State v. Pray

690 A.2d 1338, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 112425
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 11, 1997
DocketNo. 95-634-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 690 A.2d 1338 (State v. Pray) 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. Pray, 690 A.2d 1338, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 112425 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

A Superior Court jury returned guilty verdicts against the defendant, Norman C. Pray, Sr., on three counts of second-degree child molestation. He presses several points on appeal, but only two are colorable. We asked the parties to show cause why this matter should not be decided on their pre-briefing submissions. Having reviewed their contentions, we see no reason for further briefing or argument and shall therefore decide Pray’s appeal at this time.

I

The State’s Nondisclosure Before Trial of an Additional Location in Defendant’s Home Where the Alleged Sexual Assaults Occurred

In 1993 Pray’s granddaughter, Lisa (a fictitious name), told the police that Pray had been sexually molesting her and forcing her to touch him sexually during her customary visits to his home. The police obtained a signed statement from Lisa containing the following colloquy:

“Q. [Lisa] what room * * * did these incidents take place?
“A. In the basement, its [sic ] the family room.
a % * *
“Q. [Lisa] is there anything else you would like to add to this statement.
“A. No.”

The state seasonably disclosed Lisa’s signed statement to the defense. See Super. R.Crim. P. 16.1 On direct examination, however, Lisa said that this activity had also occurred in Pray’s bedroom. Pray’s counsel immediately moved to pass the case, claiming that the state had failed to indicate in its discovery responses that Lisa would testify about any bedroom incidents. The trial justice excused the jury so that Lisa could be questioned on this issue. At the end of this voir dire, the court found that Lisa had reasonably thought that the police were asking her where most of the sexual touching had occurred. As a result the trial justice concluded that because the state lacked any apparent pretrial knowledge of the alleged bedroom activity, the state had not deliberately withheld this information from the de[1340]*1340fense. Defense counsel protested in vain that this evidence knocked the legs out from under his principal line of defense — that it was improbable that Pray would have engaged in such iniquitous acts in a room as open to view as the basement. Although the trial justice denied Pray’s motion to pass, she allowed the defense a half-day continuance to regroup, without drawing any defense objection or request for any further preparation time.

Pray now challenges the trial justice’s actions on several related grounds. First, he argues that the state knew about the bedroom incident before trial and purposely omitted it from its Rule 16 discovery responses to sandbag the defense in front of the jury. Because the prosecutor asked Lisa on direct examination whether “those [sexual-touching] incidents only happened] in the basement or did they happen in other places?”, Pray insists that the prosecutor must have known about the bedroom activity before trial or he would not have asked such an open-ended question. Although conventional trial wisdom holds that a lawyer should not query a witness unless the examiner knows what the answer will be, this is a rule much honored in the breach, often for countervailing tactical reasons. Given Lisa’s explanation of her pretrial statement, the prosecution’s denials of any pretrial bedroom-incident knowledge, and the dearth of any evidence suggesting a deliberate nondisclosure, we are unable to conclude that the trial justice erred by failing to infer from this one question that the prosecutor must have known about the bedroom incident and intentionally kept it under his hat until he elicited it from Lisa on direct examination.

Pray also argues that the prosecutor’s pretrial failure to ferret out this evidence and/or to verify the completeness of the facts disclosed in the documents that were produced constitutes a lack of “due diligence” under Rule 16 and should therefore be treated as the equivalent of a deliberate nondisclosure. The trial justice disagreed, and so do we. Although the police report and the statements produced by the state to the defense pursuant to its discovery obligations indicated that these sexual contacts with Lisa had occurred in Pray’s basement, the state was not required to provide the defense with a detailed narrative containing every evidentia-ry facet of Lisa’s expected testimony. See State v. Woodson, 551 A.2d 1187, 1192 (R.I.1988) (noting that “detailed narration” is not required in a summary of a witness’s expected testimony).

Indeed, under Rule 16(a)(7), the state is only obligated to provide a summary of its expected witnesses’ testimony when “no such [written or recorded] testimony or statement of a witness is in the possession of the State.” Although the state cannot deliberately withhold material evidence from the defense when it knows its disclosed witness statements do not advert to such evidence,2 that is not the situation here. Given the truth of the disclosed facts contained in Lisa’s signed statement, the absence of any suggestion in the other produced documentation that this was the only place where such activity occurred, and the prosecutor’s lack of any actual pretrial knowledge of the bedroom incidents, we cannot fault the prosecutor for having failed to interview Lisa before trial about other possible venues in Pray’s home for the alleged misconduct — let alone about any possible bedroom incidents. Compare State v. Concannon, 457 A.2d 1350, 1353 (R.I.1983) (when a complaining witness’s statement failed to indicate that the defendant had committed an alleged additional act of first-degree sexual assault but the police report and the grand-jury testimony provided to the defense contained statements of the complaining witness that negated any such act by the defendant, the prosecution violated Rule 16 by not providing the defense with a pretrial summary of the complainant’s expected testimony concerning this alleged additional assault by the defendant) with State v. LaChapelle, 638 A.2d 525, 531 (R.I.1994) (failure of state to disclose alleged statement by the defendant to complaining witness held not to violate Rule 16 when sexual-assault incident itself had already been disclosed).

[1341]*1341Moreover, for legitimate tactical reasons the state’s trial counsel may have eschewed interviewing this complaining child witness before trial to preempt any defense insinuation that her testimony had been molded or that she had been coached. Since Pray has not convinced us that the trial justice misconceived material evidence or was otherwise clearly wrong, her due-diligence determination must stand. See State v. Lanigan, 528 A.2d 310, 314-15 (R.I.1987).

We also believe that Pray suffered no procedural prejudice from this nondisclosure. Cf. State v. Squillante, 622 A.2d 474, 478 (R.I.1993) (the defendant has the burden of showing that an unintentional nondisclosure caused procedural prejudice); Concannon, 457 A.2d at 1354 (“[procedural prejudice occurs when defense counsel must proceed to trial unprepared”).

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Bluebook (online)
690 A.2d 1338, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 57, 1997 WL 112425, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-pray-ri-1997.