State v. Griswold

991 P.2d 657, 98 Wash. App. 817
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJanuary 13, 2000
Docket17086-1-III
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 991 P.2d 657 (State v. Griswold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Griswold, 991 P.2d 657, 98 Wash. App. 817 (Wash. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*819 Brown, J.

A jury found Jeffrey Griswold guilty of third degree child molestation. He contends the trial court erred when it: (1) admitted testimony regarding prior bad acts as showing a common scheme or plan; (2) excluded evidence of his reputation for sexual morality; and (3) found that certain impeachment evidence was inadmissible as collateral. The unique use of a truth or dare game combined with other similarities support the trial court’s decision to admit the prior bad act testimony. Although we conclude reputation for sexual morality is relevant, we decide a proper foundation was not established here. The proposed impeachment evidence is collateral and not admissible. We affirm.

FACTS

Jeffrey Griswold taught Tae kwon do classes at a studio in Walla Walla. C.C. was a 14-year-old girl whom he began teaching in 1994. Tae kwon do is a martial arts activity also teaching deference and respect, especially for higher-ranking participants. On January 11, 1997 in the late afternoon, Mr. Griswold gave C.C. a ride home from the studio. Mr. Griswold said he had to stop by his house and invited her in.

C.C. later testified to the following events. Once inside, they sat on a couch and began talking in the dark. Mr. Griswold asked C.C. to play a game of “Truth or Dare.” C.C. testified Mr. Griswold knew she was carrying condoms and pulled them from her pocket. One condom was opened by C.C. Then, C.C. dared Mr. Griswold to put a condom on a doorknob; he did. Mr. Griswold dared C.C. to put a condom on her finger; she refused and they playfully struggled. Mr. Griswold told C.C. to pick one of his hands and imagine his fingers were lips, then lay back on a couch with her eyes closed and her arms over her head. Mr. Gris- *820 wold touched her face, stomach and thigh over her clothing. Mr. Griswold suggested C.C. phone her mother to tell her that she was invited to dinner at Mr. Griswold’s home. Mr. Griswold told her to say his wife was home. After the call, Mr. Griswold put C.C. over his shoulder and carried her back to the couch. The room was still dark.

C.C. testified that Mr. Griswold again asked her to pick a hand and lie back as before. This time C.C. said he fondled her vagina under her panties and touched her breasts under her bra. Afterwards, C.C. told Mr. Griswold that she had fallen asleep in response to his inquiry whether anything was wrong. Around this time another of Mr. Gris-wold’s students came by; Mr. Griswold told C.C. to hide in the bathroom. When C.C. returned the student was still present. They left in two cars to get something to eat. Mr. Griswold took C.C. to McDonald’s drive-through, then home. At some point as Mr. Griswold was driving C.C. home, Mr. Griswold asked, “are you going to tell anybody?” After C.C. said she would not, Mr. Griswold then said, “I could also get in a lot of trouble.”

C.C. disclosed the events to a school counselor. In April 1997, Mr. Griswold was charged with third degree child molestation. Before trial, Mr. Griswold unsuccessfully moved to exclude the testimony of two witnesses. Both later testified about similar prior acts of sexual misconduct. The court gave appropriate limiting instructions before each witness testified and in the final jury instructions.

The first witness, R.I., Mr. Griswold’s niece, testified that roughly 11 years earlier, when she was 11 years old, Mr. Griswold molested her. When she was alone with Mr. Gris-wold at his house, he forced her to lie on a couch with him and watch an x-rated video. Then, Mr. Griswold suggested they play truth or dare. He dared R.I. to go skinny-dipping but she refused. Mr. Griswold then tried to talk R.I. into giving him a back rub in the bedroom. When she refused, he took her by the wrist, forced her into a darkened bedroom, and made her get into bed with him. Then, Mr. Griswold made a game of taking clothing off by having R.I. *821 take a piece off with him doing the same until they were in their underwear. Next, he suggested they give each other back rubs. R.I. alleged Mr. Griswold then tried to persuade her to “get white stuff to come out of his penis like on the movie.” Mr. Griswold touched her skin on her belly button and stomach area. Mr. Griswold had her promise not to tell anyone. He promised in return to give her karate lessons. R.I. disclosed the events about a month-and-a-half later. Mr. Griswold acknowledged the disclosure in his opening statement but suggested it was part of a dispute with his former wife and her family.

The second witness, M.G., a daughter of Mr. Griswold’s friend, testified that 12 or 13 years earlier when she was 6 or 7 years old, Mr. Griswold had sexual contact with her. She stated at least once while in his car, Mr. Griswold unzipped his pants and forced her to touch his penis over her resistance. The remaining sexual contacts described occurred at Mr. Griswold’s home. Mr. Griswold would take M.G. by the hand and ask her to play games. M.G. mentioned a “Truth or Dare” type game and “boyfriend/ girlfriend” type game and explained how the games were played. Mr. Griswold would dare her to take off clothes or allow him to touch her upper thighs, midsection and chest and private parts over her clothes. At times, Mr. Griswold would dare her to touch his private parts. One time he may have lifted up her shirt. The game of boyfriend/girlfriend involved holding hands and kissing. Mr. Griswold would ask her not to tell and at times promised to buy her things at the store. He said, if she told, bad things would happen and nobody would believe her. M.G. said she disclosed these events prior to when the events with C.C. transpired.

When Mr. Griswold testified, he emphatically denied having any inappropriate contact with C.C., R.I., or M.G. He did agree to give C.C. a ride and did take her to his home. Mr. Griswold spoke to C.C. at her mother’s request because her mother was concerned about her boyfriend’s bad influence. Mr. Griswold testified he discussed sex with C.C. in *822 this context alone. He took condoms from her as a kind of “moral policeman” when she showed them to him to explain why she would not get pregnant by having sex with her boyfriend. The student who stopped by Mr. Griswold’s house testified that everything looked normal to him. The defense argued that C.C. was angry with Mr. Griswold because he interfered with her boyfriend and would not date her mother. The defense witnesses pointed out discrepancies in C.C.’s testimony. Mr. Griswold also argued C.C., R.I., and M.G. were part of a conspiracy against him with a former wife to gain an advantage in an ongoing visitation dispute.

The trial court heard and rejected Mr. Griswold’s offer of proof by question and answer of Tana Wood. Ms. Wood, Superintendent of the Washington State Penitentiary, employed Mr. Griswold as a prison guard. Ms. Wood was asked whether she was “acquainted with Jeff Griswold’s reputation as to general moral character.” Ms. Wood, responded, “Actually he has a very positive reputation at the penitentiary.” She was then asked if she was “aware of anything in the way of a negative character or reputation as regards to his moral, his sexual moral character.” Ms. Wood responded, “I am not.”

The court also rejected five other witnesses by oral offer of proof. Each knew Mr. Griswold from one to five years.

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Bluebook (online)
991 P.2d 657, 98 Wash. App. 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-griswold-washctapp-2000.