State v. Clasby

682 S.E.2d 892, 385 S.C. 148, 2009 S.C. LEXIS 364
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 17, 2009
Docket26705
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 682 S.E.2d 892 (State v. Clasby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Clasby, 682 S.E.2d 892, 385 S.C. 148, 2009 S.C. LEXIS 364 (S.C. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Justice BEATTY.

Janice M. Clasby appeals her conviction for lewd act upon a child, 1 arguing the trial judge erred in admitting evidence of prior bad acts involving the victim for which she was not indicted under the common scheme or plan exception to State v. Lyle, 125 S.C. 406, 118 S.E. 803 (1923), and Rule 404(b), SCRE. Pursuant to Rule 204(b), SCACR, this Court certified this appeal from the Court of Appeals. We affirm.

*151 FACTUAL/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On August 6, 1994, a daughter, B.C., was born to Clasby and Bug Holliday. Although the couple lived together at the time of B.C.’s birth, the couple separated approximately a month and a half later. After the separation, Clasby had physical custody of B.C.

According to Holliday, he did not have contact with B.C. until she was four years old given he “never could find where [Clasby and B.C.] were staying at.” Despite this reunion, Holliday stated that he did not establish a relationship with B.C. until she was six years old because Clasby “left again” with B.C. At that time, Holliday was awarded legal custody of B.C. after a family court custody proceeding. Even though the family court granted Clasby visitation, Holliday testified that Clasby did not exercise this right on a regular basis.

When Clasby became homeless in November 2003, Holliday permitted her to move in with him but the two did not maintain a romantic relationship. One month later, Clasby moved out of the home. Clasby did not establish contact with Holliday and B.C. until May 2004 when she sought to exercise her visitation rights. While Holliday was reluctant to permit Clasby to have visitation, he testified he did so in order to be in compliance with the family court order. Shortly thereafter, Holliday made the decision to seek a modification of Clasby’s visitation schedule so that he could get “some help from the police if [Clasby] didn’t return [B.C.]” and “to keep track of [Clasby] better.”

Although the exact date is unclear, B.C. at some point expressed that she no longer wanted to visit with Clasby. Because B.C. would not give a reason for this decision, Holliday decided to send B.C. to Cynthia Still, a licensed professional counselor. Holliday believed that a counselor would help him assess B.C.’s relationship with Clasby prior to another family court proceeding.

On June 23, 2004, Still began the first of twenty-seven counseling sessions with B.C. During the sixth visit, on August 16, 2004, Still noticed that B.C. “seemed different” and appeared “anxious.” According to Still, B.C. described “some situations where she had been around a lot of talk that involved sexual issues that she was very uncomfortable with.” *152 In the course of an appointment two days later, B.C. conveyed to Still that she had been sexually abused. In turn, Still relayed to Holliday her concerns for B.C.’s safety.

After receiving this information, Holliday spoke with B.C. who then revealed her claims of sexual abuse. Based on this discussion, Holliday met with law enforcement regarding B.C.’s allegations. B.C. was then interviewed at the Pickens County Sheriffs Office. Following this interview, Clasby was arrested for CSC with a minor, first degree.

In September 2005, a Pickens County grand jury indicted Clasby for CSC with a minor, first degree and lewd act upon a child for offenses that allegedly occurred in June 2004.

At the trial for these offenses in October 2005, the solicitor sought to introduce evidence of prior bad acts involving Clasby with the victim that allegedly occurred prior to the indicted June 2004 incidents. The solicitor asserted that these incidents established “an escalating pattern of abuse that eventually culminated in criminal sexual conduct in the first degree.” Clasby’s counsel opposed the introduction of the evidence on the ground it did not fit within the Lyle exception of common scheme or plan. Following arguments of counsel, the trial judge preliminarily ruled that the evidence could be introduced.

After B.C. began her testimony, the trial judge conducted an in camera hearing regarding the alleged prior bad act evidence. B.C. testified that when Clasby came to live with her and Holliday, she and Clasby would bathe together. B.C. testified that she would sit with her back against the bathtub wiiile her mother sat with her back to her. She further testified that as she was washing her mother’s hair, Clasby would “put her hair back ... and touch my private and rub it.”

B.C. testified that on another occasion she was watching a movie with her mother with a blanket over them in the living room and her mother “rub[bed] her private” inside of her underwear. She further stated that her mother “playfed] with her private” wiiile the two were sleeping together in her father’s bed.

*153 In addition to the incidents that B.C. testified occurred at her father’s house, B.C. relayed an incident after her mother moved out of Holliday’s home. Following her mother’s departure in the spring of 2004, B.C. testified that she would visit her mother at Clasby’s father’s home. B.C. recounted one time when her mother “rub[bed] her private” and her mother asked her to “suck her breasts.”

After outlining these prior incidents, the solicitor questioned B.C. regarding the June 1, 2004 incidents for which Clasby had been indicted. Although B.C. could not remember the exact date, she testified that her mother “put her finger” inside “her private” while they were lying on the floor in the bedroom of Heather Rhoda, Clasby’s sister.

At the conclusion of B.C.’s in camera testimony, the trial judge ruled the prior bad act evidence was “clear and convincing” and admissible under the “common scheme or plan” exception to Lyle.

B.C. gave essentially the same testimony before the jury as she did during the in camera hearing. When questioned as to why she did not immediately reveal the abuse, B.C. claimed that her mother told her she would kill her if she told.

During her testimony, Clasby adamantly denied ever touching B.C. in a “sexually inappropriate manner.” Through her testimony, Clasby inferred the sexual abuse allegations stemmed from animosity that existed between her and Holliday over their custody and visitation arrangement. Specifically, Clasby testified that Holliday told her “he would do whatever it took to keep [her] away from [B.C.].” In terms of the incidents described by B.C., Clasby explained the alleged misconduct would have occurred when B.C. visited her at Clasby’s father’s doublewide trailer which was shared by nine other relatives.

Heather Rhoda, Clasby’s sister, testified there was no privacy in the trailer given the number of people who resided there. Rhoda claimed that B.C. usually slept with her cousin when she visited and was not alone with Clasby. She described Clasby and B.C. as having a “really good relationship.” She further testified that she overheard Holliday tell Clasby that “he would do whatever he had to do to make sure that [Clasby] would not be able see [B.C.] again.”

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Bluebook (online)
682 S.E.2d 892, 385 S.C. 148, 2009 S.C. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clasby-scctapp-2009.