charging Sea with statutory rape and sexual battery. At trial, before the prosecutor called the children to testify, the trial judge individually questioned each child in chambers to determine whether they understood the taking of an oath and the obligation to be truthful. Then the children were called to testify, providing a “yes, sir” or “no, sir” answer to virtually every question. They admitted knowing that their mother’s boyfriend, Darryl, made movies of naked people. A.W. testified that she had seen the movies, and that they were about people having sex. Also, the girls acknowledged getting into trouble for taking their clothes off while playing with a friend.

¶ 5. Police Officer A.J. Hernandez, having interviewed the girls at the hospital, testified over a defense objection3 that the girls had indicated they had been molested. Hernandez also testified that he had been present when Family Crisis Services in Oxford had conducted videotaped interviews of the girls; he identified the four videotapes, the prosecutor offered them into evidence, and the court admitted them without objection.

¶ 6. After the prosecutor asked several more questions, he requested permission to play the videotapes for the jury. Sea’s counsel stated on the record, “Your Honor, for the record, I realize this has been discussed in chambers to some extent, for the record, the defense objects to the admissibility to the tapes as inadmissible hearsay.”4 The court overruled the objection, and the tapes were played for the jury.

¶ 7. After the State rested, the defense began its case-in-chief by calling Sea and asking him questions about his prior criminal conduct. Sea admitted that, in 1984, he had pleaded guilty to molesting a child under thirteen years of age. When confronted on cross-examination with documents indicating he had pleaded guilty in 1988 to an indictment for molesting another child under the age of thirteen, he at first denied it, but then testified, “If I did, I forgot about it. I’m not denying nothing. [617]*617I just said I forgot about it.” To this exchange concerning a second twenty-five-year-old conviction, Sea’s counsel offered no objection.

¶ 8. The jury acquitted Sea on three statutory-rape charges and one county of sexual battery, but found him guilty of five counts of sexual battery. The trial court sentenced him to serve twenty-five years for each count, to run concurrently. Sea obtained new counsel and now appeals, raising the following three issues: (1) Whether the tender-years exception to the hearsay rule was properly applied; (2) whether the verdict was contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence; and (3) whether Sea’s trial counsel was ineffective.

ANALYSIS

I. The videotapes

¶ 9. Sea claims the trial court committed reversible error by allowing the prosecutor to play the videotapes for the jury. But because his counsel failed to make a contemporaneous objection when the tapes were introduced, he waived any objection to their content,5 and this issue— although instructive on the issue of his counsel’s effectiveness — has no merit.

II. Overwhelming weight of the evidence

¶ 10. Sea next argues that his convictions were against the overwhelming weight of the evidence, and that the trial judge should have granted a new trial. But we have stated clearly that we “will only disturb a verdict when it is so contrary to the overwhelming weight of the evidence that to allow it to stand would sanction an unconscionable injustice.”6 We also have said that

the power to grant a new trial should be invoked only in exceptional cases in which the evidence preponderates heavily against the verdict. However, the evidence should be weighed in the light most favorable to the verdict.7

¶ 11. In this case, the convictions are amply supported by the testimony of all four of the children and the incriminating content of the videotapes. Thus, this issue has no merit.

III.Ineffective assistance of counsel

¶ 12. Sea next claims his counsel was ineffective, a claim we must analyze under the guidelines in Strickland v. Washington,8 An appellant must demonstrate that the lawyer’s “performance was deficient, and that ... the deficiency prejudiced” the appellant.9 Further, we carefully review the context of counsel’s actions and, where reasonable under the circumstances, we presume that the “decisions were sound trial strategy.”10

Prior Convictions

¶ 13. In discovery, Sea’s counsel asked the State to produce Sea’s criminal record [618]*618“if proposed to be used to impeach....” The State’s response disclosed a prolific criminal background, including a conviction for sexual battery in 1984, for which Sea was ordered to serve eighteen months, and another conviction for sexual battery in 1989, for which he was ordered to serve eight months. The latter offense, according to the indictment, involved a minor child under the age of thirteen.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 So. 3d 614, 2010 Miss. LEXIS 641, 2010 WL 4982954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sea-v-state-miss-2010.