Opinion
Appellant David Morgan was charged by information with seven counts based on his alleged battery of Julie Parker.
On February 5, 1995, the date of the alleged battery, Parker told one sheriff’s deputy that Morgan had beaten her. However, at trial, Parker *1212 testified that on the date in question she was hallucinating and that Morgan was merely restraining her so that she would not leave the apartment. Parker also testified that she sustained some of her injuries as a result of falling and hitting her face on the floor.
In response to the fact that Parker had changed her descriptiоn of events, the prosecution offered expert testimony on the subject of battered women’s syndrome. A portion of this expert testimony addressed the prevalence with which battered women recant their stories.
A jury found Morgan guilty of five of the seven charged counts: two counts of assault by force likely to produce great bodily injury (Pen. Code, § 245, subd. (a)(1)); two counts of battery on a noncohabiting date (Pen. Code, § 243, subd. (e)); and one count of false imprisonment (Pen. Code, §236).
The sole issue on appeal is the propriety of the admission of battеred women’s syndrome evidence. We conclude the evidence was properly admitted and affirm.
I. Factual and Procedural Background
Julie Parker testified that she had been dating David Morgan for approximately three years prior to the events of February 5, 1995. Parker maintained a residence in El Granada and Morgan maintained a residence in San Francisco. Parker testified that she and Morgan spent at most one night each week together.
On February 5, 1995, Morgan was at Parker’s apartment. At approximately 3 a.m., a neighbor heard screams of “[g]et away from me,” and telеphoned 911. Deputies from the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office arrived and determined that the screams were coming from Parker’s apartment. Deputy Gonzales knocked on Parker’s door. Eventually Morgan opened the door halfway. Ms. Parker ran naked from the apartmеnt.
Deputy Gonzales got a sheet for Parker to use to cover herself. Deputy Gonzales testified that Parker seemed coherent and responsive and that she told him that the dispute had arisen over a night-light. Deputy Gonzales also testified that Parker told him that Morgan had hit her аnd punched her in the face.
Sometime after the deputies left, Parker went to the emergency room. Parker told the physician who treated her there that her boyfriend had *1213 assaulted her. The physician testified that Parker appeared to have sustained multiple blunt injuries to her face and bruising on her wrists and her left shoulder.
Approximately three days after the incident, Detective Babwin, also with the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office, recorded a telephone conversation with Parker in which she again incriminated Morgan. Parker stated that Morgаn hit her in the face and that he had hit her in the past but never as badly as on this occasion. This tape was played for the jury.
By the time of trial in July 1996, Parker had resumed a “close relationship” with Morgan. At trial, Parker testified to a different version of events. Parker explained that on Fеbruary 5, she had been experiencing hallucinations brought on by the ingestion of alcohol and cocaine. Parker described experiencing hallucinations on one other occasion and stated that she had asked Morgan not to allow her to leave the apartment if that should ever happen again. As for the injuries she sustained on February 5, Parker explained that she sustained the black eye when she fell on her face and that her lips were swollen because Morgan had placed his hand over her mouth both to keep her from screaming and to restrain her from going outside.
The prosecution called Ms. Allard-Wills to testify as an expert witness on battered women’s syndrome. Ms. Allard-Wills testified about common misconceptions surrounding domestic violence and explained why battered women often stay with оr return to their abusers. Ms. Allard-Wills also testified that it was common for a battered woman to recant her original story, particularly after the woman has decided to reconcile with the abuser.
The jury found Morgan guilty on five of the charged counts.
II. Discussion
Morgan argues that the trial court erred in permitting the use of expert testimony on bаttered women’s syndrome to bolster the credibility of Parker’s earlier assertions that Morgan had beaten her.
“Battered women’s syndrome ‘has been defined as “a series of common characteristics that appear in women who are abused physically and psychоlogically over an extended period of time by the dominant male figure in their lives.” [Citations.]”’
(People
v.
Humphrey
(1996)
Judicial decisions have identified some of the purposes for which such evidence may be admitted. In
Humphrey,
for example, our Supreme Court affirmed the relevance of battered women’s syndrome evidence to a claim of self-defense.
(Humphrey, supra,
Courts have reached similar conclusions as to the admissibility of expert testimony on other syndromes. For example, in
People
v.
Bledsoe
(1984)
“In a series of decisions the Courts of Appeal have extended to [the context of child sexual abuse accommоdation syndrome] both the rule and the exception of
People
v.
Bledsoe,
[citation]; i.e., expert testimony on the common reactions of child molestation victims is not admissible to prove that the complaining witness has in fact been sexually abused; it is admissible to rehabilitate such witness’s credibility whеn the defendant suggests that the child’s conduct after the incident—e.g., a delay in reporting—is inconsistent with his or her testimony claiming molestation.”
(People
v.
*1215
McAlpin
(1991)
In
McAlpin,
our Supreme Court also extended the
Bledsoe
principles, in that case to expert testimony that “dealt with the failure not of the child victim, but of the child’s parent, to report the molestаtion.”
(McAlpin, supra,
Ms. Allard-Wills’s testimony served a function similar to that endorsed in these cases. The jury had to reconcile conflicting stories given by Parker. Consistent with the reasoning of
McAlpin,
“[i]t is reasonable to conclude that on the basis of their intuition alone many jurors would tend . . .” to doubt that Parker would recant a truthful statement in order to testify in an untruthful manner, effectively prоtecting her abuser.
(McAlpin, supra,
Morgan contends that it was improper to use battered women’s syndrome evidence to restore Parker’s credibility. According to Morgan, allоwing expert testimony for such a purpose permits “an end run around” section 1107 and its prohibition against the admission of such evidence to prove the occurrence of the charged act. A similar argument was made and rejected in
People
v.
Housley
(1992)
The Court of Appeal acknowledged the relevance of the evidence, explaining that the expert’s “testimony was clearly intended to help explain [the victim’s] delay in reporting the abuse and her last-minute recantation of the charges.”
(Housley, supra,
The reasoning of
Housley, supra,
*1217 Ms. Allard-Wills’s testimony was responsive to the issuе of Parker’s credibility. We do not find it likely that the jury interpreted that testimony as a testimonial to the truth of Parker’s pretrial statements to officers. Ms. Allard-Wills testified about battered women’s syndrome in general. She expressed no opinion as to Parker. In fact, there was no suggestion that Ms. Allard-Wills had ever even spoken with Parker or that she knew any of the facts or allegations surrounding this case.
Moreover, the jury was expressly instructed that Ms. Allard-Wills’s testimony “[was] not received and must not be considered by [the jury] to prove the occurrence of the act or acts of abuse which form the basis of the crimes charged.” The instructions advised the jury that the limited purpose of that evidence was to show (if in fact it succeeded) “that the alleged victim’s reactions as demonstrated by the evidence are not inconsistent with her having been рhysically abused.” We therefore conclude that Ms. AllardWills’s testimony on the subject of battered women’s syndrome was relevant and was not used for the purpose prohibited by section 1107.
in. Disposition
We affirm.
Peterson, P. J., and Haning, J., concurred.
Notes
Unless otherwise indicated, all further statutory references are to the Evidence Code.
