Thomas Tubbs v. State of Mississippi

185 So. 3d 363, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 76, 2016 WL 659132
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 2016
Docket2015-KA-00337-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 185 So. 3d 363 (Thomas Tubbs v. State of Mississippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas Tubbs v. State of Mississippi, 185 So. 3d 363, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 76, 2016 WL 659132 (Mich. 2016).

Opinion

RANDOLPH, Presiding Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. Thomas Tubbs was indicted, tried, and found guilty by a Warren County jury of molestation and sentenced by the trial judge to fifteen years’ imprisonment. 1 Aggrieved, Tubbs appeals.to this Court, arguing the trial court erred in admitting- the child-victim’s testimony as well as a hearsay statement made by the victim to her grandmother. Tubbs also argues certain evidence should have been excluded due to a. break in the chain of custody. Finding no error, we affirm Tubbs’s conviction and sentence.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. On December 17, 2009, D.J. 2 was working late at the hospital, so her children stayed at the home of Thomas and Vernita Tubbs 3 until D.J. picked them up. D.J. picked up the children around 7:00 p.m. and took them straight home. When they got home, T.J. went to the restroom. T.J., then three years old, called for her mother’s help. As D.J. was pulling up her underpants, T.J. said, “Thomas licked me.”

¶ 3. L.J. was living with D.J. and the children at the time. D.J. asked L.J. to come to the bathroom and asked T.J. to *366 tell L.J. what had happened while D.J. left the room. T.J. then pointed to her vagina and told L.J. that Tubbs had touched her.

¶ 4. Investigator Randy Naylor collected the clothes that T.J. had-been wearing and took them to the evidence room, where they were locked up by Raymond Elledge. Lieutenant Linda Hearn collected buccal (oral) swabs from Thomas Tubbs. Those swabs were placed in a box, which was then placed inside an envelope, and the envelope was sealed with evidence tape-all of which was provided in the swab kit. Hearn sealed the swabs and gave them to Investigator LaWanda Mallett, who gave the swabs to Naylor.

¶ 5. The State’s forensic expert, Kathryn Moyse Rogers, testified at trial that she had received the evidence (the swabs and the clothes) from Elledge. Although Rogers received the clothes and the swabs in the same bag, the envelope containing the swabs was sealed. Because the envelope was “perfectly sealed and would not interfere in any way with the panties inside [the] bag,” Rogers deemed the evidence uncontaminated and proceeded with testing. A full Y-chrOmosome DNA profile developed from DNA removed from inside T.J.’s panties, which perfectly matched the DNA on Tubbs’s buccal swabs.

¶ 6. T.J. testified that Tubbs did “a bad something” in that “he touched me.” When asked where, she pointed to her private parts. 4 Using a drawing, T.J. then identified parts of her body, those parts no one should touch, the part of his body Tubbs used to touch her, and where he touched her; she then wrote her name on the drawing. On cross-examination, T.J. testified that the State had shown her the picture she would use prior to testifying. While she did not know the exact date Tubbs touched her, she knew how old she was, she remembered that she was in day care at the time, and she knew the name of the day care center. 5

¶ 7. The defendant did not testify, but the jury heard two tape-recorded statements he gave to the two investigators. In the statement to Naylor, Tubbs posited that when T.J. said he “licked” her, she was referring to the fact he had spanked her. Tubbs gave a different excuse in his statement to Mallett: T.J. was doing flips in the bed and “flipped right in my face.” Evidence of Tubbs’s prior conviction for rape of a ten-year-old child was admitted for the limited purpose of proving) inter alia, motive; intent, or absence of mistake or accident.

¶ 8. The jury found Tubbs guilty of molestation. After a presentence investigation arid report, the court sentenced Tubbs to serve fifteen years in the custody of the Mississippi-Department of Corrections. Tubbs appealed.

STATEMENT OF THE ISSUES

I. Whether the trial court erred in admitting LJ.’s tender-years testimony.

II. Whether the trial court erred in ruling T.J. competent to testify.

III. Whether the trial court erred in admitting certain exhibits into evidence due to a break in the chain of custody.

*367 STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶ 9. The admissibility of evidence and competency determinations are left to the sound discretion of the trial court. See Ellis v. State, 934 So.2d 1000, 1004 (Miss.2006); Mohr v. State, 584 So.2d 426, 431 (Miss.1991). This Court will affirm the trial court’s ruling unless it can safely say that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing or disallowing evidence to the prejudice of the accused. Ellis, 934 So.2d at 1004.

ANALYSIS

I. LJ.’s Tender-Years Testimony

¶ 10. The tender-years exception to the hearsay rule is contained in Mississippi Rule of Evidence 803(25), which provides:

A statement made by a child of tender years describing any act of sexual contact performed with or on the child by another is admissible in evidence if: (a) the court finds, in a hearing conducted outside the presence of the jury, that the time, content, and circumstances of the statement provide substantial indicia of reliability; and (b) the child either (1) testifies at the proceedings; or (2) is unavailable as a witness: provided, that when the child is unavailable as a witness, such statement may be admitted only if there is corroborative evidence of the act.

¶ 11. As T.J. testified at trial after the trial court conducted a hearing outside the presence of the jury, “the sole issue is whether the ‘time, content, and circumstances of the statement provide substantial indicia of reliability.’ ” Smith v. State, 925 So.2d 825, 837 (Miss.2006). The comment to Rule 803 provides the following list of nonexhaustive factors trial courts should use to determine whether a statement possesses sufficient indicia of reliability:

(1) whether there is an apparent motive on declarant’s part to lie; (2) the general character of the declarant; (3) whether more than one person heard the statements; (4) whether, the statements were rnade^ spontaneously; (5) the timing of the declarations; (6) the relationship between the declarant and the witness; (7) the possibility of the declarant’s faulty recollection is remote; (8) certainty that the statements were made; (9) the credibility of the person testifying about the statements; (10) the age or maturity of the. declarant; (11) whether suggestive techniques were used, in eliciting the statement; and (12) whether the declar-ant’s age, knowledge, and experience make it unlikely that the declarant fabricated.

M.R.E. 803(25) cmt.

¶ 12. While L.J., the-grandmother, did not testify at the evidentiary hearing, her proposed testimony was proffered to the judge. The trial-court made specific findings of fact and conclusions of law.

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185 So. 3d 363, 2016 Miss. LEXIS 76, 2016 WL 659132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-tubbs-v-state-of-mississippi-miss-2016.