State v. Wermerskirchen

497 N.W.2d 235, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 177, 1993 WL 65797
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMarch 12, 1993
DocketC7-91-1027
StatusPublished
Cited by76 cases

This text of 497 N.W.2d 235 (State v. Wermerskirchen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wermerskirchen, 497 N.W.2d 235, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 177, 1993 WL 65797 (Mich. 1993).

Opinion

*236 COYNE, Justice.

The court of appeals granted the defendant, Thomas Wermerskirchen, a new trial on a charge he sexually touched his 9-year-old daughter and thereby committed criminal sexual conduct in the second degree, Minn.Stat. § 609.343, subd. 1(a) (1990). 1 The court of appeals ruled (1) that Spreigl or other-crime evidence was properly admitted pursuant to Minn.R.Evid. 404(b) to prove that any touching was intentional but was not properly admitted to prove that any touching occurred and (2) as a result of the prosecutor’s statements in closing argument and the trial court’s instructions on the use of the other-crime evidence, the jury may have misused the evidence to decide that touching occurred. State v. Wermerskirchen, 483 N.W.2d 725 (Minn.App.1992). In ruling that the other-crime evidence could not be used to prove any touching occurred, the court of appeals ignored long-settled case law upholding the use of other-crime evidence to prove the corpus delicti, that is, to prove the doing of the act charged. Because we are satisfied both that the evidence was properly admitted to prove the doing of the act charged and that the jury did not misuse the evidence, we reverse the decision of the court of appeals and reinstate the judgment of conviction.

Complainant, M.W., born in 1981, is the only child born to defendant and Marilyn, his former wife. The marriage was the second marriage for both, and Marilyn brought to the marriage a daughter from her first marriage, J.L., who was born in 1969. The second marriage deteriorated, and in March of 1989 defendant moved into an apartment that J.L. had been renting and J.L. moved back to her mother’s home. Marilyn filed for divorce about a month later. Shortly before a June 1989 mediation session Marilyn asked J.L. if defendant had ever sexually abused her. J.L. said defendant had but would not give details.

J.L. subsequently told her story to authorities in Carver County, where the abuse had occurred, beginning in 1981 when she was 12 years old. (Carver County declined to prosecute, apparently because so much time had passed since the abuse occurred.)

The detective who talked with J.L. arranged for M.W. to see Dr. Carolyn Levitt. Dr. Levitt conducted a video-taped interview of M.W., then turned off the camera and physically examined the child. Although the interview took place shortly after the occurrence of the abuse of M.W. on which defendant’s conviction is based, M.W. did not tell Dr. Levitt about the abuse. She did, however, describe sexually inappropriate conduct by defendant, including an incident where defendant had told her to touch his penis, and she made it clear that she had had a hard time setting “boundaries” with defendant (getting him to allow her privacy in the bathroom, etc.). The transcript of the interview indicates that defendant had sexually abused M.W., and in her testimony at trial Dr. Levitt admitted as much; however, at the time, Dr. Levitt did not decide that sexual abuse had occurred. Her report at that time used the word “inconclusive.”

Meanwhile, Marilyn obtained a restraining order, putting an end to M.W.’s visits with defendant in the apartment. In January of 1990, after this order had been in effect for 6 months, M.W. finally told her therapist or counselor, Susan Winslow (whom M.W. was seeing to help her get through the divorce process), about the events forming the basis of the charges against defendant. Winslow put in her notes on that day and later testified that M.W. said defendant had put his finger into *237 her vagina on several different occasions. Winslow reported this, and prosecution subsequently was begun in Hennepin County, where the abuse occurred.

In her statements to police and in her testimony, M.W. did not say that penetration had occurred. Rather, she said defendant had touched her in the vaginal area. Accordingly, the prosecution was not for sexual penetration but for sexual touching.

Of course, M.W.’s testimony was limited to the acts alleged but included reference to her relationship with her father when she was younger. Specifically, she testified that when she was younger she had a recurring problem of vaginal irritation (causing her doctor to question whether someone was touching her inappropriately) and that defendant applied petroleum jelly to her vagina each night, rubbing harder than her mother did when her mother applied the jelly; that defendant took showers with her until she was 6 years old; that defendant continued to be in the bathroom when she was bathing (her mother testified that defendant “insisted” on it); that as defendant followed her upstairs when she went up to go to bed, defendant would pat her on her breasts from behind and touch her “lower privates”; and that on occasion she had seen defendant pull her underwear from her laundry basket in her room and smell it.

Recounting the conduct on which the prosecution was based, she testified that she visited defendant at the apartment three times, staying overnight on two of the three occasions, and that defendant had sexually touched her on two occasions. She admitted that she was afraid sleeping alone the first night and had asked defendant to sleep with her. She testified that while in bed with her, defendant stuck his hand inside her underpants and started to move it around to the front, touching close to her vagina, before she kicked him and made him stop. She testified that the second time, while they were watching a movie on the couch, defendant put his hand inside her jeans, but not inside her underpants, and touched her buttocks before she asked him to remove his hand.

The admissibility of the Spreigl or other-crime evidence was addressed by the trial court at the omnibus hearing. The state wanted to call J.L. and three other young women to testify at trial concerning similar misconduct by defendant. The trial court excluded the testimony of one of these women, K.L.T., but admitted the testimony of the others.

The first Spreigl witness was J.L., M.W.’s half-sister and defendant’s stepdaughter, age 21 at the time of trial. She testified that starting when she was 12 years old defendant started teasing her about her bust and started touching her on her breasts and buttocks. When she told him to stop calling her a “slut” and a “whore,” he told her he was “just joking.” When she reacted to his teasing and touching, he would say she was overreacting. She said that when she was 13 and asked her mother for a neck rub for neck spasms she was having, defendant said he would do it. She testified that he then sat on her buttocks as she was lying on the floor, reached inside her shirt and rubbed, moving his hands under her to her breast area. She testified that his penis became hard and he rubbed it up and down against her rear end, breathing heavily as he did so. She also corroborated much of M.W.’s testimony about the sexually abusive conduct leading up to the conduct on which the prosecution was based.

The two other Spreigl witnesses were two of defendant’s nieces, daughters of defendant’s sister.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
497 N.W.2d 235, 1993 Minn. LEXIS 177, 1993 WL 65797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wermerskirchen-minn-1993.