State v. B. McGhee ( 2021 )


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  •                                                                                               08/03/2021
    DA 19-0608
    Case Number: DA 19-0608
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2021 MT 193
    STATE OF MONTANA,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,                              FILLD
    v.                                                          AUG 0 3 2021
    BOVVerl Greenwood
    Court
    BARAK JAMES MCGHEE,                                              Clerk of Supreme
    State of Montana
    Defendant and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court ofthe Seventh Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Richland, Cause No. DC-18-125
    Honorable Katherine M. Bidegaray, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Megan M. Moore, Watson Law Office, PC,Bozeman, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Austin Knudsen, Montana Attorney General, Katie F. Schulz, Assistant
    Attorney General, Helena, Montana
    Janet Christoffersen, Richland County Attorney, Charity McLarty, Deputy
    County Attorney, Sidney, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: April 7, 2021
    Decided: August 3, 2021
    Filed:
    Clerk
    Justice Dirk Sandefur delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    Barak James McGhee appeals his 2019 judgment of conviction and sentence in the
    Montana Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Richland County, on the offense of Indecent
    Exposure to a Minor, a felony in violation of § 45-5-504(3), MCA. We address the
    following restated issues:
    1. Whether the District Court erroneously allowed cross-examination ofMcGhee
    about a prior allegation ofsexual misconduct toward his daughters to rebut his
    assertion that he previously had an "awesome" relationship with them?
    2. Whether the District Court erroneously imposed an unduly harsh sentence?
    We affirrn.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKROUND
    ¶2     On November 21, 2018, the State charged McGhee by Information with two counts
    of Indecent Exposure to a Minor, based on an allegation that he exposed his penis to his
    nine-year-old twin daughters. The allegation arose in the context of the ongoing strained
    relationship between McGhee and the girls' rnother (Mother) following their breakup in
    2012. The breakup resulted in a court-ordered parenting plan which gave McGhee custody
    of the girls on alternating weekends. In 2018, Mother alleged to police that, on or about
    September 7, 2018, the twins told her that, during their last weekend stay with McGhee, he
    pulled his pants down and showed them his "private parts" in their bedroom at his home in
    Sidney, Montana. The revelation allegedly occurred in the context of her styling the girls'
    hair for school photos and discussing their upcoming weekend stay with McGhee. In
    subsequent forensic interviews conducted by a child protection specialist, the girls told the
    2
    interviewer, consistent with Mother's initial report, that he dropped his pants and showed
    them his "naughty parts" in response to a question from one of them about "how babies
    were made."
    At the final pretrial status hearing on May 13, 2019, McGhee objected to a reference
    on the State's trial exhibits list to investigatory materials obtained from North Dakota law
    enforcement authorities regarding a 2015 allegation by Mother that he exposed his penis
    to the girls, put a candy sucker on it, and had them lick the sucker. Mother further alleged
    that he also placed a sucker on or near the vagina of one of the girls and then licked the
    vaginas of both girls. McGhee denied the allegations and the ensuing investigation resulted
    in no criminal charges. During the pendency of the investigation, however, Mother
    obtained a temporary civil court order suspending his access to the girls under the parenting
    plan. The order remained in effect for almost two years, apparently due to his inability to
    get confirmation of the close of the investigation. In July 2017, following court-ordered
    reunification therapy, the North Dakota court reinstated his parenting rights under the prior
    parenting plan.
    ¶4     Based on McGhee's pretrial objection in this case, the court ordered simultaneous
    pretrial briefing on the admissibility of the 2015 North Dakota allegations in regard to the
    subject offenses. The resulting briefing focused on whether the prior North Dakota
    allegations would be properly adrnissible at trial under M. R. Evid. 404(b) for a legitimate
    non-propensity purpose. Pursuant to State v. Madplume,
    2017 MT 40
    , 
    386 Mont. 368
    , 
    390 P.3d 142
    , the State asserted that the prior bad acts evidence would be admissible as
    3
    evidence that McGhee committed the subsequently charged offenses in accordance with a
    cornmon plan, motive, or intent. He countered that Madplume was distinguishable and that
    the North Dakota allegations were otherwise insufficient under M. R. Evid. 404(b) for the
    State's asserted purpose. On the morning of trial, and in the wake of the State's objection
    to a suggested continuance to allow McGhee adequate time to review and address the
    particulars in the North Dakota materials,' the District Court sustained his earlier objection
    and barred the State from introducing or referencing the North Dakota allegations without
    prior leave of court.
    ¶5      At trial, after presentation of the State's case-in-chief, McGhee presented the
    testimony of his two brothers and long-tirne girlfriend who described his relationship with
    the girls as "wonderful,""excellent," or "great." His girlfriend further testified that, during
    their six-year relationship, she never saw the girls fearful of McGhee or saw anything
    "inappropriate." One ofhis brothers sirnilarly testified that,"[a]ll I ever saw was him being
    a good dad."
    ¶6     McGhee then testified on his own behalf. When asked by counsel to "describe [his]
    relationship with [the] girls," he answered:
    [B]efore all this, absolutely awesome. . . . I adore them, they . . . adore me.
    . . . [T]hey're always wanting to do stuff and they're always asking rne, . . .
    how to do sorne cool stuff. . .[a]nd . . . I'd like to think that we have a good
    relationship.
    I For reasons unclear on the record, McGhee and his counsel had apparently not yet had the
    opportunity to review some or all ofthe North Dakota investigative materials obtained by the State
    regarding the prior allegations.
    4
    [Counsel]:     Did they ever express any desire to not be around you?
    [McGhee]:      No, actually, quite the opposite. They would express
    regular[ly] that they wished they could live with rne and they
    would say . . . they love to [go] back to their rnom [because]
    they love their little brothers ... but, they multiple times stated
    that they wanted to live with me.
    [Counsel]:     Did you have any reason to believe that they didn't want to be
    around you?
    [McGhee]:      No, not at all.
    (Emphasis added.)
    ¶7     At a sidebar following McGhee's direct testimony, the State asked the court to
    reconsider its earlier ruling barring reference to the prior North Dakota allegations. The
    prosecutor asserted that, in light of McGhee's testirnony that he had an "awesome"
    relationship with the girls, the State:
    is basically hamstrung, at this point, without bringing in prior bad acts[.] . . .
    [W]e can't really refute the fact without bring[ing in]. .. that the relationship
    has not always been a good relationship[,] as he's trying to show the jury[.]
    So,. . . the State is not able to counter without using .. . some ofthose [prior
    allegations]. So, we are asking for leniency in cross . . . [to] ask him those
    questions.
    Through counsel, McGhee objected on relevance grounds, to wit:
    Judge, we did not open the door for 404(b). The State also asked questions
    about the girls' relationship and how they missed their dad and I was very
    careful . . . , I tried to tailor my questions with regard to describing things
    that happened this last sumrner. I did not ask him 'have you been accused of
    anything else.' . . . I tried to tailor it with regard to, specifically, this last
    summer. . . . [I]f he said I've always ha[d] a good relationship with them, I
    do not believe that opens the door to a whole can of worms of allegations
    from another jurisdiction which, again, I still have not had the opportunity to
    5
    ferret out. I think . . . simply saying he's had a good relationship with his
    daughters does not open that door. Everyone . . . has indicated that the girls
    love their dad and that they miss their dad. That, in and of itself, is — we're
    all trying to play within the perimeters of avoiding talking about some other
    alleged act.
    ¶8     The District Court concluded, however, that McGhee's response to the defense
    questioning about the nature of his relationship with his girls was sufficiently "broad" to
    "openll up the door" by making the prior allegations relevant to refute his broad
    characterization of the relationship. After the court granted the State "some latitude," the
    following colloquy ensued on cross-examination when trial resurned the next day:
    [State]:      . . .[Y]ou testified that you have an awesome . . . relationship
    with your daughters. Is that correct?
    [McGhee]:      Yes.
    [State]:      [But] is it not true that there came a point when you didn't have
    any relationship with your daughters at all?
    [McGhee]:      Yes.
    [State]:      . . . How long did you did you have to go without seeing your
    daughters?
    [McGhee]:     It was about two years.
    [State]:      And why was that?
    [McGhee]:     Because . . . there was an allegation made in the past.
    [State]:      . . . Was it made by your daughters?
    [McGhee]:     . . .[I]t was made by [their mother] originally and then, yes, the
    girls were involved.
    [State]:      . . . How old were the girls at that time?
    6
    [McGhee]:   Four or five.
    [State]:    And so,. . . you said it was two years you didn't see them?
    [McGhee]:   Yes.
    [State]:    So, why was it two years . . . ?
    [McGhee]:   . . .[W]hen the original allegation was started,[Mother] started
    by calling the local police . . . and the Justice of the Peace . . .
    suggested . . . a restraining order until they got things actually
    moving with the case ....
    [State]:    But you're saying the case was closed and they still wouldn't
    tell you?
    [McGhee]:   They didn't tell me, no.
    [State]:    . . . So, the girls were about . . . four or five when th[e] [prior]
    alleged event happened, right?
    [McGhee]:   Yes.
    [State]:    . ..[Since] you started having contact with your girls again, are
    you able to have them overnights? What was the set up?
    [McGhee]:   I started having them overnight right away. . . . I'd had them
    overnight for well over a year before [the 2018] allegations
    carne up.
    [State]:    ...[Y]esterday [your current girlfriend] testified that you guys
    had been together six years?
    7
    [McGhee]: [Yes].
    [State]:    So, . . . she's aware of[the North Dakota allegations]?
    [McGhee]:   Yes[,] . . . absolutely, she's aware of the events.
    [State]:    . . . [I]sn't it true that yesterday . . . you sat and listened to
    testimony where both of your daughters said that[one ofthem]
    told [their mother] that you dropped your pants in front of
    them?
    [McGhee]:   Yes, I heard that.
    [State]:    So, did they get up yesterday and lie[?]
    [McGhee]:   Yes.
    [State]:    Why?
    [McGhee]:   Because they were told to and coerced. Years of being told
    that I'm a bad person and all crap that's not true . . . children
    are malleable. They're like clay. . . .
    [State]:    And it has nothing to do that you've been accused of this kind
    of behavior before and you might have done this to these girls?
    [McGhee]:   Absolutely not.
    [State]:    So, basically it's everyone's fault but yours?
    [McGhee]:   No, . . . [the] relationship ended not amicably and [their
    mother] has had animosity and hatred toward me ever since.
    And I do not know why, it's never been explained in a real
    way. I know I didn't make her happy, but that's all I really
    know.
    8
    [State]:      . . .[H]ave there not been massive issues between you legally
    with her in the past?
    [McGhee]:     No, I don't understand . . what you're trying to insinuate.
    [State]:      This isn't the first time you've been accused of doing
    something inappropriate with your daughters, correct?
    [McGhee]:     . . No,this is . . . not the first time.
    [State]:      So, that couldn't be a reason that . . . maybe you guys have
    problems?
    [McGhee]:     No[,] that has been way before any allegation was ever made.
    The allegations are her way of a means to an end.
    [State]:      . . . So, what is the end?
    [McGhee]:     The end is her having full custody and me not being in the
    picture at all.
    On redirect, McGhee's counsel followed up on the North Dakota allegations, to wit:
    [Counsel]:   . . . [Y]ou were asked a question about the prior allegations
    . . . from North Dakota, correct?
    [McGhee]:     Yes.
    [Counsel]:   And . . . those allegations were investigated but there were no
    charges ever stemming from that, correct?
    [McGhee]:    Yes.
    9
    [Counsel]:     And you were asked about why [Mother] would not . . . care
    much about you, . . . [that she] ha[d] issues with you long
    before . . . either allegations were made, correct?
    [McGhee]:      Yes.
    Inter alia, the court's instructions oflaw given to the jury prior to closing arguments
    included the following limiting instruction (Instruction No. 11):
    The State has offered evidence that the Defendant at another time engaged in
    other crirnes, wrongs, or acts. That evidence was not admitted to prove the
    character ofthe Defendant or to show he acted in conformity therewith. . . .[2]
    The Defendant is not being tried for that other crime, wrong, or act. He rnay
    not be convicted for any other offense than that charged in this case. For the
    jury to convict the Defendant of any other offense than that charged in this
    case may result in unjust double punishment of the Defendant.
    (Emphasis added.) After deliberation, the jury returned a verdict finding McGhee guilty
    of indecent exposure regarding one of the daughters, but not guilty as to the other. Upon
    consideration ofthe mandatory presentence investigation report, the included psychosexual
    evaluation, and the balance of the sentencing hearing record, the District Court sentenced
    him to a 50-year prison terin, with 42 years suspended, but restricted parole eligibility until
    after the subject daughter turns 18 years old and his completion of prison-provided sex
    offender treatment(Phases I and II). McGhee timely appeals.
    2 However, contrary to the earlier-stated purpose for allowing the State to cross-exarnine McGhee
    about the prior North Dakota allegations, the limiting instruction further inconsistently instructed
    that "[t]he only purpose of admitting that evidence was to show proofofmotive, opportunity, plan,
    knowledge, identity, absence ofmistake or accident. You may not use that evidence for any other
    purpose." (Ernphasis added.) In its ensuing closing argument, the State repeated that inconsistent
    statement of purpose.
    10
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶10    District courts have broad discretion to deterrnine the adrnissibility of evidence in
    accordance with the Montana Rules of Evidence and related statutory and jurisprudential
    rules. State v. Derbyshire,
    2009 MT 27
    ,¶ 19, 
    349 Mont. 114
    ,
    201 P.3d 811
    ;State v. Parker,
    
    2007 MT 243
    , ¶ 9, 
    339 Mont. 211
    , 
    169 P.3d 380
    ; State v. Strauss, 
    2003 MT 195
    , ¶ 18, 
    317 Mont. 1
    , 
    74 P.3d 1052
    . Except for related interpretations or applications of law which we
    review de novo for correctness, we generally review evidentiary rulings for an abuse of
    discretion. Derbyshire, ¶ 19; State v. Passmore, 
    2010 MT 34
    , ¶ 51, 
    355 Mont. 187
    , 
    225 P.3d 1229
    . An abuse of discretion occurs if a court exercises granted discretion based on
    a clearly erroneous finding of fact, an erroneous conclusion or application of law, or
    otherwise acts arbitrarily, without conscientious judgrnent or in excess of the bounds of
    reason, resulting in substantial injustice. State v. Pelletier, 
    2020 MT 249
    , ¶ 12, 
    401 Mont. 454
    , 
    473 P.3d 991
     (internal citations ornitted); Derbyshire, ¶ 19.
    ¶11    Criminal sentences eligible for statutory sentence review are reviewable on appeal
    only for legality, i.e., whether the court sentenced the defendant in accordance with
    governing statutory and constitutional parameters and requirements. State v. Herinan,
    
    2008 MT 187
    , If 11, 
    343 Mont. 494
    , 
    188 P.3d 978
    ; State v. Ariegwe, 
    2007 MT 204
    , If 174,
    
    338 Mont. 442
    , 
    167 P.3d 815
    ; State v. Hicks, 
    2006 MT 71
    , ¶ 41, 
    331 Mont. 471
    , 
    133 P.3d 206
    ; State v. Herd, 
    2004 MT 85
    , ¶ 22, 
    320 Mont. 490
    , 
    87 P.3d 1017
    ; State v. Montoya,
    11
    
    1999 MT 180
    , ¶ 15, 
    295 Mont. 288
    , 
    983 P.2d 937
    .3 Whether a court imposed a legal
    sentence or sentencing condition is a question of law reviewed de novo. State v. Seals,
    
    2007 MT 71
    , ¶ 7, 
    336 Mont. 416
    , 
    156 P.3d 15
    ; State v. Bull, 
    2017 MT 247
    , ¶ 9, 
    389 Mont. 56
    , 
    403 P.3d 670
    .
    DISCUSSION
    ¶12    1. Whether the District Court erroneously allowed cross-examination ofMcGhee
    about a prior allegation ofsexual misconduct toward his daughters to rebut his
    assertion that he previously had an "awesome" relationship with them?
    ¶13    McGhee acknowledges that M.R.Evid. 404(b)does not preclude adrnission ofother
    acts evidence for relevant purposes other than as propensity evidence and that a defendant
    rnay "open the door" to admission of otherwise inadmissible other acts evidence through
    assertions or suggestions in opening statements or elicited witness testimony. He asserts,
    however, that his broad staternent that he previously had an "awesome" relationship with
    his daughters was not sufficiently specific to "open the door" to cross-examination
    regarding the prior North Dakota allegations in this case. He thus asserts that the District
    Court erroneously reversed its prior exclusionary ruling. The State asserts that the District
    Court correctly allowed limited cross-examination of McGhee regarding the North Dakota
    allegations for perrnissible non-propensity impeachment or rebuttal purposes.            We
    ultirnately agree with the State.
    3 Sentence review generally applies only to unsuspended state prison terms, and unsuspended
    commitments to the Montana Departrnent of Corrections for appropriate correctional placement,
    for "1 year or more." See § 46-18-903(1), MCA; Herd, ¶¶ 19-23.
    12
    (A) Rule 404(b) Other Acts Evidence.
    ¶14      "Evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts" is generally not admissible for the
    purpose of "prov[ing] the character of a person in order to show action in conformity
    therewith." M. R. Evid. 404(b). The purpose of this general rule is to preclude an
    impermissible jury inference, based on evidence of other uncharged bad acts or allegations,
    that an accused is a person of bad character, and thus likely guilty of the charged offense
    based on comrnon experience or belief that persons of bad character are predisposed or
    have a tendency or propensity to subsequently act in conformance therewith. See M. R.
    Evid. 404(b); Madplume,¶ 22 (internal citations omitted); State v. Stewart, 
    2012 MT 317
    ,
    TT    61-62, 
    367 Mont. 503
    , 
    291 P.3d 1187
    ; State v. Mont. Eighteenth Jud. Dist. Ct.
    (Salvagni), 
    2010 MT 263
    , ¶¶ 47 and 62; 
    358 Mont. 325
    , 
    246 P.3d 415
     (internal citations
    omitted); State v. Aakre, 
    2002 MT 101
    , ¶ 12, 
    309 Mont. 403
    , 
    46 P.3d 648
     (Rule 404(b)
    purpose "is to prevent convictions that are merely based on a jury finding that [an accused]
    has a propensity to do certain things"). The general rule of M. R. Evid. 404(b) thus bars
    admission of or reference to other acts for the purpose of supporting an inference of guilt
    based on conforrnance with prior bad character.
    ¶15     Rule 404(b)nonetheless expressly authorizes admission ofother acts evidence when
    relevant "for other purposes." M. R. Evid. 404(b)(referencing non-exclusive list of other
    potentially relevant non-propensity purposes). Rule 404(b) is a particular "application of
    the doctrine of multiple admissibility" under which evidence inadrnissible for one purpose
    may yet be admissible for another relevant purpose. Pelletier, ¶ 18 (citing 22B Charles
    13
    Alan Wright & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr., Federal Practice & Procedure: Evidence § 5243,
    132(West 2017)). Read as a whole and contrary to "frequent misconception," Rule 404(b)
    does not categorically bar all other acts evidence, but only a particular "theory of
    admissibility" of such evidence. Salvagni, ¶ 47 (emphasis original). The alternative or
    exception clause of Rule 404(b) is "a contrasting rule of inclusion" for adrnission of other
    acts evidence that has independent relevance to a material rnatter at issue other than for
    proof of propensity conforrnance. See Pelletier, ¶ 18 (citing Salvagni, ¶ 47 and United
    States v. Curtin, 
    489 F.3d 935
    , 944 (9th Cir. 2007)); Salvagni, TIT 47 and 62. Under Rule
    404(b), the distinction between admissible and inadmissible other acts evidence thus
    depends on the particular purpose or effect of the evidence. Madplume, ¶ 23 (citing
    Salvagni, ¶¶ 47 and 62-63); Stewart,¶¶ 61-62; Salvagni, ¶ 62.
    ¶16    Even when properly admissible for a non-propensity purpose, other acts evidence
    carries an inherent risk of prejudice clue to the potential that the finder of fact will
    nonetheless infer that the accused is guilty based on propensity for conformance with prior
    bad character. See State v. Brubaker, 
    191 Mont. 481
    ,484,
    625 P.2d 78
    , 79-80(1981); State
    v. Just, 
    184 Mont. 262
    , 268, 
    602 P.2d 957
    , 960-61 (1979), overruled on other grounds by
    Salvagni, ¶ 3; State v. Tiedemann, 
    139 Mont. 237
    , 242-43, 
    362 P.2d 529
    , 531 (1961). The
    risk is arneliorated, or at least fairly mitigated, upon careful balancing of relevance and
    limiting factors under M. R. Evid. 401-03, and appropriate cautionary or limiting
    instruction under § 46-16-401(1), MCA,and M. R. Evid. 105. See State v. Blaz, 
    2017 MT 164
    , ¶ 20, 
    388 Mont. 105
    , 
    398 P.3d 247
    ; Salvagni, ¶ 62.
    14
    (B) Evidence Bearing on Witness Credibility.
    1117   "A11 relevant evidence is admissible" except as otherwise provided by the Rules of
    Evidence and related statutory and jurisprudential rules. M. R. Evid. 402. "Relevant
    evidence means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact . . . of
    consequence to the determination of the action more . . . or less probable." M. R. Evid.
    401. "Relevant evidence may include," inter alia,"evidence bearing [on] the credibility
    of a witness." M. R. Evid. 401. Credibility is "[t]he quality that makes [witness testimony
    or other evidence] worthy of belief." CREDIBILITY, Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed.
    2019). "Impeachment evidence is 'evidence tending to cast doubt' on the credibility of a
    witness" or witness testimony. Pelletier, ¶ 14(citing State v. Williams, 
    2018 MT 194
    ,¶ 18,
    
    392 Mont. 285
    , 
    423 P.3d 596
    ).
    (C) Rule 607(a)Impeachment by Contradiction via Other Acts Evidence.
    ¶18     A party rnay challenge or attack the credibility of any witness. M. R. Evid. 607(a);
    State v. Zimmerman, 
    2018 MT 94
    , ¶ 23, 
    391 Mont. 210
    , 
    417 P.3d 289
     (also citing Rule
    401). See also § 26-1-302, MCA (presumption that a witness speaks the truth "may be
    controverted and overcome by any matter that has a tendency to disprove the truthfulness
    of [the] witness's testimony"); Pelletier, ¶ 32 (distinguishing Rule 607(a) authorization
    from application of M. R. Evid. 404(a)(1) and 608(b)). Arnong the various means of
    attacking or impeaching witness credibility preserved thereunder, Rule 607(a)
    encompasses and authorizes evidence of impeachrnent by contradiction. Passmore,
    759-63 (discussing non-character-based irnpeachment by contradiction); In re Seizure of
    15
    $23,691.00 in U.S. Currency, 
    273 Mont. 474
    , 480-82, 
    905 P.2d 148
    , 152-53 (1995)
    (distinguishing    Rule 608(b) irnpeachment of character for              truthfulness from
    non-character-based impeachment of credibility); State v. Goinrnenginger, 
    242 Mont. 265
    ,
    272, 
    790 P.2d 455
    , 459-60(1990)(noting that extrinsic evidence of bias/motive to testify
    falsely was pertinent to a witness's credibility for truthfulness but not subject to the
    extrinsic evidence bar of Rule 608 because offered as impeachment evidence directly
    probative of guilt rather than as propensity evidence regarding witness's character for
    untruthfulness); State v. Hayes,
    462 P.3d 1110
    , 1117-20 (Idaho 2020)(distinguishing Rule
    608(b) cross-examination impeachment of character for untruthfulness and extrinsic
    evidence bar frorn non-character-based witness impeachrnent via extrinsic evidence of
    contradictory facts, bias, or undue influence); 28 Charles A. Wright & Victor J. Gold,
    Federal Practice and Procedure: Evidence § 6118, 113-14 (2d ed. 2019)(distinguishing
    permissible Rule 608(b) cross-examination in re witness character for truthfulness from
    Rule 607 impeachrnent evidence rebutting/contradicting truth or accuracy of witness
    testirnony); Commission Comments to M.R.Evid.607(1976)(noting "traditional methods
    of impeachment . . . preserved by this rule").4
    ¶19    Impeachment by contradiction is attacking "the credibility of a witness" by
    cross-examination or extrinsic evidence offered "to prove that a fact which the witness
    4See also § 26-1-302(9), MCA (presumption that a witness speaks the truth "may be controverted
    and overcome by any matter that has a tendency to disprove the truthfulness of [the] witness's
    testirnony," including "evidence contradicting the witness's testimony," inter alia).
    16
    asserted or relied upon in [his or her] testirnony is not true." Passmore,¶ 59. Evidence of
    impeachment by contradiction has two related but distinct purposes—first, as a basis for
    an "inference that the witness either lied or was mistaken with respect to the specific fact
    contradicted," and second, as a basis for an inference that the witness is thus a generally
    "unreliable source of information" and therefore similarly mistaken, dishonest, or
    unreliable as to the balance of his or her testimony. Passmore, ¶ 59. While impeachment
    by contradiction may relate either to a matter that is directly at issue or only ancillary or
    collateral thereto, adrnission is in either event subject to balancing under the relevance and
    limiting factors of M. R. Evid. 401-03. Passmore, ¶¶ 60-61 (recognizing Rule 403
    displacement of "too rnechanistic" common law "collateral-fact rule"). Thus, when
    relevant and admissible for non-propensity impeachment purposes under M. R. Evid.
    401-03 and 607(a), evidence of impeachment by contradiction is admissible via
    cross-examination or extrinsic evidence regarding other acts regardless of the general rule
    ofRule 404(b). See M. R. Evid. 404(b)("other acts" alternative/exception); Pelletier, ¶ 32
    (citations omitted); State v. Polak, 
    2018 MT 174
    , ¶¶ 21-23, 
    392 Mont. 90
    , 
    422 P.3d 112
    ;
    Passmore, ¶¶ 60-61.5
    5 In contrast to evidence of impeachment by contradiction, evidence of general contradiction is
    evidence offered for the non-impeachrnent purpose of either directly contradicting previously
    admitted testimony or evidence, or indirectly challenging or undermining its veracity. United
    States v. Williamson,
    424 F.2d 353
    ,355 (5th Cir. 1970)(distinguishing irnpeachment evidence and
    general contradictory evidence). Accord United States v. Finis P. Ernest, Inc., 
    509 F.2d 1256
    ,
    1263 (7th Cir. 1975) ("[i]mpeachment is an attack upon the credibility of a witness" but "[a]
    witness'[s] testimony may be contradicted without being impeached"—citing Williamson). Often
    used in tandem with the related term "credibility," "veracity" means "[c]onsistency with the
    truth[,] accuracy." VERACITY, Black's Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019).
    17
    (D) Rule 404(a) Good Character Impeachment/Rebuttal by Other Acts Evidence.
    ¶20    Distinct from Rule 607(a) evidence of impeachment by contradiction, and
    regardless of the general rule of M. R. Evid. 404(b), M. R. Evid. 404(a)(1) specifically
    authorizes admission via cross-examination or extrinsic evidence of otherwise
    inadmissible other acts evidence when relevant to rebut defense evidence that the accused
    has a pertinent good character trait inconsistent with the alleged offense, and which is
    usually elicited "for the purpose of supporting an inference that he or she is not guilty."
    Pelletier, ¶¶ 16 and 19 (citations ornitted). Accordingly, defense presentation or elicitation
    of good character evidence ("e.g., that he or she is honest, trustworthy, has moral integrity,
    or is a peaceful, non-violent, loving, caring, or law-abiding person," etc.) rnay, in the
    discretion of the court, "open the door" to cross-exarnination or extrinsic evidence
    regarding other prior bad acts to the contrary. Pelletier, ¶¶ 16 and 19 (citations omitted).
    (E) Other Acts Explaining/Correcting a False Impression or Rebutting an Attack
    on Another Witness's Testimony.
    ¶21    Distinct frorn evidence ofimpeachment by contradiction and good character rebuttal
    evidence under M. R. Evid. 607(a) and 404(a)(1), a defendant may, by opening statement
    or elicited witness testirnony, further "open the door to cross-examination or extrinsic
    evidence regarding otherwise inadmissible other acts evidence which then becomes
    relevant for the purpose of explaining or correcting a pertinent false impression or
    assertion, or rebutting an attack on the credibility of another witness. See Polak, ¶¶ 21-23;
    State v. Guill,
    2010 MT 69
    ,¶ 39, 355 Mont.490,
    228 P.3d 1152
    (internal citations ornitted);
    State v. Cesnik, 
    2005 MT 257
    , ¶¶ 15-17, 
    329 Mont. 63
    , 
    122 P.3d 456
    ; State v. Weitzel,
    18
    
    2000 MT 86
    , ¶ 35, 
    299 Mont. 192
    , 
    998 P.2d 1154
    ; State v. Veis, 
    1998 MT 162
    , ¶ 18, 
    289 Mont. 450
    , 
    962 P.2d 1153
    .
    ¶22    In Guill, the district court ruled in lirnine that various uncharged incidents of
    violence and abusive conduct by the defendant against his ex-wife and other family
    members would be admissible pursuant to § 26-1-103, MCA (transaction rule), and the
    Rule 404(b) exception for proof of comrnon plan or scheme, as proof that he subjected his
    daughter to sexual intercourse without consent(SIWC)over a period of years as charged.
    Guill, TT 3-10. The affirmative ruling was limited, however, to prior incidents of which
    the victim-daughter was aware, except to the extent that the defendant might subsequently
    "open the door," upon cross-exarnination of a State witness, to a broader scope of prior
    incidents of violence against other family members. Guill, ¶ 8. In his opening statement
    at trial, the defendant, through counsel, categorically denied committing the charged
    offense and further suggested that his daughter and ex-wife fabricated the SIWC allegation
    as a means to get money and property he intended to bequeath to his girlfriend. Guill, ¶ 9.
    During the State's case-in-chief, the district court accordingly allowed the ex-wife to testify
    beyond the limited ruling in limine regarding an incident, of which the victim was not
    aware, wherein the defendant "choked [the ex-wife] when she had tried to assert herself
    against him." Guill, ¶¶ 10 and 38. In affirming on appeal, we held that, by challenging the
    ex-wife's "credibility or bias" in his opening statement, the defendant "opened the door
    to," i.e., rnade relevant, the previously excluded choking incident to "correct" or rebut the
    19
    "impression that [she] was an aggressive, calculating wornan, intent on acquiring [his]
    wealth." Guill, ¶ 40.
    ¶23    In State v. Clemans, 
    2018 MT 187
    , 
    392 Mont. 214
    , 
    422 P.3d 1210
    , the wife of a
    defendant charged with sexually assaulting his 16-year-old stepdaughter testified on direct
    examination that, based on the defendant's prior acts of violence toward family members,
    the victim-daughter feared hirn and pleaded with the wife to not confront hirn regarding
    the alleged sexual assault. Clemans, ¶¶ 7 and 12. On cross-examination, defense counsel
    challenged the wife's staternent that the daughter feared the defendant, and thus the truth
    of her testimony and the daughter's central allegation, by asking why they returned and
    stayed in the horne ifthe daughter was so afraid of hirn. Clemans, ¶¶ 12 and 15. The wife
    reaffirmed her earlier testimony regarding the daughter's fear, but cryptically stated it was
    necessary for "our safety" to return home and ensure that "everything" appeared to "still
    [be] normal" "so we could leave [when] it was safe for us to leave." Clemans, ¶ 12. On
    redirect, the court then allowed the State, over objection and subject to limiting instruction,
    to elicit additional testirnony from the wife that the defendant had also earlier assaulted her
    son, who then left the home, and that she and her daughter returned home after revelation
    of the alleged assault in order "to put a plan together to leave safely." Clemans, ¶¶ 13-14.
    In affirming on appeal, we reasoned that by suggesting on cross-examination of the wife
    that her daughter was in fact not afraid of the defendant, and that the wife thus believed it
    was safe for thern to return horne, the defendant was atternpting "to cast doubt on the
    veracity of[the daughter's] allegation" that he sexually assaulted her. Clemans, ¶ 15. We
    20
    held that the defendant thereby "opened the door" to the otherwise inadmissible other acts
    evidence to explain the circumstances and correct the false impression that he was trying
    to create as to why the wife did not immediately protect her daughter by keeping her out
    of the home. Clemans, ¶ 15.
    (F) Relevance ofNorth Dakota Allegationsfor Non-Propensity Purposes.
    ¶24    Here, on cross-examination, defense counsel attempted to undermine the credibility
    of the girls' Mother, the initial complaining witness, by questioning her about the tension
    and acrimony between her and the defendant regarding their breakup, and further
    suggesting that she had since attempted to "inhibit the ability of the [d]efendant's family
    to see the girls." During the defense case-in-chief, McGhee attempted to further irnpugn
    the Mother by testifying that her infidelity was the primary reason for their breakup and
    that she had since been unwilling to communicate with him regarding their children. The
    rnanifest purpose of McGhee's cross-examination of the Mother, and his subsequent
    testimony further impugning her, was to suggest that she was biased and had a motive to
    fabricate the charged allegation and thus testify falsely against him.
    ¶25    In support ofhis denial ofthe alleged indecent exposure, McGhee also testified, and
    elicited sirnilar testirnony from his girlfriend and brothers, that he had always had a good
    relationship with his daughters prior to the charged allegation by the Mother in 2018. In
    addition to testifying to his "awesome" relationship with his daughters, he further testified
    that, prior to the charged allegation, they had always wanted to live with him, and that he
    had no reason to believe that they did not want to be around him. The obvious purpose of
    21
    McGhee's testirnony, and the consistent testimony of his brothers and girlfriend, regarding
    his great relationship with his daughters was to create the impression that he had always
    been a loving and caring father, to which the subject allegation of indecent exposure was
    wholly inconsistent, thus supporting a jury inference that he was not guilty of the charged
    offenses. The cornbined purpose of the intended good character/not guilty inference and
    related attack on Mother's credibility was to further provide an alternative explanation for
    the charged allegation, i.e., that Mother fabricated the allegation and then orchestrated the
    girls' subsequent affirmation in furtherance of her bias and motive to fabricate and testify
    falsely against him.
    ¶26    Under these circumstances, cross-examination of McGhee regarding the prior
    allegations that he did "something inappropriate with [his] daughters," and had "been
    accused of this kind of behavior before," was directly relevant under M. R. Evid. 401-02,
    404(a)(1), 607(a), and the other purposes exception to Rule 404(b) as non-propensity
    irnpeachment evidence contradicting his good character testimony and his related assertion
    that he had no prior reason to believe that his daughters did not want to be around him. As
    recognized in Passmore,the limited cross-exarnination regarding the prior allegations was
    not only relevant to directly contradict McGhee's assertions regarding his relationship with
    his daughters and that he had no reason to believe they did not want to be around him, but
    also to then similarly undermine the credibility of the balance of his testimony, including
    his denial of the allegation. See Passmore, ¶ 59 (discussing two-pronged effect of
    impeachrnent by contradiction). Moreover, as in Guill, it was further relevant under M. R.
    22
    Evid. 401-02 and the other purposes exception to Rule 404(b) for the related
    non-propensity purpose of rebutting his implied assertion of the Mother's bias and motive
    to fabricate and testify falsely and, as in Clernans, to correct his intended false impression
    regarding her negative view of him and rnotivation in fabricating and reporting the subject
    allegation.
    (G) Rule 403 Limiting Factors.
    ¶27      McGhee further asserts that, "[e]ven if the [other acts] evidence were properly
    deemed admissible, [the] prejudicial effect substantially outweighed any probative value
    and was thus inadmissible under Rule 403." Otherwise relevant evidence is nonetheless
    subject to exclusion "if its probative value is substantially outweighed by," inter alia, "the
    danger of unfair prejudice." M.R. Evid. 403. Here, aside from his failure to clearly assert
    a similar objection below, McGhee's assertion of unfair prejudice is problematic because
    he at the same time acknowledges that "[t]here was no discussion of the actual merits of
    the North Dakota allegations" and that "the State raised the issue" to correct or rebut his
    assertion "as to why[he and the girls' Mother] have never gotten along." He further asserts,
    "[m]ore importantly," that the North Dakota allegations "could not have been probative of
    anythine because the State had "admittedly not even seen most of the evidence in [that]
    case."
    ¶28      However, in pertinent part, the limited cross-examination went no farther than
    asking McGhee if he had previously been accused of"doing something inappropriate with
    [his] daughters" involving "this kind of behavior," and whether that might explain
    23
    Mother's animosity toward him, rather than his assertion of her alleged bias and motive to
    fabricate and testify falsely against him.            As previously noted, the limited
    cross-examination allowed had significant non-propensity relevance for impeachment and
    rebuttal purposes. Aside from more clearly revealing his assertion of fabrication and
    orchestration by Mother, and his related assertion that his daughters were thus lying, the
    related questioning on cross-exarnination and redirect further disclosed only an undetailed
    law enforcement investigation that resulted in no charges, a related civil protective order
    pending the investigation, and ultimate restoration of McGhee's parenting rights under the
    prior parenting plan. The cross-examination did not reference or require disclosure of the
    much-more graphic and alarming particulars of the prior allegations of sexual misconduct
    toward his daughters. Under these circumstances, the fact that the State rnay not have had
    detailed knowledge ofthe particulars ofthe North Dakota investigation had no diminishing
    effect on the probative value ofthe limited subject rnatter ofthe cross-exarnination for the
    impeachment and rebuttal purposes to which it pertained. We accordingly find no basis
    upon which the District Court should or could have concluded that the risk of unfair
    prejudice substantially outweighed the probative value of the limited cross-examination
    regarding the North Dakota allegations.
    (H) Alleged Unwarranted Reversal ofExclusionary Ruling In Limine.
    ¶29    McGhee further asserts that the mid-trial allowance of cross-examination regarding
    the prior North Dakota allegations violated or constituted an erroneous reversal of the
    court's pretrial exclusionary ruling in limine. However, as a threshold matter, the ruling in
    24
    limine was responsive, and thus limited in scope, to precluding the State from presenting
    or referencing the prior allegations for the asserted Rule 404(b) purpose of proving that he
    committed the charged offense in accordance with a "common plan, motive, or intent."
    The ruling in limine thus had no bearing on whether the development ofthe actual evidence
    at trial might later cause the prior North Dakota allegations to become relevant and
    admissible for some other purpose distinct frorn the purpose originally proposed by the
    State and rejected by the court.
    ¶30    Complicating the situation, we recognize that the Rule 404(b) non-propensity
    limiting instruction included in the pre-deliberation jury instruction set nonetheless
    erroneously instructed the jury that the only permissible purpose for admission and
    consideration of the other acts evidence discussed during the trial was as proof that
    McGhee committed the charged offense in accordance with a common plan, motive, or
    scheme. However, McGhee did not contemporaneously object to the adequacy of the
    limiting instruction below, nor has he raised that issue on appeal under any exception to
    the contemporaneous objection/waiver rule. The narrow focus of McGhee's objection
    below was on the threshold relevance ofthe other acts evidence under M.R. Evid. 401-02
    and 404(b). He further acknowledges on appeal that the "State raised the issue not to prove
    motive, intent, or any ofthe admissible exception[s] to 404(b), but instead [to] muddy the
    waters as to why [he and the girls' Mother] have never gotten along."
    ¶31    We generally will not hold a district court in error on a subsequent assertion in
    regard to which the aggrieved party acquiesced by failing to object, thus precluding the
    25
    opportunity for direct consideration and correction. State v. Daniels, 
    2011 MT 278
    , ¶ 36,
    
    362 Mont. 426
    , 
    265 P.3d 623
     (quoting State v. English, 
    2006 MT 177
    , ¶ 71, 
    333 Mont. 23
    ,
    
    140 P.3d 454
    ); State v. Clausell, 
    2001 MT 62
    , ¶ 25, 
    305 Mont. 1
    , 
    22 P.3d 1111
    . Having
    found the lirnited cross-examination regarding the prior allegations relevant for
    non-propensity impeachment and rebuttal purposes, and no merit to McGhee's assertion of
    Rule 403 prejudice, we have no basis upon which to conclude that any resulting prejudice
    frorn the partially erroneous Rule 404(b) limiting instruction substantially outweighed the
    significant probative value of the limited cross-exarnination allowed. See similarly, State
    v. Howell, 
    254 Mont. 438
    , 445, 
    839 P.2d 87
    , 91 (1992)(erroneous inclusion of extraneous
    staternent of purpose in Rule 404(b) limiting instruction insufficient to result in substantial
    prejudice precluding admission of otherwise relevant other acts evidence).
    ¶32    While the District Court did not sequentially step through the foregoing analysis due
    to the limited rnanner in which the parties raised and addressed the issue, we have long
    adhered to the principle that we have discretion on appellate review to independently
    exarnine the record and affirm a lower court judgment that reached the correct result, even
    if for a wrong or incomplete reason. See, e.g., State v. Marcial, 
    2013 MT 242
    , ¶ 10, 
    371 Mont. 348
    , 
    308 P.3d 69
    ; State v. Ellison, 
    2012 MT 50
    , ¶ 8, 
    364 Mont. 276
    , 
    272 P.3d 646
    ;
    State v. Hendershot, 
    2009 MT 292
    , ¶ 33, 
    352 Mont. 271
    , 
    216 P.3d 754
    . Under the totality
    of the circurnstances of this case, we hold that the District Court did not erroneously
    conclude that McGhee "opened the door" to the limited cross-examination allowed
    regarding the otherwise inadmissible North Dakota allegations.
    26
    ¶33    2. Whether the District Court erroneously imposed an unduly harsh sentence?
    ¶34     Criminal sentences eligible for statutory sentence review are subject to review on
    direct appeal only for legality. Herd,¶ 22; State v. Hinshaw, 
    2018 MT 49
    ,¶ 7, 
    390 Mont. 372
    , 
    414 P.3d 271
     (internal citations omitted). A sentence is eligible for sentence review
    if it includes an unsuspended prison term or Department of Corrections commitment of"1
    year or more." See § 46-18-903(1), MCA;Herd, VII 19-23. Sentence review is generally
    the exclusive rernedy for relief from eligible sentences challenged on the basis of
    "equitability," i.e., undue harshness, based on the length of the sentence or its
    "proportionality to the crime." Jordan v. State, 
    2008 MT 334
    , ¶ 18, 
    346 Mont. 193
    , 
    194 P.3d 657
     (citing State v. Kern, 
    2003 MT 77
    , ¶ 54, 
    315 Mont. 22
    , 
    67 P.3d 272
    ). Accord
    Bull, ¶¶ 11 and 13.
    ¶35    Here, McGhee does not allege that he received an illegal sentence. Without citation
    or analysis regarding the appropriate remedy for relief, he merely asserts that his sentence
    is "unduly harsh." The State correctly asserts that his sentence is eligible for sentence
    review, and thus not subject to review on direct appeal. McGhee filed no reply disputing
    the State's assertion. We agree with the State and summarily hold that McGhee's sentence
    is subject to sentence review, and thus not subject to review on direct appeal.6
    6The record indicates that McGhee applied for sentence review in September 2019. Due to the
    pendency of this appeal, the Sentence Review Division responded that the application was
    premature and thus instructed him to tiniely refile within 60 days offinal judgment on appeal.
    27
    CONCLUSION
    ¶36   Under the circumstances of this case, we hold that the District Court did not
    erroneously conclude that McGhee "opened the door" to the lirnited cross-examination
    allowed regarding the otherwise inadmissible North Dakota allegations. We hold further
    that, based on his eligibility for statutory sentence review, McGhee's assertion that his
    sentence is "unduly harsh" is not subject to review on direct appeal. Affirmed.
    /14 roltiL
    Justice
    We concur:
    Chief Justice
    28