State v. Felts

2016 Ohio 2755
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 27, 2016
Docket15CA3491
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2016 Ohio 2755 (State v. Felts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Felts, 2016 Ohio 2755 (Ohio Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as State v. Felts, 2016-Ohio-2755.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT ROSS COUNTY

STATE OF OHIO, : Case No. 15CA3491

Plaintiff-Appellee, :

v. : DECISION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY BRETT FELTS, :

Defendant-Appellant. : RELEASED: 4/27/2016

APPEARANCES:

Timothy Young, Ohio Public Defender, and Carrie Wood, Assistant State Public Defender, Columbus, Ohio, for appellant.

Matthew S. Schmidt, Ross County Prosecuting Attorney, and Pamela C. Wells, Ross County Assistant Prosecuting Attorney, Chillicothe, Ohio, for appellee. Harsha, J. {¶1} Brett Felts, who was convicted of gross sexual imposition, asserts that the

trial court violated his federal and state constitutional right to confrontation when it

admitted statements the child victim made to a social service worker. However, the

evidence indicates the social service worker obtained the child’s statements, which

included the identity of the perpetrator, the type of abuse alleged, and the identification

of the areas where the child had been touched, for medical treatment or diagnostic

purposes. Therefore, they were nontestimonial and were admissible without offending

the Confrontation Clauses of the United States and Ohio Constitutions.

{¶2} Even if we assume that the trial court erred in admitting these statements,

the state established that any error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because

the statements were largely cumulative of other evidence introduced at trial, including:

1) other statements the child made to the social service worker that were admitted Ross App. No. 15CA3491 2

without objection, 2) the statement the child made to her mother, and 3) a scientific

analysis that identified the presence of semen and Felts’s DNA on panties the child

wore when the sexual assault occurred. We reject Felts’s first assignment of error.

{¶3} Next Felts contends that the trial court violated Ohio evidentiary rules

when it permitted the child’s mother, Jennifer M., to testify about a hearsay statement

that the child made to her. Felts claims that the statement did not qualify as an excited

utterance because there was no finding or evidence that the child made the statement

when she was under any nervous excitement. However, a three-year-old child is

considered relatively trustworthy due to the child’s limited reflective powers. And the

state introduced sufficient evidence that the child was still under the stress of

excitement caused by the sexual assault, e.g., the child made the statement to her

mother within an hour or two of returning from a weekend visit with Felts. Likewise, she

had been unusually quiet with her mother after her visit, which was very odd and

abnormal for her.

{¶4} The fact that the child made the statement in response to her mother’s

questions asking what was wrong, what happened, and why her vaginal area was so

red, did not make the statement inadmissible. The mother’s questions were neither

coercive nor leading. They facilitated the child’s expression of what was already the

natural focus of her thoughts and did not destroy the domination of nervous excitement

over her reflective faculties. Consequently, the trial court acted reasonably in admitting

the child’s statement under the excited-utterance exception to the hearsay rule. We

reject Felts’s second assignment of error and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

I. FACTS Ross App. No. 15CA3491 3

{¶5} The Ross County Grand Jury returned an indictment charging Brett Felts

with one count of gross sexual imposition in violation of R.C. 2907.05, a third-degree

felony. The indictment alleged that during a three-day period in 2010, Felts had sexual

contact with S.M., who was less than 13 years of age and (obviously) not his spouse.

{¶6} Felts entered a plea of not guilty to the charge and contested the

competency of the child victim to testify as a witness. After conducting an in camera

examination of the child, the trial court declared the child incompetent to testify.

{¶7} When the state indicated its intention to introduce the child’s statements to

Sexual Assault Nurse Examiner (“SANE” Nurse) Heidi Norman into evidence, Felts

filed a motion in limine to exclude this testimony. Felts ultimately expanded the motion

to contest the child’s statements to her mother and to social service worker Laura Butt.

{¶8} The trial court conducted a hearing where Jennifer M. testified that she is

the mother of S.M. and a son, A.M. She dropped her children off to stay with her sister,

Melinda, and her sister’s boyfriend, Felts, on the afternoon or evening of Friday,

January 15, 2010, and picked them up around 1:00 p.m. on Sunday, January 17, 2010.

S.M. was three years old at the time. According to the mother, although her daughter

was normally talkative around her, S.M. was unusually quiet on the trip back home: “she

was very quiet, wouldn’t talk.” The mother considered her daughter’s behavior very odd

for her.

{¶9} When they returned home the mother helped S.M. go to the restroom, and

she noticed redness in S.M.’s vaginal area. The mother testified that when she asked

her daughter “what was wrong,” “[w]hat happened,” and “why it was so red,” S.M. told

her that “Brett woke her up and touched her and she pointed to her private area.” The Ross App. No. 15CA3491 4

mother then called her daughter’s doctors and upon their recommendation, she took

S.M. out to the emergency room of the hospital in the same clothes she had been

wearing during the weekend visit. S.M. was examined at the hospital and released that

day. About a week later, the mother took S.M. to the Child Protection Center.

{¶10} Heidi Norman testified that she is a SANE nurse in the emergency

department of the Adena Regional Medical Center. On January 17, 2010, Norman

administered a sexual assault kit to S.M. at the hospital. In completing the kit Norman

received information about the alleged sexual conduct from S.M.’s mother, rather than

from the child.

{¶11} Laura Butt, a social service worker employed by the Ross County Job and

Family Services (“RCJFS”), Children’s Division, testified that she performs

investigations of child abuse, neglect, and dependency. Butt’s agency works with law

enforcement, the prosecutor’s office, and the Child Protection Center in cases involving

child abuse.

{¶12} Under the standard protocol, if the child has not been to the emergency

room, RCJFS will contact the Child Protection Center and arrange an interview and an

examination for the child. If the child has already been to the emergency room, a social

worker schedules an interview, a doctor reviews the notes from the hospital, and a

follow-up examination with a physician occurs. After interviewing the child, the social

service worker completes a child protection interview synopsis and a doctor reviews the

worker’s notes for purposes of medical diagnosis and treatment. During the interview of

the child, the social service worker attempts to garner the following information to be

used in the medical diagnosis of the child: the name of the perpetrator and the alleged Ross App. No. 15CA3491 5

abuse, i.e., if the child has been injured or touched, so that the doctor knows what to

look for.

{¶13} Butt testified that on January 25, 2010, she interviewed S.M. at the Child

Protection Center about a week after her hospital visit.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Bennett
2023 Ohio 2734 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State v. Sims
2023 Ohio 1179 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State v. Caldwell
2023 Ohio 355 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2023)
State v. O.A.B.
2020 Ohio 547 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2020)
State v. Hoskins
2019 Ohio 4842 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Lykins
2019 Ohio 3316 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Hunt
2018 Ohio 4183 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2018)
Jackson v. Am. Bulk Commodities, Inc.
112 N.E.3d 345 (Court of Appeals of Ohio, Fourth District, Washington County, 2018)
Martindale v. Martindale
2017 Ohio 9266 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2017)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 Ohio 2755, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-felts-ohioctapp-2016.