State v. Berry

CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2025
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Berry (State v. Berry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico 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. Berry, (N.M. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

The slip opinion is the first version of an opinion released by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals. Once an opinion is selected for publication by the Court, it is assigned a vendor-neutral citation by the Clerk of the Court for compliance with Rule 23-112 NMRA, authenticated and formally published. The slip opinion may contain deviations from the formal authenticated opinion. 1 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO

2 Opinion Number:__________

3 Filing Date: February 20, 2025

4 No. A-1-CA-40788

5 STATE OF NEW MEXICO,

6 Plaintiff-Appellee,

7 v.

8 BRYAN KEITH BERRY,

9 Defendant-Appellant.

10 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LEA COUNTY 11 Lee A. Kirksey, District Court Judge

12 Raúl Torrez, Attorney General 13 Santa Fe, NM 14 Meryl E. Francolini, Assistant Solicitor General 15 Albuquerque, NM

16 for Appellee

17 Bennett J. Baur, Chief Public Defender 18 Joelle N. Gonzales, Assistant Appellate Defender 19 Santa Fe, NM

20 for Appellant 1 OPINION

2 WRAY, Judge.

3 {1} Defendant appeals his conviction for one count of second-degree criminal

4 sexual contact of a minor (CSCM), contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-9-13(B)(1)

5 (2003). Before trial, the district court found, “the evidence presented establishes that

6 the child-victim [(Child)] in this case cannot testify without suffering unreasonable

7 harm pursuant to Rule 5-504 NMRA.” As a result, the district court ordered the State

8 to take Child’s testimony at a videotaped deposition but did not allow Defendant to

9 be physically present in the room during the proceeding. At trial, Child’s deposition

10 was substituted for her in-court testimony, and Defendant did not object. On appeal,

11 Defendant challenges the district court’s conclusions that these special procedures

12 were justified under the circumstances and argues that as a result of these procedures,

13 he was denied the right under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution

14 to confront and cross-examine his accuser. We hold that the district court’s factual

15 findings were supported by substantial evidence and justified the conclusion that a

16 videotaped deposition was necessary under the circumstances. The district court did

17 not, however, make factual findings to support the further conclusion that Defendant

18 would not be physically present and would watch the deposition on a video monitor

19 from another room. Nevertheless, Defendant did not object to the absence of findings

20 or to the substitution at trial of Child’s videotaped deposition testimony for face-to- 1 face confrontation. We therefore conclude that Defendant did not preserve an

2 objection to the absence of findings and waived the protections of the constitutional

3 rights he now asserts on appeal. Reviewing the admission of the videotaped

4 deposition testimony for fundamental error, we affirm.

5 BACKGROUND

6 {2} Defendant was briefly responsible for babysitting Child––the four-year-old

7 daughter of his wife’s friend––in his home in Hobbs, New Mexico. Afterward, Child

8 reported an incident, and Defendant was charged with one count of CSCM. The State

9 filed a pretrial motion to take a videotaped deposition of Child pursuant to Rule 5-

10 504(A) and argued that this special procedure was necessary “to prevent [Child]

11 suffering from unreasonable and unnecessary mental or emotional harm.” The State

12 attached to the motion a forensic evaluation completed by Mr. Munro, a licensed

13 professional clinical counselor. The forensic evaluation was based primarily on

14 information Mr. Munro gathered during separate interviews with Child and her

15 mother. Defendant did not respond to the State’s motion.

16 {3} The district court held a pretrial hearing on the State’s Rule 5-504(A) motion.

17 The State presented the sworn testimony of Mr. Munro, who offered unrebutted

18 expert opinions that Child would be traumatized by testifying both in court and in

19 Defendant’s physical presence. Although Defendant presented no evidence at the

20 pretrial hearing, Defendant’s counsel objected twice, unsuccessfully, to Mr. Munro’s 1 testimony as speculative and argued against the State’s motion on the grounds that

2 “any person accused of a crime has a right to confront his accuser, has a right under

3 the law for that witness’s testimony to be cross-examined, and for that witness to

4 appear in open court.”

5 {4} At the end of the pretrial hearing, the district court weighed Defendant’s

6 confrontation rights against the potential for unreasonable and unnecessary

7 emotional harm to Child and granted the State’s Rule 5-504(A) motion. The district

8 court also granted the State’s separate request, made only during the pretrial hearing,

9 that Defendant “not be present in the room while [the] deposition is going on.” The

10 district court explained the exclusion procedure it would implement for the

11 videotaped deposition as follows:

12 Now I have done a few of these over my time on the bench and I believe 13 one I have done where the defendant was not present, under a similar 14 situation. What we were able to do was to set up kind of a closed circuit. 15 [The defendant] was in a room across the hallway, he was able to watch 16 and listen in, in the deposition in real time. I gave his attorney the 17 opportunity for breaks during the deposition—to step across the hall, 18 consult with his client, talk about questions and issues that the 19 defendant wanted raised during the deposition and that is the same 20 process I intend to follow here.

21 Defendant did not object to the district court’s exclusion procedure. In the written

22 order granting the State’s motion, the district court found that Child “cannot testify

23 without suffering unreasonable harm pursuant to Rule 5-504” and ordered “that the 1 video deposition will comply with State v. Fairweather, 1993-NMSC-065, 116 N.M.

2 456[, 863 P.2d 1077].”

3 {5} During Child’s deposition, Defendant sat in a room adjacent to the room in

4 which Child testified and viewed the proceeding live on a video monitor. Both the

5 district court and Defendant’s attorney were physically present in the room where

6 Child testified, and Defendant’s attorney cross-examined Child. As noted above,

7 Child’s videotaped deposition testimony was played at the bench trial and admitted

8 into evidence in lieu of in-court testimony without objection from Defendant. The

9 district court found Defendant guilty, entered judgment, and imposed a sentence of

10 fifteen years, with eight years suspended. This appeal followed.

11 DISCUSSION

12 {6} On appeal, Defendant contests the district court’s order to take the deposition

13 and to exclude Defendant from the room where the deposition occurred. In addition

14 to challenging the sufficiency of both the evidence and the district court’s findings

15 to justify the procedures, Defendant also argues that aspects of the procedures

16 impermissibly burdened the right to cross-examination. Defendant’s arguments

17 involve whether the Sixth Amendment right to confront an accuser, which is

18 normally satisfied by physical, face-to-face confrontation at trial, has been

19 adequately safeguarded by substitute procedures. See Rule 5-504. We therefore 1 review the protections of the Confrontation Clause and the circumstances in which

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Bluebook (online)
State v. Berry, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-berry-nmctapp-2025.