STATE OF MISSOURI v. WADE A. STUCKLEY

573 S.W.3d 766
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 13, 2019
DocketSD35350
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 573 S.W.3d 766 (STATE OF MISSOURI v. WADE A. STUCKLEY) 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. WADE A. STUCKLEY, 573 S.W.3d 766 (Mo. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF MISSOURI, ) ) Respondent, ) ) vs. ) No. SD35350 ) WADE A. STUCKLEY, ) FILED: May 13, 2019 ) Appellant. )

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF GREENE COUNTY Honorable Thomas E. Mountjoy, Judge AFFIRMED Wade Stuckley was convicted of sodomizing and molesting his girlfriend’s (now wife’s) four-year-old child (“Victim”). Each of his three points on appeal seeks plain-error review, two raising Celis-Garcia complaints 1 and one charging double jeopardy. A plain-error claim “places a much greater burden on a defendant than an assertion of prejudicial error.” State v. Ralston, 400 S.W.3d 511, 520 (Mo.App. 2013). A defendant must show not only that the trial court committed evident, obvious, and clear error, but also the existence of manifest injustice or a miscarriage of justice. State v. Mueller, 568 S.W.3d 62, 75 (Mo.App. 2019). To prove plain instructional error, the defendant “must demonstrate the trial court so misdirected or failed to instruct the jury that the error affected the jury’s verdict.”

1 State v. Celis-Garcia, 344 S.W.3d 150 (Mo. banc 2011), discussed infra. Celis-Garcia, 344 S.W.3d at 154 (citations and internal quotation marks omitted). Even clear and obvious instructional error rarely works a manifest injustice or miscarriage of justice demanding plain-error reversal. State v. Parsons, 339 S.W.3d 543, 549 (Mo.App. 2011). The outcome of plain-error review depends heavily on the facts and circumstances of each case. Ralston, 400 S.W.3d at 520. Given the facts and circumstances of this case, and particularly how it was tried, Stuckley fails to convince us that anyone committed evident, obvious, and clear error, or that modified instructions would have changed the verdicts. We affirm the convictions. Background After several police interviews, the state charged and later tried Stuckley on three counts alleged to have happened at home between May 28 and June 13, 2014: 1. A bath incident where Stuckley admitted to police that he had inserted his pinky into Victim’s vagina. This was charged, presented at trial, and instructed upon as Count I. 2. A bedroom tickling incident where Stuckley admitted to police that he probably had inserted his thumb into Victim’s vagina, Victim said “Don’t touch me down there,” and Stuckley immediately apologized. This was charged, presented at trial, and instructed upon as Count II. 3. Other tickling incidents in Victim’s bedroom where Stuckley’s hand touched Victim’s vagina without penetration. This was charged, presented at trial, and instructed upon as Count III. This matchup of acts with charges continued through trial, beginning with the prosecutor’s opening-statement reference to what was charged as Count I and would be the subject of Instruction 5 (our emphasis): You’re going to hear from the defendant how he describes one particular instance that stands out in his mind. He remembers carrying four-year-old [Victim] out of the bathtub after she was getting a bath. He’ll describe to you that he remembered she was wet and slippery and his hands were wet and slippery from helping her wash her hair. He’ll talk about remembering his right hand on her upper back and his left hand underneath the buttocks. He remembers the thumb of his left hand brushing up against the lips of her vagina. He’ll talk about her slipping and his pinky finger

2 inserting into her vagina about one inch or up to his first knuckle. He’ll tell police officers that once that happened, he yanked it out real quick. The prosecutor then moved to what was charged as Count II and would be the subject of Instruction 6 (our emphasis): The defendant remembered another particular circumstance in which his fingers had been inserted inside [Victim’s] vagina in that two-week period. You’ll hear him describe to police officers that when he would put [Victim] to bed at night, he would often tickle her. On this particular incident, he remembered her wearing a dress nightgown, with panties. He talked about tickling her on her upper leg, inner thigh, and back of leg area. On this particular night, his left hand again, the thumb this time, slipped inside the elastic band of the leg part of her underwear and into her vagina, again about one inch or up to the first knuckle. That particular incident stood out to the defendant because he remembers four-year-old [Victim] saying, “No, don’t touch me there.” And he said to her, “I’m sorry. I was just tickling. It was an accident.” And again he told officers that he pulled his thumb out real quick once that happened. Finally, the prosecutor briefly touched on what was charged as Count III and would be the subject of Instruction 7 (our emphasis): The defendant also remembers several other times, about three or four, that his hand and fingers grazed against [Victim’s] vagina when he was tickling her. Presentation of evidence was consistent with these matchups, as were closing arguments and the verdict-directing instructions, where jurors had to agree that Stuckley: • “inserted his finger” into Victim’s vagina for guilt on Count I under Instruction 5, • “inserted his thumb” into her vagina for guilt on Count II under Instruction 6, and • “touched the genitals of [Victim] with his hand” for guilt on Count III under Instruction 7. Stuckley’s trial defense was to admit these touchings and penetrations, but deny they were prompted by sexual desire as the instructions required for guilt on 3 each count. The jury acquitted Stuckley on Count I (statutory sodomy, finger insertion), and found him guilty on Count II (statutory sodomy, thumb insertion) and Count III (child molestation, genital touching without penetration). We take Stuckley’s three points out of order for convenience. Point 2 – Instruction 6/Celis-Garcia In Celis-Garcia, our supreme court considered Missouri’s constitutional right to a unanimous jury verdict in a “multiple acts” case, i.e., one where “there is evidence of multiple, distinct criminal acts, each of which could serve as the basis for a criminal charge, but the defendant is charged with those acts in a single count.” 344 S.W.3d at 155-56 (our emphasis). For example, this would have been a multiple-acts case had the state tried all of Stuckley’s acts as one child-molestation count, or both vaginal penetrations as one statutory-sodomy count. In those situations, the verdict directors would have needed to “differentiate between the various acts in a way that ensured the jury unanimously convicted [Stuckley] of the same act or acts.” Id. at 156. “‘The defendant is entitled to a concurrence of the minds of the 12 jurors upon one definite charge of crime.’” Id. at 155 (quoting State v. Jackson, 146 S.W. 1166, 1169 (Mo. 1912)). But the state did not charge or try this as a multiple-acts case. Instead, per one of our supreme court’s Celis-Garcia recommendations, the state elected to submit particular criminal acts in separate charges. 344 S.W.3d at 157; State v. Flores, 437 S.W.3d 779, 791 (Mo.App. 2014). It charged, tried, and instructed upon the two vaginal penetrations as separate counts differentiated by thumb vs. finger penetration. It also charged, tried, and instructed upon the bedroom incidents separately: statutory sodomy (thumb penetration) vs. child molestation (other fondlings without penetration). 2 Not surprisingly, the court and parties thus tried and seemingly perceived this as not being a multiple-acts case. Yet astute appellate counsel has found and now proffers this brief snippet

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Bluebook (online)
573 S.W.3d 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-missouri-v-wade-a-stuckley-moctapp-2019.