Defendant appeals from a judgment of conviction on one count of unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree and two counts of sexual abuse in the first degree. On the first day of defendant’s trial, two medical expert witnesses testified that they had diagnosed the six-yеar-old child victim as having been sexually abused based on the credibility of her report; the next day, the Oregon Supreme Court issued its opinion in State v. Southard,
Because defendant was convicted, we summarize the facts in the light most favorable to the state. State v. Vidal,
Mother took B to a pediatrician, Dr. McNamara, who performed an ano-genital examinatiоn. His only relevant finding was that B’s vagina had “no obvious hymenal rim and notching [was] present.” When he asked where defendant had touched her, B pointed to the area between her anus and vagina. McNamara referred B to CAKES, a child abuse assessment center, where a medical examiner and a social worker conducted an abuse assessment. McCready, a pediatric nurse practitioner, performed a physical evaluation of
Defendant was arrested and charged with one count of unlawful sexual penetration in the first degree, ORS 163.411, and two counts of sexual abuse in the first degree, ORS 163.427. The sexual penetration charge specified that it related to the penetration of B’s anus, and the charges for sexual abuse in the first degree related to the touching of B’s buttocks and genital area. Before defendant’s trial date, however, he was released on bail and fled the country. He was arrested on a warrant six years later, and this case was tried shortly thereafter.
At trial, McNamara and McCready testified for the state as medical experts regarding their findings. McNamara testified that hе believed that B had been sexually abused, and McCready testified that she, too, had made a diagnosis of sexual abuse. Additionally, the jury watched B’s videotaped interview with the social worker at CARES. Also on the first day of trial, B testified that she remembered that defendant touched her vagina with two of his fingers, but she did not remember or recall many details.
On the second day of trial, defendant testified, and he denied that he had abused B. That same morning, the Oregon Supreme Court decided Southard.
“because the diagnosis, which was based primarily on an assessment of the [child’s] credibility, posed the risk that the jury will not make its own credibility determination, which it is fully capable of doing, but will instead defer to the expert’s implicit conclusion that the victim’s reports of abuse are credible.”
Id. at 141.
After the lunch break on the second day of trial, defendant’s counsel moved for a mistrial, arguing that, under OEC 403 and Southard, defendant had been unfairly prejudiced by the jurors having heard inadmissible evidence. He also requested that, if the motion for mistrial were denied, the court instruct the jury to disregard the portions of McNamara’s and McCready’s testimony diagnosing sexual abuse. The trial court denied the motion for a mistrial. After defendant finished testifying, the trial court instructed the jury:
“Ladies and gentlemen, yesterday the Oregon Supreme Court rendered a decision stating that a diagnosis of child * * * sexual abuse is not admissible in cases such as this. Thеrefore, you are to disregard only the witness’s statements that they made a diagnosis of child sexual abuse. All other portions of their testimony you are allowed to consider.”
Ultimately, the jury convicted defendant on all three counts.
Defendant now appeals, arguing that, in this case, the evidence of medical diagnoses of sexual abuse was so prejudicial that a curative instruction was insufficient and a mistrial should have been granted.
The state responds that the curative instruction was sufficient to remove any prejudice. The state compares this case to State v. Brown,
We review a decision to deny a mistrial for abuse of disсretion. State v. Bowen,
We note first that defendant is correct that wе have exercised our discretion in several cases to review as plain error the admission of evidence of expert medical diagnoses
The question in this case is whether the admission of the witnesses’ medical diagnoses were so prejudicial that defendant was denied a fair trial, despite the court’s instruction to the jury. We conclude that they were. Here, there were two experts, and both drew cоnclusions based entirely on B’s statements, which were not corroborated by the physical findings. The only physical evidence in this case — nonspecific findings regarding B’s hymen — was, according to the experts, not indicative of vaginal penetration, and, in any event, defеndant was not charged with vaginal penetration. Similarly, B’s own testimony, that defendant touched her vagina,
We next consider whеther the limiting instruction was sufficient to cure the prejudice. The state argues that the instruction in this case is similar to a curative instruction that was deemed sufficient in Brown,
In this case, however, the limiting instruction was not sufficient to cure the prejudicial diagnoses of sexual abuse. McNamara and McCready did not simply testify regarding whether they believed that B was truthful; rather, they stated their opinions as medical diagnoses from credеntialed experts. They aligned their expertise on one side of a pure swearing contest, involving an incident in which there were no witnesses other than the parties, and in which each party’s testimony had vulnerabilities: B changed her account of the incident, and dеfendant fled the jurisdiction. Further, a significant amount of time lapsed between the admission of
We understand that jurors are “assumed to have followed their instructions,” except in cases that present an “overwhelming prоbability that they would be unable to do so.” State v. Terry,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
The bound Oregon Reports and Westlaw state that Southard was decided on October 1, 2009; however, the version of the case available on the Oregon Supreme Court website states the case was “filed September 30, 2009.” Additionally, in the trial transcript, the trial court states on October 1, 2009, that “I read the case yesterday. I knew it was there.” Nonetheless, it appears that the case was not available to the public until October 1, 2009.
Defendant also assigns as error the jury’s 11 to 1 verdict, arguing that non-unanimous verdicts are unconstitutional. We have rejected that argument in the past, State v. Cobb,
