State v. W.L.

650 A.2d 1035, 278 N.J. Super. 295, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 3, 1995
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 650 A.2d 1035 (State v. W.L.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. W.L., 650 A.2d 1035, 278 N.J. Super. 295, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3 (N.J. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PRESSLER, P.J.A.D.

Following a trial by jury, defendant W.L. was convicted of four first-degree and three second-degree crimes of sexual abuse of which the victim was D.L., one of his six children and the oldest of his three daughters. The gravamen of the charges is that from the time D.L. was seven years old until she was seventeen, defendant abused her by way of sexual contact which escalated into intercourse by the time she was thirteen. He was sentenced to consecutive terms of twenty years on two of the first-degree convictions and to unspecified concurrent terms on the remaining convictions.

In appealing from the judgment of conviction, defendant raises the following issues:

I. THE DEFENDANT’S RIGHT TO A FAIR TRIAL WAS DENIED BY THE PROSECUTOR’S SUMMATION CHARACTERIZING THE CSAAS FACTORS AS “INDICATORS” OF SEXUAL ABUSE; HER ARGUMENTS THAT BASED UPON THE EXPERT’S TESTIMONY, DEFENDANT WAS “THE TYPE OF PERSON” LIKELY TO ENGAGE IN DEVIANT BEHAVIOR; AND THE TRIAL COURT’S FAILURE TO INSTRUCT THE JURY ON THE FUNCTION OF CSAAS EVIDENCE. (Not raised below)
II. SINCE THE STATE HAD PRESENTED EVIDENCE THAT ANOREXIA WAS COMMONLY ASSOCIATED WITH SEXUAL ABUSE, IT WAS FUNDAMENTALLY UNFAIR AND A VIOLATION OF THE CONFRONTATION CLAUSE TO PRECLUDE THE DEFENSE FROM INTRODUCING THOSE PORTIONS OF D.L.’S DIARIES IN WHICH SHE ATTRIBUTED HER ANOREXIA TO THE FACT THAT HER BOYFRIEND HAD USED HER SEXUALLY, AND INDICATED THAT SHE HAD BEEN RAPED BY ANOTHER PERSON.
III. THE STATE’S EXPERT’S TESTIMONY THAT ON THE “CHILD ABUSE POTENTIAL INVENTORY’ TEST ADMINISTERED TO DEFENDANT, “THE FAKING GOOD INDEX WAS HIGHLY ELEVATED” (MEANING THAT HE “WASN’T GIVING US HONEST ANSWERS,” BUT WANTED TO APPEAR “HEALTHY’), WAS HIGHLY IMPROPER, AND DENIED DEFENDANT A FAIR TRIAL. (Not raised below)
IV. DEFENDANT RECEIVED INEFFECTIVE ASSISTANCE OF COUNSEL DUE TO HIS ATTORNEYS FAILURE TO MOVE FOR A PRETRIAL HEARING ON THE ADMISSIBILITY OF PORTIONS OF THE DIARY; HIS FAILURE TO OBJECT TO THE TESTIMONY ABOUT THE DEFENDANTS SCORES ON THE FAKING GOOD INDEX OF THE CHILD ABUSE POTENTIAL INVENTORY; HIS FAILURE TO [299]*299OBJECT TO THE PROSECUTOR’S SUMMATION THAT THE CSAAS FACTORS WERE “INDICATORS” OF CHILD ABUSE; AND HIS FAILURE TO REQUEST A LIMITING INSTRUCTION EXPLAINING THAT THE CSAAS FACTORS WERE NOT SUBSTANTIVE EVIDENCE OF GUILT. (Not raised below)
V. THE SENTENCE WAS IMPOSED IN VIOLATION OF THE SENTENCING GUIDELINES OF THE CODE, AND IS PARTIALLY ILLEGAL. (Not raised below)
A. The Decision To Impose the Maximum Sentence on Both Count Two and Count Three Violated The Sentencing Guidelines of the Code.
B. The Judgment of Conviction is Incorrect In Listing Counts One, Six and Seven as First Degree Crimes.
C. The Imposition of “Concurrent” Terms on Counts One, Four, Five, Six and Seven was Insufficient; The Case Must Be Remanded For Resentencing on Those Counts.

We reverse. Our review of this record satisfies us that the trial was irretrievably tainted by plain error in the use of expert testimony and by harmful error in evidential rulings.

There is no need for extensive recitation of the facts. At the time of this trial in February 1992, defendant and his wife C.L. had been married for twenty-six years, enjoying a stable and mutually supportive relationship. The three older children, their sons, were then 24, 23 and 22. The three younger, their daughters, were then 18, 17 and 12. The family had lived, since the parents’ marriage, in half of a duplex house. C.L.’s mother lived in the other half. The six children occupied the three upstairs bedrooms and the parents used the downstairs living room as their bedroom, sleeping on a convertible couch.

Insofar as this record indicates, the asserted victim, D.L., was a troubled child at least from the time she was thirteen years old. She claims to have been then raped by an older boy. She also, at that age, began a long-lasting and apparently obsessive and unhappy relationship with P.D., a boy four or five years older, to whom her parents objected because of the age difference. D.L. had frequent quarrels with her father on this account. By the time she was sixteen, she became a serious anorectic and was hospitalized for nine weeks. During that time, as part of her rehabilitative program, she kept a diary which included both [300]*300mundane daily entries and expressions of her most intimate thoughts. Among the latter were her reflections on P.D. to whose abuse she attributed her problems, including her anorexia. Her conduct at about this time also included some self-mutilative behavior; she carved messages into her arms.

D.L.’s problems at home apparently came to a climax of sorts some time after her release from the hospital when she was seventeen. She was then employed at night at a Roy Rogers restaurant, returning home from work by 11:30. One night, instead of coming home, she went out with P.D., returning after 2:00 a.m. Her father, who testified as to his extreme anxiety over her non-arrival home, confronted her upon her return and apparently struck her. It was not long after that she moved out of the house and sought out a school guidance counselor to whom she showed poetry she had written in which she accused her father of having sexually molested her. The counselor immediately advised the Division of Youth and Family Services of the accusation, defendant was arrested, and these proceedings eventually ensued.

At trial D.L. testified to sexual contact with her father starting when she was seven years old. She testified that as the whole family was gathered in the living room watching television, her father would ask her to scratch his back. She would climb up behind him, he would cover them both with a blanket, and would then fondle her. By the time she was eleven, she said, he would take her down to the basement, where the laundry facilities were located, and rub against her. By the time she was thirteen, she testified, he had penetrated her. These frequently occurring visits to the basement, she testified, generally took place dining the time between her father’s arrival home from work at 4:30 and her mother’s arrival home from work an hour or so later. At least some of the other children, she testified, were usually in the house at that time. When no one was home, she said, her father sometimes violated her in the kitchen. D.L. also claimed that her father gave her money for submitting to him, that he told her her mother must never know, and that it was his habit to insist on sex [301]*301with her before she went out on a date. D.L. also testified that she tried to tell her mother in an ambiguous note what was happening to her, but then, when she saw how upset her mother was, denied that any of her disclosures or accusations were true.

Defendant, who testified on his own behalf, denied that any of these acts had ever taken place. D.L.’s mother, both of her sisters and one of her brothers also testified, asserting that none of them had ever had the slightest intimation that any sexual contact had occurred between D.L. and her father, all of them also asserting that they would have known or at least had had suspicions if anything of the kind had ever happened.

There was virtually no corroborating evidence. The trial was, in effect, a credibility contest between father and daughter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
650 A.2d 1035, 278 N.J. Super. 295, 1995 N.J. Super. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-wl-njsuperctappdiv-1995.