State v. Talley

258 S.W.3d 899, 2008 WL 2943525
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 1, 2008
Docket28624
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 258 S.W.3d 899 (State v. Talley) 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. Talley, 258 S.W.3d 899, 2008 WL 2943525 (Mo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

DON E. BURRELL, Judge.

Jimmie L. Talley (“Defendant”) was convicted after a jury trial of first-degree statutory sodomy pursuant to section 566.062. 1 Defendant alleges that the trial court erred by: 1) overruling both Defendant’s motion in limine and subsequent objection at trial to the admission of his medical records; 2) overruling Defendant’s objection to certain questions the trial court asked the venire; 3) permitting the State to file a Second Amended Information at the close of the State’s case-in-chief; 4) providing to the jury for use during its deliberations an authenticated copy of a prior conviction Defendant had for child abuse that was received into evidence pre-trial to determine whether Defendant qualified as a “prior offender” for sentencing purposes; 5) overruling Defendant’s objections to two comments made by the State during its closing argument; and 6) overruling Defendant’s motions for judgment of acquittal because there was insufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict. For the reasons outlined below, we affirm the judgment.

J. Factual and Procedural Background

Viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, State v. Woodmansee, 203 S.W.3d 287, 289 (Mo.App. S.D.2006), the pertinent facts are as follows:

*903 Defendant was the step-father of C.H., a female child born July 6, 1988 (“Victim”). Victim was thirteen years old and was living with Defendant, her mother, and two siblings at the time of this offense. Defendant was a strict disciplinarian and required all of the children in the home to obey him. Before Victim reached her thirteenth birthday, Defendant paid little attention to her. At that point, however, Defendant began to take an increased interest in Victim and began spending more time with her. After one of Victim’s basketball games, Defendant had Victim weigh herself. Defendant told Victim that she was fat and that no one would love her unless she lost some weight. Seemingly trying to help her, Defendant began to have Victim exercise regularly with him. Defendant, who drove a truck for a living, also began taking Victim along on his routes more often than he took the other children.

In April or May of 2002, Victim, Defendant, and Victim’s mother were going to go out to eat. Victim was alone in the living room with Defendant while Victim’s mother was getting ready in an upstairs bedroom. Defendant began to “wrestle” 2 with Victim and eventually pulled down her shorts, pushed her underwear to the side, and put his mouth on her vagina. Victim remembered the contact as lasting approximately two minutes and ending when they heard her mother moving around upstairs and closing the door. When Victim later asked Defendant about what had happened, he told her not to worry about it; he was just really stressed out with marital problems and Victim was helping to keep peace in the house. Defendant told Victim that he was also helping her out as she was “having all these hormones” and it was better that he do something about it instead of a boy “who could knock [her] up.”

After this particular incident, Defendant continued to encourage Victim to exercise and get involved in sports, but he also began to take her out to dinner and buy her things she wanted from the store. Victim continued to ride with Defendant in his truck and often accompanied him on delivery trips to an underground storage facility in Carthage, Missouri. While waiting for his truck to be loaded or unloaded, Defendant would go into the sleeper section of the truck and tell Victim to join him-that he had something to show her. Once in the sleeping area, Victim would be forced to take her pants off and he on the bed while Defendant put his mouth on her vagina. Defendant would also put his penis in Victim’s mouth. Additionally, Defendant would lie on Victim while rubbing against her and pushing his penis against her vagina. Defendant once tried to penetrate Victim’s vagina, but she told him to stop because it hurt. Although Defendant did stop at that time, he told Victim that he had “taken ... virginity” before and that it did not hurt that much. He went on to tell Victim that if she wanted to have sexual intercourse with him, all she had to do was tell him.

Victim felt as though these sexual encounters with Defendant would last for several hours at a time and took place on most of the trips she made with Defendant to the underground facility in Carthage during the time period that fell between April and May of 2002 and the start of school in August of that same year.

In the fall of 2002, Victim began dating C.M. (“Boyfriend”), a boy she met at *904 school. On one occasion after Victim and Boyfriend started dating, Defendant and Victim’s mother saw them kissing on the way home from school. Defendant “freaked out” at this sight and began screaming at Victim that she was a “slut.” After Defendant and Victim’s mother divorced in October of 2002, Victim continued to see Boyfriend and they began engaging in sexual activity, including sexual intercourse, later that year.

The first time Victim told anyone about her sexual encounters with Defendant was when she told Boyfriend about them in April of 2003. Boyfriend urged Victim to tell her mother what had happened, and Victim did so a month later when school let out. When Victim told her mother about her sexual activities with Defendant, Victim’s mother contacted the police who then arranged for Victim to be taken to the Child Center for a forensic interview and medical examination. That medical examination diagnosed victim as having genital warts.

A detective with the Webb City Police Department interviewed Defendant, who denied ever having any type of sexual contact with Victim. Defendant also initially denied ever having been diagnosed with or treated for genital warts. Defendant eventually admitted that he had had genital warts at one point in time, but had been successfully treated and no longer had them. The detective told Defendant there was no cure for genital warts and that Defendant would always carry the virus even if he had no apparent outbreaks. Defendant stated that wasn’t true and that he no longer had genital warts. During this first interview with the detective, Defendant also admitted that his penis had an abnormally large glans.

Prior to the start of trial, Defendant filed several motions in limine. One of those motions challenged the anticipated admission of certain medical records of Defendant that would indicate he had been diagnosed as having Condyloma, a virus that causes genital warts. The trial court overruled the motion in limine and also allowed the records to be admitted into evidence at trial over Defendant’s objection.

Also prior to the start of trial, the State asked the trial court to find, under section 558.016, that Defendant qualified as a prior offender because of a 1997 third-degree felony child abuse conviction he had received in the state of Utah. The trial court, at that time, received as evidence State’s Exhibit 7 — an authenticated record of the Utah conviction — and found Defendant to be a prior offender.

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Bluebook (online)
258 S.W.3d 899, 2008 WL 2943525, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-talley-moctapp-2008.