The complainant testified that
Defendant testified that he called the complainant up to the office to discuss his suspicions that she was dating someone else and had been spying on him. He admitted slapping her with force twice, but denied stomping on her. Defendant testified that he had apologized for the slaps when he saw that her eye had begun to swell and that he then began crying. Following this, he stated that the complainant then asked him to make love to her and that he complied. There were no other witnesses to the sexual assault, making the trial primarily a credibility contest.
Defendant contends that he was denied his right to a fair and impartial trial because of the admission of testimony concerning other wrongful acts. We agree.
The prosecutor asked the complainant if she had moved out of the marital home. She indicated that she had moved out two days after marrying defendant, because he had knocked her down and beat her in such a manner that everything went black. When asked if she had called the police on that occasion, she said that defendant had blocked the door with a piece of furniture and had watched her “all night with a gun and told me he would blow my brains out if I [had dared] try to leave.” She also said that her face had become all swollen and black and blue as a result of the beating. She further testified that, after a time, defendant had let her out of the bedroom to talk to someone at the door but only after he had made her put on makeup and sunglasses. She then had run out of the house and had jumped into that person’s car and had gone to a hospital emergency room. When asked if she had gone back to live with defendant at a later time, defense counsel objected to “this whole line of questioning.” The court sustained the belated objection. The prosecutor then asked the complainant if she had had any other physical encounters with defendant, and she said that there had been and that it had occurred when she had thrown a surprise birthday party for defendant. As she began preparing to give details regarding the incident, the court excused the jury and asked defense counsel if he had an objection. Defense counsel said that he did object. The prosecutor then agreed to focus on the date of the event that led to the charges. The jury, however, heard about the first beating a second time when, during cross-examination, the complainant stated that she had fled the house on February 13 because defendant had “beat the living hell out of me” and fur ther stated that she had fled the home again on April 30, which was the day of defendant’s birthday party. The court sua sponte ordered these comments stricken. When defense counsel asked the complainant why she had not gone to the hospital after the incident leading to the charges, she stated that she had been to' the hospital previously “on beatings.”
Generally, we review a trial court’s decision to admit evidence for an abuse of discretion.
People v Bahoda,
The trial court has a duty to limit the introduction of evidence and the arguments of counsel to relevant and material matters, MCL 768.29; MSA 28.1052, and to assure that all parties that come before it receive a fair trial.
Reetz v Kinsman Marine Transit Co,
Pursuant to MRE 404(b), evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of a person in order to show action in conformity therewith. Such evidence may, however, be admissible to show a motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, scheme, plan, or system in doing an act, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident when material.
People v VanderVliet,
It is further the case that other-acts evidence is not admissible simply because it does not violate MRE 404(b). The trial court must also determine whether the evidence is relevant under MRE 402 and whether the danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighs the probative value of the evidence under MRE 403. VanderVliet, supra at 74-75. In the case at bar, the trial court questioned the relevance of the bad-acts testimony and determined that it was more prejudicial than probative after the jury had already heard it. We agree with this determination. On this record the testimony regarding the prior beating was not logically relevant to an element of the charged offenses. The prior beating was not accompanied by a demand from defendant for sex. We also find that the prior beating was not relevant to the issue of consent to sexual intercourse because the complainant never testified that she, aware of how violent he could get from the earlier incident, stopped resisting him. If the complainant had testified that she fearfully submitted, the earlier beating would be relevant to vitiate the apparent consent. That situation is not found here because the complainant’s resistance never wavered, and, from reviewing her testimony, we can conclude that defendant was, on this occasion, even more physically violent when he demanded sex than he had been when he physically assaulted her months earlier. We also note that the trial court determined, after the fact, that the testimony regarding the first beating was more prejudicial than probative. As stated in Bahoda, supra at 291, such determinations are best left to a contemporaneous assessment of the presentation, credibility, and effect of the testimony by the trial judge.
Error in the admission of evidence is not grounds for reversal where the error was harmless.
People v Robinson,
We find that defendant is entitled to a new trial under these circumstances where (1) the prosecutor did not move to admit this evidence in accordance with MRE 404(b)(2), (2) the prosecutor cited an improper purpose for admitting the bad-acts evidence, (3) such evidence was not logically relevant to an element of the charged offenses, (4) the trial court found the evidence more prejudicial than probative, and (5) the jury may have given undue weight to this prejudicial testimony.
Defendant further argues that the court improperly shifted the burden of proof when it instructed the jury regarding the issue of consent. We disagree. Defendant did not object to this instruction. Therefore, appellate review is foreclosed absent manifest injustice.
People v Van Dorsten,
The trial court gave an instruction that was virtually identical to CJI2d 20.27. The Michigan Criminal Jury Instructions, however, do not have the official sanction of the Michigan Supreme Court.
People v Petrella,
In
People v Thompson,
Defendant next alleges twenty specific instances of prosecutorial misconduct. Defendant challenges one remark made during the prosecutor’s opening statement, ten remarks made during the prosecutor’s initial closing argument, and nine additional comments contained in the prosecutor’s rebuttal closing argument. Defendant argues that he is entitled to a new trial on the basis of individual and cumulative error. A trial court has the duty to limit the arguments of counsel to relevant and material matters. MCL 768.29; MSA
Defendant did not object to eighteen of the twenty alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct at trial. Appellate review of improper prosecutorial remarks is generally precluded absent an objection because it deprives the trial court of an opportunity to cure the error.
People v Stanaway, supra
at 687. Thus, a well-tried, vigorously argued case ought not be overturned because of isolated improper remarks that could have been cured had an objection been lodged.
Duncan, supra
at 17. An appellate court will still reverse if a curative instruction could not have eliminated the prejudicial effect of the remarks or where failure to review the issue would result in a miscarriage of justice. Stanaway,
supra
at 687. See, e.g.,
People v Meir,
Defendant urges this Court to consider
People v Hurt,
We have reviewed each of the alleged instances of prosecutorial misconduct and find almost all of them to have been proper argument. For example, during his initial closing argument the prosecutor attempted to rebut defendant’s testimony that the complainant had been a good actress when she had testified by stating: “[H]e [defendant] is the biggest actor in this court. He should go to law school and defend O. J. Simpson.” In response to an objection by defense counsel, the court stated “Quiet in the courtroom, please” and properly instructed the jury that the arguments of counsel are not evidence. Defendant did object to this argument, and, thus, we review the matter to determine whether the argument denied defendant a fair trial. Bahoda, supra at 267. We find that this comment did not deny defendant a fair trial. This was not a situation where a prosecutor com pared a defendant with an infamous defendant. 4 On the one other occasion when defense counsel objected, the court properly instructed the jury that the jury’s recollection of the testimony was controlling.
Defendant testified that he spoke with the complainant for eighteen straight hours on the telephone while he was in jail. When defendant called the complainant as a witness she denied that this had ever happened. Defendant claims the following related argument of the prosecutor was improper:
Ladies and gentlemen, I don’t know a single man in the world who can talk to his wife or girlfriend for 18 hours. Men just aren’t like that. I’ve never met a man like that in my life. This guy [defendant] should be a used car salesman. Don’t buy the lemon from this man.
After a careful review of the record, we conclude that no miscarriage of justice will result from our refusal to consider this unobjected-to comment because a cautionary instruction could have cured any impropriety in the remark.
People v Slocum,
Defendant next contends that he was deprived of his rights to due process, a fair trial, and a jury trial when the jury foreperson returned a verdict that convicted him of no crime. We disagree. When a jury’s verdict is uncertain, a defendant may be entitled to appropriate relief. In
People v Smith,
Finally, defendant contends that he was deprived of effective assistance of counsel at trial. We agree. After defendant was convicted, defendant’s appellate counsel moved for an evidentiary hearing regarding this claim. The trial court denied the motion. Defendant has not appealed this ruling, apparently being satisfied that the alleged instances of ineffective assistance of trial counsel are adequately established by the existing record. Failure to hold an evidentiary hearing forecloses appellate review of a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel unless the record contains sufficient detail to support defendant’s claim.
People v Barclay,
To find that a defendant’s right to effective assistance of counsel was so undermined that reversal of an otherwise valid conviction is justified, a defendant must show that counsel's performance fell below an objective standard of reasonableness and that the representation deprived him of a fair trial.
People v Pickens,
Defendant argues that counsel was ineffective at trial because counsel failed to make a timely objection to the complainant’s bad-acts testimony, failed to object to improper prosecutorial arguments, and failed to object to the jury instruction regarding consent. Counsel’s failure to object to the consent jury instruction was not ineffective, because the instruction was proper. Counsel’s failure to object to the alleged. instances of prosecutorial misconduct was not ineffective, because none of the challenged remarks deprived defendant of a fair trial and because the lack of an objection may have been trial strategy. In Bahoda, supra at 287, n 54, the Supreme Court stated that there are times when it is better not to object and to draw attention to an improper argument.
We do find, however, that counsel's failure to enter a timely objection to the bad-acts testimony was a serious error that prejudiced defendant.
Pickens, supra
at 303.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
Notes
Examples of such injustice include when a court effectively removes a possible verdict from a jury’s consideration, when a court rules as a matter of law with respect to an element of the offense, when a court repeatedly misidentifies joint defendants, and when a court repeatedly misdeflnes self-defense in a murder trial. Kelly, supra at 272, n 3.
The other seventeen “depublished” Court of Appeals opinions are:
Oliver v Nat’l Gypsum Co, Cement Division,
Bernthal v Aetna Casualty & Surety Co,
People v Sledge,
American Nat’l Fire Ins Co v Frankenmouth Mutual Ins Co,
People v Leary (On Remand),
People v Sledge (On Rehearing),
Ginther v Ovid-Elsie Area Schools,
People v Lopez (After Remand),
People v Brooks (On Remand),
Gingold v Berkley Clinic, PC,
Wieringa v Blue Care Network,
Jishi v General Motors Corp (On Remand),
Mapes v Auto Club Ins Ass’n,
People v Miller,
People v Premen,
People v Jackson,
Pigeon v Radloff
We also note that
Oliver, supra,
was cited as “binding precedent” in
Said v Rouge Steel Co, 209
Mich App 150, 155;
Compare
People v Kelley,
