State of Louisiana v. Edley W. Smith

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 2005
DocketKW-0004-1470
StatusUnknown

This text of State of Louisiana v. Edley W. Smith (State of Louisiana v. Edley W. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Louisiana v. Edley W. Smith, (La. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

04-1442 consolidated with 04-1470

VERSUS

EDLEY W. SMITH

********** APPEAL FROM THE THIRTY-SIXTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT PARISH OF BEAUREGARD, NO. CR-487-2003 HONORABLE HERMAN I. STEWART JR., DISTRICT JUDGE **********

GLENN B. GREMILLION JUDGE

**********

Court composed of Oswald A. Decuir, Glenn B. Gremillion, and Elizabeth A. Pickett, Judges.

04-1442 WRIT DENIED.

04-1470 WRIT DENIED IN PART; GRANTED IN PART; AND MADE PEREMPTORY.

Hon. David W. Burton District Attorney 36th Judicial District Court P. O. Box 99 DeRidder, LA 70634 (337) 463-5578 Counsel for Plaintiff/Respondent State of Louisiana Richard Alan Morton Assistant District Attorney 36th Judicial District Court P. O. Box 99 DeRidder, LA 70634 (337) 463-5578 Counsel for Plaintiff/Respondent State of Louisiana

Charles A. Sam Jones, III Attorney at Law P.O. Box 995 DeRidder, La 70634 (337) 463-5532 Counsel for Defendant/Applicant Edley W. Smith GREMILLION, Judge.

In this case, both the State and the defendant, Edley W. Smith, filed writ

applications in this court seeking review of those portions of the trial court’s ruling

following a pre-trial hearing which were adverse to both their interests. For the

following reasons, we deny Smith’s writ and grant the State’s writ in part and deny

it in part.

FACTS

The State alleges that the minor child in this case, hereinafter referred

to as K.N.,1 was sexually molested by Defendant, her stepfather, from March 28, 2002

to May 31, 2003. During this period, Defendant allegedly raped K.N. on two

occasions. The child is now nine years old; she was seven and eight years old at the

time of the alleged offenses.

The State filed several pre-trial motions, including a “State’s Motion in

Limine,” seeking to preclude the presentation of evidence regarding the previous

sexual abuse of K.N. by her paternal grandfather, which occurred in April 2001.

Defendant also filed pretrial motions, one of which was a “Motion to Prevent the

Office of the District Attorney from Switching Horses in Mid-Stream,” by which he

sought to preclude the State from contesting the admissibility of certain medical

records and related testimony pertaining to the prior abuse.

At the hearing conducted by the trial court regarding both motions, the

only witness presented was Dr. Thomas E. Griffin, III, a pediatrician from DeRidder,

1 The initials of the victim are being used in accordance with La.R.S. 46:1844(W).

1 Louisiana, who testified that he examined K.N. on July 1, 2003. Dr. Griffin gave his

opinion regarding the nature of the injuries he observed while examining the victim.

Other records were introduced at the hearing, including the reports of a

sex abuse nurse examiner, who worked with K.N. after the 2001 abuse by her

grandfather; therapy records from another examiner, Penelope Butler, from 2002;

Memorial Herman Baptist Hospital records from 2001; and conviction records

pertaining to the prior abuse by K.N.’s grandfather. As we shall discuss hereafter, the

trial court ruled that certain anticipated testimony regarding the records and portions

thereof were admissible, while other potential testimony and evidence was

inadmissible.

DEFENDANT’S WRIT APPLICATION (KW04-1442)

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in prohibiting introduction

of evidence regarding a prior sexual assault against the victim in this case, by her

grandfather, and other alleged, unspecified assaults. He claims that he may call a

forensic medical expert to rebut the opinion of the State’s expert (Dr. Griffin), but

that without the excluded evidence he could not question the expert as to the reasons

for his alleged erroneous opinion or conclusions. Defendant further alleges that the

disallowed evidence “not only contradicts evidence which the State offers against

him, but also proves his innocence as to these baseless charges.” Finally, in brief to

this court, Defendant claims that La.Code Evid. art. 412 is unconstitutional.

There is no disagreement that the victim in this case was sexually abused

by her grandfather in 2001. Dr. Griffin testified that some symptoms noted on the

2 child, including vaginal redness, could only have been caused by a relatively recent

assault, while others could have been caused by the prior abuse.

Defendant sought to introduce detailed testimony from Butler, a

counselor who examined the victim, regarding “a sexual abuse history of at least three

incidents when the client was one, two and five,” and her notes, indicating that

“Sergeant Philpot videotaped the questioning of the client. She said granddad used

his finger and another big thing out of his britches.” According to Defendant, this

testimony is intended to show that the injuries currently observed on the victim were

caused by another assailant and not by him.

There was little discussion and no testimony regarding the specific

portions of the medical records sought to be introduced at trial. As stated, several of

these records were introduced at the hearing, primarily for the benefit of this court.

However, there was no page-by-page analysis, or ruling on the admissibility thereof,

regarding these documents. Additionally, there is no way for us to determine, de

novo, the admissibility of the individual documents, absent factual testimony

regarding their relevance to the issues presented in this case. Further, Defendant does

not elaborate on which specific items he desires to be introduced and why.

We have reviewed the documents submitted from Memorial Herman

Baptist Hospital in Beaumont, Texas, and note that many of these documents include

both observations and notations regarding the physical condition of the victim in this

case, as well as comments pertaining to allegations and reports of prior physical or

sexual abuse. Presumably, it is these documents and the comments contained therein

3 to which the State objects. As we have noted, the State has also objected to the

counseling records.

In denying Defendant the right to introduce evidence including details

of these incidents, the trial court said, “I’m not going to allow evidence of any prior

specific sexual assault that this child may have been subject to,” and:

I am trying to allow the defense some leeway in allowing nurse Butler to testify at all. And I am doing so only from the standpoint of the time frame within which she was serving as counselor, and I’m limiting that to whether or not this was reported to nurse Butler. I think it’s necessary, at least, to allow her to testify generally as to the – how she became a counselor to this child and the general nature of the counseling. But I’m going to apply the rape-shield law not to allow her complete medical records or reference to any specific prior sexual assault that the child may be subject to.

When Defendant inquired as to whether he could ask Dr. Griffin about

the validity of his opinion, in light of the past sexual abuse, the trial court stated,

“You can ask him that as long as you do not specify any particular prior incident.”

Then when Defendant asked if the trial court would allow him to prove to the jury

that a prior incident of sexual abuse had occurred, the trial court said:

I’m allowing you to show that a prior physical condition existed. That’s what I’m allowing you to show. That (sic) the only part that’s relevant.

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Related

State v. Davis
664 So. 2d 821 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1995)
State v. Zierhut
631 So. 2d 1378 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1994)
State v. Fradieu
851 So. 2d 345 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 2003)

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State of Louisiana v. Edley W. Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-louisiana-v-edley-w-smith-lactapp-2005.