State v. Wiley

676 A.2d 321, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 140, 1996 WL 272308
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMay 21, 1996
Docket95-54-MP
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 676 A.2d 321 (State v. Wiley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Wiley, 676 A.2d 321, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 140, 1996 WL 272308 (R.I. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

BOURCIER, Justice.

This case comes before us on the defendant Marvin J. Wiley’s (Wiley) petition for certiorari, seeking review of his March 21, 1989 judgment of conviction following jury verdicts of guilty on six counts of child abuse. Wiley asserts that he was denied rights guaranteed him by the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution and article 1, section 10, of the Rhode Island Constitution. Specifically, he claims that he is entitled to reversal of his convictions and to a new trial because he was prevented by the trial justice from cross-examining one of his accusers in an area of inquiry that he believed was consistent with his theory of defense. For the reasons that follow, we deny the petition for certiorari and remand the papers in this case to the Family Court.

The charges against Wiley stemmed from allegations by his two biological sons and his stepdaughter that he treated them in a most brutal manner. An incident on May 19,1987, served as the catalyst for the criminal proceedings initiated against him by the state. On that date, as the three children, Robert, *322 Martin, and Cheryl, 1 were preparing for school, defendant began striking Martin, who was fourteen years of age at the time. One of Wiley’s blows caused Martin to lose his balance and fall against a wall. This action, in turn, dislodged a picture from the wall, which then fell on Martin, leaving a cut on his forehead. Whey instructed his sons to tell anyone at their school inquiring about the bruises on Martin’s face that the two boys had been fighting.

When Martin arrived at school, his teacher did notice the facial bruises and the cut forehead and sent him to the school’s nurse, Carol Ann Barbato (Barbato). The nurse testified at defendant’s trial that Martin had indeed first claimed that the abrasions on his face had resulted from fighting with his brother, but he also then stated that then-father had separated and beaten the two of them. Barbato testified that she then sent for Robert, and when she noticed that he did not appear to have been in a fight, she contacted the Department for Children and Their Families (DCF). 2 A DCF caseworker arrived at school and took the children to Newport Hospital. The three children were later placed in the care and custody of DCF.

A few days after they had been removed from the Wiley home, an investigator for DCF, Sue Sams (Sams), interviewed the children. She learned of previously unreported incidents of abuse to the children. According to the investigator’s trial testimony, each of the children revealed to her that he or she had been beaten by defendant. One incident, as related by Cheryl to Sams, was that she had been struck in the back of her head by the defendant, the force of the blow causing her head to then hit a washing machine, which later left a scar above her eye. According to Sams, Cheryl also told her that the defendant had bitten her on the arm, and had once thrown her across a room and then proceeded to hit her on the back of her head with “the shovel stick.” 3 After interviewing the children, Sams testified that she arranged a meeting with Wiley and his wife at a DCF office in Providence. During this meeting, when defendant was confronted with the children’s allegations of abuse, Sams testified that, “Mr. Wiley’s only comment to each and every one [of the allegations] was to either laugh or say nothing.”

As events later unfolded during the course of his trial on the various charges, the defendant added or said nothing of substance. This was due in part to the fact that he failed to appear for the second and third days of the trial proceedings and a warrant for his arrest was issued to bring him before the Family Court for sentencing after his convictions. Wiley’s explanation regarding the reason for his absence from the court trial is not clearly reflected by the record. However, it is not unreasonable for us to assume that Wiley’s peregrination on the second day of his trial was based upon the damning evidence he had heard during the opening-day trial testimony. In part, he had listened to testimony from his son Robert recounting the abuse the defendant had freely and frequently doled out upon his children. The defendant because of his absence did not avail himself of the opportunity, during the second and third days of his trial, to watch and listen to the testimony of his other two children regarding his abuse of them. In any event, for the purposes of this appeal, the first-day testimony of his youngest son, Robert, is most germane.

Robert, fourteen at the time of trial, testified that his father struck him and his siblings often, and with a variety of objects, including his hands, belts, extension cords, the “shovel stick,” and the “Black Beauty.” This last implement used to inflict pain was described by Robert as “a big stick wrapped in black tape with the gold letters ‘Black Beauty’ written on it.” Robert also testified that his father would beat the children on the arms, legs, and head with “Black Beauty.” The basic theme of Robert’s testimony could be characterized by his statement, “[ajlmost *323 every day he [defendant] found a reason to beat either me, [Martin] or [Cheryl].” He related several other such occurrences of the defendant’s brutal abuse.

The defendant’s theory of defense was not to deny that he had beaten his children, but instead was that he struck the children because he was a strict disciplinarian. Defense counsel, in his opening statement, set the theme for that defense in remarking that, “[w]ith so much widespread violence, drug use, one-parent families, it is good that we have fathers that will discipline their children and keep them on the straight and narrow.” Having embarked upon that course of defense, Wiley’s counsel sought during cross-examination of Robert to elicit admissions of misbehavior from Robert that, presumably, would justify his father’s efforts to “discipline” him. 4 On appeal, defendant claims that the trial justice erred in curtailing defense counsel’s probing for Robert’s incidents of misbehavior at his school, and his restriction of defense counsel’s cross-examination violated his federal and state constitutional rights to confront and cross-examine a witness against him.

During the cross-examination of Robert, the record reveals that the following took place:

“Q Were you ever — did you ever have much trouble in school as far as disobedient behavior, lying to your teachers, or anything like that?
“A Yes.
“Q Okay, how often were you in trouble at school?
“Ms. Nagle: Objection.
“The Court: How is it relevant?
“Mr. Jones: I’m trying to show a pattern of nonveracity on the witness’s part.
“The Court: You can’t show a pattern in that manner.
“Mr. Jones: I’ll rephrase the question, Your Honor.
“The Court: Objection sustained.
“Q How many , times-were you ever suspended from school?

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Bluebook (online)
676 A.2d 321, 1996 R.I. LEXIS 140, 1996 WL 272308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wiley-ri-1996.