State v. Dean

533 A.2d 333, 129 N.H. 744, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 263
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedOctober 9, 1987
DocketNo. 86-203
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 533 A.2d 333 (State v. Dean) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Dean, 533 A.2d 333, 129 N.H. 744, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 263 (N.H. 1987).

Opinion

Thayer, J.

The defendant appeals his conviction for aggravated felonious sexual assault. RSA 632-A:2 (Supp. 1986). He contends that the Trial Court (O’Neil, J.) improperly denied him the opportunity to cross-examine the prosecutrix concerning alleged inconsistent statements she had made to an examining nurse regarding her prior sexual activities. The defendant further challenges the decision of the trial court to admit into evidence a thirty-three-page statement given to the police by the prosecutrix. He also argues that the trial court improperly permitted the jury foreman to remain as a juror after it was learned that the foreman was the uncle of a witness. Finally, the defendant challenges the decision of the trial court imposing an extended term of imprisonment, arguing that there was insufficient evidence to support the statutorily required finding of an infliction of serious bodily injury, see RSA 651:6. We affirm.

Sometime after midnight on July 12, 1985, the victim stopped at a gas station in Concord to purchase a soft drink. When she returned to her car she found the defendant seated inside. Believing that the defendant was carrying a knife, the victim obeyed the defendant’s demand to drive him out of Concord. When she stopped the car on the way to her home in Loudon and told the defendant he would have to get out, he refused, and grabbed her. He placed [746]*746a knife to her face and said, “I’m going to get a ride, aren’t I?” The victim then drove toward Pittsfield. After she drove around a curve too quickly, Dean ordered her to stop the car. He took her place behind the wheel.

Dean drove the victim down an unpaved, wooded back road, and later turned the car onto a second dirt road, He stopped the car in a secluded area. When the victim asked him if he was ever going to let her go, he replied, “not until T have some fun.” He ordered her into the back seat and told her to undress. When she said, “Don’t expect me to kiss you,” the defendant replied, “then don’t expect me to be nice.” The defendant pinched the victim’s breast and choked her by twisting her necklace around her throat. The defendant then forced the victim to submit to intercourse after which he struck her in the vaginal area with his fist. When the victim screamed, the defendant told her to keep her mouth shut. When the victim asked him “why me?”, the defendant replied, “Well, let’s just say you were in the wrong place at the wrong time.”

Dean continued to pound the victim in the vaginal area. He rummaged through her handbag and found several items which he inserted into the victim’s vagina. He thrust a hairbrush with bristles about an eighth of an inch long into her vagina, then abruptly ripped it out.

Dean continued to beat the victim in the groin area and after tying her hands behind her back, forced her to perform fellatio on him and to further submit to intercourse. With his cigarette he burnt her vagina. Telling the victim, “You had better please me because if you don’t, I’m going to kill you,” Dean forced the victim to submit to further acts of vaginal and anal sex. He thereafter repeatedly beat her in the vaginal area and at one point used his fingers to twist her labia. When the victim asked the defendant why he was hurting her, Dean replied, “why not?”

Eventually, the defendant gave the victim a blanket and permitted her to sleep. In the morning, while Dean was changing a tire on the car, a jogger ran by with her dog. Dean warned the victim that he would kill her if she said anything to the jogger. After that, Dean gave the victim directions to Pittsfield and took ten dollars from her purse. He remarked, “I might as well add robbery to the charges.” Telling her not to look back, Dean left the car and went into the woods.

The victim drove to a house in Northwood and called her father. Police and an ambulance responded shortly afterwards, and the ambulance took her to Concord Hospital.

[747]*747The hospital performed the rape protocol procedure on the victim. During the procedure she was upset, trembling, and very shaky. She cried during the exam. The examining physician noticed bruises on the victim’s arms and legs, a great deal of swelling and bruising to her genitalia, and a laceration to her cervix. The victim’s rectum was tender. Nonmotile sperm were found in her vagina. An analysis of her hairbrush revealed the presence of epithelial cells, which line the mucous membrane of the vagina, on the bristles and handle.

Gary Dean became a suspect on July 14, 1985. Dean’s file fingerprints were matched with a print lifted from the car, and the victim identified Dean as her assailant from a photographic lineup. Dean was arrested at his home on July 15, 1985, and charged with aggravated felonious sexual assault and robbery. At trial, he admitted to having sex with the victim, but testified that she had initiated a conversation about sex and had consented to sexual intercourse. Although the defendant admitted striking her, he testified that this occurred because she had bitten his testicles.

On cross-examination of the victim, defense counsel elicited information from her concerning a few dates she had had with a man. She volunteered that the relationship was “nothing serious.” When defense counsel went on to ask about other dates the victim had had with other men, the State objected. Out of the jury’s presence, defense counsel offered evidence that a Concord Hospital medical report reflected a statement by the victim, to an examining nurse, that she had sex on July 10, two days before she was raped. Citing our decision in State v. Howard, 121 N.H. 53, 426 A.2d 457 (1981), the defendant sought to examine the victim concerning her memory of the statement on the ground that the inquiry would highlight her allegedly inconsistent statements. Subsequently, the trial court ordered an in camera voir dire, in which the defendant was permitted to question the victim out of the presence of the jury regarding her prior sexual activities and her statements to the Concord Hospital nurse. She admitted that she had had, sex before her rape by the defendant, but was unable to remember her conversation with the nurse at Concord Hospital, or whether she had had sex on the morning of July 10, 1985.

On the basis of the victim’s testimony, the trial court held that the probative value of her testimony regarding her prior sexual activities was outweighed by the potential for prejudice to her. Accordingly, the court held that the State rape shield law, RSA 632-A:6, prohibited the defense from cross-examining the victim on the subject of her prior sexual activity. The defendant was found [748]*748guilty and sentenced to ten to thirty years in the New Hampshire State Prison on the aggravated felonious sexual assault indictment and 7 1/2 to 15 years in the State Prison on the robbery indictment. In his appeal to this court, the defendant appeared orally pro se, and in the course of argument made certain statements damaging to his case.

We first address the defendant’s contention that the trial court erred in prohibiting the cross-examination of the victim on the details of her prior sexual activity and on statements she made concerning those activities. In this State, inquiry into the prior consensual sexual activities of victims of aggravated felonious sexual assault is generally prohibited. RSA 632-A:6; N.H. R. Ev. 412.

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Bluebook (online)
533 A.2d 333, 129 N.H. 744, 1987 N.H. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dean-nh-1987.