Appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion, made pursuant to Criminal Rule 118, to seal the records of his arrest in January 1999. Following an evi-dentiary hearing, the trial court concluded that appellant had not met his burden of proving, by clear and convincing evidence, that he had not committed a crime, and thus was not entitled to relief under Rule 118. See Super. Ct.Crim. R. 118. Appellant contends that the trial judge erred in applying the wrong legal standard and in failing to consider the possibility that the assault, if committed, was in self-defense. He also claims that the trial judge abused his discretion in excluding from evidence testimony which would have established his reputation for veracity and for peacefulness. Although there is some merit to one of appellant’s evidentiary challenges, we conclude that any error was harmless, and, accordingly, affirm.
I.
In January 1999, appellant was arrested and charged with the robbery of Ismael Diare, a cabdriver who claimed that appellant had punched him in anger after Diare had mistakenly taken a less-than-direct route to appellant’s home in Northern Virginia. After a preliminary hearing, the court found no probable cause for the arrest and dismissed the robbery charge. Thereafter, the government charged appellant by information with two misdemeanors, simple assault and taking property without right. The government subsequently entered a
nolle prosequi
to these charges in March 2001, and appellant filed a motion under Criminal Rule 118 for the seating of the records relating to his arrest. During the hearing on the motion, Diare claimed that appellant assaulted him, whereas appellant and William Natter, a friend who accompanied
The judge ruled that appellant had not shown by clear and convincing evidence that he had not committed a crime:
There is much to be believed and disbelieved on both sides. There really are. But one thing that I’m unable to believe based on listening to the witnesses, and that is I’m unable to accept the notion that there was no physical action taken by Mr. Rose with respect to this incident. I come to that conclusion because, first of all, it’s sort of not common sense; but secondly, there’s the information that his knuckles were bruised. And finally, I guess just as a matter of credibility, the manner in which it is alleged that Mr. Diare, quote, “set this up” is not believable to me.
Were I to be ruling on this case as a regular criminal case, I don’t have any reason to say anything other than that I would say that there is not proof beyond a reasonable doubt. There’s no question that I would say that. No question that I would say that. But that’s not what I’m asked to rule on.
And do I believe that there was no offense committed by Mr. Rose beyond a reasonable doubt — -not beyond a reasonable doubt — by a preponderance of the evidence? I mean, I can’t say that. I can’t say that because I am not convinced of his candor and accuracy of his perception, for that matter, with respect to these events. I do not believe that this record supports a clear and convincing conclusion that he was, without provocation, physically attacked and that that’s what happened. I can’t conclude that. So I don’t. I don’t know what happened that night. But I know I cannot reach a conclusion by clear and convincing evidence.
... with respect to “clear and convincing” and “preponderance of the evidence,” it really doesn’t matter which I use, even though the correct standard is clear and convincing, because I would not come to this conclusion by a preponderance of the evidence either. Why? Because I cannot reach the 51 percent. I cannot reach the 51 percent.
II.
A. Rule 118
If a person has been arrested for a criminal offense, but the prosecution is terminated before trial, that person may request to have the arrest records sealed.
See
Super. Ct.Crim. R. 118(a);
District of Columbia v. Hudson,
B. Self-Defense
Appellant claims that the trial judge erred in failing to consider the fact that even if he did hit Diare, he did so in self-defense, and therefore he did not commit a crime. We disagree with the government’s initial contention that appellant is precluded from making a self-defense argument because he denied ever hitting Diare. Even where the accused maintains that he did not commit an assaultive act, he is still allowed to submit, as an alternative argument, that if the finder of fact disbelieves his factual testimony and finds that he did hit the victim, he is nonetheless not guilty on the theory that he did so in self-defense.
See Wilson v. United States,
The judge was presented with conflicting testimony: Diare maintained that he was grabbed from behind by one of his passengers while the other alighted from the car, came around to the driver’s side window, and beat him about the head and chest. Appellant testified that it was Diare who punched him in the face, then pulled him into the cockpit of the vehicle and beat him some more, and that after appellant was able to exit from the car, Diare kicked him in the face. Appellant was steadfast that all the while he never responded in kind. An investigating officer had noticed, however, that appellant’s knuckles were bruised the morning following the altercation. And it was undisputed that Diare had called the police immediately after the fight, whereas appellant did not report an assault.
The judge resolved this conflict against appellant stating that, “I am not convinced of [appellant’s] candor and accuracy of his perception, for that matter, with respect to these events. I do not believe that this record supports a clear and convincing conclusion that he was,
without provocation,
physically attacked and that that’s what happened.” (Emphasis added). Thus, the judge not only disbelieved appellant’s contention that he never punched Diare, but also did not believe that he hit Diare in response to the latter’s aggression. This decision, based on the judge’s assessment of credibility, is beyond the purview of appellate review.
See Mikas v. United States,
C. Evidentiary Rulings
Appellant objected to three evidentiary rulings of the trial judge, which (1) prohibited testimony as to appellant’s reputation for veracity and peacefulness; in his case in chief (2) did not allow a rebuttal witness to testify about appellant’s reputation for truth and veracity; and (3) prohibited a witness from testifying on re-direct examination as to appellant’s reputation for peace and good order. He also claims, for the first time on appeal, that the trial judge plainly erred in not allowing testimony which would have exposed Diare’s bias. Of these arguments, only the claim with respect to testimony as to appellant’s reputation for peacefulness raises a substantial question; but we conclude that, even if the judge’s ruling was erroneous, any error was harmless, and thus there was no abuse of discretion.
1. Reputation for peace and good order
Walter Fischer had known appellant in a professional context for over thirteen years. When counsel questioned Fischer about appellant’s reputation for peace and good order, the trial judge sustained an objection to the question, ruling that “the only issue with respect to Mr. Rose is whether or not he was assaulted that night and no other issue with respect to his, quote, assaultive behavior or peace and good order is relevant.”
“Relevant evidence is ‘that which makes the existence or non existence of a [contested] fact more or less probable’ than it would be without the evidence.”
Jones v. United States,
The defendant in a criminal proceeding “is generally allowed to raise at trial character traits which are antithetical to the charged offense.”
Hack v. United States,
The general rule in civil cases for assault and battery, on the other hand, is that “the character of neither party is an issue and cannot be the subject of attack, unless it is first attacked or supported by the adversary.”
Phillips v. Mooney,
Phillips
was relied on in
Thompson,
which considered a variety of civil claims made by a former employee of the District of Columbia library system stemming from the termination of her employment.
See Thompson,
In the present case, both as to Thompson’s claim of assault and battery and as to Maury’s counterclaim of assault and battery, neither party claimed self-defense. But, both parties claimed the other party initiated the assault. Thus, the issue at trial was, “Who was the aggressor?” The trial court erred by not admitting evidence of Thompson’s threats and assaults of her coworkers and, further, by not admitting evidence of Maury’s peaceful character. Since the evidence at trial of Thompson’s and Maury’s alleged assaults of each other consisted mainly of the testimony of Maury and Thompson, making the issue essentially one of credibility, the error was not harmless. It warrants reversal and remand for a new trial on the assault claims.
Id.
at 299-300 (citing
Montgomery v. Dennis,
In this case, even though appellant did not claim self-defense, the trial court found that appellant had acted “without provocation,”
i.e.,
that he was the aggressor. The nature of the proceeding
We are satisfied, however, that this error did not cause prejudice requiring reversal for abuse of discretion.
See Johnson v. United States,
2. Reputation for truthfulness
Fischer was also questioned as to appellant’s reputation for truth and veracity, but the trial judge sustained an objection to this testimony, ruling that Rose’s “credibility has not been challenged and that’s what it takes to raise that issue at trial.” A defendant in a criminal proceeding is given wide latitude to place the evidence of his good reputation for truthfulness into evidence, particularly when his credibility is besmirched.
See Cooper,
The civil nature of a Rule 118 proceeding is therefore determinative in evaluating whether the trial judge erred in refusing to admit the proffered evidence of appellant’s reputation for truthfulness. Had this been a criminal prosecution, appellant would have been entitled to introduce evidence of his reputation for truthfulness and veracity even if it had not been directly challenged.
See Cooper,
3. Bias
In his cross-examination of Diare, appellant inquired into events surrounding Diare’s previous termination from another cab company, Blue Top Cabs. Appellant’s counsel proffered that, upon being fired by Blue Top Cabs, Diare threatened to “blow up” the company, and otherwise threatened violence against his former employer. At trial, appellant sought to question Diare about this incident in order to show that
“Bias” refers generally to “all forms of partiality which may be proven by extrinsic evidence,” and is present, inter alia, when a witness has a general willingness or motivation to testify falsely on the stand.
See In re C.B.N.,
In this case, because the relevance of the proffered evidence to Diare’s bias was never suggested by appellant, the judge did not rule whether the proffer would support cross-examination for bias. As noted by the trial judge in connection with another evidentiary ruling, however, Diare’s termination from his previous job had taken place three years before the assault for which appellant was arrested. Thus, the argument made on appeal, that Diare would have been motivated by that experience to lie in court in order to protect his present employment, was not so plain or obvious that the trial judge should have raised it sua sponte; nor do we think, in light of the appellant’s high burden under Rule 118, and the judge’s comment that appellant’s version did not make common sense, that the trial court’s failure to consider the now-suggested bias theory resulted in a manifest injustice.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellant contends that the trial court did not apply the proper legal standard. Although the trial judge expressed that what he was being asked to do was "so unnatural to me”, the record of the judge’s oral ruling makes clear that the judge recognized that his role was to find whether appellant had proved, by clear and convincing evidence, that he had committed no crime.
. The ex-wife’s testimony was, in turn, countered by the plaintiff, who sought to introduce her previous contradictory assertion, made in an affidavit filed in a divorce action, that her then-husband “has an extremely terrible temper.”
Phillips,
. The appellant also called John Massoud, who testified on direct examination solely about Massoud's impressions of Diare. He was cross-examined concerning Massoud's affiliation with another cab company that appellant patronized. On re-direct examination, counsel asked Massoud about appellant’s reputation as a passenger for peace, good order, and stability. The trial judge sustained the government’s objection to this questioning.
Unlike Fischer’s proffered testimony, Mas-soud’s testimony on rebuttal was excluded by the hearing judge not on relevance grounds, but because it was outside the scope of cross-examination. "Redirect examination is limited to matters which were first raised on cross-examination, to which the opposing party is merely responding on redirect.”
Brown,
. This is a generous assumption, for in excluding Fischer’s character testimony, the trial court commented that appellant had not been called "a liar.”
. Appellant vaguely offered an unnamed rebuttal witness — that he says on appeal would have been Officer Scott — to testify as to his reputation for truth and veracity. The trial judge similarly disallowed this testimony reasoning that, because the appellant’s truthfulness had not been challenged, evidence of his good reputation for veracity was irrelevant. As appellant's credibility was called into question only by Diare’s conflicting testimony, we cannot say that the judge abused discretion in concluding that appellant’s truthfulness had not been attacked in a manner sufficient to allow him to introduce evidence of his reputation for veracity.
