United States v. Quarles

25 M.J. 761, 1987 CMR LEXIS 805, 1987 WL 33050
CourtU.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review
DecidedNovember 30, 1987
DocketNMCM 86 0575
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 25 M.J. 761 (United States v. Quarles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Navy-Marine Corps Court of Military Review primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Quarles, 25 M.J. 761, 1987 CMR LEXIS 805, 1987 WL 33050 (usnmcmilrev 1987).

Opinion

MIELCZARSKI, Judge:

Contrary to his pleas, appellant was convicted by a general court-martial (with members) of committing an indecent assault upon and sodomizing his five-year-old daughter, A, as well as committing numerous acts of sodomy upon his four-year-old daughter, D, and one act of sodomy on his six-year-old son, N.1 He was sentenced to confinement for 12 years, total forfeitures, reduction to pay grade E-l, and a dishonorable discharge. The convening authority approved the findings with respect to the offenses upon A and N, and approved only so much of the finding of guilty with respect to the sodomy of D which provid[763]*763ed that sodomy occurred on one occasion vice diverse occasions; he approved the sentence as adjudged.

Before this Court, the appellant raises twelve assignments of error. We find merit with assignments VI, VIII, and XI. Because we reverse appellant’s conviction, we will not discuss the remaining assignments.2

VI
THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED TO THE SUBSTANTIAL PREJUDICE OP THE APPELLANT BY PERMITTING A PROSECUTION PSYCHOLOGIST, PURSUANT TO MILITARY RULE OP EVIDENCE 803(4), TO REPEAT STATEMENTS MADE BY THE ALLEGED VICTIMS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT.
VIII
THE MILITARY JUDGE ERRED TO THE SUBSTANTIAL PREJUDICE OF THE APPELLANT BY ADMITTING THE TESTIMONY OF MRS. BEVERLY HUGHES, MRS. SUSAN E. MAURICE, MRS. FRANCIS M. SCHMITZ, MRS. SHERRY ANN GREEN, SPECIAL AGENT MARTIN G. NATHAN AND MRS. EARLDEAN FUTRELL.
XI
TRIAL COUNSEL’S CLOSING ARGUMENT, WHICH WAS IMPASSIONED AND DESIGNED TO AROUSE THE EMOTIONS OF THE COURT MEMBERS, OVERSTEPPED THE BOUNDS OF PROPRIETY AND VIOLATED APPELLANT’S RIGHTS.

FACTS

Appellant is the divorced father of three young children, all of whom resided with him during the spring of 1985, the period in which the charged offenses were alleged to have occurred. Because of his status as a single parent, appellant employed babysitters to care for his children while he worked. The charges in question arose from statements made by the children to several of the babysitters.

Mrs. Beverly Hughes cared for the Quarles children from September through [764]*764December 1984 during which time she claimed appellant’s house to be dirty and smelling of urine. She was concerned for the welfare of the children and made at least one attempt to contact the base chaplain at Camp Lejeune to report the conditions. Her complaint sounded in neglect due to the substandard living conditions she observed and did not contain any allegation of sexual abuse despite the fact that she had earlier discovered A naked, engaged in a humping motion upon her five-year-old son. She was also concerned with seeing that appellant’s children received Christmas gifts because appellant earlier told her that he would not be able to afford any presents. She asked her parents to donate gifts and she solicited other assistance through a local newspaper. Mrs. Hughes stopped caring for the children after Christmas because the appellant could not pay in advance for her services. She notified the North Carolina State Department of Social Services (DSS) about the conditions at the Quarles household some three months later, on 18 April 1985, the same day that she learned that appellant had purchased a new automobile.3

Mrs. Sherry Ann Green assumed the babysitting job after Mrs. Hughes. In February of 1985, while the children were at her home, she noticed N with his hand down D’s pants. She scolded N and told him that she would tell the appellant when he returned home. N replied, “My dad allows me.” A then stated, “Yes Mrs. Green, daddy allows [N] to play with us and do that to us.” A went on to say that appellant had placed his penis into her mouth. Later that evening at dinner, Mrs. Green observed A and D moving hot dogs in and out of their mouths, stating, “Ooo! Look at the white stuff!” She later confronted Quarles about N’s actions. She did not, however, mention to him anything about the allegations of sexual abuse made by the children. She told no one until two months later when, on 21 April 1985, she told a neighbor, Mrs. Maurice.4

After Mrs. Hughes called the DSS on the 18th of April 1985, the interviewers visited with N the next day at his school. They asked no questions about sexual abuse because, up to that point, there had been no such allegation made. They found N to be dirty and unkempt. On Sunday (the 21st), Mrs. Green told Mrs. Maurice about the statements the children had made to her back in February, and Mrs. Maurice told Mrs. Hughes. Mrs. Hughes called the DSS again that day, relating the story told to her by Mrs. Maurice. On Monday, the DSS returned.

That day, Daphne Knight, Linda Justice, and a Naval Investigative Service (NIS) investigator came to Mrs. Schmitz’s residence, where the children were being cared for, asking to speak to the children because “they [DSS] had a call that the children had been sexually abused.” Mrs. Schmitz allowed the group to question A and D with the aid of anatomically correct dolls. The children were quiet and shy and made no statement concerning sexual abuse. The social workers and investigator then left to interview N. After learning that A and D had been interviewed by the DSS and had made no statements about any sexual impropriety by the appellant, both Mrs. Hughes and Mrs. Maurice approached the children. In the conversation that followed, A told the two women that the appellant “put his pee-pee in my mouth.” Mrs. Hughes reported this conversation to the DSS. Later that day, Mrs. Schmitz summoned A, who had been playing outside and talking with Mrs. Hughes, back into the house to change into a swimsuit. As she was changing, A said to Mrs. Schmitz, “Do you know what daddy does?” A continued on to say that appel[765]*765lant “put his pee-pee in my mouth and white stuff came out.”

After leaving the Schmitz residence, Mrs. Knight, Mrs. Justice, and the NIS investigator interviewed N at his school. He was quiet and became particularly uncomfortable when the interviewers unclothed the dolls. He made no statement, however, concerning sexual abuse. The DSS group then contacted appellant and they visited with him. They told appellant about their suspicions of neglect and sexual abuse. Appellant denied that he neglected his children and apparently did not respond overtly to the allegation of sexual abuse.

At the DSS’s request, appellant took the children to the base hospital where Dr. Stelmach, a staff pediatrician, examined them. The doctor found no sign of physical abuse and the children made no statements about sexual abuse to her. After the examination, Daphne Knight questioned them but only A responded. According to Mrs. Knight, “I kept asking her — I asked her at least three times [within a five-minute period] if she could tell me what her daddy had done that she didn’t like.” A finally responded that appellant “put his privates around her.”5 Shortly thereafter, the DSS obtained a court order granting the agency temporary custody of the children. They assigned Mrs. Earldean Futrell as the foster parent. While in her care, A and N made statements both that appellant had “peed” in each one’s mouth and that he did not do anything at all.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 M.J. 761, 1987 CMR LEXIS 805, 1987 WL 33050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-quarles-usnmcmilrev-1987.