STATE OF OREGON, Appellant, v. RONALD LESLIE LEACH, Respondent.
98082072F; CA A106514
Court of Appeals of Oregon
August 30, 2000
9 P.3d 755 | 169 Or. App. 530
Chris W. Dunfield argued the cause and filed the brief for respondent.
Before De Muniz, Presiding Judge, and Haselton and Wollheim, Judges.
HASELTON, J.
De Muniz, P. J., concurring.
The state appeals from a pretrial order excluding evidence in a prosecution for child sex abuse. The trial court concluded that
Defendant is charged with three counts of sexual abuse in the first degree,
Before trial, defendant moved to exclude evidence of two incidents that both occurred in the summer of 1993 when S was 10. In the first incident, S and her friend, A, who was also about 10 years old, were watching television with defendant and S‘s mother. As they watched, defendant turned to the girls and asked them “if they had any body hair.” A did not reply and could not recall whether S replied.
In the second incident, which occurred at about the same time, defendant asked S and her friend B, who was also about 10, whether they had any pubic hair. Both girls replied that they did. Defendant then asked B if he “could see hers” and pulled on the elastic waistband on the front of her panties. When B slapped defendant‘s hands, he let go.
Defendant contended that evidence of those incidents should be excluded under
The state responded that evidence of defendant‘s comments to S was relevant not only to intent but also to “plan” or “preparation.” The prosecutor argued, particularly, that “defendant was trying to desensitize the victim in order to perform the crimes“—that defendant was “engaging in grooming type of behavior with the victim.” The state further argued that defendant‘s remarks to A and B and his conduct towards B were also relevant to intent and corroborated S‘s account of the two 1993 incidents. Finally, the state argued that
The trial court granted the motion to exclude, reserving its ability to revisit that ruling depending on developments at trial:
“As already expressed by the Court, the rulings here on a Motion to Exclude are not rulings of absolute exclusion because certain facts or issues which are raised at trial may
make the prior acts admissible for a different reason than presently anticipated. “However, absent such additional reasons for admissibility, the two acts referenced in Defendant‘s motion would only have relevancy to show Defendant‘s bad character or Defendant‘s propensity to act in conformity therewith. Therefore, pursuant to
OEC 404(3) , the Defendant‘s motions are granted. The Court would also state that even if the Court could find that Defendant‘s referenced prior acts were admissible to show plan or preparation by desensitization as suggested by the State, the Court would still have to find underOEC 403 that the potential prejudice of the prior acts substantially outweighs any probative value.”
The state appeals. For purposes of analytic coherence, we consider, in turn: (1) Defendant‘s comments to S; (2) defendant‘s comments to A and B; and (3) defendant‘s conduct in tugging at B‘s panty waistband.
On appeal, as before the trial court, the state argues primarily that evidence of defendant‘s questions and comments to S about “body hair” and pubic hair is admissible as relevant to defendant‘s intent and to “plan” or “preparation.”3 We agree with the trial court that that evidence is not relevant to intent. However, the trial court erred, on this record, in concluding that the evidence was not relevant to “plan” or “preparation.” Moreover, to the extent the trial court invoked “balancing” under
We note, at the outset, that there is a substantial and unresolved question as to whether “prior bad acts” evidence can ever be admitted as being relevant to intent where, as here, the defense is that the charged crime never occurred.4
“1) Does the present charged act require proof of intent?
“2) Did the prior act require intent?
“3) Was the victim in the prior act the same victim or in the same class as the victim in the present case?
“4) Was the type of prior act the same or similar to the acts involved in the charged crime?
“5) Were the physical elements of the prior act and the present act similar?” 301 Or at 555-56.
Here, at the least, evidence of defendant‘s prior statements to S did not meet Johns‘s fourth (similarity of type of act) and fifth (similarity of physical elements) requirements. Asking a 10-year-old girl questions about her sexual development in the presence of her mother or friends is not the same or similar type of act as the intimate physical contact, constituting sexual abuse in the first degree, that is charged here.5 Moreover, although defendant allegedly commented on S‘s sexual development while engaging in the charged crimes, the differences in “physical elements” are manifest: The prior incidents involved comments and questions to S, without any physical touching, in the presence of others. Consequently, the trial court correctly concluded that evidence of defendant‘s alleged remarks to S was irrelevant to intent.6
We return to the state‘s theory of relevance: Defendant‘s comments to S were a part of a scheme to “desensitize” her to sexual subject matter so that she would ultimately be more susceptible to defendant‘s advances. In a word: grooming. That theory was explicitly presented to the trial court, see 169 Or App at 533, and defendant‘s only relevance response was that the evidence did not satisfy Johns.8 On
In sum, the trial court concluded, without elaboration, that the evidence was irrelevant to “plan” or “preparation,” see 169 Or App at 534, and the only discernible basis in the record for that ruling is erroneous. Defendant urges no alternative basis for affirmance with respect to relevance—and, in this posture, we perceive none.10 Consequently, we conclude that the trial court erred in determining that evidence of defendant‘s alleged comments to S was irrelevant to “plan” or “preparation.” Further, to the extent that the trial court purported to rule, alternatively, that the evidence, if relevant, could be excluded under
We proceed to the admissibility of defendant‘s comments to S‘s friends, A and B. The state argues, as it did to the trial court, that those remarks are relevant to intent. We reject that argument for the same reasons that we rejected it in the context of defendant‘s remarks to S. The state argues, alternatively, that S‘s friends’ testimony would be admissible as corroborating a significant element of her account of the
Finally, the state argues that evidence that defendant tugged at B‘s panty waistband in an apparent effort to view her genital area was relevant to intent. That argument fails because, at the least, that alleged conduct does not meet Johns‘s fourth and fifth requirements. The state‘s additional argument on appeal that such evidence would corroborate S‘s account of the charged crimes was not raised before the trial court, and we do not consider it. The trial court did not err in excluding that evidence.
Exclusion of evidence of defendant‘s alleged remarks to the complainant, S, reversed and remanded; otherwise affirmed.
DE MUNIZ, P. J., concurring.
I write separately to emphasize that we are not holding that the state‘s proffered evidence of defendant‘s prior statements to the victim necessarily will come into evidence in this case. Our holding is that the trial court erred in granting defendant‘s pretrial motion in limine to exclude the evidence. The basis of our reversal is that the trial court erred in concluding that the evidence was not admissible under
In this case, we have concluded that the evidence may fall within the “preparation” or “plan” provision of
In short, the foundational requirements for the type of evidence at issue in this case are an open question. I write to emphasize that, in ruling as we do, we are not foreclosing defendant from challenging the scientific basis of the state‘s proffered “grooming” evidence.
