State v. Stanley James Oliver

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedMarch 13, 2014
DocketA13A2394
StatusPublished

This text of State v. Stanley James Oliver (State v. Stanley James Oliver) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Stanley James Oliver, (Ga. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DOYLE, P. J., MCFADDEN and BOGGS, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. http://www.gaappeals.us/rules/

March 13, 2014

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A13A2394. THE STATE v. OLIVER.

MCFADDEN, Judge.

After a jury trial, Stanley James Oliver was convicted of kidnapping with

bodily injury, rape, and aggravated assault of his former girlfriend, F. W. At trial, the

state had elicited testimony from F. W. about Oliver’s earlier acquittal on charges of

similar crimes against another person. Oliver moved for a new trial on the ground that

the trial court erred in allowing this testimony, among other reasons. A different trial

judge considered the motion and granted Oliver a new trial on that ground. The state

appeals.

As detailed below, we find that F. W.’s testimony was admissible. It was not

collaterally estopped by the earlier acquittal, was relevant to an issue that Oliver had

raised in his cross-examination of F. W., and only incidentally placed Oliver’s character in issue. We further find that the trial court’s earlier ruling on a motion in

limine did not preclude the testimony. For these reasons, the trial court did not err in

allowing the testimony at trial, and the admission of the testimony was not a ground

for the grant of a new trial. We therefore reverse.

1. Facts and procedural background.

The state charged Oliver with committing the offenses of kidnapping with

bodily injury, rape and aggravated assault during a period of time between March 8

and March 12, 2008. At trial, F. W. testified on direct examination that she had a

previous relationship with Oliver and that he had become violent with her on at least

one occasion before March 8, but that she had not reported his violent acts to law

enforcement. She testified that she was afraid of Oliver. On March 8, she agreed to

go with Oliver to his house. She testified that Oliver then held her captive in the

house for several days, beating her, stabbing her, hitting her with a fireplace poker,

ripping out some of her hair, and threatening to kill her. At one point during her

captivity she had sexual intercourse with him in the hope that this would enable her

to escape. F. W. finally escaped the house on March 12.

Oliver’s defense strategy centered on questioning F. W.’s credibility and her

account of what took place at Oliver’s house between March 8 and March 12. To that

2 end, Oliver’s counsel questioned F. W. on cross-examination about her failure to call

law enforcement on the earlier occasion when Oliver beat her.

At a bench conference before redirect, the state argued that Oliver’s counsel

had opened the door for F. W. to testify about what Oliver had told her about a “prior

that he was acquitted of . . . and how that related to her not calling the police.” This

referred to Oliver’s earlier acquittal on charges of crimes against another person, P.

M. Oliver’s counsel denied opening the door to testimony about the prior acquittal.

The trial court stated, “Yeah. I think he’s right.” Although ambiguous on the cold

record, the trial court’s statement appears from the context to have been a ruling in

favor of the state, which proceeded on redirect to ask the following questions:

Q. [Oliver’s counsel] said that either you and your mother, or maybe your mother, knew about Mr. Oliver’s history with women. You remember that question?

...

A. Yes, sir.

Q. And something to the effect he had a history of doing this to women. Do you remember that question?

A. (Nods head affirmative[ly.])

3 Q. And [Oliver’s counsel] also asked you about why you didn’t report that first, those first bruises, you didn’t report that to law enforcement. You remember that?

Q. Did Mr. Oliver tell you anything about [P. M.]?
Q. . . . What did he tell you about [P. M.]?

A. He just – He didn’t tell me nothing straight out about [P. M.]. But, but I heard ‘em talking about getting by with what he did to her. They were all sitting around laughing about beating the system.

Q. Okay. And --
A. And so I knew he’d done got by with it. And that it was just gonna be trouble.

Q. Did that have an effect on you and cause you – Did that influence your decision not to call law enforcement the first time?

4 Q. Okay. And, in fact, he faced charges for doing similar things to [P. M.], is that right?

Q. But a jury found him not guilty?
Q. Jury said he didn’t do that.

Q. But you knew that he had been found not guilty of those same things and you were taking all that into consideration didn’t you?

Q. Did he tell you anything while you were at his home from March 8th to March 12th about the trial of [P. M.]?

A. Just that they were like no –

[Discussion between trial court and counsel that they could not hear F. W.’s response.]

5 Q. And again, [Oliver’s counsel] asked you some questions about why you didn’t report this. You remember those questions?

Q. Did Mr. Oliver ever tell you of plans he had of things to do to [P. M.,] the woman who had testified against him?

Q. What were those plans and what did he tell you?
A. He was gonna nail their door shut and burn them out.

Q. What about did he tell you anything about what he would do if he were convicted of those offenses?

A. He said that he would get the – the jailer’s gun and shoot her.
Q. Okay. Did that influence you in deciding not to report that first incident?

6 Oliver cited the trial court’s decision to allow the above testimony as one of the

grounds for his motion for new trial. A different judge heard argument on the motion

and agreed with Oliver that the jury should not have heard the testimony about the

prior acquittal, in part because he found that the evidence was precluded by the trial

court’s ruling on a motion in limine. That earlier ruling provided that the state would

instruct its witnesses not to mention Oliver’s “record and incarceration” and that if

the state felt Oliver had opened the door on that issue the state would first seek

permission from the trial court before questioning its witnesses on it. In granting

Oliver a new trial, the new judge found that Oliver’s counsel had not opened the door

to testimony on the acquittal through his cross examination of F. W.

2. Standard of review.

As an initial matter we consider our standard of review. We are reviewing the

trial court’s decision to grant a new trial to Oliver on the ground that the testimony

about the prior acquittal was inadmissible. In his ruling, the substitute trial judge

acknowledged that this was a purely legal issue, and he did not receive any evidence

or make any findings of fact on the issue. Under these circumstances, we do not apply

the standard of review codified in OCGA § 5-5-50 (“The first grant of a new trial

7 shall not be disturbed by an appellate court unless the appellant shows that the judge

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State v. Stanley James Oliver, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stanley-james-oliver-gactapp-2014.