State v. ALDABA, JR.

25 P.3d 149, 29 Kan. App. 2d 184, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 477
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedMay 25, 2001
Docket84,553
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 25 P.3d 149 (State v. ALDABA, JR.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. ALDABA, JR., 25 P.3d 149, 29 Kan. App. 2d 184, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 477 (kanctapp 2001).

Opinion

Beier, J.:

Santiago Aldaba, Jr., appeals his jury trial conviction for aggravated criminal sodomy.

Aldaba raises five issues: (1) Should the district court have instructed the jury on the lesser included offense of attempted aggravated criminal sodomy? (2) Did the district court err by admitting K.S.A. 60-455 evidence when the State failed to give timely notice? (3) Did the district court abuse its discretion by admitting evidence of defendant’s prior sexual acts with a second child to show plan and identity? (4) Did the district court abuse its discretion by denying defendant’s motion for mistrial after the second child testified at trial that he was a victim of aggravated criminal sodomy rather than the inappropriate touching and attempted sodomy that he was expected to describe? (5) Did the district court err by allowing the State to call a rebuttal witness without giving prior notice to the defense?

The alleged victim in this case, 6-year-old I.V., told his 12-year-old cousin L.D. that Aldaba, a relative, had touched I.V.’s “butt” and stuck his penis into I.V.’s mouth while in the living room of I.V.’s grandfather’s house. L.D. told I.V. to tell his mother and his older brother. I.V. then told the brother that Aldaba had tried to make him put his mouth on Aldaba’s “dick” when Aldaba came to *186 visit the previous summer. I.V. was shaking and crying during this discussion and said he had not told anyone before because Aldaba had told him he would kill him. L.D. then came into the room, started crying, and said Aldaba had “tried to do the same thing to him” in Chicago.

The initial police report filed by Officer Diaz after interviewing I.V. said that Aldaba had attempted to have oral sex with I.V., but I.V. refused and ran into a bathroom. This report was characterized at trial as a summary and not a “word-for-word” transcript of what I.V. told Diaz. I.V. later told a different officer that Aldaba was sleeping by him at his grandpa’s house and that Aldaba grabbed his head and made him suck on Aldaba’s penis. I.V. also said he pushed Aldaba away, but Aldaba grabbed him by the leg.

After Aldaba was charged, he filed a notice of alibi defense in accordance with K.S.A. 22-3218. The State filed no notice of its intent to use I.V.’s sister as an alibi rebuttal witness. The State did file a K.S.A. 60-455 motion seeking to admit evidence that Aldaba inappropriately touched and attempted to commit oral sodomy on L.D., arguing that it was relevant to identity and plan. The defense opposed the motion as untimely. The district court noted that the motion failed to abide by an apparently unwritten local rule requiring such motions to be filed at least 5 days before trial but nevertheless granted the motion.

At trial, I.V. testified that the defendant had put his “wiener” in I.V.’s mouth at his grandpa’s house, but he said that it happened upstairs in his room when it was daylight.

L.D. testified at trial that the defendant had slept in the living room of the grandfather’s house with I.V. He also testified that the defendant had touched L.D.’s “butt” four times. When the prosecutor asked L.D. if the defendant had ever tried to do anything to him like what had been done to I.V., L.D. said the defendant had put his penis in L.D.’s mouth as well when he was visiting the defendant out of state. This testimony, at the next break in the evidence, prompted a defense motion for mistrial based on unfair surprise. The district court denied the motion, finding that all parties were surprised by L.D.’s testimony about the completed act of sodomy.

*187 I.V.’s and L.D.’s trial statements conflicted in some of their particulars with the testimony of Detective Kevin Bradford, who had interviewed both of the boys pretrial. Bradford testified regarding the initial interview of I.V., in which I.V. said that Aldaba had tried to commit sodomy but that I.V. had escaped to a bathroom. He also testified that, in a later interview, I.V. had told him the sodomy happened in the kitchen rather than the living room of his grandfather’s house. Bradford also testified that L.D. had told him the defendant grabbed L.D. and attempted unsuccessfully to commit sodomy.

The defense called several of defendant’s other relatives and one unrelated person as alibi witnesses, all of whom said the defendant stayed somewhere other than I.V.’s grandfather’s house the night of the alleged sodomy on I.V. In addition, the defendant denied all of the allegations made by I.V. and L.D.

After the defense rested, the State called I.V.’s 14-year-old sister as a rebuttal witness. She testified that the defendant had a conversation with her about where she was going to sleep on the night in question and that he slept in the living room of the grandfather’s house with I.V. The defense objected to lack of notice of this testimony. During an ensuing bench conference, the prosecutor divulged that she became aware of the sister’s ability to rebut the alibi defense a couple of days to a week before trial. Although this knowledge was not shared with the defense, the district judge overruled defense counsel’s objection to admission of the sister’s testimony.

The defendant did not request a jury instruction on the lesser included offense of attempted aggravated criminal sodomy.

Lesser Included Offense

Defendant first argues the district court erred by failing to instruct the juiy on the lesser included offense of attempted aggravated criminal sodomy, because two witnesses testified that I.V. said the defendant only “tried” to commit the crime. These witnesses were the older brother and the investigator who took I.V.’s initial statement. Because the defense did not object to the absence of the lesser included offense instruction, we must find that the *188 absence was “clearly erroneous” before Aldaba would be entitled to reversal on this issue. See K.S.A. 2000 Supp. 22-3414(3). “Instructions are clearly erroneous only if the reviewing court is firmly convinced that there is a real possibility the jury would have rendered a different verdict if the trial error had not occurred.” State v. Henry, 263 Kan. 118, 131, 947 P.2d 1020 (1997).

Although I.V.’s version of what Aldaba did to him ultimately included a completed rather than an attempted sodomy, we agree that his inconsistent accounts could have supported conviction on the lesser included offense of attempt instead. We are not, however, firmly convinced that there is a real possibility the jury would have rendered a different verdict if the lesser included instruction had been given. Both I.V. and L.D. overcame their initial reluctance to tell the whole story, a reluctance jurors would regard as normal under the circumstances. Their testimony against defendant was graphic, more so than it would have been if the attempts at oral sodomy had been unsuccessful.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 P.3d 149, 29 Kan. App. 2d 184, 2001 Kan. App. LEXIS 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-aldaba-jr-kanctapp-2001.