Sherron v. State

959 So. 2d 30, 2006 WL 3200966
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedNovember 7, 2006
Docket2004-KA-01668-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 959 So. 2d 30 (Sherron v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherron v. State, 959 So. 2d 30, 2006 WL 3200966 (Mich. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

¶ 1. Charlotte Sherron was convicted of being an accessory after the fact to her husband's crime of statutory rape by assisting the victim, who was her minor daughter, obtain an abortion. This assistance helped hide the husband's crime by removing its most obvious evidence.

¶ 2. Since the time of the passage of the parental consent statute for a minor's acquiring an abortion, no prior Mississippi appellate court decision has considered criminalizing in this way a parent's decision to consent to a minor child's abortion. Indeed, our search has not revealed a prosecution in any state on these grounds, though perhaps such prosecutions have occurred. We need not decide today the constitutionality of charging concealment of a rape due to the assistance a defendant gave her minor daughter to gain an abortion. Sherron raised the issue before trial only later to abandon it. Thus the issue was waived. We find no other error and affirm.

FACTS
¶ 3. In January 1988, the defendant Charlotte Sherron, then known as Charlotte Howard, gave birth to a daughter whom we will in this opinion call "Jane." That alias is our best though limited means to avoid giving her undue publicity when we discuss her 2002 rape. Jane's mother and father were not married. Charlotte Sherron had a daughter with another man in about 1992, then had a third daughter in about 1996 with Xavier Sherron. When Xavier and Charlotte Sherron married is unclear, but it was before the 2001-2002 events that we next describe.

¶ 4. Xavier Sherron began having sexual intercourse with his stepdaughter Jane in December 2001 or January 2002. At the time that the intercourse began, Jane was still thirteen years old. After learning she was pregnant, Jane with the permission and assistance of her mother obtained an abortion in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. Only later did police learn that Xavier Sherron had intercourse with Jane. He was arrested, indicted, and convicted of statutory rape. He received a sentence of twenty-seven years without the possibility of parole. In August 2002, the defendant here, Charlotte Sherron, was indicted as an accessory after the fact to Xavier Sherron's crime of rape. The only event alleged in the indictment which constituted her crime was assisting her daughter obtain an abortion. Trial before a Lowndes County Circuit Court jury was not held until August 2004.

¶ 5. The first witness was the then sixteen year old victim, Jane. She said that after her mother went to sleep, Xavier Sherron would leave her mother's bedroom and go into Jane's room, where he would touch her sexually and then later began to have intercourse with her. Jane was frightened of him. She testified that Xavier Sherron told her not to tell her mother, the defendant. He told Jane that her mother would be upset with her if she discovered the sexual intercourse.

¶ 6. Jane testified that Xavier Sherron would come into her room as frequently as every other night. She did not testify as to the exact dates of the sexual abuse. However, the defendant, Charlotte Sherron, gave a statement to police on May 22, 2002, which was introduced into evidence. She said that approximately one year before the statement, Jane told her that Xavier Sherron had touched her inappropriately. *Page 33 Charlotte Sherron asked her husband whether he was molesting Jane. Though he initially denied it, he finally admitted that he touched Jane but did not admit to intercourse. According to Charlotte Sherron's statement, Xavier Sherron promised that he would not do this again. She stated, "I gave him another chance, but I did not trust him." The sexual intercourse that made Jane pregnant occurred a few months later.

¶ 7. Jane testified that in February 2002, after she had turned fourteen, Xavier Sherron took her from school and asked whether she had experienced her monthly period. She had not. He then purchased a pregnancy test at a pharmacy. After arriving home, she complied with his demand that she take the test. It indicated that she was pregnant.

¶ 8. Xavier Sherron called his brother George Sherron, and also called Rosa and Greg Mostella, his wife's maternal aunt and uncle. He notified them that he had impregnated Jane. He then confessed his actions to Charlotte Sherron. Greg Mostella suggested that the situation be kept secret from Alice Howard, Charlotte Sherron's mother. Mostella stated that Ms. Howard would "kill" Xavier if she found out. According to Charlotte Sherron's statement, the Mostellas and George Sherron suggested that law enforcement authorities also not be told, because she would lose custody of her children and her husband would go to jail. Charlotte Sherron said that she let Xavier Sherron continue to live with her because she did not know how she was going to pay the bills if he went to prison.

¶ 9. Jane and her mother talked in a room by themselves about whether Jane wanted an abortion. Jane testified that she had no doubts about wanting to have an abortion. She did not want to give birth to and raise a child fathered by Xavier Sherron. Jane testified that this same night, after everyone went to sleep, her mother put her and the two younger daughters in the car, with the goal of driving to her grandmother Alice Howard's house. Xavier Sherron followed and tried "to run [them] off the road." Xavier Sherron pulled alongside his wife's vehicle, moved his van towards her car, but never hit her. Jane testified that "if we had kept on going, he would have actually ran us off the road." Both vehicles stopped. Xavier Sherron told his wife to return to their house, and she did. He said that no one would learn about the pregnancy. Charlotte Sherron stated that she had Jane lock her door at night for protection.

¶ 10. The defendant telephoned the Women's Clinic in Tuscaloosa, Alabama. The Clinic indicated that among the items needed to be scheduled for an abortion, Jane should have a picture identification card. Xavier Sherron took Jane to get the identification. On March 14, 2002, Xavier and Charlotte Sherron drove Jane to Tuscaloosa, Alabama, where the abortion was performed.

¶ 11. In May 2002, Jane visited with her uncle's fiancee and discussed what had happened in a "what-if-this-happened-to-you" manner. The fiancee concluded that Jane was discussing herself. Jane's uncle was told, and he told Charlotte Sherron's mother, Alice Howard.

¶ 12. Howard took Jane to the Columbus Police Department. Jane spoke with investigator Wayne McClemore. Lieutenant McClemore testified that he took Jane's statement, filed a report, and contacted the local Department of Human Services (DHS). DHS placed Jane in the care of her grandmother, Alice Howard, the person who upon learning of the crime had finally reported it. *Page 34

¶ 13. The DHS investigation led to Xavier Sherron's admission to the statutory rape. McClemore and another investigator picked Sherron up, drove him to the police department, and obtained a statement from him. A statement was also taken from Charlotte Sherron which included this:

I did call the Women's Clinic in Tuscaloosa, Alabama, and ask them about how far along in the pregnancy a person has to be to have an abortion. They said four to six weeks. They also said they needed a birth certificate, a Social Security card, and a picture ID. Xavier took [Jane] to the driver's license office in Columbus Tuesday, two days before [Jane] went to the doctor, to get her ID. Xavier and I took [Jane] to the Women's Clinic, and [Jane] got the abortion. 1 filled out the paperwork for [Jane] at the clinic. Xavier, Uncle Greg and I took [Jane] to her checkup in Tuscaloosa. I did not tell anyone about this because I have nobody to confide in. I was scared to tell the police because [I] did not know what would happen to me or my family.

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Sherron v. State
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
959 So. 2d 30, 2006 WL 3200966, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherron-v-state-missctapp-2006.