State v. Alexander

875 S.W.2d 924, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 806, 1994 WL 197979
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1994
DocketNos. 17863, 18808
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 875 S.W.2d 924 (State v. Alexander) 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 v. Alexander, 875 S.W.2d 924, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 806, 1994 WL 197979 (Mo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Robert S. Alexander (Defendant) was charged with violating § 566.060, RSMo 1986, by sodomizing his six-year-old stepdaughter between May 28,1989, and June 16, 1989. Convicted by a jury, he was sentenced to 15 years’ imprisonment pursuant to the verdict. In Case No. 17863 he appeals from the judgment imposing the sentence. Defendant claims that the trial court erred (I) by admitting evidence of his misconduct with his son, (II) by allowing the victim to sit on her great-aunt’s lap as the victim testified, (III) by admitting pictures of naked women, and (IV) by giving the pattern reasonable doubt [926]*926instruction. Point III is dispositive. We reverse and remand.

After sentencing, Defendant sought post-conviction relief under Rule 29.15. In Case No. 18808 he appeals the denial of that motion. Pursuant to Rule 29.15(Z) the appeals were consolidated. Our disposition of the direct appeal renders moot the issue raised in Case No. 18808. Appeal No. 18808 is therefore dismissed.

CASE NO. 17868 — DIRECT APPEAL

LJVL_H„, the victim, was age 8 at the time of trial.1 The victim’s mother, S_A_, died in June 1989. Before the mother’s final hospitalization, she and her husband (Defendant), their son B_A_, their daughter H_A_, and the victim lived together. When S_A_ was hospitalized, Defendant was in Illinois. The children’s grandmother, D_H_, was at the hospital with her daughter. For those reasons, R_L_, the children’s great-aunt, temporarily had the children at her home.

Because R_L_ had been concerned for over a year about possible misconduct of Defendant toward the victim, she took this opportunity to ask the victim “if she still took showers with her dad.” At first, the victim did not “want to talk about herself.” However, R_L_ pressed the issue and the victim finally made statements suggesting that she had been sodomized anally by Defendant. When the children’s grandmother, D_H_, came from the hospital, R_L_ told her what the victim had said.

D_H_, the grandmother, testified that after June 12, 1989, she had custody of all the children, including the victim. Upon questioning by D_H_, the victim related facts suggesting that she had been sodomized by Defendant. D_H_ then contacted juvenile authorities. In addition, DJHL took the child to three doctors, including an emergency room doctor at Phelps County Regional Medical Center.

Employees from both the Division of Family Services and the Phelps County Sheriffs Office interviewed the victim and her half-brother, B_. At trial they testified that during their interview of the victim she related facts and used dolls to suggest that Defendant had sodomized her anally.

L_MJEI_, the victim, testified at trial that Defendant stuck his “ding-a-ling” in her “privates.” When asked to use the anatomically correct dolls to show what Defendant had done, she responded by placing the penis of the male doll both in front of and to the back of the female doll.

Dr. James Taylor, emergency room physician who saw the victim in June 1989, was called for the defense. He testified he did a general physical examination of L_M_H_, with special attention to the genitalia. He found the child’s hymenal tissue in place, normal for her age, and for the most part intact without evidence of scar tissue. No abnormalities were found upon anal examination. The only abrasions noted were on her right knee and left ankle. He recorded on the hospital record, “[rjectal and vaginal, without evidence [of] trauma.”

Defendant testified. He denied sodomizing the child. During cross-examination he insisted that D_H_, the grandmother, had “fed [the victim] this story” because she did not want Defendant to take the children back to Illinois.

The jury convicted Defendant of sodomy, and this appeal followed.

In Point III Defendant charges the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted into evidence playing cards that featured naked women, claiming that any probative value to this evidence was outweighed by its prejudicial impact on the jury. He also argues that the cards were not relevant to any issue in the ease, and that no valid reason existed for admitting the cards. Defendant insists that the only purpose of the cards was to inflame the jury, i.e., by using the pictures to portray Defendant as a person obsessed with sex.

The cards were ordinary in appearance except that (a) they were larger than the usual deck of cards, and (b) on one side they show adult women with their breasts and buttocks exposed — no men or children were shown on the cards. They depict women in [927]*927poses similar to those frequently seen in the past on service station and garage calendars. The trial judge characterized the pictures as “semi-pornographic.” Where, when, or how the state came into possession of the cards does not appear in the record.

Defense counsel filed a motion in limine, seeking an order precluding the state from referring to the cards any time during the trial. In the motion Defendant alleged that such evidence did not tend to prove the guilt of Defendant and would tend to “inflame the passions and prejudices of the jury against defendant.”

When the “card” motion was first argued to the trial court, the prosecutor represented to the trial court that the evidence would show “this was a deck of playing cards which the Defendant kept under [the victim’s] bed.” When asked by the judge, “What exactly is the evidence going to be with regard to these playing cards?,” the prosecutor answered, “[The victim] knew that they were there and that she took them to her school ... maintaining they were Daddy’s playing cards. This shows the state of mind of this Defendant and what he thought [the victim’s] bedroom was for, which is where these acts are alleged to have occurred.” The trial court then observed:

“[T]hey may be relevant ... if the man is keeping these ... playing cards under his little girl’s bed ... that’s a little different than just his having a pack of semi-pomographic playing cards in his possession somewhere.... Depending on what use these playing cards were made and how they fit into this case ... is going to depend on whether they’re admissible.... [I]f he’s got them in a little girl’s room, keeps under the little girl’s bed ... I think that they’re going to come out.”

During pretrial on the day of trial the trial judge reaffirmed his view on the issue, saying:

“[T]he Court has basically overruled the motion for limine [as to the playing cards] ... but would need to hear the evidence in this case ... as the State has indicated to the Court that ... [the victim] will testify that her father kept that deck of cards under her bed.... [I]f that’s the way [the
testimony] come in would be relevant.... But it will ... depend upon how the evidence in the case comes in.”

Thereafter, during trial and over Defendant’s objection, the victim testified regarding the playing cards as follows:

“Q. (to victim, after showing her exhibit 1, the cards). Have you ever seen those cards before?
A. Yes.
Q. And where have you seen them before?
A. They were under my bed.
Q. And who put them under your bed? Do you know?
A. No.
Q.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 S.W.2d 924, 1994 Mo. App. LEXIS 806, 1994 WL 197979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-alexander-moctapp-1994.