State v. Wearing

701 A.2d 41, 46 Conn. App. 741, 1997 Conn. App. LEXIS 465
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1997
DocketAC 15214
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 701 A.2d 41 (State v. Wearing) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wearing, 701 A.2d 41, 46 Conn. App. 741, 1997 Conn. App. LEXIS 465 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Opinion

SHEA, J.

The defendant, Edward G. Wearing, has appealed from the judgments rendered on a jury verdict finding him guilty of kidnapping in the second degree with a firearm in violation of General Statutes § 53a-94a, sexual assault in the third degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-72a, assault in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-60, and tampering with awitness in violation of General Statutes § 53a-151.

On appeal, the defendant claims (1) that his constitutional right to a fair trial by an impartial jury was violated by the failure of the trial court to conduct a proper investigation and to declare a mistrial when a juror placed a cartoon, which the defendant maintains was racially offensive, on a table in the jury room where some other jurors saw it, (2) that the admission into evidence of a tape-recorded statement of the victim violated the hearsay rule and was prejudicial, and (3) that the exclusion of the testimony of a witness offered by the defendant to prove that the victim had made statements inconsistent with her testimony at trial was contrary to the rule of evidence allowing such testimony for the purpose of impeachment. We reject the first two claims, but agree with the defendant that the exclusion of the evidence of prior inconsistent statements was improper. We affirm the judgments, nevertheless, because the ruling on evidence had no significant impact on any of the findings of guilt.

[744]*744From the evidence supporting the verdict, the jury could reasonably have found that on the morning of February 21,1994, the victim telephoned the defendant and accused him of molesting their four year old son. The defendant became very upset. That evening, about 7:30 p.m., the defendant drove to the victim’s home and confronted her. During the argument that ensued, the defendant struck the victim on the head with a beer bottle. When she fell to the ground, he grabbed her hair and pulled her until she stood up. Holding her by the hair, he led her to his truck and pushed her inside. The victim called for help as the defendant walked toward the truck. The defendant threatened to shoot some people who approached to offer help.

The defendant drove with the victim to his mother’s house in Hamden, where he was living. Despite the victim’s objections, he made her get out of the truck and enter the house, from which his mother and stepfather were then absent. He forced her downstairs to the basement, in which he had a bedroom. He told the victim to remove her clothes. While protesting, she did so because of his threat to kill her. She testified that the defendant forced her onto his bed, where he had sexual intercourse with her.

By the time the defendant’s mother and stepfather arrived at the house, approximately 9 p.m., both the defendant and the victim were upstairs in the kitchen. His mother got into an argument with the defendant, and he left the house. The victim told the defendant’s mother that the defendant had struck her, forced her to come to the house and raped her. She said she did not feel well and wanted to go home. The defendant’s mother and stepfather took the victim to her home in their car.

The police were waiting at the victim’s home with a neighbor who had called them after she had observed [745]*745the victim being forced into the defendant’s truck. The victim told the police what had happened to her and requested that she be taken to a hospital. The police first took her to the New Haven police station, where she gave a tape-recorded statement to a detective. The police then drove her to a hospital, where she was examined and given medication.

The witness tampering charge alleges that on March 5,1994, the defendant telephoned the victim at approximately 3 a.m. and attempted to induce her to testify falsely, to withhold testimony, to elude legal process summoning her to testify or to absent herself from any official proceeding. The victim testified that the defendant had made a telephone call to her home at that time and threatened to kill her if she did not drop the charges. She called her brother-in-law, who took her and her children to his home. She also reported the incident to the police and gave them a tape-recorded statement.

I

JUROR MISCONDUCT

During the luncheon recess that followed completion of the state’s initial closing argument, trial counsel for the defendant entered the jury room after the departure of the jurors to use the bathroom facilities. He discovered a cartoon attached to the bulletin board in the room that showed two black jurors sitting at opposite ends of an otherwise empty jury box, one of whom is pointing at the other and saying to Judge Ito, the presiding judge at the O. J. Simpson criminal trial, “Your Honor, he’s looking at me!”

When the court reconvened, the defendant moved for a mistrial on the ground that the jurors had been exposed to a cartoon that was racially offensive and prejudicial. The state argued that the cartoon was [746]*746merely a humorous comment on the exodus of jurors from the Simpson trial and that any prejudice could be cured by an appropriate instruction of the court. The court denied the motion for a mistrial and, when the jurors returned to the courtroom, they were told to strike the cartoon from their minds. After completion of the remaining arguments and the charge to the jury, the jurors deliberated and reached their verdict on the various charges the next day.

Five days after the verdict, the court, sua sponte, conducted a hearing in regard to the cartoon. The court indicated that, out of “an abundance of caution,” it had concluded that such a hearing was required by State v. Brown, 232 Conn. 431, 656 A.2d 997 (1995) (Brown I), which had been published on March 28, 1995, approximately three months before the hearing. The court informed counsel that it would question each of the six jurors who had participated in rendering the verdict about the cartoon, but would not permit questioning by the attorneys. Defense counsel objected to being precluded from questioning the jurors.

At the hearing, the foreman of the jury testified that he had seen the cartoon in a newspaper he was reading in the jury room. He tore it out and placed it on the table in the jury room. A couple of people looked at it and laughed. He said there was no discussion of the cartoon and that it had no bearing on the jury deliberations. Another juror said that she had not seen the cartoon and that it was not discussed during deliberations. Others said that they had seen the cartoon but had not read it or paid much attention to it. All the jurors testified that the cartoon was not discussed during deliberations and had not entered into their deliberations. The court, after questioning the jurors, declared that it was satisfied that the cartoon had “played no part prejudicial to the defendant in connection with the jury’s deliberations in the case.”

[747]*747In Brown I, our Supreme Court concluded that the due process clause of article first, § 8, of our state constitution requires that, “[w]hen a judge is alerted to the possibility that a juror may have been exposed, outside of the adversarial arena, to information that may tend to affect his or her deliberations, the judge has an independent obligation to investigate by conducting an evi-dentiary hearing into the allegations.

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State v. Francis D.
815 A.2d 191 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2003)
State v. Jenkins
743 A.2d 660 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2000)
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740 A.2d 868 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1999)
State v. Vega
709 A.2d 28 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1998)
State v. Wearing
702 A.2d 645 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1997)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
701 A.2d 41, 46 Conn. App. 741, 1997 Conn. App. LEXIS 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wearing-connappct-1997.