State v. Jeremy R. Amidon , 198 A.3d 27 ( 2018 )


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  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for reargument under V.R.A.P. 40 as well as formal
    revision before publication in the Vermont Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter
    of Decisions by email at: JUD.Reporter@vermont.gov or by mail at: Vermont Supreme Court, 109
    State Street, Montpelier, Vermont 05609-0801, of any errors in order that corrections may be made
    before this opinion goes to press.
    
    2018 VT 99
    No. 2016-354
    State of Vermont                                               Supreme Court
    On Appeal from
    v.                                                          Superior Court, Bennington Unit,
    Criminal Division
    Jeremy R. Amidon                                               March Term, 2018
    David A. Howard, J.
    David Tartter, Deputy State’s Attorney, Montpelier, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    Allison N. Fulcher of Martin & Associates, Barre, for Defendant-Appellant.
    PRESENT: Reiber, C.J., Skoglund, Robinson, Eaton and Carroll, JJ.
    ¶ 1.   SKOGLUND, J. Defendant appeals his conviction by jury of lewd or lascivious
    conduct with a child. He argues that the trial court should have granted his motion for a mistrial
    after the State asked prejudicial questions during voir dire that tainted the jury; that the court
    erroneously admitted evidence of his prior incarceration; and that the State was improperly
    permitted to impeach the defense’s sole witness with a question concerning the molestation of her
    daughter. We affirm.
    ¶ 2.   In October 2013, defendant was charged with a single count of lewd or lascivious
    conduct with a child, second offense, for touching the vaginal area of his daughter C.A. sometime
    between July 2005 and July 2007. Prior to trial the State notified the defense of its intent to
    introduce evidence of prior bad acts, including that defendant was physically and emotionally
    abusive toward C.A. and other family members and that she felt safe when he was in prison and
    became afraid when she learned he was being released. The State indicated that it was offering
    this evidence to explain why C.A. did not disclose the sexual abuse sooner. Defendant filed a
    motion in limine seeking to exclude the evidence on the grounds that it was irrelevant and
    prejudicial.
    ¶ 3.    Following a hearing in August 2015, the court ruled that evidence of defendant’s
    anger and possible physical abuse toward C.A. and other family members was relevant and
    admissible. It found that the probative value of the evidence outweighed any prejudicial effect, as
    the State had a reasonable need to explain why C.A.’s fear caused her to disclose defendant’s act
    after several years of silence. The court held that the State did not have to wait for the defense to
    attack the witness for her delayed report, as a jury would naturally be concerned about the timing
    of the report. The court also ruled evidence of defendant’s incarceration and release was
    admissible to explain why C.A. delayed in reporting and then finally did report, as “[i]t would be
    difficult for the jury to consider why the complainant suddenly had a fear of defendant when some
    years had passed without disclosure.” The court concluded that the probative value of this
    evidence outweighed its prejudicial effect so long as proper jury instructions were given and the
    jury was not informed of the reason that defendant was incarcerated. However, it excluded the
    other evidence the State sought to introduce, including the facts underlying defendant’s 2007
    conviction for sexual assault on a minor and evidence of his alleged sexual assaults against other
    children.
    ¶ 4.    Defendant was initially tried in January 2016, but the jury was unable to reach a
    verdict. A new jury was selected in May 2016. During voir dire, the State asked individual
    potential jurors about their prior jury experience and whether that experience had affected them in
    a way that they felt they could not be fair or impartial in defendant’s case. The State then asked:
    2
    So of the folks that were on the jury, the—was there anything that
    came out in the newspaper after, that you read about the trial, that
    you were completely in disbelief that you didn’t know that when
    you were in the trial, or that irked you that you didn’t know that,
    or—so nothing about that process that—because the judge is going
    to instruct you to not read anything and not follow any newspaper,
    not to research this independently, and sometimes people are not
    happy about that, that they can’t look up what happened, and then
    sometimes they hear things after that they just don’t understand why
    they weren’t told some of the things they read about. So nobody
    had that experience where you felt like this was not a fair and
    impartial jury process?
    None of the potential jurors responded affirmatively.
    ¶ 5.    The prosecutor went on to ask the jurors several questions on other topics. After
    the prosecutor concluded her voir dire, defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s questions
    about finding out information after the trial. The prosecutor responded that the questions were
    aimed at discovering whether members of the jury panel who had served on juries the previous
    month were frustrated by the process.         The court overruled the objection, stating that the
    questioning “didn’t indicate one way or another which—what they could have read, whether it
    could have been pro-defendant or pro-State. It was neutral questioning.”
    ¶ 6.    After jury selection but prior to trial, defendant moved for a mistrial, arguing that
    the jury had been irrevocably tainted by the prosecutor’s questioning. He argued that the questions
    planted an idea in the minds of the jurors that prejudicial information was being withheld from
    them in this case, and a simple internet search would reveal that defendant had been previously
    convicted for sexual assault on a child. He argued that even if the jurors obeyed the court’s
    standard instructions not to conduct their own outside research about defendant, the State had
    created a prejudicial suspicion that other information existed. The court ruled that it would take
    up the motion at the beginning of the trial, stating that “[u]nless it is shown by the required
    supplemental exam that a juror has actually obtained inappropriate information about defendant or
    the case, the court does not believe the questioning defendant objects to is sufficient for a mistrial.”
    3
    ¶ 7.    On the first morning of trial, the court reiterated its determination that the
    questioning itself did not taint the jury. It went on to ask the jury if anyone had learned anything
    about defendant or the case since jury selection, and received no response. The jury was then
    sworn and the trial began.
    ¶ 8.    The following facts were presented at trial. Defendant lived with his wife, Yvonne
    Pratt, and their five children in a three-bedroom mobile home in Woodford, Vermont, from 2004
    to 2007. The boys slept in one bedroom, the girls in another, and defendant and Yvonne slept in
    the third. Yvonne worked a night shift. While she was at work, Fred Bessette, a friend of
    defendant, watched the children. He was paid by the State to look after the children because
    defendant was on medication and partially disabled. Defendant was usually sleeping or on his
    computer. Fred’s wife Ida accompanied him when he was at defendant’s home, but she did not
    have childcare duties and spent most of her time on another computer.
    ¶ 9.    Yvonne, one of her sons, and her daughter C.A. testified that defendant only
    interacted with his children to discipline or yell at them. Defendant made the children stand in the
    corner for hours and lick paint off the wall. He also made them sit in the “invisible chair,” which
    involved sitting with their backs against the wall and supporting their weight with their legs, and
    run laps around the mobile home park while he followed them in a vehicle. Yvonne did not
    intervene because defendant would become violent toward her in front of the children.
    ¶ 10.   In early 2007, defendant went to prison in Kentucky. Yvonne visited him there a
    few times with the children, who did not want to go. She eventually ended her relationship with
    defendant. Around 2013, defendant was released from prison. Yvonne received some court
    documents indicating that defendant wanted visitation with the children. When she told C.A. that
    defendant wanted to have contact, C.A. cried and said she wasn’t going to see him.
    ¶ 11.   C.A. testified that she was scared when she learned that defendant was getting out
    of prison and wanted contact with her because he had touched her sexually when she was younger.
    4
    She told her grandmother, who told Yvonne. C.A. refused to speak to Yvonne about defendant’s
    act, but Yvonne told her that she needed to talk to somebody. C.A. eventually told the dean of
    students at her high school, who reported the conversation to the Department for Children and
    Families, which then interviewed C.A.
    ¶ 12.   C.A. testified the lewd or lascivious conduct charged occurred when she went into
    defendant’s bedroom to tell him that dinner was ready. She was wearing a nightgown and
    underwear. He was sitting on the bed, and his hand went under her underwear. Defendant told
    her that he would hurt her mother if she told anyone. She believed him because she had heard him
    threaten her mother before and because of the way he disciplined her and her siblings.
    ¶ 13.   The jury returned a verdict of guilty. In September 2016, defendant was sentenced
    to serve four to six years. This appeal followed.
    I.
    ¶ 14.   The first issue before us is whether the trial court properly ruled that the
    prosecutor’s questions during jury selection did not amount to a prejudicial extraneous influence
    on the jury sufficient for the court to declare a mistrial.1 The decision whether to grant a new trial
    is a matter committed entirely to the discretion of the trial court. State v. Jewell, 
    150 Vt. 281
    , 284,
    
    552 A.2d 790
    , 792 (1988). The court’s decision will be upheld unless that discretion was abused
    or withheld. State v. McKeen, 
    165 Vt. 469
    , 472, 
    685 A.2d 1090
    , 1092 (1996).2
    1
    We disagree with the State’s suggestion that defendant waived this argument by failing
    to raise it in a timely fashion. Defendant objected during jury selection and renewed his argument
    in a pretrial motion, giving the trial court ample time to correct any error. Cf. State v. Bartlett, 
    137 Vt. 400
    , 405, 
    407 A.2d 163
    , 166 (1979) (noting that defendant’s failure to move for mistrial when
    facts about misconduct of juror became known ordinarily would result in waiver; “[a] defendant
    cannot gamble on a favorable verdict, but must make prompt objection and motion for mistrial”).
    2
    Defendant’s motion for mistrial was arguably incorrect because the jury had not yet been
    impaneled. State v. Herrick, 
    2011 VT 94
    , ¶ 12, 
    190 Vt. 292
    , 
    30 A.3d 1285
    . The form of
    defendant’s objection does not affect our decision to uphold the trial court. 
    Id. 5 ¶
    15.   A criminal defendant is entitled to a fair trial by an impartial jury, “free of the
    suspicious taint of extraneous influences.” State v. Wool, 
    162 Vt. 342
    , 353, 
    648 A.2d 655
    , 662
    (1994); U.S. Const. amend. VI; Vt. Const. ch. I, art. 10. A defendant who seeks a mistrial based
    on alleged jury taint must show that “an irregularity—i.e., anything creating any suspicion of
    extraneous influences—had the capacity to influence jury deliberations.” State v. Schwanda, 
    146 Vt. 230
    , 232, 
    499 A.2d 779
    , 781 (1985) (quotation omitted). If such an irregularity is shown, the
    opposing party must demonstrate that it had no actual effect on the jury. 
    Id. at 232,
    499 A.2d at
    781-82.
    ¶ 16.   Although the trial court did not use the precise language above, it essentially
    concluded that defendant failed to meet the first prong of the test described in Schwanda. The
    court ruled in response to defendant’s motion and at the outset of trial that the prosecutor’s
    questioning of the jury pool, by itself, did not taint the jury.3 It explained its reasoning when
    defendant initially objected at jury selection: the questioning was neutrally phrased and did not
    suggest that there was extraneous information favoring one side or the other. After defendant
    renewed the objection, the court also noted that none of the potential jurors responded affirmatively
    to the State’s questions at voir dire. The court pointed out that by defendant’s logic, jurors would
    be improperly influenced by the court’s routine instructions not to conduct their own outside
    research of the case. Moreover, it found no evidence that the questioning actually affected the jury
    in the manner suggested by defendant.
    ¶ 17.   The court’s decision was not an abuse of its discretion. “[T]he trial judge is in the
    best position to determine whether a jury has been tainted, and ‘[c]onsequently, every reasonable
    presumption in its favor is accorded to the ruling below.’ ” State v. Grega, 
    168 Vt. 363
    , 370, 
    721 A.2d 445
    , 451 (1998) (quoting 
    McKeen, 165 Vt. at 472
    , 685 A.2d at 1093) (alterations in original).
    3
    For this reason, we reject defendant’s assertion that the trial court failed to address his
    argument that the jury had been affected by the questions themselves.
    6
    We note that the prosecutor’s questions did not introduce any extraneous information about
    defendant to the jury panel. Cf. State v. Johnson, 
    2013 VT 116
    , ¶ 17, 
    195 Vt. 498
    , 
    90 A.3d 874
    (holding that potential juror’s comment that she knew defendant was involved in another case
    “undeniably constituted an irregularity because it introduced extraneous information regarding
    defendant to the jury panel”). Even if the questioning had the potential to suggest that there might
    be additional information about the case to which the jurors were not privy, the trial court
    concluded based on the context of the questioning, the neutral phrasing, and the lack of response
    from the jury that the possible prejudicial influence resulting from that suspicion was minimal.
    See 
    McKeen, 165 Vt. at 473
    , 685 A.2d at 1093 (noting that “the crucial factor in deciding when
    jury exposure to extraneous information requires a new trial is the degree and pervasiveness of the
    prejudicial influence possibly resulting from that exposure” (quotation omitted)). See also State
    v. McCarthy, 
    2012 VT 34
    , ¶ 26, 
    191 Vt. 498
    , 
    48 A.3d 616
    (affirming denial of motion for mistrial
    where defendant failed to show that jury view gave rise to irregularities with capacity to influence
    verdict); 
    Wool, 162 Vt. at 353
    , 648 A.2d at 663 (holding that court acted within discretion in
    denying defendant’s motion for new trial based on alleged jury bias where nonjuror’s statement to
    group of jurors that defendant “had to be on something” was ambiguous, and there was lack of
    response to court’s general inquiry about extraneous influences). Our review of the record does
    not show this to be an untenable conclusion. We therefore affirm the trial court’s decision to deny
    defendant’s motion for mistrial.
    II.
    ¶ 18.   Defendant next argues that he was denied a fair trial because the trial court admitted
    evidence of his prior incarceration during the prosecution’s case-in-chief.
    ¶ 19.   Under Vermont Rule of Evidence 404(b), evidence of prior crimes or bad acts is
    not admissible to prove that a person has a bad character or that he or she had a propensity to
    commit such acts. “It may, however, be admissible for other purposes, such as proof of motive,
    7
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident.”
    V.R.E. 404(b). The State argued below that the evidence of defendant’s prior incarceration was
    relevant and admissible for a permissible purpose, that is, to explain C.A.’s silence during the years
    after the abuse while defendant was incarcerated and her decision to finally report it in 2013. On
    appeal, defendant does not argue that the challenged evidence was irrelevant or offered for an
    impermissible purpose. Rather, he argues whatever probative value the evidence of incarceration
    had was outweighed by its prejudicial effect.
    ¶ 20.   Evidence that is admissible under Rule 404(b) must still satisfy the balancing test
    set forth in Rule 403. State v. Bruyette, 
    158 Vt. 21
    , 30, 
    604 A.2d 1270
    , 1274 (1992). That rule
    provides that relevant evidence “may be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed
    by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by
    considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”
    V.R.E. 403. The trial court has broad discretion when deciding whether to admit or exclude
    evidence under Rule 403, and we will reverse its ruling only where that discretion was abused or
    withheld. State v. Cameron, 
    2016 VT 134
    , ¶ 19, 
    204 Vt. 52
    , 
    163 A.3d 545
    .
    ¶ 21.   “Virtually all evidence for the prosecution in a criminal case is prejudicial to some
    degree at least against the accused.” State v. Parker, 
    149 Vt. 393
    , 400, 
    545 A.2d 512
    , 517 (1988).
    Thus, Rule 403 requires the exclusion of evidence only if it is unfairly prejudicial to the defendant.
    
    Bruyette, 158 Vt. at 31
    , 604 A.2d at 1274. Evidence is unfairly prejudicial when its primary
    purpose “is to appeal to a jury’s sympathies, arouse its sense of horror, provoke its instinct to
    punish, or trigger other mainsprings of human action that may cause a jury to base its decision on
    something other than the established propositions in the case.” 
    Id. (quotation and
    alterations
    omitted). In weighing the probative value of prior bad act evidence against its prejudicial effect,
    the trial court considers the prosecution’s need for the evidence, its probative value, and its
    potential to make the jury hostile toward defendant. Id. at 
    31, 604 A.2d at 1274
    -75.
    8
    ¶ 22.   Here, the trial court found that if the jury were not informed of defendant’s
    incarceration and release, it would be difficult for them to understand why C.A. suddenly became
    frightened of defendant after several years had passed during which she had not disclosed the
    abuse.4 The trial court acted within its discretion in concluding that the disputed evidence was
    necessary to an understanding of C.A.’s testimony. Without this evidence, C.A.’s delayed
    reporting would be difficult to understand, and “[t]he resulting gaps in the narrative would detract
    from its ‘ring of truth.’ ” State v. Searles, 
    159 Vt. 525
    , 529, 
    621 A.2d 1281
    , 1284 (1993); see State
    v. Ankeny, 
    2018 MT 91
    , ¶¶ 32-34, 
    417 P.3d 275
    (holding that letters defendant wrote to
    complainant from prison, which contained references to his incarceration, were admissible in trial
    for domestic assault for permissible purpose, i.e., to show why complainant delayed reporting
    assault, and trial court did not abuse discretion in finding probative value of letters outweighed
    prejudice).
    ¶ 23.   Moreover, the court limited the prejudicial effect of the evidence. Pursuant to the
    court’s pretrial ruling, the reason for defendant’s incarceration was not disclosed to the jury.5
    4
    Defendant argues that he made clear prior to trial that he was not challenging C.A.’s
    credibility based on her delay in reporting. Thus, he says, her behavior could have been explained
    by other, less prejudicial information in the record, including testimony of a detective and a social
    worker that victims of abuse often wait months or years before coming forward; evidence of
    defendant’s harsh discipline against the children and violence towards their mother Yvonne Pratt;
    and evidence that Pratt had ended the relationship and defendant was seeking visitation after some
    years had passed. However, the trial court concluded that the jury would wonder about the delay
    even if defendant did not highlight it and would have a difficult time understanding C.A.’s
    behavior if it did not know that defendant had been in prison for several years and was released
    around the time C.A. made her report. “[T]his Court will not interfere with discretionary rulings
    of the trial court that have a reasonable basis, even if another court might have reached a different
    conclusion.” 
    Parker, 149 Vt. at 401
    , 545 A.2d at 517 (quotation omitted).
    5
    Defendant claims that the State twice told the jury during its cross-examination of his
    witness, Ida Bessette, that his prior incarceration was for the same conduct for which he was on
    trial. The record does not support this assertion. The State asked Bessette, “Did you testify at
    your deposition that you did not believe he did what he was in jail for?” Later, the State asked,
    “So your testimony, as you sit here today, is that the fact that you’ve been friends with him for
    twenty years and that you don’t believe he could have committed a crime he was actually in jail
    for does not prevent you from testifying truthfully about what you saw?” At no point did the
    9
    Further, the court instructed the jury that the evidence was admitted for the limited purpose of
    explaining the timing of C.A.’s report and that they should not consider it as evidence of
    defendant’s character or that he committed the offense for which he was on trial. The court also
    instructed the jury that the reason for his prior incarceration was not relevant and that they should
    not speculate about or consider it. In the absence of evidence to the contrary, we presume that the
    jury followed the court’s limiting instructions. State v. Messier, 
    2005 VT 98
    , ¶ 15, 
    178 Vt. 412
    ,
    
    885 A.2d 1193
    ; see also Commonwealth v. Foxworth, 
    40 N.E.3d 1003
    , 1013-14 (Mass. 2015)
    (affirming trial court’s admission of evidence of defendant’s incarceration where evidence was
    relevant to motive and court limited prejudice by excluding reason for incarceration and instructing
    jury they could not consider it for propensity purposes); State v. Palermo, 
    168 N.H. 387
    , 396, 
    129 A.3d 1020
    (2015) (holding trial court did not abuse discretion by admitting evidence of defendant’s
    prior incarceration, parole status, and civil lawsuit against state prison for limited purpose of
    explaining how victim and defendant met where criminal conduct underlying incarceration was
    not introduced and court issued limiting instructions to jury). Therefore, the admission of the
    evidence was not error.
    III.
    ¶ 24.   Finally, defendant claims that he was denied a fair trial because the State was
    permitted to impeach his witness with a question concerning the molestation of her daughter.
    ¶ 25.   Defendant’s sole witness was Ida Bessette. She testified that she and her husband
    Fred were at defendant’s home in Woodford up to twelve hours a day, seven days a week. From
    where she usually sat, she could see into defendant’s bedroom and could hear conversations in that
    room. She never saw any interactions between defendant and the children that bothered her. She
    prosecution mention the reasons underlying defendant’s prior incarceration during its examination
    of Ida Bessette, and the questions did not suggest what his crime may have been.
    10
    testified that neither C.A. nor the other children were allowed to go into the bedroom. Fred was
    the only person who was allowed to wake up defendant when he was sleeping.
    ¶ 26.   On cross-examination, the following exchange took place between the prosecutor
    and the witness:
    Q. And so is it your testimony that you would have known if
    something had happened?
    A. Yes.
    Q. You believe that, if anything had happened to C.A., you would
    have known about it?
    A. Yeah.
    Q. But you didn’t know when your own daughter was the victim
    of a molestation?
    Defense counsel objected, arguing that the molestation of Bessette’s daughter was irrelevant. The
    prosecutor argued that the question was permissible for impeachment purposes, because Bessette’s
    claim that she would have known if C.A. had been molested was called into doubt by the fact that
    Bessette’s daughter had been molested for years under her own roof. The trial court ruled that
    Bessette could answer the question but that no further inquiry into the topic would be allowed.
    Bessette answered, “Yes, I did.” The State then asked, “And were you told by someone about
    that?” The defense objected, and the court sustained the objection on the ground that it was a
    collateral issue.
    ¶ 27.   On appeal, defendant argues that the State should not have been permitted to ask
    Bessette about the molestation of her daughter because it was irrelevant, inflammatory, and
    concerned a collateral issue.
    ¶ 28.   The trial court has broad discretion in determining the scope of cross-examination,
    and its decision will not be reversed unless that discretion is abused or withheld. State v. Voorheis,
    
    2004 VT 10
    , ¶ 28, 
    176 Vt. 265
    , 
    844 A.2d 794
    . The court’s ruling was not improper. Bessette
    asserted that she would have known if anything had happened to C.A.                The prosecutor’s
    11
    questioning was intended to suggest that Bessette was not as observant as she claimed or that she
    was deliberately covering up for defendant due to her personal friendship with him. A witness’s
    personal bias and capacity to observe or remember are fair subjects for cross-examination.
    Reporter’s Notes, V.R.E. 607. The rule is that “a witness may be cross-examined as to collateral
    facts which tend to test his accuracy or veracity, but the cross-examiner must be content with the
    witness’ answers, and cannot contradict them by independent proof.” State v. Jackson, 
    126 Vt. 250
    , 256, 
    227 A.2d 280
    , 284 (1967); see also State v. Berard, 
    132 Vt. 138
    , 147, 
    315 A.2d 501
    , 508
    (1974) (explaining that credibility of witness is always open to attack, though court may restrict
    examination on collateral issues). The trial court acted within its discretion in allowing the single
    question and restricting further examination on the topic.
    Affirmed.
    FOR THE COURT:
    Associate Justice
    12