State v. Pena-Rojas

822 A.2d 921, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 130, 2003 WL 21210139
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 27, 2003
Docket2001-234-C.A., 2002-362-M.P.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 822 A.2d 921 (State v. Pena-Rojas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Pena-Rojas, 822 A.2d 921, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 130, 2003 WL 21210139 (R.I. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In this statutory-rape case, the defendant, Rafael Pena-Rojas, 1 challenges the trial justice’s rulings sustaining the state’s objections to certain questions that his attorney posed to him during his direct examination of the defendant at his criminal trial. On his appeal and in his petition for certiorari, the defendant contends that his attorney intended to elicit evidence that the defendant was free of the sexually transmitted diseases that the victim said she had contracted after engaging in the sexual activity in question.

A Superior Court jury found defendant guilty of one count of first-degree child molestation, concluding that he had sexual intercourse with a thirteen-year-old girl. 2 The trial justice then sentenced him to a fifteen-year prison term, with five years of the sentence suspended and five years of probation. A judgment of conviction was entered on November 20, 2000.

On January 25, 2001, the Superior Court granted defendant’s motion to extend the time for him to file a notice of appeal from his conviction. By this date, however, the maximum thirty day additional period for filing an appeal beyond the original twenty day appeal period allowed by law for doing so already had expired. 3 Article I, Rule 4(b) of the Supreme Court Rules of Appellate Procedure provides, in pertinent part:

“Upon a showing of excusable neglect the Superior Court may, before or after the time has expired, with or without motion and notice, extend the time for filing a notice of appeal for a period not to exceed thirty (30) days from the expiration of the time otherwise prescribed by this subdivision.”

Upon realizing that he had failed to file his notice of appeal before the deadline for doing so had expired, defendant petitioned this Court to issue a writ of certiorari. We then granted the petition and issued the writ. Meanwhile, we ordered the parties to show cause why we should not decide the appeal summarily. After reviewing the parties’ respective submissions and hearing their oral arguments, we conclude that they have failed to show cause, and we therefore proceed to decide this case without further briefing and argument.

Because defendant failed to file the notice of appeal in a timely manner, we have no choice but to dismiss defendant’s appeal because he failed to invoke our *923 jurisdiction within the time limits provided by law for doing so. Nevertheless, given the pending petition for certiorari, we treat the parties’ respective arguments on the appeal as their contentions for and against the granting of the certiorari petition. We now turn to the merits of these arguments.

In his challenge to the conviction, defendant raises only one issue: whether, the trial justice erred by not allowing him to testify during his direct examination about whether he had a sexually transmitted disease. Specifically, defendant suggests that he wanted to testify about how, shortly after his arrest, a medical examination at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) revealed that he did not have any sexually transmitted diseases and that he never had any sexually transmitted diseases. At trial, however, the trial justice sustained the state’s objections to this line of inquiry:

“Q. What was the first thing they did at the A.C.I. when you went there?
“Ms. Sterniek: Objection.
“The [c]ourt: Sustained.
“Q. Did you have a medical examine [sic ] at the A.C.I.?
“A. Yes.
“Q. Did any sexual transmitted diseases turn up?
“Ms. Sterniek: Objection.
“The [cjourt: Sustained.
“Q. Have you ever had a sexually transmitted disease?
“Ms. Sterniek: Objection.
“The [cjourt: Sustained.
“Mr. St. Onge: Nothing further.”

The defendant argues that because the state implied during the presentation of its case that the victim developed sexually transmitted diseases as a result of her contact with defendant, he should have been allowed to introduce evidence that he was free of these diseases. For support, defendant relies on two cases from Georgia, where an intermediate appellate court ruled that a defendant must be given an opportunity to present evidence of being disease-free in a situation such as this one in which medical testimony revealed that the victim contracted a sexually transmitted disease after she had sexual contact with the defendant. See Chambers v. State, 205 Ga.App. 78, 421 S.E.2d 326, 328-29 (1992) (holding that the trial court erred by refusing to admit evidence that the defendant did not have the sexually transmitted disease that the victim contracted); Reece v. State, 192 Ga.App. 14, 383 S.E.2d 572, 574 (1989) (overturning the defendant’s conviction because he was not allowed to present evidence that his wife did not have a sexually transmitted disease during the relevant time period). In each case, the court reasoned that such evidence was essential to the defendant’s case because evidence of the victim’s disease suggested that she had caught the illness from the defendant and that the defendant therefore should have been allowed to present evidence that he did not have the disease — thereby demonstrating that he was not the one responsible for committing the sexual crime in question. Chambers, 421 S.E.2d at 329; Reece, 383 S.E.2d at 574.

The evidence in each Georgia case, however, is distinguishable from this situation because no evidence in those cases suggested that the victim had sexual relations with anyone other than the defendant during the relevant period. In this case, however, the victim testified that she first had sexual relations with another man on the evening of June 27, 1999, and then later— on that same evening in the same motel room — she also had sexual intercourse with defendant. Thus, this earlier sexual contact — let alone the possibility of other such incidents in the same relative time *924 frame — could explain how she contracted the sexually transmitted diseases. Also, although the prosecutor introduced evidence of the victim’s medical condition to explain how she ultimately came to disclose her sexual involvement with defendant at the motel, the prosecution did not offer this information into evidence to inculpate defendant as the person responsible for infecting her with these diseases, nor did the prosecutor suggest that defendant either had the diseases in question when he engaged in sexual intercourse with the victim or that he otherwise was responsible for transmitting them to her.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
822 A.2d 921, 2003 R.I. LEXIS 130, 2003 WL 21210139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pena-rojas-ri-2003.