State v. Skipper

101 S.W.3d 350, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 487, 2003 WL 1791204
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 2003
Docket24618
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 101 S.W.3d 350 (State v. Skipper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Skipper, 101 S.W.3d 350, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 487, 2003 WL 1791204 (Mo. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

JOHN E. PARRISH, Judge.

Daniel Paul Skipper (defendant) was convicted, following a jury trial, of statuto *352 ry rape in the first degree, § 566.032, 1 and statutory sodomy in the first degree, § 566.062. He was charged as, and found to be, a prior offender. See § 558.016.2. This court affirms.

For purposes of its review, this court accepts as true evidence favorable to the verdict together with all favorable inferences. Contrary evidence and inferences are disregarded. State v. Bigsby, 891 S.W.2d 160, 162 (Mo.App.1995); State v. Vincent, 785 S.W.2d 805, 807 (Mo.App.1990).

N.H. met defendant at a bus station in Springfield, Missouri. She gave defendant her telephone number. That evening defendant called. He asked N.H. to come to Mt. Vernon, Missouri, to visit him. Defendant lived in a trailer. He gave N.H. the address of the trailer. She went to Mt. Vernon but could not find the address he had given. N.H. returned to Springfield. Later that evening defendant called again. N.H. agreed to again go to Mt. Vernon and meet defendant at a grocery store.

N.H. met defendant in Mt. Vernon. They went to defendant’s trailer. Defendant’s sons, ages six and four, were at the trailer. N.H. spent the night there. The next day defendant talked of marriage. N.H. told defendant she was in the process of getting a divorce; that she could not marry him. She agreed to move in with him.

N.H. has two daughters. They had been visiting their father. The following day, January 7, 2000, N.H.’s daughters, S.H. and A.H., age two and seven, moved in with N.H., defendant and defendant’s two sons. The older daughter, A.H., was in the second grade. N.H. enrolled her in school in Mt. Vernon.

Defendant’s trailer had two bedrooms. Defendant’s boys slept in one. The second bedroom was used for storage. Defendant, N.H., and her two girls slept on pads on the living room floor.

N.H. testified that' on January 26, 2000, she woke up; that she saw defendant’s fingers in A.H.’s vagina. She said she tried to pull defendant away; that he stopped.

N.H. testified that on February 3, 2000, she was changing S.H.’s diaper; that when she pulled the child’s diaper off, defendant pulled out his penis; that “[h]e put the head of it in [S.H.’s] vagina.” Defendant’s penis was erect. After defendant placed the head of his penis in S.H.’s vagina, “[h]e went up and down.” N.H. was asked if defendant indicated why he did this to her two-year-old daughter. She answered, “He — He wanted to do it to little girls.”

Defendant argues three points on appeal. Points I and II complain that the trial court erred in overruling objections to testimony by Kathy Carr, who interviewed A.H., and admitting in evidence a videotaped recording of the interview (Point I), and in permitting testimony by Amanda Pope about statements A.H. made to her and that her observation of A.H. was that the child was “rough” and dirty (Point II). Point III contends the trial court erred in submitting the verdict-directing instruction for Count II, Instruction No. 7, to the jury.

Point I contends the trial court erred in permitting Kathy Carr to testify about her interview with A.H. and in admitting the videotaped recording of the interview because “both the videotape and Carr’s testimony duplicated and bolstered the trial testimony of [A.H.] so that the jury heard the victim’s testimony three times.”

Defendant relies on principles enunciated in State v. Seever, 733 S.W.2d 438 (Mo. *353 banc 1987), in support of Point I. In Seever a videotaped statement was admitted in evidence and played to the jury. The video was a statement by an eight-year-old child alleged to have been subjected to sexual contact. After the videotaped statement was played to the jury, the child testified. The court found that “[t]he statement and the testimony covered the same precise ground.” Id. at 441. Seever held this was “improper enhancement and rehabilitation.” Id. Seever concluded that “[t]his bolstering [was] a departure from the normal course of trial proceedings.” Id. The court concluded it could not say there was no prejudice. It reversed the judgment and remanded the case for a new trial.

Defendant acknowledges that cases subsequent to Seever have questioned its holding and distinguished their facts from those in Seever. Furthermore, the statute pursuant to which the videotaped statement was introduced in Seever, § 492.304, RSMo 1986, has had significant changes. Section 492.304.1, RSMo 1986, prescribed (as does the current revision of that statute) circumstances in which “visual and aural recording[s] of a verbal or nonverbal statement of a child when under the age of twelve who is alleged to be a victim of an offense under the provisions of chapter 565, 566 or 568, RSMo, is admissible into evidence.” One of the circumstances in the version of the statute then in effect required that the child be “available to testify.” § 492.304.1(8), RSMo 1986. Section 492.304.2, RSMo 1986, provided that if an electronic recording of the child were admitted into evidence under that section, either party was permitted to call the child to testify and the opposing party could cross-examine the child.

The statute was changed in 1992 by deleting § 492.304.1(8) and subsection 2 of the 1986 revision. New subsections 2 and 3 were enacted and remain in effect. They provide:

2. If the child does not testify at the proceeding, the visual and aural recording of a verbal or nonverbal statement of the child shall not be admissible under this section unless the recording qualifies for admission under section 491.075, RSMo.
3. If the visual and aural recording of a verbal or nonverbal statement of a child is admissible under this section and the child testifies at the proceeding, it shall be admissible in addition to the testimony of the child at the proceeding whether or not it repeats or duplicates the child’s testimony.

§ 492.304.2 and .3, RSMo 2000.

In State v. Silvey, 894 S.W.2d 662 (Mo. banc 1995), the court clarified the Seever constraints observing that “[t]he bolstering [in Seever ] was improper because it effectively allowed the witness to testify twice.” Id. at 672. Silvey continues, “Section 492.304 allows for the preparation of a videotape in a child sexual abuse case as a quasi-deposition to relate the child’s testimony. What Seever prohibits is the use of such a videotape to wholly duplicate the live testimony of the child witness.” Id.

In State v. Gollaher, 905 S.W.2d 542

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Bluebook (online)
101 S.W.3d 350, 2003 Mo. App. LEXIS 487, 2003 WL 1791204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-skipper-moctapp-2003.