State v. Phillips

854 S.W.2d 803, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 585, 1993 WL 118155
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 1993
DocketNos. WD 43503, WD 44617
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 854 S.W.2d 803 (State v. Phillips) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Phillips, 854 S.W.2d 803, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 585, 1993 WL 118155 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

ULRICH, Judge.

Leroy E. Phillips appealed from the judgment, entered following jury verdict, convicting him of first degree sexual abuse, section 566.100, RSMo 1986. Mr. Phillips also appealed the denial of his Rule 29.15 postconviction motion, and the appeals were consolidated. Rule 29.15(1). On May 12, 1992, by opinion of this court, the judgment of conviction and the denial of the postconviction motion were affirmed. State v. Phillips, No. WD 43503 (May 12, 1992). Mr. Phillips applied to the Supreme Court of Missouri for its order of transfer. On February 23, 1993, the Supreme Court of Missouri transferred the consolidated cases and ordered the cases retransferred to this court for reconsideration in light of State v. Bernard, No. 74775, 849 S.W.2d 10 (Mo. banc 1993).

Among the issues raised by Mr. Phillips on appeal, and the one to which Bernard applies, was his contention that the trial court erred in allowing C.M., Mr. Phillips’s stepgranddaughter and the victim of the charged offense, and J.G., another minor, to testify that when they were eleven years [804]*804old, Mr. Phillips engaged each of them on several occasions in uncharged sexual misconduct similar to the conduct for which Mr. Phillips was charged. The trial court permitted the testimony under the common scheme or plan exception to the rule precluding introduction of evidence of unrelated and uncharged criminal conduct. Resolution of this issue is dispositive of the appeal and the Rule 29.15 postconviction motion. The judgment of conviction is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new trial.

The purported incident, which is the basis for the charged criminal conduct, occurred in April 1989. C.M. testified that she was then eleven years old and temporarily residing in her maternal grandmother’s and stepgrandfather’s house with her mother and a sibling. She was reading the newspaper on her grandparents’ bed when Mr. Phillips entered the bedroom and sat next to her. C.M. testified that Mr. Phillips pulled her underpants down and placed his index finger in her vagina.

In addition to presenting testimony specifically about the occurrence alleged in the information, C.M. was permitted to testify that Mr. Phillips engaged the witness in uncharged sexual molestation approximately twenty additional times, commencing when the witness was nine years old. C.M. testified that during half of the alleged incidents, Mr. Phillips sexually molested her on a canopy bed in the room where C.M. slept when visiting her grandparents. During the other ten incidents, C.M. testified that Mr. Phillips molested her on the bed where Mr. Phillips’s stepdaughter (mother of C.M.) slept when she visited her mother, Mr. Phillips’s wife. C.M. testified that Mr. Phillips never threatened her. Not until the episode in April 1989, for which Mr. Phillips was charged, did he tell C.M. not to report the activity to anyone, C.M. testified.

J.G., who was fifteen years old at the time of the trial, testified that when she was eleven years old, Mr. Phillips developed a close relationship with her and her family. Mr. Phillips offered to assist J.G. with problems that she was having with her family. He included her in his family’s activities and accompanied her to various events. Mr. Phillips, according to an investigating police officer, professed to considering J.G. as he would his own granddaughter.

J.G. testified that Mr. Phillips had inappropriately touched her vaginal area on three different occasions when she was eleven years old. She said that the first time occurred when Mr. Phillips took her fishing at J.G.’s family’s lake property. She said that the second time occurred in a pickup truck when Mr. Phillips had taken her to view puppies. The third time occurred, J.G. said, when Mr. Phillips attempted to touch her vaginal area while she was at his barber shop. Mr. Phillips denied each of these allegations to police authorities in December 1988, and no charges were filed against him for the purported incidents.

In Bernard, the Missouri Supreme Court addressed the series of cases that applied the common scheme or design exception to the rule that evidence of other uncharged and unrelated crimes is not admissible. Bernard, 849 S.W.2d at 12-20. Evidence of other, uncharged misconduct is permissible

when it “ ‘tends to establish: (1) motive; (2) intent; (3) the absence of mistake or accident; (4) a common scheme or plan embracing the commission of two or more crimes so related to each other that proof of one tends to establish the other; [or] (5) the identity of the person charged with the commission of the crime on trial.’ ”

Id. at 13 (quoting State v. Sladek, 835 S.W.2d 308, 311 (Mo. banc 1992); People v. Molineux, 168 N.Y. 264, 61 N.E. 286, 294 (1901)). The court remarked that State v. Koster, 684 S.W.2d 488 (Mo.App.1984), expanded the common scheme or plan exception beyond that traditionally allowed. Id. 849 S.W.2d at 15. Bernard noted that the recent trend in Missouri has been to allow the liberal admission of evidence of the prior sexual misconduct of a defendant charged with the sexual abuse of a child under the premise that such evidence is [805]*805proof of motive, identity or common scheme or plan. Id. at 13. The court concluded that liberal use of the common scheme or plan exception has resulted in a distortion of the original purpose of the exception. Id. The court then reviewed the case history regarding application of the common scheme or plan exception and determined that certain cases which define the exception will no longer be applied when determining whether to admit evidence of prior sexual misconduct in cases involving a charge of sexual misconduct. Id. at 16.

The court adopted a new “signature modus operandi/corroboration” exception to the rule excluding evidence of a defendant’s uncharged prior misconduct. Id. at 17. The court noted that this exception is analogous to the recognized exception that permits evidence of prior uncharged misconduct for the purpose of proving the wrongdoer’s identity. Id. at 16. “If the identity of the wrongdoer is at issue, the identity exception permits the state to show the defendant as the culprit who has committed the sexual crime charged by showing that the defendant committed other uncharged sexual acts that are sufficiently similar to the crime charged in time, place and method.” Id. The court further stated that for prior misconduct to be classified within this established exception and admissible, “[t]he charged and uncharged crimes must be nearly ‘identical’ and their methodology ‘so unusual and distinctive’ that they resemble a ‘signature’ of the defendant’s involvement in both crimes.” Id. at 16-17 (quoting State v. McDaniels, 668 S.W.2d 230, 232-33 (Mo.App.1984); State v. Young, 661 S.W.2d 637, 639 (Mo.App.1983)). Thus, Bernard teaches that evidence of prior sexual misconduct that corroborates the testimony of the victim should be nearly identical to the charged crime and so unusual and distinctive as to be a signature of the defendant’s modus operandi. Id. at 17 (quoting Sladek,

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Holleran
197 S.W.3d 603 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2006)
State v. Gilyard
979 S.W.2d 138 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1998)
State v. Jones
914 S.W.2d 852 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1996)
State v. Magouirk
890 S.W.2d 17 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1994)
State v. Vowell
863 S.W.2d 954 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1993)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
854 S.W.2d 803, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 585, 1993 WL 118155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-phillips-moctapp-1993.