State v. McCurry

770 N.W.2d 553, 2009 Minn. App. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 2497289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 18, 2009
DocketA08-0931
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 770 N.W.2d 553 (State v. McCurry) 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. McCurry, 770 N.W.2d 553, 2009 Minn. App. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 2497289 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

TOUSSAINT, Chief Judge.

Sylvester McCurry, Sr. was convicted of burglarizing his ex-wife’s home and stealing her wallet. . In this appeal from conviction, he challenges the state’s introduction of relationship evidence under the domestic-abuse statute. He also argues for reversible error based on a witness’s unsolicited comment about a prior incarceration and based on the prosecutor’s insinuations about the absence of alibi witnesses for appellant. Because we conclude that the *556 errors individually were harmless, we affirm.

FACTS

While appellant’s ex-wife, G.M., was getting ready for work on August 25, 2007, a man forcefully entered her Woodbury home, damaging her patio door. The intruder, after encountering G.M. and a house guest, took G.M.’s wallet from her purse and left. G.M. and her house guest identified the intruder as appellant. Appellant called G.M. later that day and arranged to meet with her at Sun Ray Shopping Center, telling her that he wanted to show her where he ditched her wallet. Appellant denies that he was at G.M.’s house that morning and says that he arranged to meet with G.M. because she was concerned about an injury he had suffered and offered to give him a ride to pick up medications. G.M. arranged for police officers to follow her to the shopping center. Seeing them, appellant fled but was apprehended with the help of two police dogs. Appellant was charged with first-degree burglary.

At trial, the parties immediately made the troubled relationship between G.M. and appellant an issue. Defense counsel mentioned it in his opening statement. G.M. was the state’s first witness and testified regarding her and appellant’s history. She explained that they met in 1993 and she then became pregnant with appellant’s child. The prosecutor asked, “And then what happened?” and G.M. replied, “Well, then he went to prison in Stillwater for a sexual — attempted sexual assault charge.” Appellant moved for a mistrial, arguing that it was prejudicial for the jury to know that he is a convicted sex offender. The prosecutor argued that the statement was unsolicited and unexpected. The court agreed and denied the mistrial, stating that the jurors would be able to follow a curative instruction because they were “fairly sophisticated.”

The district court explained to the jury that G.M. “mentioned that [appellant] had apparently served time in prison for an offense not in any way related to this case.” It instructed the jury “to disregard and not consider in any way any offense for which [appellant] may have previously been incarcerated.” At the start of the trial, the court also told the jury: “If I instruct you during the trial to disregard some statement that a witness has made, you must disregard it.”

Defense counsel also asked the court to forbid G.M. from testifying about “any other criminal activity or bad acts.” The state argued that evidence of G.M. and appellant’s relationship was admissible under Minn.Stat. § 634.20 (2006), despite conceding that the conduct underlying appellant’s charges did not qualify as domestic abuse. The district court decided to have G.M. give her testimony outside the presence of the jury, so that the court could “figure out whether [the prior acts were] similar enough under 634.20 to be relevant enough to come in.”

G.M. testified that, before and throughout her five-year marriage to appellant, she endured intermittent incidents of physical abuse and sexual infidelity, although there were also periods of stability and cordialness. G.M. told the court that a physical attack in 2005, for which appellant was convicted of misdemeanor domestic abuse, led her to seek to dissolve the marriage. She also proffered testimony about her and appellant’s relationship after the marriage was dissolved, which included incidents of verbal and emotional abuse. G.M. testified that, at times, she told appellant to stop calling her or stop coming to her house. G.M. retained custody of their child, and she said appellant often tried to scare G.M. by claiming that the *557 child protection office was investigating her.

G.M. also described three incidents that occurred in August 2007 in the weeks before the burglary. In the first incident, appellant came to G.M.’s house, argued with her, pushed her, and smashed her phone when she tried to call for help. She fled the house, but appellant remained, refused to leave, damaged property, and hid out in the house until G.M. returned. In the second incident, appellant entered G.M.’s house through the kitchen window one night and stayed with her overnight. In the third incident, he called G.M. and made a veiled threat, and G.M. discovered damage to her car the next morning.

The district court concluded that, under section 634.20, prior-act evidence was not limited to cases where the current charge qualified as domestic abuse, but instead turned on whether the prior conduct was similar to the current charge- and not unfairly prejudicial. The court limited G.M.’s testimony to events that occurred after the marriage dissolution, closer in time to the charged incident, and stated that G.M. could testify, generally, that she and appellant had problems and at times she had to call the police. The court allowed G.M. to testify to the three incidents she described and gave the jury an instruction explaining the purpose of the evidence. G.M. testified substantially as she had in the proffer, within the limits set by the court.

The state called other witnesses. G.M.’s houseguest the morning of the burglary testified that appellant was the burglar. A bus driver testified that she saw appellant on her bus that morning and that she dropped him off in Woodbury. A police officer testified about photographs he took of G.M.’s broken patio door. Canine officers also testified that appellant ran when he saw police with G.M. at the shopping center. Another officer testified about a statement appellant gave after being arrested, in which he avoided discussing his whereabouts that morning.

Appellant testified that the main source of stress between him and G.M. after the marriage dissolution was money that she allegedly owed him from the value of their marital home. He did not address the three incidents that took place in the weeks before the August 25 burglary. As for the burglary itself, he said he was home that morning in bed and later took the bus to the shopping center to meet a friend and buy throw pillows. He also called G.M. that morning to talk about their daughter. He said G.M. wanted to meet him at the shopping center because she was concerned about an injury he was recovering from. The injury involved bites from police dogs in a previous incident; he claimed these injuries explained why he ran when seeing canine officers with G.M. at the shopping center.

During. cross-examination, the prosecutor elicited appellant’s claim that an overnight guest and a downstairs neighbor saw him at home that morning. The prosecutor impliedly asked appellant why he did not call either of them as a witness. On re-direct, appellant said that he had lost contact with both of them. The state renewed its reference to the absent witnesses in a statement during closing argument, without objection from appellant. Following additional witness testimony, the jury found appellant guilty.

ISSUES

1.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
770 N.W.2d 553, 2009 Minn. App. LEXIS 156, 2009 WL 2497289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mccurry-minnctapp-2009.