STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 14, 2020
DocketSD35945
StatusPublished

This text of STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD (STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD, (Mo. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Plaintiff-Respondent, ) ) v. ) No. SD35945 ) JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD, ) Filed: July 14, 2020 ) Defendant-Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF STODDARD COUNTY

Honorable Joe Z. Satterfield

AFFIRMED

A jury found James Darrin Woolard (“Defendant”) guilty of three counts of first-

degree statutory sodomy.1 In five points on appeal, Defendant challenges the sufficiency

of the evidence to sustain two of his three convictions (points 1 and 2), as well as the

admission of certain testimony (points 3, 4, and 5). Because the convictions he

challenges were supported by sufficient evidence, and he agreed to the admission of the

evidence that he now attempts to challenge on appeal, we affirm.

1 Section 566.062.1. All statutory citations are to RSMo 2016.

1 Relevant Evidence and Procedural History

We recite the evidence relevant to Defendant’s claims in the light most favorable

to the verdict. State v. Suttles, 581 S.W.3d 137, 141 (Mo. App. E.D. 2019).

As is all too common in these types of cases, Defendant gained access to his

victim (“Victim”) by dating her mother. Mother and her children eventually moved in

with Defendant around June or July 2016, and Victim was ten or eleven years old at the

time of the charged events. The State’s Second Amended Information alleged that,

between January 1, 2016, and July 22, 2017, the Defendant performed oral sex on Victim

in the bedroom (Count 1), rubbed Victim’s vagina through her shorts in the office (Count

2), and rubbed Victim’s vagina with his hand in the living room (Count 3).

During a summer visit with her father, Victim told him about the sexual abuse,

and he reported it to the authorities. Mother moved out of Defendant’s residence in July

2017, about two weeks after Victim disclosed the abuse to her father.

Victim did not testify in person at trial. Instead, her recitation of the charged

events was put before the jury in several different forms. First, a video-recorded forensic

interview, taped in July 2017, was introduced. During that interview, Victim said that

Defendant had “licked her” vagina.

The State also introduced September 2017 deposition testimony that Victim gave

in connection with a child protection case. During that deposition, Victim testified that

Defendant licked her private area for approximately seven minutes, and he rubbed it

under her shorts. She also stated that Defendant rubbed her private parts through her

shorts on two other occasions, once in the living room and once in the office.

2 Finally, Victim provided sworn testimony via a November 2018 deposition taken

in lieu of trial testimony (“Exhibit 3”). In conformity with her previous disclosures,

Victim described an incident in which Defendant had licked her vagina. She also added

that Defendant had touched her private parts through her clothing and had placed his

hand in her pants while they were in the office. Finally, she testified about another time

in the office when Defendant had touched her private parts through her shorts.

After deliberating upon its verdict, the jury found Defendant guilty of all three

counts.

Analysis

Points 1 and 2 ‒ Sufficiency of the Evidence

Because Defendant’s first two points challenge the sufficiency of the evidence,

we address them together. Point 1 claims the evidence adduced at trial was insufficient to

support his conviction on Count 3, in that it failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt

that Defendant had rubbed Victim’s vagina in the living room (“the living-room count”).

His second point makes the same claim regarding Count 2, which charged that Defendant

rubbed Victim’s vagina while they were in the office (“the office count”).

In reviewing a claim that there was not sufficient evidence to sustain a criminal conviction, this Court does not weigh the evidence but, rather, “accept[s] as true all evidence tending to prove guilt together with all reasonable inferences that support the verdict, and ignore[s] all contrary evidence and inferences.” State v. Latall, 271 S.W.3d 561, 566 (Mo. banc 2008); State v. Reed, 181 S.W.3d 567, 569 (Mo. banc 2006). This Court “asks only whether there was sufficient evidence from which the trier of fact reasonably could have found the defendant guilty.” Latall, 271 S.W.3d at 566.

State v. Claycomb, 470 S.W.3d 358, 362 (Mo. banc 2015).

3 The living-room count charged that Defendant committed the crime of first-

degree statutory sodomy by having “deviate sexual intercourse with [Victim] who was

then a child less than twelve years old, by rubbing [Victim]’s vagina with his hand while

in the living room.” The office count charged that Defendant committed first-degree

statutory sodomy by having “deviate sexual intercourse with [Victim], who was then less

than twelve years old, by rubbing [Victim]’s vagina through her shorts [with]

Defendant’s hand while in the office of their home.”

Although Defendant argues that because Victim disclosed the touching in the

living-room count in only one of her three interrogations (all of which were played for

the jury), it is well-established that the jury was entitled to believe that single recitation.

See State v. Anderson, 348 S.W.3d 840, 844 (Mo. App. W.D. 2011). Asking this court to

give that testimony little or no weight disregards our standard of review. See Claycomb,

470 S.W.3d at 362.

Defendant also claims that the evidence was insufficient to support his

convictions on both counts at issue because the evidence at trial established only that

Defendant touched Victim’s vagina through her shorts, and skin-to-skin contact is

required under the statute. We disagree.

Under section 566.062.1, a person commits first-degree statutory sodomy “if he or

she has deviate sexual intercourse with another person who is less than fourteen years of

age.” As relevant here, section 566.010(3)2 defines “[d]eviate sexual intercourse” as

“any act involving the genitals of one person and the hand, mouth, tongue, or anus of

another person[.]”

2 Section 566.010 was amended in 2014 (effective January 1, 2017) to add additional definitions. Because the definitions are listed in alphabetical order, many of the pre-existing definitions were renumbered.

4 Recent Missouri case law has been inconsistent as to whether skin-to-skin contact

is necessary to prove “deviate sexual intercourse.” In 2009, our court’s eastern district

reversed a conviction for first-degree statutory sodomy on the ground that touching the

victim’s vagina “through her clothing constituted sexual contact, not deviate sexual

intercourse[,]” supporting only a conviction for the lesser offense of first-degree child

molestation.3 State v. Peeples, 288 S.W.3d 767, 771 (Mo. App. E.D. 2009).

In doing so, the court did not explain why the statutory definition of deviate

sexual intercourse excludes touching through the clothing. Instead, it reasoned that

because “sexual contact”

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Related

State v. Bonich
289 S.W.3d 767 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2009)
State v. Reed
181 S.W.3d 567 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2006)
State v. Holmes
654 S.W.2d 133 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1983)
State v. Peeples
288 S.W.3d 767 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2009)
State v. LATALL
271 S.W.3d 561 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2008)
State v. Patton
229 S.W.3d 631 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2007)
State v. Madison
997 S.W.2d 16 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1999)
State v. Hendricks
944 S.W.2d 208 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1997)
State v. Clay
909 S.W.2d 711 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1995)
State v. Anderson
348 S.W.3d 840 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)
State v. Benn
341 S.W.3d 203 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2011)
State of Missouri v. Christopher C. Claycomb
470 S.W.3d 358 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2015)
STATE OF MISSOURI v. WADE A. STUCKLEY
573 S.W.3d 766 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Steffenhagen
671 S.W.2d 344 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)
Carr v. State
829 S.W.2d 101 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1992)
State v. Miller
372 S.W.3d 455 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2012)
State v. Lewis
388 S.W.3d 252 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2012)
State v. Kelso
391 S.W.3d 515 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2013)
State v. Rogers
529 S.W.3d 906 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2017)
State v. Hinton
561 S.W.3d 433 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2018)

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STATE OF MISSOURI, Plaintiff-Respondent v. JAMES DARRIN WOOLARD, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-plaintiff-respondent-v-james-darrin-woolard-moctapp-2020.