State v. Walters

698 A.2d 1244, 142 N.H. 239, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 81
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedAugust 6, 1997
DocketNo. 96-058
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 698 A.2d 1244 (State v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Walters, 698 A.2d 1244, 142 N.H. 239, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 81 (N.H. 1997).

Opinion

BROCK, C.J.

The defendant, David Walters, has been charged with the aggravated felonious sexual assault of his minor stepdaughter based on conduct that allegedly occurred between August 1984 and November 1985. See RSA 632-A:2, XI (Supp. 1983). This interlocutory appeal from ruling, see SUP. CT. R. 8, requires us to determine the admissibility of a complaining witness’s testimony in a sexual assault trial when the witness, for a period of time, did not remember the charged conduct. See State v. Hungerford, 142 N.H. 110, 697 A.2d 916 (1997). The Superior Court (Dalianis, J.) denied the defendant’s motion to suppress the evidence, ruling that the memory must be assumed to be no less reliable than ordinary human memory. We reverse and remand.

At an evidentiary hearing, the complainant and her therapist testified to the following facts. The complainant, then fifteen years old, became pregnant in August 1991. She informed her mother of her pregnancy in December of that year. At some point after informing her mother but before giving birth, the complainant had three “nightmares,” during which she had “flashbacks” which consisted of glimpses of the defendant abusing her when she was nine or ten years old. See Ernsdorff & Loftus, Let Sleeping Memories Lie? Words of Caution About Tolling the Statute of Limitations in Cases of Memory Repression, 84 J. CRIM. L. & CRIMINOLOGY 129, 138 (1993) (describing recovery of repressed memory via a flashback, or “a reliving of a traumatic experience as if it were currently happening”). Before having these nightmares, the complainant apparently had no memory of being assaulted by the defendant.

Although she could not recall at the hearing in what order she had the three nightmares, the complainant described their content as follows:

The first one that I can recall was when [the defendant] put me to bed and he pulled the sheet over, that was — the sheet off [of] me and that was the only thing that was in the first flashback. The second one was — it wasn’t clear to me at the time but it was when [the defendant] was down [241]*241between my legs. The third one was when the next mornin’ it seemed everything was fine. . . . The next morning of the night that it happened. The following morning was the last flashback.

Upon questioning by defense counsel, the complainant testified that the dreams themselves did not “put everything together” about the defendant’s conduct:

Question: You said you put your memories together. You did that after you had woken up again?
Answer: No, I just put the flashbacks together, not when I woke up but after I had the third one I put ’em together and I realized that I was molested by [the defendant].
Question: I’m trying to get how you put them together. Was your third flashback a longer flashback than the others?
Answer: No.
Question: So it was another chunk?
Answer: Yes.
Question: And then I guess - did the realization hit you, after you had woken up?
Answer: Yes.
Question: So you woke up, remembered the nightmare and ended up thinking about it more?
Answer: Yes.

The complainant was engaged in psychological therapy before, during, and after the nightmares. She testified that she did not report the abuse to her therapist when she remembered it because she knew that her therapist would report any abuse to authorities and because she did not want to cause the breakup of her mother’s marriage to the defendant.

The complainant informed her boyfriend of her memory sometime before the birth of her child in May 1992. She declined to tell her mother about the memory until November 1992, again stating that she “didn’t want to break up [her] marriage” to the defendant. She revealed the memory to authorities at her school and to her therapist in April 1993. The instant charges followed.

The defendant moved to exclude the complainant’s testimony from being admitted at his trial, arguing that she should not be allowed [242]*242to testify regarding her alleged memory of events that she previously had not remembered. The parties stipulated that the court could consider the record of the pretrial admissibility heai’ing on recovered memories in the two cases reported in Hungerford, 142 N.H. 110, 697 A.2d 916, which was pending before a different judge in the superior court. After considering the expert testimony from the Hungerford hearing and conducting a brief hearing on the facts of the instant case, the trial court ruled that the complainant’s testimony was admissible, and that the testimony was not subject to the threshold reliability requirements of expert testimony. The court found that the purported memories were not “the product” of the complainant’s therapy, based upon the court’s observation that the nightmares occurred during a period when her visits to therapy were infrequent and that “nothing in the therapy sessions concerned sexual abuse.” The court stated that “[bjecause the objective truth of memory cannot be scientifically determined, lay testimony of allegedly recovered memories cannot be barred on the basis that there has been no preliminary showing of its reliability.” The court ultimately ruled that expert testimony would be allowed to explain the phenomena of traumatic amnesia and memory repression, and to opine on the reliability of ordinary memory and recovered memory, but not to opine on the truth of a particular recovered memory. This interlocutory appeal followed.

The court is presented with nine questions in the interlocutory appeal statement, but, in light of our decision in Hungerford, 142 N.H. 110; 697 A.2d 916, we need only address two: whether the trial court erred in placing the burden of proof on the defendant to demonstrate the unreliability of recovered memories, and whether the court erred in ruling that the testimony was admissible. We defer to the trial court’s rulings on evidentiary matters and reverse only when the court has abused its discretion. State v. Briere, 138 N.H. 617, 620, 644 A.2d 551, 554 (1994). We also review the trial court’s decisions on the reliability of scientific evidence deferentially, “although we review some aspects of scientific evidence independently when their reliability or general acceptance is not likely to vary according to the circumstances of a particular case.” Hungerford, 142 N.H. at 117, 697 A.2d at 920; see State v. Vandebogart (DNA), 136 N.H. 365, 376, 616 A.2d 483, 491 (1992).

We agree with the defendant that the trial court improperly shifted the burden of proof in ruling on the defendant’s motion to suppress. The party offering evidence generally bears the burden of demonstrating its admissibility. See, e.g., Opinion of the Justices [243]*243(Prior Sexual Assault Evidence), 141 N.H.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
698 A.2d 1244, 142 N.H. 239, 1997 N.H. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-walters-nh-1997.