Defendant appeals from judgments of conviction for unlawful sexual penetration, sodomy, and rape. Although defendant assigns numerous errors to the trial court, we address only whether the trial court’s failure to sua sponte refuse to permit the complainant’s mother to comment on the complainant’s credibility was an error requiring reversal. We hold that the error is plain and requires that we reverse defendant’s convictions and remand for a new trial.
Defendant began dating the complainant’s mother, Eagles, in August 2008. In January 2009, defendant traveled with the complainant by train from Modesto, California, to Bend, Oregon. After arriving in Bend, defendant rented a motel room with one queen-sized bed. During the night, defendant removed the complainant’s clothes and engaged in sexual intercourse with the complainant, even though she continually said “no.”
In the weeks following the incident, the complainant became angry and upset. Eventually she began cutting herself and skipping school. Two to three weeks after the trip, the complainant gave her mother a letter attempting to explain what had happened. When Eagles spoke to the complainant, the complainant explained that defendant had “forced” himself on her at the motel the night they had arrived in Bend.
At trial, in response to the prosecutor’s question, “[w]hat did [the complainant] tell you,” Eagles stated:
“She told me that he forced himself on her, and I’m like, ‘Okay, well, how far did things go?’ and she told me that it went all the way. And I waited like so many hours and let her repeat it to me again that way I knew for sure she wasn’t lying”
(Emphasis added.) Following the trial, defendant was found guilty on all counts.
Defendant argues that Eagles’s comment, “And I waited like so many hours and let her repeat it to me again so that way I knew for sure she [the complainant] wasn’t
The decision of an appellate court to review “unpreserved or unraised error” is “made with utmost caution.” State v. Fults,
Under Oregon law, “a witness, expert or otherwise, may not give an opinion on whether he believes a witness is telling the truth.” State v. Middleton,
The rule is “straightforward” in instances where “one witness states directly that he or she believes another witness, or that the other witness is honest or truthful. However, statements that fall short of such overt vouching also may be impermissible.” State v. Lupoli,
In this instance, Eagles’s testimony that she waited “for so many hours” so she “knew for sure that [the complainant] wasn’t lying” was a direct comment that her daughter was truthful and that she believed her daughter’s accusations against defendant.
The state argues, however, that the admission of Eagles’s testimony does not qualify for plain error review because this court would have to choose between competing inferences, one of which is that defendant may have chosen
In determining whether to exercise our discretion to correct the error, we generally consider the following factors:
“the competing interests of the parties; the nature of the case; the gravity of the error; the ends of justice in the particular case; how the error came to the court’s attention; and whether the policies behind the general rule requiring preservation of error have been served in the case in another way[.]”
Ailes,
The state argues that we should decline to correct the error because one of the factors we must consider is “whether the record would have developed differently if the appellant had raised” the error at trial. See State v. R. H.,
The fact that a curative instruction may be “sufficient to dispel the jury’s possible contamination,” Brown,
We stated in Lowell that, in “a case that boil[s] down, in large part, to a credibility contest between the victim and defendant, evidence commenting on the credibility of either was likely to be harmful.”
Under defendant’s theory of the case, his sexual contact with the complainant was unlawful, but was not forcible — resulting at most in convictions for Class C felonies — not Class A felonies as contended by the state. As noted, the issue of force turned solely on the complainant’s testimony. Viewed in that light, we conclude that the gravity of the error and the ends of justice require that we exercise
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
ORAP 5.45(1) prohibits review on appeal any error “unless the claim of error was preserved in the lower court * * *, provided that the appellate court may consider an error of law apparent on the record.”
