State v. Preston

427 A.2d 32, 121 N.H. 147, 1981 N.H. LEXIS 269
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 11, 1981
Docket80-036
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 427 A.2d 32 (State v. Preston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Preston, 427 A.2d 32, 121 N.H. 147, 1981 N.H. LEXIS 269 (N.H. 1981).

Opinion

Per curiam.

The issues in this kidnapping and felonious sexual assault case are whether the admission of evidence regarding the victim’s virginity requires a new trial, whether the prosecutor’s closing argument constituted prosecutorial misconduct, whether the trial court erred in denying the defendant’s motion to take the deposition of the victim, whether the jury was not chosen from a fair cross-section of the community in violation of the defendant’s sixth amendment right to a fair trial, and whether it was error for the court to find that the defendant was a dangerous sexual offender when the évidence showed that he was not amenable to treatment. We uphold the defendant’s conviction.

The evidence at trial established the following facts. The sixteen-year-old victim left her place of employment about midnight on July 18, 1979. As she started to get into her Jeep, a man approached her and asked for a ride. She refused, but the man persisted and entered the Jeep. After they had traveled a short distance, he grabbed the victim by the hair and directed her to drive to a gravel pit where, holding a knife, he ordered her to *149 undress. He then raped her. Approximately thirty minutes later, he raped her again, after which they returned to the Jeep. After wiping the fingerprints from the Jeep, the defendant fled the scene. The victim ran to the nearby residence of the Swensons, who, by coincidence, were the aunt and uncle of the defendant and with whom he was living. The victim was later examined at a hospital and was found to have had sexual intercourse shortly before the examination. The police were notified of the incident and, with the Swensons’ consent, searched the area of the house where the defendant slept. They found a knife in a box near the defendant’s bed which, from the evidence, the trier of fact could have found was the one used in the assault.

The victim, who had known the defendant by sight and first name before the incident, identified him as her assailant, and he was arrested. A jury convicted the defendant of kidnapping (RSA 633:1 1(d)) and aggravated felonious sexual assault (RSA 632-A:2 III (Supp. 1979)). The Court (DiClerieo, J.) found the defendant to be a dangerous sexual offender under RSA ch. 173-A, sentenced him to eleven to twenty-two years, and provided that the defendant could be transferred between the State prison and the New Hampshire Hospital as his condition might warrant. The defendant appealed.

The defendant first challenges the admission into evidence of the victim’s testimony that the July 18, 1979, incident was her “first sexual encounter.” He argues that the only issue at trial was whether he was the perpetrator of the crime and that since the victim’s consent was not at issue, evidence of her prior chastity was inadmissible. We disagree.

The State must prove lack of consent beyond a reasonable doubt to make a prima facie case of rape. See State v. Lemire, 115 N.H. 526, 532, 345 A.2d 906, 911 (1975); RSA 625:10. This is so regardless of whether the defendant, pursuant to Superior Court Rule 101, formally notifies the court and the prosecution of his intention to claim the defense of consent. The defendant may, of course, stipulate prior to trial on the issue of lack of consent. Superior Court Rule 62(B)(12). In this case, however, the defendant did not do so, therefore leaving lack of consent to be proved by the State as part of its prima facie case. See State v. Lemire, supra at 532, 345 A.2d at 911. Moreover, if consent was not an issue and if the only issue was the assailant’s identity, as the defendant con *150 tends, the evidence of virginity could not have been harmful to the defendant because it is not related to the issue he contested. Finally, the defendant’s reliance on New Hampshire’s rape shield law, RSA 632-A:6 (Supp. 1979), is misplaced because that statute excludes evidence of certain prior sexual activity of the victim, not evidence of the victim’s virginity. For the same reasons, we reject the defendant’s argument that the prosecutor’s brief reference to the victim’s virginity in his closing argument is ground for a new trial.

The defendant next argues that the prosecutor’s closing argument, in which he argued to the jury three facts not in evidence and on one occasion asked the jury to use its imagination, constituted prosecutorial misconduct and therefore requires a new trial. The three alleged misstatements of the evidence were that the defendant told the victim it was fortunate for her that she was not the person on whom he was taking out his frustration “or else you’d be dead,” that the defendant’s aunt testified that the victim, on being informed that the defendant was in her house, said “Oh, my God. I’ve come to the house where he is,” and that the knife used by the perpetrator was found with the defendant’s “personal belongings.”

No objection was made until after the completion of the argument. These three statements were then withdrawn by the prosecutor, who stood before the jury and specifically acknowledged that each one was an incorrect statement of the evidence. He also told the jurors that they should not use their imagination but that they should rely strictly on their own recollection of the evidence. The judge instructed the jury that statements of counsel were not evidence and that the jurors should use their own recollection of the evidence, not their imagination.

We first note that the reference to the knife was not without some foundation, since it was found in a box near the defendant’s bed. Furthermore, the defendant did not object or except to the methods used to cure the effect of the prosecutor’s argument. Consequently, he is not now in a position to complain about the adequacy of those methods. State v. Bass, 93 N.H. 172, 178, 37 A.2d 7, 11-12 (1944); see State v. Carroll, 120 N.H. 458, 461, 417 A.2d 8, 10 (1980). In any event, we are satisfied that any possible prejudice to the defendant was cured by the prosecutor’s own retraction of his statements and by the court’s instructions to the jury, which we assume the jurors followed. See State v. Novosel, 120 N.H. 176, 186, *151 412 A.2d 739, 746 (1980); State v. Bass, supra at 178, 37 A.2d at 11-12.

We do, however, caution prosecutors to avoid misstatements of evidence, improper argument, or other improper conduct. This court has often addressed complaints by criminal defendants of prosecutorial misconduct, although the alleged misconduct usually has not required us to reverse the convictions. But see State v. Scarlett, 118 N.H. 904, 395 A.2d 1244 (1978). It is only fair to state that, because of the continuing problem, we will take a firmer stand in the future. See State v. Arthur, 118 N.H. 561, 564, 391 A.2d 884, 886 (1978).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
427 A.2d 32, 121 N.H. 147, 1981 N.H. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-preston-nh-1981.