Wall v. State

432 P.3d 516
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 2019
DocketS-17-0266; S-18-0127
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 432 P.3d 516 (Wall v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. State, 432 P.3d 516 (Wyo. 2019).

Opinion

DAVIS, Chief Justice.

[¶1] Brent Wall was convicted of one count of first degree sexual assault of a minor. On appeal he claims that his right to be present at every stage of the trial was violated and that he was denied effective assistance of counsel. We find no reversible error and affirm.

ISSUES

[¶2] Mr. Wall presents two issues on appeal, which we restate as:

1. Did the district court commit reversible error when it responded to a juror note expressing confusion over DNA testimony without informing either party of the juror note and the court's response to it?
2. Was Mr. Wall's right to effective assistance of counsel denied: a) by trial counsel's conflict of interest; and b) when trial counsel did not adequately pursue a theory of intentional secondary DNA transfer?

*520FACTS

[¶3] MW is the biological daughter of Sandra Bell-Wall and Brent Wall, the defendant in this case. Ms. Bell-Wall and Mr. Wall divorced in 2000, and Ms. Bell-Wall was given primary custody of MW, who was then about two, and her three-year-old sister CW. MW lived with her mother, sister, and half-brother in Urie, Wyoming, until December 2012.

[¶4] In 2012, MW was fourteen and had engaged in a number of troubling behaviors, including the use of fake social media profiles to lure classmates into conversations (also known as catfishing), sexually explicit conversations, falsely accusing family members of hurting her, committing self-harm by cutting her arms and torso, and generally being rebellious. When MW threatened to commit suicide, MW, her mother, and her father and stepmother, Arlee Wall, met with a counselor. It was decided that MW would move to Evanston, Wyoming to live with her father and stepmother and their two younger children.

[¶5] After MW moved in with her father and stepmother, her behavioral issues abated. In the fall of 2014, however, when she was sixteen years old, she wrecked her car, and after that her grades dropped and her troubling behaviors resurfaced. In early 2015, her grades were continuing to drop, and she had a boyfriend and best friend that her stepmother believed were negative influences. She began catfishing again, and she included in one of her profiles a fake obituary for her little sister. After her own electronic devices were taken from her, she stole electronic devices from her father and stepmother to use for catfishing, and when she was confronted with the theft, she first blamed her young half-sister and then destroyed the devices. In February, she altered and attempted to cash two checks written by her stepmother to her school for lunches.

[¶6] As discipline for these behaviors, MW had her activities and privileges restricted, and she was required to do chores to earn enough money to pay for the destroyed electronic devices. She was also homeschooled and restricted to her bedroom when not performing chores. All items were removed from her bedroom except her bed, a blanket, a desk, and a bible. She was required to wear shorts and a tank top so her father and stepmother could see if she was cutting herself.

[¶7] On March 1, 2015, MW's biological mother and sister came for a visit that lasted until about 1:30 that afternoon. After the visit, Ms. Bell-Wall expressed concern that MW seemed sad, and Mr. Wall assured her that MW's restrictions would soon be lifted. Later that afternoon, at about 2:30 p.m., MW's stepmother left to run errands. She arrived back home at about 4:00 and testified that the following then occurred:

Q. Now, when you got back, did you have a conversation with [MW]?
A. I did.
Q. And do you recall that?
A. I do.
Q. And what was that conversation?
A. I was hugging her.
She was crying. I thought she was crying because of the punishment.
I told her, "It's almost over. I know it's hard."
And she says, "You don't know how hard it is."
And I told her, "I do."
And then she told me, "While you were gone, dad made me give him a blowjob."
Q. And how did you react to that?
A. I was shocked that she could even say that.
I stepped back and I looked at her. And she said, "He did. He said you wouldn't believe me, but he did it and I can prove it."
Q. And what did you do?
A. I just - I shook my head and I grabbed a load of groceries and I went in the house.
Brent was sitting on the couch with the two kids when I walked in. And then I went back out for more groceries. She -
Q. And did [MW] bring groceries in or not?
A. Well, she was waiting for me at the car.
*521Q. And then did you have any more conversation?
A. Yeah. She - she told me that, "He blew it in my mouth and I can prove it."
And I told her, "The mouth cleans itself. Don't you know that?"
And she goes, "But it's there. I haven't ate or drank anything since he did it."
And, I just - I shook my head, and she grabbed a load and followed me into the house.
And Brent asked me what was going on. He could tell that I was angry on my first trip.
And I told him - I just shook my head when he asked me. And I looked at [MK] and I says, "Tell him."
And she gave him a play by play. She told him everything that he had done.
And by that time, it had turned into a second blowjob, in the garage.
And I asked her, I says, "Why are you giving him a play by play? Wasn't he there?"

[¶8] Mr. Wall then called Ms. Bell-Wall, informed her of what MW was saying, and told her to come and get MW. Ms. Bell-Wall testified that she did not immediately believe MW's allegations, and so when she picked her up, she did not take her to the hospital. She instead bought her a bottle of water and a Dr. Pepper and returned to Mountain View. Ms. Bell-Wall eventually decided to take MW to the hospital in Evanston, and they arrived there at about 10:20 the evening of March 1st.

[¶9] The hospital contacted law enforcement, and Sergeant Randall Chandler of the Uinta County Sheriff's Office responded and took MW's statement, which he recorded. MW reported that she was doing chores in the garage when her father came into the garage and told her to retrieve a battery charger from his bedroom so he could return it to the garage shelf where it belonged. When she went to the bedroom, her father followed her and asked if she was ready to hear what she had to do to have her restrictions lifted. MW reported that when she said yes, the following occurred:

And so he pulls out this piece of paper and he says, "I wrote them down."
And I made a joke.

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Bluebook (online)
432 P.3d 516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-state-wyo-2019.