State v. Maule

112 Wash. App. 887
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedAugust 5, 2002
DocketNo. 47873-7-I
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 Wash. App. 887 (State v. Maule) 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. Maule, 112 Wash. App. 887 (Wash. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

Ellington, J.

A trial court has considerable latitude in choosing the procedure for determining competency, and may proceed by any means which permits the parties to be heard and allows the court to make a well-informed judg[889]*889ment. The chief issue in this case is whether due process requires that defense counsel be permitted to cross-examine a child witness at a pretrial competency hearing. We hold that precluding such cross-examination does not necessarily violate due process.

Here, counsel’s proposed examination would not have been helpful to the determination of competency, and the procedure for questioning the child did not violate Maule’s due process rights. We therefore affirm Maule’s convictions for first degree child molestation and sexual exploitation of a minor. We address other issues in the unpublished part of this opinion.

FACTS

Donald Maulé is married to Anna Maulé. Melissa and Lydia are Anna’s daughters from a previous marriage, and A.S. is Melissa’s daughter. Maulé is therefore A.S.’s step-grandfather. In December 1999, Maulé was 56 years old and A.S. was 7.

Anna, Lydia, and Maulé lived together in his Auburn home. On December 29,1999, Lydia was babysitting A.S. at the house. Maulé was at his computer with A.S. sitting on his lap. Lydia’s boyfriend, John Boyatt, saw that Maulé had his hand under A.S.’s shirt and was stroking her chest. Maule’s behavior made John nervous, and he went upstairs to tell Lydia what he had seen. By the time they returned, Maulé was elsewhere and A.S. was alone at the computer. Lydia saw a blurred image on the computer and asked A.S. what it was. She replied, “It’s a butt.”1 When asked whose butt it was, A.S. said that it was hers. She said she took the pictures because Maulé teased her and called her “chicken.”2

Lydia took A.S. into a bathroom to talk privately, and A.S. became upset. Lydia asked her if Maulé had touched her, [890]*890and she replied, “No.”3 When Anna returned home, A.S. again denied that Maulé had touched her. But when her mother, Melissa, picked her up, A.S. said that Maulé had touched her crotch through her clothes while she was sitting on his lap at the computer.

Maulé was arrested and his computer was seized. On one of Maule’s floppy disks, police recovered 10 images of child pornography, which had been downloaded from two web sites with explicitly descriptive internet addresses. Records of visits to those sites were found on Maule’s hard drive. Maulé told Detective Stocker that he viewed pornography on his computer, and the detective would probably find some “child-type” photos on the computer.4

The State charged Maulé with first degree child molestation and sexual exploitation of a minor. By the time of trial, A.S. was eight years old. The court held a hearing to determine her competency as a witness. The prosecutor questioned A. S. about her age, where she lived, whether she knew the difference between the truth and a lie, and what she did for her last birthday. Defense counsel then sought to cross-examine. After hearing counsel’s proposed line of inquiry, the court concluded counsel’s questions would not help determine whether A.S. was competent, and denied the request to cross-examine.

The court found A.S. competent and the trial proceeded. Nicole Farrell, a child abuse investigator at the King County Prosecutor’s Office who had interviewed A.S., testified that A.S. said Maulé told her to use the digital camera on his computer to take pictures of her “behind” and “in front” with her pants and underwear off.5 A.S. was reluctant, but Maulé kept calling her “frady-cat” until she relented.6 A.S. also told Farrell that Maulé had rubbed her [891]*891crotch area, over her pants, as they sat at the computer, saying “this is where I always rub grandma.”7

A.S.’s testimony was similar to her disclosures to Farrell. A.S. testified that Maulé told her to take pictures of her “private spots” with his digital camera, and that he kept calling her “chicken.”8 She also testified that he put his hand on her “private spot” while she was sitting on his lap at the computer.9

Maulé denied abusing A.S. He testified that A.S. took a picture of his rear-end, so he told her, “That’s kind of chicken-shit, take a picture of your own butt.”10 He claimed that he did not intend for her to actually photograph herself, and denied touching her vagina while she sat on his lap. He also testified that he never intentionally put his hand under her shirt, but that her shirt may have lifted up when she reached for something on the computer desk, and that his hand may have ended up underneath the shirt. He testified that he occasionally viewed adult pornographic web sites, and that images of child pornography would sporadically “show up,” but claimed that he did not download them.* 11

The jury convicted Maulé of first degree child molestation and sexual exploitation of a minor.

Due Process at Child Competency Hearings

The trial court has a threshold obligation to ensure witnesses are competent to testify. Competency is thus a question of fact to be determined by the trial court.12 The [892]*892burden of proving incompetency is on the party opposing the witness.13

Courts consider five factors when determining competency of a child witness; absence of any one of which renders the child incompetent to testify:

(1) an understanding of the obligation to speak the truth on the witness stand; (2) the mental capacity at the time of the occurrence concerning which he is to testify, to receive an accurate impression of it; (3) a memory sufficient to retain an independent recollection of the occurrence; (4) the capacity to express in words his memory of the occurrence; and (5) the capacity to understand simple questions about it.[14]

The procedure for determining competency, including the nature of the questioning, “rest[s] primarily with the trial judge who sees the witness, notices his manner, and considers his capacity and intelligence.”15 The trial court may find it appropriate to limit voir dire to its own questions,16 especially where the witness is a child who is particularly vulnerable, or where the court fears unduly intimidating questioning by counsel. Like the child’s demeanor, these concerns may not be reflected in the record on appeal, and are among the reasons the procedure at child competency hearings “lies within the sound discretion of the trial judge.”17

Such determinations obviously depend on the facts of each case, and make general rules elusive and inappropriate. No single method of determining competency can be prescribed for all situations.

[893]*893Maulé contends due process requires that defense counsel be permitted to cross-examine a child witness at a competency hearing, particularly where the prosecutor has been permitted to do so.

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Related

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Court of Appeals of Washington, 2022
State v. Brousseau
172 Wash. 2d 331 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)
State v. Maule
51 P.3d 811 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 Wash. App. 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-maule-washctapp-2002.