State v. Rioux

708 A.2d 895, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 105, 1998 WL 128930
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 17, 1998
Docket97-270-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 708 A.2d 895 (State v. Rioux) 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. Rioux, 708 A.2d 895, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 105, 1998 WL 128930 (R.I. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

This appeal concerns the sufficiency of evidence to establish a probation violation when the complaining witness recants her prior inculpatory statements to the police concerning the defendant’s alleged misconduct. The defendant, Robert Rioux, appeals from a Superior Court adjudication finding him to be in violation of his probation relating to a host of prior criminal convictions and ordering him to serve seven years in prison on a previously suspended sentence and . twenty-eight months concurrently on another. The defendant appeals from the Superior Court’s judgment following a violation hearing, alleging various evidentiary errors and the lack of reasonably satisfactory evidence of a probation violation. This court ordered the parties to show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be summarily decided. After considering their arguments, we conclude that no cause has been shown and proceed to decide the appeal without further briefing or argument.

The complaining witness at defendant’s violation hearing was his former girlfriend, Jennine Shellman (Shellman). Shellman testified that she called police on the afternoon of December 19, 1996, to report a domestic assault. Officer Robert Motose (Motose) of the Middletown police department responded to the call. Shellman informed the officer that two days previously she had argued with defendant and that during their argument defendant had grabbed and pummeled her, thereby bruising her body. Shellman showed Motose the bruises on her chest and arms and told him that she also had bruises on her legs. Shellman also completed a domestic-violence reporting form in which she indicated the locations of her injuries.

At Rioux’s violation hearing, however, Shellman testified that she lied to Motose when she informed him that defendant had attacked and beaten her. She stated that she and defendant had argued on the day in question but that defendant departed without striking her and did not return. She stated that she attempted to contact defendant two days later but was unsuccessful. Shellman claimed that her friends had told her that defendant had become involved with another woman. As a result of this disclosure, she said that she became angry, called the police, and made up the story about having been attacked by defendant. Shellman stated that she received the bruises not at the hands of defendant but during an altercation at a bowling alley with an ex-friend named Tiffany Bell. And she claimed that she never reported this assault to the police because she was intoxicated at the time of the fight and because she was the person who had “started it.”

Motose testified that he responded to a complaint of a domestic disturbance on December 19, 1996, at Shellman’s home. He said that Shellman told him at that time that during an earlier argument with defendant on the seventeenth of December, defendant had smashed the phone and had shoved, grabbed, and beaten her. Motose stated that he observed the complainant’s bruises and photographed them. He also testified that he completed a domestic-violence form based upon the statements of the complaining witness on that day. The form indicates that the victim reported a physical battery by defendant and that she had been previously attacked, on December 13,1996.

The hearing justice reviewed this evidence and concluded that he was reasonably satisfied that defendant had violated the terms and conditions of his probation. He found that Shellman’s hearing testimony denying the December 17 incident was not credible *897 and determined that she in fact had been battered by defendant. In arriving at his decision, the hearing justice discussed a pattern of conduct that he had observed in people who have suffered heatings at the hands of “significant others.” He commented that the victims, usually female, frequently attempt to recant their previous accusations after reflecting upon the adverse consequences to the batterer.

It is well settled that this court’s review of a hearing justice’s decision in a probation-violation proceeding is limited to considering whether the hearing justice acted arbitrarily or capriciously in finding a violation. State v. Sparks, 667 A.2d 1250, 1251-52 (R.I.1995); In re Lamarine, 527 A.2d 1133, 1135 (R.I.1987). It is not the function of this court to weigh the credibility of witnesses in a probation-violation hearing; that task is for the hearing justice to perform. Sparks, 667 A.2d at 1251; Walton v. Baird, 433 A.2d 963, 964 (R.I.1981).

The defendant contends that the hearing justice acted arbitrarily and capriciously in refusing to accept another pattern of conduct that exists in these situations. In that pattern, argues defendant, a scorned woman invents a tale of abuse and calls police in order to exact revenge upon her unfaithful boyfriend or spouse. The defendant insists that this is precisely what occurred in the present case and that Shell-man’s recantation testimony supports this argument. The hearing justice determined, however, that Shellman’s in-court disavowal of the beating had been newly fabricated in order to prevent defendant from being adjudged a violator and returning to prison. The hearing justice noted that he had heard hundreds of domestic-violence cases in his years on the bench and had passed on the credibility of over a thousand witnesses. It does not appear to us that the hearing justice acted arbitrarily in this regard merely by drawing upon his lengthy experience as a trial justice.

The defendant further complains that the hearing justice reached a conclusion in this case concerning Shellman’s credibility before he had heard all the evidence. The defendant points to a portion of the hearing transcript in which the trial justice admonished defense counsel to discontinue questioning Shellman concerning conversations that had occurred between counsel and the witness. Prior to this admonition Shellman testified (in response to defense counsel’s cross-examination) that she had contacted the Office of the Public Defender, seeking advice on what could be done to drop the charges against defendant. The state’s attorney objected to this line of questioning, and the trial justice indicated that defense counsel should confine her cross-examination to points addressed on direct examination. We are of the opinion that the hearing justice’s comments to defense counsel were not an attempt to foreclose proper cross-examination but rather were designed merely to prevent defense counsel from eliciting testimony from the witness concerning conversations between counsel and the witness that the court found irrelevant and unresponsive to the testimony adduced on direct examination. We also note that counsel was permitted to continue questioning the witness concerning her attempts to drop a no-contact order that had been in place. Thus we are unable to conclude that the trial justice improperly impeded the cross-examination of this witness or arbitrarily rendered a credibility determination before hearing all the evidence.

The defendant next claims that the hearing justice imposed an erroneously low burden of proof in determining that he was reasonably satisfied that defendant had violated his probation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
708 A.2d 895, 1998 R.I. LEXIS 105, 1998 WL 128930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-rioux-ri-1998.