State v. Bruna

686 N.W.2d 590, 12 Neb. Ct. App. 798, 2004 Neb. App. LEXIS 222
CourtNebraska Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 7, 2004
DocketA-03-544
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 686 N.W.2d 590 (State v. Bruna) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Bruna, 686 N.W.2d 590, 12 Neb. Ct. App. 798, 2004 Neb. App. LEXIS 222 (Neb. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

I. INTRODUCTION

Pursuant to a jury verdict, Jay E. Bruna was convicted in the district court for Sarpy County of first degree sexual assault on a child and sentenced to 15 to 50 years in prison. Bruna appeals, alleging that the trial court committed numerous prejudicial errors and that Bruna’s trial counsel was ineffective in several respects. Although we conclude that these matters lack merit regarding the pretrial motions and trial proceedings, we find merit in the error assigned regarding the trial judge’s sentencing comments.

II. BACKGROUND

The information asserted one charge of first degree sexual assault on a child, a Class II felony in violation of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-319(l)(c) (Reissue 1995). It specifically alleged that between December 1, 2001, and May 20, 2002, Bmna, a person 19 years of age or older, subjected A.T., a person younger than 16 years of age, to sexual penetration. Bmna and the State each filed several motions before and during trial. We summarize the relevant motions and rulings in the analysis section of this opinion.

The court conducted a trial on March 3 to 7, 2003. Because the evidence regarding the elements of first degree sexual assault is relevant only to Bmna’s motions for directed verdict, we summarize that evidence in the manner most favorable to the State. See State v. Spurgin, 261 Neb. 427, 623 N.W.2d 644 (2001).

We first summarize the testimony of A.T., the victim, in detail. A.T. was bom on January 27, 1990. During the 2001-02 school year, he was a sixth grader and often rode a schoolbus, driven by Bmna, home from school. A.T. described Bmna as his friend.

A.T. related events showing that Bmna took an unusual interest in A.T.:

During the 2001-02 school year, A.T. played a saxophone in the school band. He took private band lessons from the band teacher. Bmna attended these private lessons and “would just sit *802 there” during them. Bruna also attended A.T.’s band concerts. Bruna told A.T. and other children that if they practiced their instruments more, they could go to a hockey game. As a result of this incentive, A.T. attended a hockey game with Bruna, other boys, and the father of one of the other boys. Bmna told A.T. that Bmna played percussion instmments and the guitar. A.T. wanted to leam to play the guitar and asked Bmna to teach him. Bmna replied that he would give A.T. lessons at Bmna’s house.

A.T. also played baseball on a team composed entirely of boys. Bmna attended almost all of A.T.’s baseball games, standing behind a dugout. A.T. did not see Bmna speaking to the parents at the games but admitted that it was possible that Bmna did so when A.T. was not watching.

A.T.’s school hosted a grandparents’ tea between Thanksgiving and Christmas of 2001. A.T. had no grandparents in the area, and without any request, Bmna offered to attend. A.T. accepted the offer and sat with Bmna at the tea. If A.T. had not brought a guest, the tea’s sponsor would have assigned a stranger as A.T.’s guest.

During his sixth grade year, A.T. obtained a haircut at a barbershop in Springfield. A.T. saw Bmna at the barbershop, watching A.T. and taking his picture. Bmna did not tell A.T. why Bmna took the photographs. A.T.’s mother accompanied A.T. to the haircut appointment, but A.T. did not know whether she spoke to Bmna.

On A.T.’s birthday in January 2002, Bmna gave him a greeting card which, although tom into pieces, was received in evidence.

In addition to driving the schoolbus, Bmna worked at a bar in Springfield. Bmna inquired whether A.T. wanted a job mowing the lawn at the bar, but Bmna did not tell A.T. how much Bmna intended to pay for this work.

Bmna told A.T. that he owned several cars, including “a Corvette, a Lincoln, and . . . two or three Broncos,” and A.T. asked to see Bmna’s cars. Bmna told him that he would bring a picture of a car the next day, but he never did.

A.T. explained the circumstances involving the events on the schoolbus:

During the second half (January to May) of the 2001-02 school year, A.T. rode the bus home two to three afternoons per *803 week; on the remaining schooldays, his parents, both of whom work, brought him home. At the beginning (September) of that school year, A.T. sat in the back of the bus, but Bruna later made

A.T. and one of A.T.’s friends, B.T., sit in the front because, Bruna claimed, the two boys were “acting up.” The two boys sat on the front seat across from Bruna. When A.T. rode the bus, Bruna would bring him food. Bruna did not give food to the other children, but he sometimes gave the other children candy. At some point during the school year, B.T. resumed sitting in the back of the bus, but A.T. continued to sit in the front. At times, rather than sitting on the front seat, A.T. would sit on the engine cover between the front seat and the driver’s seat. When doing so, he faced Bruna, with his legs on the side of the cover closest to the driver’s seat. A.T. sat on the engine cover almost every time he rode the bus between January and May. A.T. did not know how this practice began. While sitting in this location, A.T. assisted Bruna by opening the bus’ door, using the control lever in front of the engine cover.

A.T. lived in a house just outside of Springfield’s Meadow Oaks subdivision, where the backyard adjoined the premises of B.T.’s residence. Sometimes A.T. would get off the bus at B.T.’s residence, play there, and then walk home through A.T.’s backyard. B.T.’s residence was located on Meadow Ridge Drive, one-half mile from its intersection with Cornish Road.

At a point after Christmas 2001 and also after the hockey game mentioned above, Bruna began stopping the bus on Cornish Road near Meadow Ridge Drive while he and A.T. were alone on the bus. The first time Bruna stopped the bus there, they talked while Bruna sat in the driver’s seat and A.T. sat across from him in the front seat. The next time A.T. rode the bus, Bruna did not stop on Cornish Road. On the next occasion when Bruna and A.T. were alone on the bus and Bruna stopped it on Cornish Road, Bruna did so at the same location and told A.T. to go to the back of the bus. A.T. went three-quarters of the way toward the back of the bus and sat on a seat, and Bruna kneeled on one knee in the aisle. Bruna touched A.T.’s penis with Bruna’s hands through A.T.’s clothes. Bruna threatened that if A.T. told anyone what had happened, Bruna would hurt him. Bruna then drove away from the area.

*804 Bruna returned to the same area on another occasion when alone with A.T. on A.T.’s way home from school. Bruna again told A.T. to go to the back of the bus. A.T. again went three-quarters of the way to the back of the bus and sat in a seat, and Bruna again kneeled on one knee in the aisle. Bruna told A.T. to pull down his pants, and A.T. complied. Bruna touched A.T.’s penis with Bruna’s hands, and, A.T. later testified, “stuff came out of [A.T.’s] penis” and landed on the floor. Bruna again threatened A.T.

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Bluebook (online)
686 N.W.2d 590, 12 Neb. Ct. App. 798, 2004 Neb. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-bruna-nebctapp-2004.