State v. Price

2009 MT 129, 207 P.3d 298, 350 Mont. 272, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 137
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 2009
DocketDA 08-0040
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 2009 MT 129 (State v. Price) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Price, 2009 MT 129, 207 P.3d 298, 350 Mont. 272, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 137 (Mo. 2009).

Opinions

JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Chester Lawrence Price (Price) appeals his conviction in the Tenth Judicial District, Fergus County, for sexual intercourse without consent in violation of § 45-5-503, MCA. We affirm.

¶2 We review the following issue on appeal:

¶3 Did the District Court prejudice Price when it conducted eleven in-chambers conferences without Price present?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶4 Price comes before this Court for a third time. We affirmed Price’s conviction in State v. Price (Price I), 2003 MT 373N, 319 Mont. 424, 82 P.3d 37 (Table), 2003 WL 23028878. We reversed the District Court’s denial of Price’s petition for post-conviction relief in Price v. State (Price II), 2007 MT 307, 340 Mont. 109, 172 P.3d 1236. We remanded for an entry of an order by the District Court granting Price an opportunity to appeal based on his absence from eleven in-chambers meetings during his original trial. Price II, ¶ 20. We derive from Price I and Price II the facts pertinent for this appeal. We will discuss additional facts as necessary.

¶5 The State charged Price on August 21, 2001, with forcing his 14-year-old niece, C.W., to engage in sexual intercourse without her consent. C.W. lived in Lewistown with her mother and father, Cathy and Steve, and her 24-year-old half brother, Clint. Price lived in Lewistown with his wife, Faye, and two of their three daughters. Price and C.W.’s mother are siblings and they have three other sisters, two of whom testified: Melinda “Mind/’ Riehl (Mindy) and Shannon Rausch. At the time of the incident, Steve and Cathy were traveling to Colorado to return Clint’s two small children to their mother, Clint’s former wife. Clint could not personally transport his children home due to a conviction on a sexual offense that he had committed in Colorado.

¶6 On August 10, 2001, Price, Faye, two of their daughters, C.W., and Clint decided to go boating on a nearby lake. When they returned to town, C.W. and Clint went to the store so that Clint could buy beer. C.W. wanted to attend a party with Clint. Price testified that he and [274]*274Faye were concerned for C.W.’s safety and insisted that C.W. return to the Price residence rather than attend the party with Clint.

¶7 After arriving at the Price residence, Price’s daughter gave C.W. one of Price’s dirty shirts to wear because C.W.’s clothing was wet from the boating excursion. Clint and Price got into a physical altercation about where C.W. was going to stay that night. Clint ultimately left the residence. Price and C.W. went to look for Clint. C.W. was concerned about Clint’s safety due to the amount of alcohol that he had consumed. They found Clint, but another argument soon erupted between Clint and Price. Witnesses to the altercation called the police. The police arrested Clint when they arrived at the scene and took Clint into custody.

¶8 C.W. and Price returned to Price’s house. C.W. testified that she, Price, and Faye reclined on an air mattress to watch television. Price testified that only the women were on the air mattress and that he was on the floor. C.W. stated that Price began to rub her sides and chest after Faye fell asleep. C.W. claimed that Price eventually moved his hands below her waist under her clothing. Price woke Faye and took her upstairs. He then returned to the air mattress.

¶9 C.W. testified that she told Price “no” at least 30 times, but he persisted with his touching. Price penetrated her vagina with his fingers and tongue and licked her breasts. Price eventually stopped touching C.W. He left the room. C.W. dressed and ran to a neighbor’s house to get help. The neighbor called several of C.W.’s friends.

¶10 C.W. took a shower at her friend’s house because she felt “dirty and disgusting.” C.W. went home and washed all of her clothing except her swimsuit top. Clint called C.W. from jail. C.W. told Clint that Price had molested her. Clint called C.W.’s mother Cathy. Cathy had just returned home from Colorado. Clint told Cathy that Price had molested C.W. Cathy called the police. C.W. told Cathy what had happened in the presence of several police officers. Cathy took C.W. to the hospital. Doctors examined C.W. and completed a rape kit that included vaginal swabs. Cathy gave the swimsuit top to the police during the examination.

¶11 Michelle Griffin, a forensic scientist at the Montana State Crime Lab, testified that she found trace amounts of saliva on C.W.’s vaginal swabs. The sample did not contain sufficient amounts of saliva, however, to develop a DNA profile. Griffin further testified that she found four saliva stains on the inside of C.W.’s swimsuit top. The DNA analysis of this saliva excluded Steve, Cathy, and Clint. Price’s DNA profile proved consistent with the saliva stains. Price attributed the presence of his DNA on C.W.’s swimsuit to his dirty shirt that his [275]*275daughter had loaned to C.W. C.W. had worn the shirt over her swimsuit top after returning from the lake. Price claimed that his nasal discharge on the shirt had transferred onto C.W.’s swimsuit top.

¶12 Timothy J. Whalen (Whalen) served as Price’s trial counsel. Twelve in-chambers conferences took place throughout the trial. The District Court, counsel for the State, and counsel for Price discussed legal and procedural issues at the second and third conferences. The court excused a prospective juror at the fourth conference. The prospective juror felt that he could not be objective because his daughter had been a rape victim.

¶13 The District Court and Whalen both questioned Juror Cantrell at the eighth conference. The court granted Whalen’s motion to remove Juror Cantrell based on possible bias against Price. The District Court, Whalen, and the State discussed, and the court ruled on, evidentiary issues at the first, fifth, sixth, seventh, tenth, eleventh, and twelfth conferences. The evidentiary issues involved Price’s primary defense theories: 1) that Clint, not Price, had committed the crime, and 2) that C.W.’s family had framed Price.

¶14 Whalen attempted at these conferences to persuade the District Court to allow Price to introduce evidence of Clint’s criminal history and other past acts. Whalen requested the court to allow Price’s sister Mindy to testify that Clint had tried to rape one of her daughters. Whalen argued that Mindy’s testimony would establish “a strong possibility” that C.W. and Clint had engaged in a sexual relationship. Price and his wife would testify, alternatively, that C.W. was afraid of Clint and that she was not afraid of Price. Mindy further would testify that C.W. had told her that C.W.’s parents, Steve and Cathy, previously had interfered with the physical evidence from a rape that Clint allegedly had committed in Colorado. Steve and Cathy apparently had hoped to “confuse the DNA results.”

¶15 Price was present for only one of the twelve conferences. Whalen purported to waive Price’s right to be present at eight of the eleven conferences, after the court questioned him about Price’s absence and prompted Whalen to waive Price’s right. Whalen did not waive Price’s right to be present in the other three conferences. Price was present at the ninth of the twelve conferences, and Whalen purported to have Price retroactively waive his right of presence at the preceding eight conferences.

¶16 After the jury convicted Price, he retained Gary Wilcox (Wilcox) to handle his direct appeal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 MT 129, 207 P.3d 298, 350 Mont. 272, 2009 Mont. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-price-mont-2009.