State v. Kenneth Schaller

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 1, 2010
Docket02C01-9503-CR-00086
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Kenneth Schaller, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT JACKSON

SEPTEMBER 1995 SESSION FILED November 5, 1997

STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) Appellate C ourt Clerk Appellee, ) No. 02C01-9503-CR-00086 ) ) Shelby County v. ) ) Honorable John P. Colton, Jr., Judge ) KENNETH B. SCHALLER, ) (Aggravated Sexual Battery -- 2 counts) ) Appellant. )

For the Appellant: For the Appellee:

David K. Lower Charles W. Burson 4384 Stage Road, Suite 209 Attorney General of Tennessee Memphis, TN 38128 and (AT TRIAL) Ellen H. Pollack Assistant Attorney General of Tennessee James V. Ball 450 James Robertson Parkway 217 Exchange Avenue Nashville, TN 37243-0485 Memphis, TN 38105 (ON APPEAL) John W. Pierotti District Attorney General and Jennifer S. Nichols Assistant District Attorney General 201 Poplar Avenue, Suite 301 Memphis, TN 38103-1947

OPINION FILED:____________________

JUDGMENT IN CASE NO. 9209723 VACATED; CONVICTION IN CASE NO. 9209722 REVERSED; REMANDED

Joseph M. Tipton Judge

OPINION The defendant, Kenneth B. Schaller, appeals as of right from his

convictions by a jury in the Shelby County Criminal Court on two counts of aggravated

sexual battery, a Class B felony. The defendant was sentenced as a Range I, standard

offender to ten years for each count, to be served concurrently in the custody of the

Department of Correction. The defendant contends (1) that the evidence was

insufficient to support a conviction of aggravated sexual battery of the victim alleged to

be mentally defective, (2) that the two offenses should have been severed and tried

separately, and (3) that the trial court erred in allowing into evidence the prior written

statements of the victims.

We hold that the indictment regarding the allegedly mentally defective

victim fails to state the offense of aggravated sexual battery for which the defendant

was convicted and that the evidence was insufficient to convict the defendant for sexual

battery in that case. We also hold that although the offenses were properly

consolidated for trial, the use of inadmissible out-of-court statements made by one

victim improperly prejudiced the defendant relative to the offense involving the second

victim.

This case involves the defendant's conduct toward his girlfriend's two

daughters, S.T., age seven at the time of the alleged offense, and C.S., age thirteen at

the time of the alleged offense. The defendant was living in the same household as his

girlfriend and the victims. The defendant was indicted on a count of aggravated sexual

battery against S.T., a person less than thirteen years of age. The defendant was also

indicted on a purported count of aggravated sexual battery against C.S., a person that

the defendant knew or had reason to know was mentally defective. The indictments

charged that the offenses occurred between the dates of March 1, 1992, and August

25, 1992.

2 The state's first witness, Christine Smith, testified that she rented one of

her houses to the defendant on July 10, 1992. She testified that the defendant, his

girlfriend Kimberly Schauer, her three children, and the child of the defendant and Ms.

Schauer were to be living in the house. Ms. Schauer's children included the two

victims, C.S. and S.T., and her four-year-old son, B.T. The defendant’s and Ms.

Schauer's child was an eighteen-month-old infant.

Tom Beard, a detective with the Collierville Police Department, testified

that he investigated the allegations of child abuse. He testified that on August 25,

1992, he met with Dean Grisby, a counselor for the Department of Human Services, at

the Collierville Middle School, and after meeting with a school official, he and Mrs.

Grisby interviewed C.S.

Detective Beard testified to the details of his interview with C.S. He

testified that C.S. had just turned thirteen years old and that she appeared to be

"mentally challenged," even though she appeared to understand the questions being

asked and responded appropriately. The state then questioned the detective as to the

details of the interview, which he answered by reading from the transcript. He testified

that C.S. described how the defendant touched her and her sister, S.T., and that C.S.

said that she told her grandmother, Peggy Lewis, about the abuse. The detective

testified by reading to the court a significant portion of the thirty-five-page interview

transcript.

Detective Beard testified that after the interview was over, he and Mrs.

Grisby decided that they needed to get a protective custody order for the three children,

C.S., S.T., and B.T. He said that they went to the elementary school and picked up the

other two children, S.T. and B.T., took them to police headquarters, and then contacted

their mother, Kim Schauer, and their grandmother, Peggy Lewis.

3 Detective Beard testified that he and Mrs. Grisby interviewed S.T. at

police headquarters. Detective Beard testified to the details of his interview with S.T. by

reading from portions of the eighteen-page transcript of the interview he had with S.T.

The detective stated that S.T. said that the defendant grabbed her hand and made her

rub his penis. He also stated that S.T. said that both her sister, C.S., and brother, B.T.,

were in the room at the time.

S.T., the seven-year-old victim who was nine years old at the time of the

trial, testified that the defendant took her hand and placed it on his penis, which he had

covered with a pillow that was on his lap. She said that she was finally able to yank her

hand away. S.T. also testified that she told her grandmother, Peggy Lewis, what the

defendant had done.

B.T., the victims' younger brother who was six years old at the time of the

trial, testified that he heard the defendant tell the victims to touch his "privacy." He

stated that he did not see anything except his two sisters sitting on the couch with the

defendant.

C.S., the thirteen-year-old victim who was fourteen at the time of the trial,

testified that while sitting on the couch with the defendant, the defendant whispered in

her ear asking her to touch his penis. Both S.T. and B.T. were in the room at the time.

She testified that, against her will, the defendant took her hand and placed it on his

penis. She also testified that on another date he fondled her vagina while she was

sitting on the couch at their home in Collierville. She said that when she told him to

stop, he did stop.

C.S. testified that she told her mother, Kimberly Schauer, what the

defendant had done but her mother did not believe her. C.S. testified that she then told

a counselor at school, which led to the police investigation resulting in the instant

charges. On cross-examination, C.S. could not provide any details, even as to what

4 she testified to on direct, and frequently replied, "I don't get it" or "I don't know." She

did admit to hating the defendant and wanting to have nothing to do with him.

Patricia Davidson, the therapeutic foster care program counselor for C.S.,

testified to her familiarity with C.S. Ms. Davidson testified that she believed that C.S.

was under special therapeutic foster care because C.S. was sexually abused and

mentally challenged. She testified that C.S. was seeing a psychiatrist every other week,

and that C.S. was enrolled in a special education program.

Dr.

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State v. Kenneth Schaller, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-kenneth-schaller-tenncrimapp-2010.