State v. Cegers

2019 UT App 54, 440 P.3d 924
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 4, 2019
Docket20161018-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2019 UT App 54 (State v. Cegers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Cegers, 2019 UT App 54, 440 P.3d 924 (Utah Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

HAGEN, Judge:

¶1 Antonio Dewayne Cegers was convicted of sexually abusing his girlfriend's daughter (M.F.) and one of M.F.'s friends (S.B.). He now appeals his convictions for one count of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, one count of sexual abuse of a child, and one count of forcible sexual abuse.

¶2 Cegers raises four issues that we reach on appeal. First, Cegers argues that the district court erred when it allowed the State to admit testimony from M.F.'s high school counselor that bolstered M.F.'s credibility. At trial, M.F.'s counselor testified that she did not believe that M.F. fabricated the allegations against Cegers to receive a school scholarship. Because this testimony offered an opinion as to M.F.'s truthfulness on a particular occasion, it constituted impermissible bolstering. Although Cegers did not raise a bolstering objection, we address the issue on appeal because Cegers has successfully argued that the plain error exception to the preservation rule applies. We conclude that the admission of the counselor's testimony, combined with the district court's subsequent instruction directing the jury to consider the counselor's opinion, amounted to plain error. And because the State introduced no evidence of Cegers's guilt apart from the alleged victims' testimony, Cegers was prejudiced by the impermissible bolstering. Accordingly, we must vacate Cegers's convictions and remand to the district court for a new trial.

¶3 Although we vacate his convictions based on impermissible bolstering, we address three other issues Cegers raises on appeal that may be relevant on remand. With respect to his challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we conclude that the victims' testimony was not so inherently improbable that it could not sustain his convictions and affirm the district court's denial of his motion for a directed verdict. We also conclude that the jury instructions did not misstate the law or mislead the jury with respect to the intent elements of sexual abuse of a child and forcible sexual abuse. Finally, the district did not err in declining to review M.F.'s medical records in camera because Cegers did not make a threshold showing that the records related to the kind of condition contemplated by rule 506(d)(1) of the Utah Rules of Evidence. Accordingly, we affirm the district court's rulings on these issues.

BACKGROUND 1

¶4 In June 2011, S.B. disclosed to her brother, mother, and a friend that Cegers had molested her while she was sleeping over with M.F. S.B.'s mother reported Cegers to the police. Shortly thereafter, the police met and spoke with M.F., the daughter of Cegers's girlfriend. M.F. told the police that she was not aware that anything had happened to S.B. while she was at M.F.'s home and that she herself had never been sexually abused by Cegers.

¶5 Roughly four years later, Cegers and M.F.'s mother separated. After M.F. and her mother moved out of Cegers's home following a domestic violence disturbance, M.F. told her mother that Cegers had been sexually abusing her since she was five years old. The next day, M.F. also confided in her school counselor that Cegers had sexually abused her throughout her childhood. After M.F. disclosed the abuse to her counselor, the counselor contacted the police.

¶6 Upon receiving M.F.'s report of abuse, the State charged Cegers with six counts of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, see Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1 (4) (LexisNexis Supp. 2018), 2 relating to both S.B. and M.F., and two counts of forcible sexual abuse, see id. § 76-5-404, relating to M.F.

¶7 Before trial, Cegers filed a motion to sever the charges relating to M.F. and S.B. and a motion to allow Cegers to subpoena M.F.'s medical and school records. The district court denied the motion to sever, concluding that the charges relating to S.B. were properly joined with the charges relating to M.F. and that the joinder did not prejudice Cegers. The district court also denied Cegers's motion to subpoena M.F.'s medical, counseling, and school records under rule 506(d)(1) of the Utah Rules of Evidence. Regarding the medical records, which included counseling records dating back to 1997 and counseling records from some of the hospitals 3 that provided care for M.F. after a suicide attempt in 2013, the court concluded that Cegers had not shown that M.F. suffered from a relevant emotional condition as required by rule 506(d)(1) and that he had not shown with reasonable certainty that the records contained exculpatory evidence. Regarding M.F.'s school records, the district court denied Cegers's request because the defense had failed to "lay out what the standards of the expectations of privacy are with respect to those records."

¶8 Additionally, prior to presentation of the State's evidence at trial, Cegers objected to the "intent requirements" in the element jury instructions for sexual abuse of a child and forcible sexual abuse. Specifically, Cegers objected to the instructions' inclusion of "knowingly" and "recklessly" as possible mental states with which Cegers could have committed the touching elements of both offenses, arguing that sexual abuse of a child and forcible sexual abuse are "specific intent crime[s]." The district court overruled Cegers's objection, emphasizing that the Model Utah Jury Instruction after which the instructions were patterned accurately stated that "it is the more general mens rea that applies with respect to the touching."

¶9 At trial, the State introduced testimony from S.B., M.F., M.F.'s counselor, S.B.'s mother, S.B.'s brother, a friend of S.B., and M.F.'s mother. S.B. testified that M.F. was her "best friend" until part way through junior high school and that she spent a considerable amount of time at the home that Cegers shared with M.F.'s mother, M.F., and Cegers's other children. She testified that she remained friends with M.F. until Cegers made her feel too uncomfortable to return to their home.

¶10 S.B. described several incidents where Cegers touched her sexually. According to her testimony, Cegers would wait until she was alone with him and touch her breasts and groin area over and under her clothing. She said these incidents took place in Cegers's home in the living room while she was sleeping or lying on the couch or floor and in the kitchen washing dishes.

¶11 M.F. testified that she was not aware that Cegers had abused S.B. Although she remembered the police speaking with her about S.B.'s allegations, according to M.F., neither the police nor Cegers ever provided her with specific details. But M.F. testified extensively about her own sexual abuse by Cegers, stating that Cegers began touching her sexually when she was five years old and that the abuse continued into her teenage years. According to M.F., Cegers repeatedly rubbed her vagina over her clothes with his feet and hands, brushed his hands underneath her breasts, and pressed his erect penis against her. M.F.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 UT App 54, 440 P.3d 924, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cegers-utahctapp-2019.