State v. Escobar-Mendez

986 P.2d 227, 195 Ariz. 194, 289 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 14, 1999 Ariz. App. LEXIS 23
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedFebruary 25, 1999
Docket1 CA-CR 97-0999
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 986 P.2d 227 (State v. Escobar-Mendez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Escobar-Mendez, 986 P.2d 227, 195 Ariz. 194, 289 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 14, 1999 Ariz. App. LEXIS 23 (Ark. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

GRANT, Judge.

¶ 1 Ramon Escobar-Mendez (“Defendant”) appeals his convictions on two counts of sexual conduct with a minor, class 2 felonies. The trial court sentenced him to consecutive, *196 aggravated terms of fourteen years in prison on each count 1 . For the following reasons, we affirm the convictions and sentences.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 In November 1994, Detective Mark Calles (“Detective Calles”) was investigating allegations that Defendant had sexually assaulted “S.S.,” the minor daughter of Defendant’s current girlfriend 2 . During the course of that investigation Detective Calles learned that years earlier Defendant may have also impregnated Y.T., the daughter of a previous girlfriend 3 .

¶ 3 Detective Calles contacted Y.T. in December 1994, and she disclosed for the first time that Defendant had sexually assaulted her on numerous occasions between 1984 and 1987 — when she was a minor and he was her mother’s live-in boyfriend.

¶4 Y.T. was born on July 6, 1972. She was nine years old when Defendant began dating her mother. He moved in with them about a year later. Defendant began to molest Y.T. shortly thereafter. He told Y.T. to tell her mother that she was having nightmares, and that she wanted to sleep in their bed. Defendant would then have Y.T. come to his side of the bed. He would reach inside her shorts and fondle her vagina without the mother knowing. If Y.T. tried to cross her legs to stop him, he would dig his fingernails into her legs until she relented. One time, when Defendant dug his nails into her, Y.T. screamed and woke her mother up. Her mother asked what was wrong. Y.T. ran crying into the bathroom after telling her mother that she was just having a nightmare. When Y.T. stepped out of the bathroom Defendant was waiting outside the door. He grabbed her by the arm, shook her, and told her he would hurt her the next time she screamed.

¶5 When Y.T. was around twelve years old, Defendant drove her to a secluded area in a river bottom, pulled down her shorts, and had intercourse with her. When Defendant put his penis inside her, Y.T. started to bleed. He told her this was “normal.” She cried, and Defendant said, “Don’t be such a cry baby.” After they got home, Defendant told the mother that Y.T. was bleeding and crying, because she had started to menstruate.

¶ 6 Y.T. never told her mother, or anyone else, what Defendant did to her because she was afraid of him. Defendant had beaten her mother so badly that she was “all bruised,” and he had told Y.T. that he would hurt or even kill her mother, if Y.T. ever disobeyed him. Defendant said that if that happened, it would be Y.T.’s “fault.”

117 A few weeks later, Defendant again drove Y.T. to the river bottom. He took off her shorts and she started to cry, asking why was he doing this to her. Defendant said he was doing it because he “loved” her. Y.T. tried to resist, but he punched her in the stomach with such force that she lost her breath. Defendant then had sex with Y.T., ejaculating on her leg and scaring her even more. He subsequently told her that he had punched her in the stomach because a blow there would not cause a bruise.

¶ 8 In February 1986, Y.T.’s mother took her to a doctor because her feet were swollen. The doctor told them that Y.T. was pregnant. Y.T., who had not even suspected she was pregnant, just cried when her mother asked who the father was. When they got home, Defendant told Y.T. to say that the father was a boy from school who had since moved away without even knowing of the pregnancy. This is what Y.T. told her mother. Three days later Y.T. gave birth to a daughter, C.T., at Maricopa Medical Center.

¶9 Defendant again assaulted Y.T. when she was fourteen, this time using a condom, *197 because the birth of C.T. had been “a close call.” Around the same time, Defendant came into Y.T.’s room and choked her because he had seen her in the company of a teenage boy.

¶ 10 Y.T. never told anyone that Defendant was the father of her child, even after he had moved out of the house, because she was afraid of him. When Detective Calles contacted her in December of 1994, Y.T. told someone for the first time what Defendant had done to her. DNA analysis showed a 99.7% probability that Defendant was C.T.’s father. The grand jury indicted Defendant on October 11,1995.

¶ 11 The jury convicted Defendant of two counts of sexual conduct with a minor, and the court sentenced him to consecutive fourteen year prison terms on both counts. Defendant timely appealed. This court has jurisdiction to adjudicate the appeal. Ariz. Const, art. VI, § 9; Arizona Revised Statutes Annotated (“A.R.S.”) sections 12-120.21(A)(1), and 13-4033(A)(1).

¶ 12 On appeal Defendant argues that the State is barred from prosecuting him by the seven year statute of limitations in A.R.S. section 13-107.

DISCUSSION

A. Because the State exercised reasonable diligence in discovering Defendant’s crimes and because the delay in indicting him was due to Defendant’s efforts to conceal his crimes, the statute of limitations does not bar prosecution.

¶ 13 Statutes of limitations in criminal cases are jurisdictional. They limit the power of the sovereign to act against the accused. Price v. Maxwell, 140 Ariz. 232, 234, 681 P.2d 384, 386 (1984). Moreover, statutes of limitations are construed liberally in favor of the accused and against the prosecution. State v. Fogel, 16 Ariz.App. 246, 248, 492 P.2d 742, 744 (1972). However, the Arizona criminal statutes of limitations are explicit. Unlike most statutes of limitations, they do not begin to run until the State, or the political subdivision of the State having jurisdiction, actually discovers or should have discovered that the offense occurred 4 . The applicable limitations statute reads as follows:

Except as otherwise provided in this section, prosecutions ... must be commenced within the following periods after actual discovery by the state or the political subdivision having jurisdiction of the offense or discovery by the state or such political subdivision which should have occurred with the exercise of reasonable diligence, whichever first occurs:

1. For a class 2 ... felony, seven years. A.R.S. § 13-107(B) (emphasis added).

¶ 14 In the present case, Defendant does not dispute that police actually “discovered” the offenses charged when Detective Calles first interviewed Y.T. in December, 1994. Because Defendant was indicted ten months later, the seven year statute of limitations is easily satisfied unless the State or the political subdivision having jurisdiction over the offense did not act with reasonable diligence in discovering it.

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Bluebook (online)
986 P.2d 227, 195 Ariz. 194, 289 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 14, 1999 Ariz. App. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-escobar-mendez-arizctapp-1999.