State v. Carr

725 P.2d 1287, 302 Or. 20, 1986 Ore. LEXIS 1759
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 1986
DocketTC C84-11-34938; CA A36895; SC S32984
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 725 P.2d 1287 (State v. Carr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Carr, 725 P.2d 1287, 302 Or. 20, 1986 Ore. LEXIS 1759 (Or. 1986).

Opinion

*22 PETERSON, C. J.

Defendant appeals from convictions on jury trial for the crimes of rape in the first degree, sexual abuse in the second degree and three counts of sodomy in the first degree. The Court of Appeals affirmed defendant’s conviction without opinion. State v. Carr, 79 Or App 548, 719 P2d 925 (1986).

Defendant contends that the trial court erred in allowing the state to elicit testimony regarding the victim’s character for truthfulness. We granted review to determine whether testimony by defense witnesses on direct examination suggesting a motive for the victim to lie and by the defendant on cross-examination answering affirmatively to a question whether the victim had lied, is an attack on the victim’s character for truthfulness that opens the door for rehabilitation evidence of the victim’s truthful character under OEC 608(l)(b).

Defendant was charged with repeatedly sodomizing and sexually abusing his stepdaughter from the time that she was about 14 to 16 years old. The victim and her younger sister testified in detail to numerous instances of such conduct by defendant over the two-year period in question.

Defendant took the stand and denied that any of the acts had taken place. Defendant and his wife (the children’s mother) testified that during the two years in question they had embraced a religion that taught them, as marital partners, to act as one. They testified that before accepting this religion the wife had sole responsibility for disciplining the children. After they were taught to act as one the defendant began to participate in disciplining the children. They testified that the two girls did not like this, nor the new closeness of defendant and his wife. Defendant’s wife testified that the girls “rebelled”:

“Q. Did Mr. Carr’s role change as far as discipline was concerned?
“A. Yes. We kind of worked [as] one. We made decisions together on what we should do when time came for discipline, how to raise them and everything.
“Q. How did [the victim] react to this?
“A. Well, they didn’t like it.
“Q. When you said they, who are you talking about?
*23 “A. [The daughter and her sister]. They took most of my time up. I was spending most of my time with [the daughter]. [The daughter] and I was close. Even if I was taking a bath they was right in there with me. When I started drawing closer to my husband and being one and things, they rebelled against it and I think this is why they, you know, it is rebelling right now.”

Neither the defendant nor the wife testified on direct examination that the character of the girls for truthfulness was bad, either by reputation or opinion. Neither testified that the girls were lying. On cross examination, however, the prosecutor asked defendant:

“Q. Are you trying to tell the jury that those two children are lying because they don’t like the way you discipline them?
“A. Yes, I am.”

On redirect examination, defendant testified:

“Q. Do you know why they are telling the story they are telling?
“A. No, I don’t.
* * * *
“Q. You’re telling this jury, are you not, that what [the daughter] and [her sister] said is not true?
“A. Yes, I am. All of it is not true. All of it.”

The prosecution called the daughter’s aunt (the wife’s sister) to testify. Defendant objected to the offer of her testimony that the daughter was honest and truthful. There was extensive colloquy among the court and counsel concerning whether OEC 608(1) (b) would permit the receipt of such testimony.

The trial court allowed the aunt to testify. The aunt testified that she had known the daughter since the daughter was born, and that the daughter was an “honest person” and would not lie.

OEC 608(1) provides:

“The credibility of a witness may be * * * supported by evidence in the form of opinion or reputation, but:
“(a) The evidence may refer only to character for truthfulness or untruthfulness; and
*24 “(b) Evidence of truthful character is admissible only after the character of the witness for truthfulness has been attacked by opinion or reputation evidence or otherwise.”

Defendant first argues that the testimony of the defendant and his wife merely contradicted the testimony of the daughter and did not amount to an attack on the daughter’s character for truthfulness or support the introduction of evidence as to the daughter’s truthful character. The state concedes that “had the defense case been limited to a denial of the charged acts, such a denial would not constitute an attack upon the veracity of the victim.”

The answer to the first assertion is this. A prosecutor cannot create a foundation for OEC 608(1) (b) evidence by asking a defendant if a witness has lied. An affirmative response to such an inquiry does not put the character for truthfulness of the prosecution witness at issue, nor does it open the door for rehabilitation evidence of truthful character. Admission of the aunt’s testimony based upon that foundation was error. See State v. Allen, 276 Or 527, 531, 555 P2d 443 (1976). (Under former ORS 45.620, “where a witness’s testimony is merely contradicted and no affirmative attack has been waged against his character,” reputation testimony supporting his testimony is inadmissible.)

The state’s main claim is that the wife’s testimony that the daughters were “rebelling right now” provided the foundation for the aunt’s testimony on rebuttal. We turn to that question.

In its brief, the state acknowledges:

“* * * had the prosecutor inquired for the first time on cross examination into defendant’s opinion of the victim’s truthfulness, the question would have been improper. Rehabilitation of the victim would not be permissible unless defendant, in his direct testimony (or another defense witness in direct testimony), had first attacked the victim’s character for truthfulness.”

The state then argues that the daughter’s character for truthfulness was attacked when the defense “proffered their theory that the victim was lying because she was ‘rebelling’ against parental discipline by defendant.” The state argues that the testimony of the defendant and his wife went “beyond a simple denial” and attempted “to show the victim’s motive to fabricate a story.”

*25

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
725 P.2d 1287, 302 Or. 20, 1986 Ore. LEXIS 1759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carr-or-1986.