State v. Mann
This text of 35 S.W.3d 913 (State v. Mann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Rusty L. Mann (“Defendant”) appeals his conviction for child molestation, § 566.067, and sexual misconduct involving a child by indecent exposure, § 566.083. 1 Upon recommendation by the jury, the trial court sentenced Defendant to seven years’ imprisonment for child molestation and five years’ imprisonment for the sexual misconduct involving a child. The court ordered the sentences to be served consec *915 utively. On appeal Defendant makes two claims of reversible error regarding the admission into evidence of a videotaped interview of the child victim and testimony of certain witnesses. We find no error. We affirm.
Defendant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence, nor does he assert error in allowing the contents of the videotape or the testimony to be heard by the jury; rather, he alleges the trial court abused its discretion in allowing cumulative evidence. Accordingly, it is not necessary to describe the vile details of the offense charged and found by the jury to have been committed.
After the crime occurred, the child victim (“D.R.”) related her version of the events to numerous people including her mother (“Mother”), her neighbor (“Dorothy”), Defendant’s mother, a school nurse (“Myra”), and a case manager at the Child Advocacy Center (“Angela”). Mother, Dorothy, and Myra all testified at trial as to what D.R. told them relating to the crime, and each person’s testimony was substantially the same with only minor variations. Additionally, the court admitted into evidence a 27 minute videotaped interview with D.R. conducted by Angela. In the videotaped interview, D.R. gave essentially the same accounts of the crimes as she gave in her “five” testimony at trial. The videotape was admitted despite Defendant’s objections that “playing the videotape would be improperly bolstering her testimony and ... repetitive.” Additionally, Defendant noted he was not at the interview and could not cross-examine D.R. at that time; consequently, “the videotapes violate his right to confront and cross-examine the witnesses against him.”
In part, Defendant’s first point maintains the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed the videotape to go before the jury because such evidence “improperly bolstered the in-court testimony of [D.R.] ... [and] was duplicative and corroborative of the testimony she gave from the witness stand, and the State thereby gained an undue advantage with its presentation.” This argument ignores § 492.304, specifically subsections 1 and 3 thereof. Section 492.304.1 lists seven prerequisites to the use of the videotape, and Defendant does not claim any of the requirements went unfulfilled here. 2 Section 492.304.3 provides:
“If the visual and aural recording of a verbal or nonverbal statement of a child is admissible under this section and the child testifies at the proceeding, it shall be admissible in addition to the testimony of the child at the proceeding whether or not it repeats or duplicates the child’s testimony.” (Emphasis added).
Normally, the issue of control of cumulative evidence is committed to the *916 sound discretion of the trial court. 3 State v. Kidd, 990 S.W.2d 175, 180[7] (Mo.App.1999). However, in this instance the legislature specifically mandated this type of evidence “shall be” admitted “whether or not it repeats or duplicates” in-court testimony. “Where the language of the statute is clear, courts must give effect to the language used by the legislature.” State v. Burns, 978 S.W.2d 759, 761[6] (Mo.banc 1998). This is what the trial judge did here, i.e., he followed the clear, unambiguous language of § 492.304.3. The statute itself (1) renders the videotape admissible and (2) demonstrates the frivolous nature of this part of Defendant’s point relied on.
Second, Defendant contends, as part of his first point, the trial court erred in admitting the videotape “because that ruling violated [Defendant’s] right to confrontation.” Defendant does not, however, support this assertion with an argument or citation of supporting authority in the argument portion of his brief. 4 Failing to do so results in there being nothing for this court to review. State v. Nicklasson, 967 S.W.2d 596, 608[17] (Mo.banc 1998); State v. Downen, 3 S.W.3d 434, 438[9] (Mo.App.1999).
Gratuitously, we note Defendant’s “confrontation” argument was answered adversely to him by the Missouri Supreme Court in Schaal, 806 S.W.2d 659. The court stated: “By any calculation, Section 492.304 satisfies a defendant’s right to confrontation. The statutory requirement that the child witness be available to testify at trial, under oath, and subject to the fact finder’s observation of demeanor ... guarantees that right.” (Emphasis added). Id. at 663[3]. Although the 1986 version of § 492.304 was implicated in Schaal, we believe that case controls the disposition here because the RSMo 1994 version affords an accused even more protection than the statute at issue in Schaal. Thus, under § 492.304, RSMo 1994, not only does the victim have to be available to testify, but the statute specifically requires the victim to actually testify before the videotape can be admitted as evidence. Defendant’s contention that he must be allowed to confront or cross-examine the witness at the time the videotape was made is wholly without merit.
Finally, Defendant’s first point includes a contention that the trial court erred in admitting the videotape “because that ruling violated [Defendant’s] right ... to due process and a fair trial.” As before, however, Defendant fails to support this claim of trial court error with an argument and citation of supporting authority in the argument section of his brief. Because of this briefing deficiency, Defendant has failed to preserve his due process claims for review. Downen, 3 S.W.3d at 438[9]. Furthermore, Defendant did not object to the videotape at trial on the basis that § 492.304 violated his constitutionally guaranteed rights to due process and a fair trial. Constitutional claims are deemed to be waived if not presented to the trial court at the first opportunity. State v. Parker, 886 S.W.2d 908, 925[59] (Mo.banc 1994). Point denied.
In Defendant’s second point relied on, he claims the trial court plainly erred *917 in allowing the testimony of Mother, Dorothy, and Myra to be heard by the jury because this was merely duplicative testimony which constituted improper bolstering.
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35 S.W.3d 913, 2001 Mo. App. LEXIS 188, 2001 WL 68709, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mann-moctapp-2001.