State v. Rapp

246 S.W.3d 858, 368 Ark. 387
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 11, 2007
DocketCR 06-813
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 246 S.W.3d 858 (State v. Rapp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Rapp, 246 S.W.3d 858, 368 Ark. 387 (Ark. 2007).

Opinion

Tom Glaze, Justice.

This is an appeal by the State from a trial court’s ruling under Arkansas’s rape-shield statute, Ark. Code Ann. § 16-42-101 (Repl. 1999). Under Ark. R. App. P. - Crim. 3(a)(3) (2006), the State may take an interlocutory appeal “only from a pretrial order in a felony prosecution which... grants a motion under Ark. Code Ann. § 16-42-101(c) to allow evidence ofavictim’s prior sexual conduct.” Thus, the first issue this court must decide in this appeal is whether we have jurisdiction to consider the State’s arguments.

On May 2, 2005, appellee Robert Rapp was charged with the rape of his niece, F.O., who was a minor. On August 3, 2005, the State filed a motion to revoke Rapp’s bond, alleging that the victim had called the Fort Smith Police Department on June 28, 2005, to report that Rapp was driving around her house. The circuit court held a hearing on the State’s petition on August 29, 2005. At that hearing, the alleged victim testified that she had been placed in foster care in July of 2005 because she was afraid for her safety. She further stated that she had told her counselor that she felt unsafe at home, and the counselor suggested foster care. The trial court denied the State’s petition to revoke Rapp’s bond but ordered Rapp to have no contact with the alleged victim or her family.

On May 15, 2006, the State filed two motions in limine. In the first, the State noted that it anticipated that Rapp might try to introduce evidence or elicit testimony concerning the alleged victim’s having been sexually abused in the past by her natural father in California. 1 Such evidence, the State contended, was inadmissible under Arkansas’s rape-shield statute as evidence of the victim’s prior sexual conduct. In the second motion, the State noted that it anticipated that Rapp would try to introduce statements made by the alleged victim during the bond-revocation hearing, as well as statements she made to the Department of Human Services, concerning why she was taken from her home and placed into foster care by DHS. The State also asserted that Rapp would probably try to introduce DHS records as they related to that incident, and that such evidence of a collateral matter was inadmissible under the Rules of Evidence.

Rapp also filed a motion in limine on May 15, 2005, 2 as well as a response to the State’s motion in limine. In his response, he claimed that he intended to introduce evidence that the alleged victim in this case had been abused by her father. Rapp contended that the victim and her mother had lied at the bond-revocation hearing about the reason F.O. had been removed from her home, and he asserted that he intended to explore “the untruthful statements made before this court and why they were made.” More specifically, he claimed, the alleged victim was removed from the home because her mother had left her alone in the house with her father, who had sexually abused her. Because the case against him hinged on the alleged victim’s credibility, as well as her mother’s credibility, Rapp asserted that the evidence was relevant to attack their trustworthiness.

The trial court held a hearing on the motions on May 16, 2006. At that time, Rapp alleged that the father’s convictions for sex offenses was relevant for two reasons: first, to show that the alleged victim and her mother “knew the road map to get someone out of their way”; and second, to show the real reason F.O. was placed in foster care and, by implication, to challenge F.O.’s credibility. Rapp agreed that there was no need to mention that F.O. was the victim of the father’s crime, but he contended that “to say [the father] is a sex offender is different than saying [the father] abused his daughter. The jury will never have to know who the victim was. That’s what the rape-shield statute is for.”

The trial court ultimately ruled that evidence of the father’s sex-abuse conviction was relevant; the court thus denied the State’s motion in limine insofar as the victim made a statement at the bond hearing that she was removed from the home because Rapp was back in the neighborhood. However, the court further determined that Rapp would not be permitted to make any mention of the fact that F.O. was the victim of her father’s crime. The court concluded that the rape-shield statute did not apply because, under the court’s ruling, it would not be brought out that F.O. was the victim in the earlier case.

The court’s subsequent written order provided that Rapp was permitted to introduce evidence “concerning the victim’s natural father’s having been found guilty of a sexual assault in California. However, the defendant is prohibited from making any reference as to the identity of the victim in the father’s case.” The court concluded that the rape-shield statute did not apply. The State filed a timely notice of appeal pursuant to Ark. R. App. P. — Crim. 3(a)(3) (2006).

Under Arkansas’s rape-shield statute, Ark. Code Ann. § 16-42-101, evidence of a victim’s prior sexual conduct is inadmissible by the defendant to attack the credibility of the victim, to prove consent or any other defense, or for any other purpose. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-42-101(b) (Repl. 1999). An exception to this rule exists when the trial court, at an in camera hearing, makes a written determination that such evidence is relevant to a fact in issue, and that its probative value outweighs its inflammatory or prejudicial nature. Ark. Code Ann. § 16-42-101(c)(2)(C). The statute’s purpose is to shield victims of rape or sexual abuse from the humiliation of having their sexual conduct, unrelated to the charges pending, paraded before the jury and the public when such conduct is irrelevant to the defendant’s guilt. State v. Townsend, 366 Ark. 152, 233 S.W.3d 680 (2006); Graydon v. State, 329 Ark. 596, 953 S.W.2d 45 (1997). Accordingly, the trial court is vested with a great deal of discretion in determining whether the evidence is relevant, and we will not overturn the trial court’s decision unless it constitutes a clear error or a manifest abuse of discretion. Townsend, supra.

As noted above, the State may bring an interlocutory appeal only from an order that grants a defendant’s motion and allows the defendant to delve into evidence of the victim’s prior sexual conduct. The trial court’s ruling in the instant case, however, permitted Rapp to “introduce evidence concerning the victim’s father having been found guilty of a sexual assault in California,” but specifically precluded Rapp from “making any reference as to the identity of the victim in the father’s case.” Thus, the court’s order actually granted the State’s request to keep out evidence of the alleged victim’s prior sexual conduct.

Stated another way, the State asked the court to exclude evidence of the alleged victim’s prior sexual conduct, and the court refused to let Rapp reveal that the alleged victim had been sexually abused by her father. In this case, the evidence that Rapp sought to introduce, and the evidence that was the subject of the State’s motion in limine, was not evidence of the victim’s prior sexual conduct. Rather, it was evidence of a third person’s prior sexual conduct, i.e., that of the alleged victim’s father.

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Related

Sorum v. State
2017 Ark. App. 384 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2017)
Pigg v. State
2014 Ark. 433 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2014)
Rackley v. State
267 S.W.3d 578 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 2007)

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Bluebook (online)
246 S.W.3d 858, 368 Ark. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rapp-ark-2007.