State v. Fraser

430 N.W.2d 512, 230 Neb. 157, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 376
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1988
Docket87-1081
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 430 N.W.2d 512 (State v. Fraser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Fraser, 430 N.W.2d 512, 230 Neb. 157, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 376 (Neb. 1988).

Opinion

Grant, J.

This is an appeal from the district court for Douglas County. The defendant-appellant, Patrick L. Fraser, was charged by information with first degree sexual assault and use of a weapon to commit a felony. He pled not guilty to both counts.

The case was tried before a jury. Defendant admitted that he had sexual intercourse with the complainant on the date in question, but alleged that he had done so with her consent. During the State’s closing argument, defense counsel moved for a mistrial based on statements made by the prosecutor. That motion was overruled. The jury returned verdicts of guilty on both counts, and the defendant’s subsequent motion for new trial was overruled. He was sentenced to a term of 6 to 9 years’ imprisonment on count I and 2 to 3 years’ imprisonment on count II, with the sentences to run consecutively. Defendant appeals to this court, assigning as error the action of the district court in denying his motion for a mistrial based on the improper statements made by the prosecutor during final argument. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

The record discloses the following. On August 6, 1986, at approximately 4:15 a.m., the victim called the Douglas County sheriff’s office and reported that she had just been sexually assaulted in her trailer home in Elk City, Nebraska. She told the investigating officers that although she could not see her assailant because it was too dark, he had threatened her with a serrated knife during the incident, and she believed he had driven away in a U-Haul van.

The officers first made contact with the defendant at his residence in rural Elkhorn, after observing a U-Haul van *159 parked at that location. A serrated knife was found near the van. Defendant was arrested on an outstanding traffic warrant and taken to the Douglas County sheriff’s office for questioning.

The victim subsequently made a voice identification of the defendant. She later recognized him as the delivery man for a local florist and as a patron in the Ponderosa Bar, her place of employment, a few weeks after Mother’s Day in 1986. Although the victim testified she did not otherwise personally know the defendant, he testified that they met in the Ponderosa Bar during January or February 1986; that he and the victim developed a “friendship”; and that they had engaged in sexual intercourse twice (once in the victim’s trailer home, where she lived with her husband and daughter, and once in the defendant’s truck) before the August 6 incident. The defendant also admitted he had sexual intercourse with the victim on August 6,1986, but claimed it was a consensual act.

The error alleged in this appeal stems from the testimony of witnesses called by the State. Defendant’s mother testified that in the late evening of August 6, she had gone to the Ponderosa Bar “[t]o see what that was all about” and do some investigating. She then met Gena Anderson, the defendant’s girlfriend, at the bar, and the two went to the Kwik Shop in Elkhorn, where the victim’s husband worked at night. In response to the prosecutor’s question as to whether she made any allegations to the husband, defendant’s mother testified, “Based on the opinion I had formed at the bar, I told him that she [the victim] was a tramp.”

Anderson then testified that she had lived with defendant for approximately 5 years and was living with him in Anderson’s home in rural Elkhorn on August 6,1986. She was the owner of Fawn Hollow Floral & Antiques in Elkhorn and had on occasion employed the defendant as a delivery man. On August 5, 1986, the defendant had moved furniture to Council Bluffs, Iowa, for Anderson, in a U-Haul van. Anderson stayed in Council Bluffs, and defendant testified he returned to the Elk City area that night. Anderson’s testimony generally contradicted a statement given by defendant to the sheriff’s office.

*160 She also testified that she met defendant’s mother at the Ponderosa Bar on August 6; that the two then went to the Kwik Shop in Elkhorn, where the victim’s husband worked; and that there defendant’s mother created a scene and made derogatory accusations about the victim and her conduct.

On cross-examination of Anderson, on the subject of the confrontation of the victim’s husband, defendant elicited the following testimony:

Q. Did you personally say anything to the clerk at the Kwik Shop?
A. Yes.
Q. Without relating what he said, what did you tell him?
A. I told him that he knew that this whole thing was utterly ridiculous, that he had to know that his wife was having an affair before this, and that this was not the first one, therefore, he knew that there could be no rape involved.

The subject of the victim’s conduct was again inquired into by the prosecutor on his redirect examination of Anderson. During the redirect examination, defense counsel objected to a question asked by the State as leading, and the court stated that the prosecutor had, in effect, requested “the Court to declare the witness in legal terms a legally hostile witness. The Court has so declared and the objection is overruled.” The court was following the requirements of Neb. Rev. Stat. § 27-611(3) (Reissue 1985). The record then shows the following:

Q. Didn’t you just tell us earlier that you told him that there was an ongoing affair going on between his wife and-
A. No, I did not, I said that I had heard that she had been having affairs with other people. I did not say ongoing affair with Mr. Fraser.
Q.... Let’s assume for the sake of argument that what you are saying, these rumors, let’s say it was true that she had had an affair with Mr. A, B and C, but not with the defendant, how does that clear the defendant of a rape charge?
A. It doesn’t____

*161 The defendant’s assignment of error relates directly to the prosecutor’s remarks, relating to the foregoing testimony, made during the State’s rebuttal argument to the jury. The record contains defendant’s argument to the jury and the rebuttal portion of the State’s closing argument. No contention is made by the State that the prosecutor’s remarks hereinafter set out were in response to anything said by defendant’s counsel in his argument. The doctrine of invited response does not apply. See United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 105 S. Ct. 1038, 84 L. Ed. 2d 1 (1985).

In the statement complained of, the prosecutor said to the jury:

She [the victim] has to sit up there and have every tiny aspect of her background gone over with a microscope.
And what came out, that she got up and goofed around on a stage one time in April of 1986, and that was it. That was it. So that’s the scarlet letter, that’s what they are trying to paint for you. That is ridiculous, absolutely absurd.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
430 N.W.2d 512, 230 Neb. 157, 1988 Neb. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fraser-neb-1988.