OPINION
Defendant Rickard Lindgren appeals from a Sery plea resulting in his conviction for aggravated sexual abuse of a child, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1 (1995). We reverse and remand.
FACTS
Defendant was charged with aggravated sexual abuse of a child. The amended information alleged that from 1988 to 1990 defendant had committed more than five acts of sexual abuse as defined by section 76-5-404.1 of the Utah Code on his teenage daughter. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1 (1995). 1
Defendant admitted committing the acts, but denied he possessed the specific intent required by the statute. Namely, defendant denied that he committed any acts with the “intent to cause substantial emotional or bodily pain” or with “the intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person.” See id. § 76-5-104.1(1).
Prior to trial, defendant filed a motion for a bifurcated trial. He requested that in the first trial, the jury only be informed that defendant was charged with sexual abuse of a child, based upon the permission slip and masturbation incidents. If the jury found defendant guilty of that charge, defendant requested that a separate trial, with the same jury, be held to determine if defendant likewise committed the aggravating circumstances, based upon the breast check incidents. The trial court granted the motion.
The day of trial, the State filed a motion in limine, requesting the trial court exclude testimony from defendant and his sisters as to certain conduct they witnessed or suffered as children. Defendant sought to offer his own testimony and that of his adult sisters that they had been touched by their parents in the same fashion when they were children, including the same type of “breast checks” on the sisters, and that they had been taught that such touching served a medicinal and educational, not a sexual, purpose. The State alleged that such evidence was not relevant to the instant case, and that even if it was relevant, the evidence was more prejudicial than probative.
The trial court granted the State’s motion and excluded the testimony, concluding it was “not relevant to these proceedings.”
2
Defendant thereafter entered a guilty plea as to the crime of aggravated sexual abuse of a child, conditioned upon his right to appeal the trial court’s evidentiary ruling.
State v. Montoya,
ISSUE
The narrow issue in this case preserved by defendant’s Sery guilty plea is whether defendant should have been permitted to introduce evidence of his and his sisters’ childhood experiences which he claims is relevant to his lack of specific intent to commit aggravated sexual abuse of a child. Defendant contends the trial court committed reversible error by prohibiting testimony about the sexual conduct he witnessed or suffered as a child. He alleges the evidence is essential to corroborate his claim that he lacked the specific intent to commit the charged crime.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“When reviewing a trial court’s ruling regarding admissibility of evidence under Rule 403, *we will not overturn the court’s determination unless it was an “abuse of discretion.’””
State v. White,
ANALYSIS
I. Rule 403
The trial court ultimately concluded that evidence of defendant’s childhood sexual experience was “only marginally relevant” to the instant matter. We disagree certainly as to the aggravating acts, the breast checks, as we conclude the testimony was central to whether defendant engaged in the acts to arouse or gratify his or his daughter’s sexual desires or because he believed such conduct served an educational or medicinal purpose based on his unique upbringing. 4
A criminal defendant has the right to introduce evidence tending to disprove his or her specific intent to commit a crime.
State v. Sessions,
In the instant case, defendant’s childhood experiences support his claim that he did not intend to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of himself or his daughter when he performed the breast checks, but that he believed his behavior was medicinal and educational and appropriate behavior among family members. Thus, the evidence is highly relevant in that it tends to disprove an element of the charged crime; namely, defendant’s specific intent.
Nevertheless, Rule 403 provides that although relevant, evidence
may
nonetheless
be excluded
“if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.” Utah R.Evid. 403. Rule 403 is an “inclusionary” rule. It presumes the admission of all relevant evidence except where the evidence has “an unusual propensity to unfairly prejudice, inflame, or mislead” the jury.
State v. Dunn,
Under a Rule 403 analysis, the trial court may find evidence to be unfairly prejudicial, and therefore inadmissible, “if it ‘appeals to the jury’s sympathies, arouses a sense of horror, provokes the instinct to punish,’ or otherwise ‘may cause the jury to base its decision on something other than the established propositions of the case.’ ”
Carter v. Hewitt,
Utah courts have often considered a criminal defendant’s right to present evidence tending to disprove his or her specific intent to commit a crime under a Rule 403 balancing test. The Utah Supreme Court addressed the admissibility of evidence in an aggravated sexual abuse case in which the defendant was seeking a diminished capacity instruction in light of his testimony and that of two psychiatrists regarding his intent to commit the crime.
State v. Sessions,
[T]he trier of fact should have the benefit of whatever evidence bears on the intent of a defendant when specific intent or purpose is an element of the crime. Therefore, ... basic rules of evidence pertaining to materiality and relevance require that a defendant have the right to adduce evidence which would tend to disprove the existence of a specific intent.
Id. at 645 (footnote omitted).
In another case, the supreme court reversed two conspiracy convictions, holding the trial court erred by excluding expert testimony regarding the defendant’s mental capacity and therefore his specific intent to commit the charged crimes.
State v. Miller,
Again, in
State v. Smith,
Finally, this court considered a case in which the trial court refused to permit the defendant to present certain evidence that he had been abused by his father as a child.
State v. Olsen,
The only issue in this ease was whether defendant had the requisite intent to commit aggravated sexual abuse of a child, as he had admitted to performing the acts. Nevertheless, the trial court excluded any reference to defendant’s or his sisters’ childhood experiences. The trial court in its Rule 403 analysis reasoned that focusing on defendant’s childhood would cause undue delay, confuse the jury because they might be misled into believing the experience was an excuse for defendant’s conduct, and divert the focus of the trial. Although the evidence might have somewhat increased the length of the trial, we cannot say its total exclusion was reasonable. Other than defendant’s own bald assertions, he had no other evidence to present to the jury regarding his lack of specific intent. The evidence was clearly not cumulative. We have found no legal support for the exclusion of evidence tending to disprove specific intent unless it was cumulative.
See Smith,
II. Harmful Error
Finally, even though the trial court erred in refusing to admit the evidence in this case, we will only reverse if the error was harmful. A trial court’s error is harmful “if absent the error there is a reasonable likelihood of an outcome more favorable to the defendant.”
State v. Dunn,
This court must therefore presume that absent the trial court’s error, there is a reasonable likelihood of an outcome more favorable to defendant. Accordingly, we reverse and remand.
CONCLUSION
We hold that evidence of the sexual conduct defendant and his siblings witnessed or experienced while growing up was relevant to disprove an element of the crime of aggravated sexual abuse of a child. Moreover, we conclude the trial court’s ruling excluding it under Rule 403 was unreasonable. Finally, because there is not an adequate record before this court, we find the error harmful and therefore reverse and remand.
ORME, P.J., and JACKSON, J., concur.
Notes
. Section 76-5-404.1 provides
(1) A person commits sexual abuse of a child if, ... the actor touches the anus, buttocks, or genitalia of any child, the breast of a female child younger than 14 years of age, ... with intent to cause substantial emotional or bodily pain to any person or with the intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire of any person....
[[Image here]]
(3) A person commits aggravated sexual abuse of a child when in conjunction with the offense described in Subsection (1) ...
(g) The accused committed, in Utah or elsewhere, more than five separate acts, which if committed in Utah would constitute an offense described in this chapter, and were committed at the same time, or during the same course of conduct, or before or after the instant offense. ...
(4) Aggravated sexual abuse of a child is punishable as a first degree felony by imprisonment in the state prison for a term which is a minimum mandatory term of 3, 6 or 9 years and which may be for life.
Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-404.1 (1995).
. Neither the State’s motion in limine, nor the trial court's ruling on that motion or its subsequent denial of defendant's application for certificate of probable cause, indicate the scope of the court's ruling. The record does not clearly state whether this testimony is excluded from the first, the second, or both trials. In granting the State’s motion, the court never distinguished between the two trials. However, the court's language indicates the ruling applied to both trials before the same jury. The court states "I'm going to grant the State's motion to exclude the testimony of abuse by defendant's parents to the defendant or defendant's parents to his siblings as finding that it is simply not relevant to these proceedings." (plural). We simply cannot determine with the case in the posture of a Sery plea and the limited record before us what the court intended or, more importantly, what defendant understood when he entered his guilty plea to the aggravated sexual abuse charge. Thus, for purposes of this appeal, we assume the ruling applied to both stages of the bifurcated trial.
. On appeal, we deal with the court’s ruling on the State’s motion in limine under a Rule 403 analysis even though the trial court’s original holding was that the evidence was not relevant. We do so at the request of the parties and to facilitate proceedings on remand.
We note for guidance on remand that we do not consider the trial court’s ruling excluding the evidence as to the sexual abuse charge based upon the masturbation incident to be unreasonable. The evidence was either not relevant to this charge or so marginally relevant as to be reasonably excluded under Rule 403. As this conduct alone would support the sexual abuse charge, we need not reach the permission slip incident.
. We focus our analysis on appeal on the aggravating factors, the breast check incidents, as defendant entered his Sery guilty plea to aggravated sexual abuse of a child. If the evidence was improperly excluded, then we necessarily must reverse and remand.
. The expanded version of a
Sery
plea, approved by the supreme court in
State v. Montoya,
