State v. Haala

415 N.W.2d 69, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 5003
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 10, 1987
DocketC5-87-227
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 415 N.W.2d 69 (State v. Haala) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Haala, 415 N.W.2d 69, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 5003 (Mich. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

CRIPPEN, Judge.

Appellant Norbert Haala was convicted of criminal sexual conduct in the second degree in violation of Minn.Stat. § 609.343(a) (1986). On appeal, appellant claims his conviction should be reversed or he should be granted a new trial because: (1) the trial court erred by admitting Spreigl evidence of his 1981 conviction for criminal sexual conduct in the second degree and giving an improper cautionary instruction on the purpose of the evidence; (2) the prosecutor committed misconduct; and (3) there is insufficient evidence to sustain the conviction. We affirm.

FACTS

Appellant was convicted of sexual misconduct, touching with his hand his ten-year-old daughter L.H. Appellant’s defense to the charge was fabrication.

Appellant and Karen Haala were divorced following appellant’s conviction in 1981 for sexually abusing his step-daughter, K.E. After the divorce, Karen Haala and the parties’ four children, Tony, Andy, Lei-na, and the victim, L.H., age 10, lived with their mother at the parties’ farm in Com-frey, Minnesota. Appellant maintained visitation rights with the children on Sundays and pursuant to the divorce decree, rented three buildings on the farm, one of which he converted from a chicken housé into a wood shop. He regularly worked at the wood shop an average of four evenings a week. The two boys, especially Tony, helped appellant make wooden toys at the shop. On occasion the two girls also visited the woodshop.

On July 6, 1985, Karen Haala- and her two daughters, Leina and L.H., together with Dorothy Severin, went to visit Shirley Stippel, a good friend and former sister-in-law in Mankato. Stippel asked Karen Haa-la about the childrens’ visitation with appellant, and she replied that Leina and L.H. didn’t want to go with appellant on visitation. Stippel asked L.H. if she knew where her private parts were and L.H. responded by putting her hand down by her crotch. Stippel then asked L.H. if anybody had touched her there. L.H. stuck her thumb in her mouth and walked away, as if afraid to say anything.

L.H. then came back and sat down. Stip-pel told her she didn’t have to be afraid and stated that nobody was going to hurt her. Stippel again asked if anyone had touched her and L.H. said yes, her father had. Stippel asked where, and L.H. put her hand down by her crotch. Stippel asked where this happened, and L.H. told her it was in the chicken house where they make toys. She also stated she did not want to go with her father on visitation.

*72 In answering Stippel’s question, L.H. was very nervous, as if she didn’t want to answer any questions. During this conversation, Karen Haala sat quietly. There had been no earlier discussion between Stippel and Haala of possible sexual abuse.

Stippel advised Karen Haala she should report the incident to her social worker, who was coming on Monday. Although upset about L.H.’s revelation, Karen Haala allowed L.H. to go with the other children on the scheduled visitation day with appellant the next day, on Sunday, rather than violate the divorce decree. When the social worker, Deb Steinkey, came to the Haala farm she interviewed L.H., who again related the incident.

L.H. testified that the incident occurred in the wood shop a few days earlier, when no one else was present. She stated that when she was sitting on appellant’s lap he put his hand down under her jeans and underwear and touched her in the genital area. On cross-examination, L.H. testified that she .went to the wood shop by herself and was with appellant for a period of time before the touching occurred. In response to leading questions, she agreed that they had been together perhaps 15, or even 30 minutes to an hour. Following the incident she ran out, went into the house, and watched television.

On direct examination L.H. stated that appellant told her not to tell her mother what had happened. Later, however, she stated she didn’t remember appellant saying anything to her, and it was difficult to remember. She gave conflicting testimony as to whether her brother Andy had come into the wood shop while the touching was taking place. Andy Haala testified he did not walk in on appellant and L.H. while they were alone in the shop. L.H. also testified that her mother had told her to tell the truth, that she was telling the truth, and had not made up the incident.

Appellant denied having touched L.H.’s private parts and indicated that in the days preceding the fourth of July he was at the wood shop two or three times, but only saw the children there once on July 2. He stated that on July 2 he brought a rocking horse for him and Tony to use as a model and then he was alone in the workshop for 15 or 20 minutes before Tony came in. Tony and appellant worked for the next hour or two making a pattern for the rocking horse and worked on other toys as well. Appellant claimed the other three children came in about 20 or 30 minutes after Tony did, and later, Tony left for a short time to go to the bathroom. Appellant stated that after he returned Tony and L.H. got into a fight, during which L.H. called Tony an obscenity and appellant made them say a prayer. According to appellant, L.H. then left and went to the house, and appellant finished up his work and left.

Appellant also testified that he was aware of his past problems and took special precautions when he was with any of the girls. He testified “I always was aware of myself because I was involved in ’81. I didn’t want to get involved with the same thing, so I took the necessary steps I felt that would prevent me from doing the things I did in ’81.”

Tony Haala was called as a witness by the defense. He testified that around July 4, 1985 appellant came to the farm with a rocking horse, and later that same evening Tony and L.H. got into an argument at the shop and called him a bad name. Tony stated appellant made them say a prayer, and L.H. left. Tony indicated it was difficult to remember which night that occurred, and stated it could have been either before or after July 4. He testified that appellant left the wood shop for about a half an hour and that Tony went into the house until after appellant returned. Tony also testified that he was not always around when appellant was at the work shop, and sometimes when Tony got home, appellant was in the shop with Andy or L.H. alone. Tony also testified that L.H. had not lied to him very often and was not a liar.

Dorothy Severin was also called as a witness by the defense. She testified that when she, Karen Haala, and the two Haala girls were visiting Shirley Stippel on July 6, Stippel asked L.H., “Did your father touch you?” According to Severin, L.H. first *73 made no response, and when asked again she only nodded her head. Severin also stated she did not see L.H. touch herself between the legs in response to any questions by Stippel. However, in a statement to the police, Severin stated she had learned L.H. had been touched between the legs by appellant.

Nancy Hierman, whose friendship with Karen Haala had soured, testified that sometime before their friendship broke off in 1985, Haala said she was going to do something to make sure appellant never saw the children again. Karen Haala was also called as a witness by the defense. She could not recall ever making such a statement, and testified that she never told L.H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 N.W.2d 69, 1987 Minn. App. LEXIS 5003, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-haala-minnctapp-1987.