State v. Courville

769 P.2d 44, 236 Mont. 253, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 54
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1989
Docket88-175
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 769 P.2d 44 (State v. Courville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana 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. Courville, 769 P.2d 44, 236 Mont. 253, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 54 (Mo. 1989).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Alexander Courville was convicted of aggravated burglary and sexual intercourse without consent in the Twentieth Judicial District, Lake County. Courville appeals the conviction of aggravated burglary.

The issues on appeal are stated as follows:

1. Whether the trial court erred by not directing a verdict in favor of defendant on the aggravated burglary charge; and

2. Whether the trial court erred by not allowing defendant to introduce evidence at trial of the victim’s past crimes, wrongs and other acts?

We affirm.

T.B. was awakened in the upstairs bedroom of her home at about 4:00 a.m. on the morning of August 22, 1987, by a noise downstairs. She went downstairs in her nightgown and found Courville in her house, sitting on her couch with his shoes off. T.B. recognized Courville immediately because he had been an acquaintance of the family for many years.

T.B. noticed that Courville was obviously upset and appeared to have been drinking. He pleaded with T.B. to stay and talk to him because he was upset. T.B. explained to him that she was sick, she had been at the hospital earlier to get a shot of Demerol for her severe migraine headache, she was tired from the drug and needed to go back to bed. The trial testimony conflicted at this point as to whether or not T.B. actually told Courville to get out of the house. However, Courville stood up and began walking. T.B. assumed he was walking toward the door to leave, and she went upstairs, returning to bed.

T.B. was awakened again in a short time by Courville sitting on her bed and shaking her awake. Her two-year-old son was in bed with her. The testimony again conflicted at this point as to where Courville was and what dialogue passed between them. T.B. gave slightly different accounts of this. She appeared confused at trial, and her memory was not strong due to the ensuing events, her drowsiness, and the effect of the drug.

However, T.B. testified that she turned her back to Courville and *255 dozed off again. She was awakened the next time by Courville choking her and yelling at her. He choked her several times and demanded that she strip so that he could have sex with her. She refused and was choked again. She testified that under fear for her life, she undressed. She persuaded him not to have intercourse with her, but while she was naked Courville fondled her entire body and put his fingers in her vagina and rectum.

T.B. attempted to leave the bedroom for varying excuses, but Courville followed her through the house and twice took her back to the bedroom to repeat this process. Finally, at about 7:00 a.m., T.B. was able to get out of the house with her son and another child she was babysitting, under the excuse of needing to take the other child home to her mother and needing to get on the road for a trip they had planned to Glacier Park.

T.B. went straight to Vanessa Jones’s house, the mother of the child she was babysitting. Vanessa testified that T.B. appeared on her doorstep about 7:00 a.m. with the kids and was shaking and totally upset. Her throat, chest and arms were covered with bruises. T.B. related the entire story to Vanessa, who also knew Courville. Vanessa persuaded T.B. to get some sleep at Vanessa’s house and encouraged her to turn Courville in to the police.

Five days later, Vanessa went to the Poison Police Department with this story and gave a statement to the police. The next day, T.B. came in herself and related the story. T.B. was still quite bruised and her injuries were photographed by the investigating officer. However, T.B.’s version of the events varied slightly at trial from the story she related to the police that day.

Originally, T.B. gave a statement that she told Courville several times to go home and get out of the house and the next thing she remembered was waking up to him choking her. At trial, she could not remember specifically telling him to leave, but rather just understood that he was leaving when she told him she was sick and he got up and walked toward the door. Additionally, T.B. later remembered some intervening events in her bedroom between her falling asleep the first time and when Courville first began choking her.

However, she testified unequivocally that she did not invite him into the house, nor the bedroom, she did not encourage him, she did not want to have sex with him and she did not consent to his acts. All accounts of the story reveal the fact that Courville threatened her: “If you don’t do it, I’ll kill you,” and “Vanessa will find you *256 dead here tomorrow” and “you keep your mouth shut about this or I’ll come back and hurt you again.”

Courville was charged by information on September 11, 1987, with sexual intercourse without consent and aggravated burglary. Prior to trial, the State made motions in limine to exclude evidence of T.B.’s sexual conduct and history of her criminal record. Both motions were unopposed by defense counsel and were granted by the judge. The jury returned a verdict of guilty on both counts in February, 1988, and Courville was sentenced to twenty years with none suspended for Count I, sexual intercourse without consent, and twenty years with ten suspended on Count II, burglary, with an additional ten years for aggravated burglary, all to run consecutively. Courville does not appeal his conviction on Count I.

Courville appeals the trial court ruling that T.B.’s character had not been put in issue by her own inconsistent statements, thus prohibiting his use of “other bad acts” evidence against her, and denying his motion for a directed verdict on the burglary charge.

I.

Character evidence is generally inadmissible. Rule 404(a), M.R.Evid. However, Rule 608, M.R.Evid., does permit character evidence under specific circumstances: when the witness’s character for truthfulness has been put in issue and then only if the offered evidence goes to the witness’s veracity. But specific instances of misconduct of a witness for the purpose of attacking the witness’s credibility may not be proved by extrinsic evidence. Rule 608(b). Rule 609 specifically prohibits admission of evidence that a witness has been convicted of a crime for purposes of attacking the credibility of the witness. See for discussion, Sloan v. State (Mont. 1989), [236 Mont. 100,] 768 P.2d 1365, 46 St.Rep. 214, 216.

In this case, the defendant argued that the victim’s inconsistencies in some of the details of her story put her character at issue. He thus wanted to prove she was untruthful with testimony, some from other witnesses, that she had been accused of stealing money from Vanessa at one time and that T.B. herself had a criminal record. However, counsel’s efforts were misguided on this issue. This testimony is not probative of truthfulness, and T.B.’s character was not put at issue. The judge properly ruled that the door was not open to this sort of testimony.

We decline to rule that an inconsistent statement in a victim’s ac *257

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Bluebook (online)
769 P.2d 44, 236 Mont. 253, 1989 Mont. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-courville-mont-1989.