State of Missouri v. Brad J. Julius

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 7, 2014
DocketED100555
StatusPublished

This text of State of Missouri v. Brad J. Julius (State of Missouri v. Brad J. Julius) 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 v. Brad J. Julius, (Mo. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District

DIVISION TWO

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) No. ED100555 ) Respondent, ) Appeal from the Franklin ) County Circuit Court vs. ) ) Honorable John B. Berkemeyer BRAD J. JULIUS, ) ) Filed: October 7, 2014 Defendant/Appellant. )

Introduction

Brad Julius (Defendant) appeals from his judgment of conviction of sexual assault. On

appeal, Defendant raises seven points, alleging that the trial court unduly restricted pre-trial

discovery, committed four separate instructional errors, and erroneously declined to admonish

the jury and grant a mistrial after the prosecutor misstated the law during closing argument.

Defendant additionally claims that these errors had a prejudicial cumulative effect. We affirm.

Factual Background

In April 2011, Victim went on a date with a former boyfriend (friend), where they shared

a bottle of wine. Afterward, the victim and her friend went to a bar in Union, Missouri, sharing a

partial bottle of wine on the way. At the bar, Victim visited with her friend and he bought her

another glass of wine. Victim then went to visit Defendant and his friend, Matt Rogers, who were also at the bar, during which time Victim continued to drink alcohol, consuming two or

three “jack and Cokes.” Victim told Defendant that she and her friend were just friends and that

she did not want an intimate relationship with him. Defendant told Victim that it “look[ed]” like

Victim‟s friend “want[ed] more” and Defendant asked for her phone number so that he could call

and “check on” Victim later. After declining a ride from Defendant and Rogers, Victim returned

to her home with her friend, where they opened another bottle of wine and talked.

During that time, Victim received several texts from Defendant, to which she replied that

she was “fine” and did not need Defendant and Rogers to come over. Rogers then called Victim

and asked whether he and Defendant could come over for some beers. Rogers indicated that if

he and Defendant came over, Victim‟s friend would leave. Victim did not want her friend to

spend the night, so she told Defendant and Rogers that they could come over. Victim‟s friend

then left her house.

When Defendant and Rogers arrived, the three drank more wine and each had a shot of

hard alcohol. After that, Victim was only able to remember “bits and pieces” of the night and

felt like her body was “shutting down.” Victim recalled going to the living room to listen to

music and dance and then leaving to go lay down. As she walked into the kitchen, Defendant

grabbed her upper body and told her that he and Rogers were “going to run a train on [her].”

Defendant guided, and “kind of carried,” Victim toward her bedroom where Defendant then had

sexual intercourse with Victim. At the time, Victim could not move or talk. After Defendant

and Rogers left, Victim lost consciousness. Several weeks later, Victim reported what had

happened to the police. Defendant was arrested and charged with one count of sexual assault.

Before trial, Defendant conducted a deposition of Victim, during which Victim refused to

disclose her ex-husband‟s phone number and her victim impact statement. Defendant recessed

2 the deposition to a later date. Defendant then filed a motion for sanctions for Victim‟s failure to

answer questions during her deposition. Defendant also filed a notice to take the depositions of

Victim‟s medical and psychological providers, Doctors Christy Bleckman and Timothy Jones

respectively, and filed subpoenas for Victim‟s medical and psychiatric records. Victim moved to

quash Defendant‟s request for discovery and for the subpoenas. The trial court granted Victim‟s

motion to quash and denied Defendant‟s motion for sanctions.

Defendant then moved for reconsideration of the trial court‟s order sustaining Victim‟s

motion to quash and denying Defendant‟s motion for sanctions. In his supporting memorandum,

Defendant asserted that Victim had waived the physician-patient privilege as to Drs. Bleckman

and Jones and that no in camera review of the requested records was necessary.1 Defendant

further asserted that denial of access to the records would deprive him of his rights to a fair trial,

to present a defense, and to confront witnesses against him. The information contained in the

records, according to Defendant—including, Victim‟s contradictory out-of-court statements

regarding the crime, false claims of prior rapes, her inability to recall the crime because of her

use of psychiatric medications—was necessary to impeach Victim‟s credibility. The trial court,

in denying Defendant‟s motion for reconsideration, did not conduct an in camera review of the

records, but apparently considered the records privileged by indicating that it would weigh

Defendant‟s need for the information against Victim‟s interest in keeping the records private.

Ultimately, the trial court‟s order permitted further deposition of Victim limited to the events on

the night in question, but permitted Defendant to “continue discovery (including deposition and

1 Contrary to Victim‟s assertion in her motion to quash that the records were protected by the physician-patient privilege, Defendant‟s motion for reconsideration alleged that Victim provided waivers of all privileges as to the records of Drs. Bleckman and Jones. However, the record on appeal contains one authorization to release medical records as to Dr. Bleckman and not Dr. Jones. Defendant also asserted in his supporting memorandum that Victim waived the privilege by putting her medical condition in issue by making allegations regarding her “mental capacity to consent to sex with Defendant” and how her physical condition impacted her ability to consent.

3 records)” if Victim had sought professional medical, psychiatric or psychological treatment for

conditions related to the crime since the date of the assault. The order prohibited discovery of

medical, psychiatric or psychological conditions before the date of the crime unless the “medical,

psychiatric or psychological professional” found the information “necessarily related” to the

instant crime.

Ultimately, the jury convicted Defendant of sexual assault. The trial court sentenced

Defendant to five years‟ imprisonment in the Department of Corrections. The trial court

suspended execution of the sentence and Defendant was placed on probation for five years. This

appeal followed.

Point I: Pre-Trial Discovery

In his first point, Defendant claims that the trial court abused its discretion by sustaining

Victim‟s motion to quash Defendant‟s subpoena of Victim‟s medical and psychiatric records,

overruling Defendant‟s motion for sanctions for Victim‟s failure to answer questions during her

deposition, and denying Defendant‟s motion for reconsideration of these same issues and

limiting the reconvened deposition of Victim to the events on the date of the crime. According

to Defendant, the trial court‟s actions in this regard deprived Defendant of his rights to present a

defense, to confront the witnesses against him, to due process of law, and to a fair trial. 2 While

Defendant‟s initial brief does not elucidate what information was contained within the records of

which he was deprived that would have assisted him in preparing a defense—and, thus, does not

2 Defendant‟s point relied on alleges potential claims of error regarding three different decisions of the trial court.

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State of Missouri v. Brad J. Julius, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-brad-j-julius-moctapp-2014.