State v. Donald P. Rogers

2013 MT 221, 306 P.3d 348, 371 Mont. 239, 2013 WL 4080764, 2013 Mont. LEXIS 312
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 2013
DocketDA 12-0263
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2013 MT 221 (State v. Donald P. Rogers) 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. Donald P. Rogers, 2013 MT 221, 306 P.3d 348, 371 Mont. 239, 2013 WL 4080764, 2013 Mont. LEXIS 312 (Mo. 2013).

Opinion

JUSTICE BAKER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Following a three-day trial, a Missoula County jury convicted Donald P. Rogers of eight criminal counts, including sexual intercourse without consent, partner or family member assault, unlawful restraint, and violation of a no contact order. The Montana Fourth Judicial District Court subsequently sentenced Rogers to forty years at the Montana State Prison, with twenty years suspended. Rogers appeals his conviction. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

¶2 Rogers raises two issues on appeal:

¶3 1. Did the District Court violate Rogers’s constitutional rights by precluding him from cross-examining the victim about her prior acts of violence against him unless he first testified to his defense of justifiable use of force?

¶4 2. Did the District Court err by allowing the State to question Rogers about his prior criminal history once he testified about the victim’s prior acts of violence against him?

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶5 Over the course of a four-year period, Rogers and the alleged victim, S.M., engaged in an “on again, off again”romantic relationship that “had some good times and bad times”; it abruptly ended in mid-April 2011. Rogers agreed to meet with S.M. at 1:00 p.m. on April 15 to discuss their relationship as well as money Rogers owed S.M. When Rogers failed to arrive as agreed, S.M. called him and texted him numerous times. Eventually, Rogers told S.M. that he and his brother would have a drink with her at a bar in Missoula. S.M. testified that both Rogers and his brother had been drinking “quite a lot” and they were asked to leave the bar after Rogers’s brother made a scene. *241 Rogers told S.M. to go back to her home in Arlee and he “would be there later” after he finished “hanging out with [his] brother.” S.M. continued to call and text Rogers throughout the evening of April 15 and into the early-morning hours of April 16.

¶6 S.M. testified that at approximately 3:00 that morning, she heard someone ‘banging” on her back door. Rogers then called S.M. and asked her to let him into the house. When she refused, Rogers broke into her home and “made it clear that he wanted to have ... sexual relations[.]” S.M. described Rogers as being “very intoxicated” and testified that he was “slurring his words.” S.M. later stated that after she asked Rogers to leave, he ‘bit [her] in the jaw ... very hard” and prevented her from calling 911. At that point, S.M. stopped resisting Rogers’s advances because she was afraid he would kill her unless she complied.

¶7 Rogers ‘basically held [S.M.] hostage from 3:00 a.m. to 7:00 a.m.” He pinned S.M. down on her bed and, after he was unable to obtain an erection, he penetrated her with his fingers and tongue; later that morning he “masturbated over [her] head and chest.” Rogers also choked S.M. “several times”during the ordeal and, when he needed to use the bathroom, he “grabbed the back of [her] hair” and “made [her] go into the restroom with him.” S.M. tried to get Rogers to stop assaulting her by telling him that her daughter was picking up her dog at the house that morning; instead of stopping, Rogers stated he should stay so he could have sex with S.M.’s daughter as well and then ‘hurt both of [them].”

¶8 At approximately 7:00 a.m., Rogers left S.M.’s house. Even though S.M. had not reported Rogers for prior instances of abuse, she immediately called 911-in part because Rogers had threatened her daughter. Missoula County Sheriffs Deputies responded to the call and arrested Rogers outside of S.M.’s residence. Deputy Scott King later recalled that S.M. was coherent, but she ‘bad a split lip, and a bruising on her face.” She told Deputy King that Rogers had sexually and physically assaulted her that morning; she also reported that Rogers had physically assaulted her in November 2010.

¶9 After his arrest, Rogers was transported to the Missoula County Sheriff s Office, where Deputy William Burt interviewed him. Rogers “adamantly” denied breaking into S.M.’s house and told the deputy that S.M. had consented to having sex with him. Although he initially denied striking S.M., when Burt noticed Rogers had blood on his hand Rogers began to cry and admitted slapping S.M. in the face. Rogers *242 explained that he struck S.M. after she made “comments about his brother’s sexual offender status.”

¶10 Deputy King then filled out a seventy-two-hour no-contact order and gave it to Rogers at the county jail. Rogers admitted at trial that, even though he understood he was prohibited from contacting S.M., he violated that order several times by calling S.M. from the jail. S.M. testified that he called her five times on the day he was arrested.

¶11 On May 3, 2011, the Missoula County Attorney filed an information with the District Court charging Rogers with sexual intercourse without consent, a felony, in violation of §45-5-503, MCA; two counts of partner or family member assault, third or subsequent offense, a felony, in violation of § 45-5-206(3)(a)(iv), MCA; unlawful restraint, a misdemeanor, in violation of §45-5-301, MCA; and four counts of violating a no-contact order by a person charged with partner or family member assault, a misdemeanor, in violation of §45-5-209, MCA. Rogers pled not guilty before the District Court, which set his trial for the week of November 28, 2011.

¶12 Several months before trial, Rogers gave notice that he would assert a justifiable use of force defense by establishing that S.M. had a violent character. He planned to introduce evidence that the State had charged S.M. with criminal endangerment and partner or family member assault after she allegedly bit Rogers while he was driving. The State subsequently filed a motion in limine requesting that the District Court prohibit Rogers from introducing ‘testimony or physical evidence related to any alleged prior acts of violence of [S.M.] absent proper foundation.” In the motion, the State contended that, pursuant to State v. Daniels, 2011 MT 278, 362 Mont. 426, 265 P.3d 623, Rogers was required to testify about his personal knowledge of S.M.’s past acts of violence prior to any testimony regarding S.M.’s character for violence. Rogers responded that he understood the ruling of Daniels and was confident he could lay the necessary foundation to permit introduction of the victim’s violent history with Rogers. Rogers’s counsel indicated that he proposed to make an offer of proof outside the presence of the jury Tt]o facilitate the resolution of this issue.”The response did not identify any constitutional issues for the court’s consideration or offer other legal argument.

¶13 Immediately prior to trial, Rogers’s attorney, Chris Daly, presented a proposal for how he intended to satisfy Daniels prior to cross-examining S.M. about her allegedly violent character:

[A]t some point before the alleged victim testifies, we would-eut of the presence of the jury-4 would put on an offer of proof for the *243 Court to hear what evidence we would, in fact, intend to put forward, and, then, the Court [could] see if that satisfies the requirements of Daniels.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2013 MT 221, 306 P.3d 348, 371 Mont. 239, 2013 WL 4080764, 2013 Mont. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-donald-p-rogers-mont-2013.