¶ 1. Defendant appeals from a jury verdict that he violated a temporary relief-from-abuse order and also violated conditions of release imposed in an earlier criminal case. Defendant raises two unrelated questions for review. 1 First, he challenges the denial of his motion for mistrial. Second, he challenges the validity of one of his probation conditions. We address and affirm each issue in turn, but remand for the trial court to consider the parties’ stipulation as to defendant’s sentence.
I.
¶ 2. Defendant was charged with two counts arising from the same alleged incident: (1) violation of a term of a relief-from-abuse (RFA) order that required him to remain at least three hundred feet from his girlfriend and her residence and (2) violation of a condition of release from an earlier criminal charge that prohibited him
¶ 3. Defendant challenged the credibility of both the girlfriend and the third-party observer, and the cross-examination of the girlfriend produced the evidentiary incidents that underlie the first issue on appeal. Defense counsel attempted to cross-examine the girlfriend about her mental health and alcohol use, and she gave answers that defendant argues are irrelevant and so prejudicial as to require a new trial. The girlfriend’s testimony included the following exchange:
Defense counsel: You have, and I don’t mean any disrespect, I hope you will understand this, but you suffer from PTSD, is that right?
State: Objection, Your Honor.
Court: Overruled for now, but we’ll see where this goes.
Girlfriend: Are you kidding me? Like why are you doing this?
Defense counsel: Well, I mean it’s cross-examination. I don’t need to give a reason.
Girlfriend: Will you refresh my mind why did I put that restraining order on him January 22nd? Was that the night he tried to shoot me? He got pulled over with a loaded gun in his truck.
State: Judge, I’m going to object at this point.
Court: Yes, I think that’s warranted.
The State — not the defense — made the only objection, and the court apparently sustained the objection. 3 Defendant did not ask for a curative instruction or to strike the testimony. After the defense counsel resumed questioning, the girlfriend again answered beyond the scope of the question:
Defense counsel: You have drinking issues?
Girlfriend: No.
Defense counsel: You did February 2nd?
Girlfriend: I was drinking, yes, because [defendant] was cheating on me and abusing me. I did drink.
Defendant then moved for a mistrial. The court denied the motion and stated that the girlfriend’s responses were “invited error.” Again, defendant did not ask the court to strike the testimony or for a curative instruction. Both the State and the defense referenced the girlfriend’s statements in their closing arguments. After the jury verdict, defendant moved for judgment of acquittal or new trial, which was denied.
¶ 4. Defendant argues the court abused its discretion by not granting a mistrial because the girlfriend’s comments were too prejudicial. Specifically, defendant argued that the girlfriend’s evidence violated Vermont Rule of Evidence 404(b) because it was “[ejvidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts [offered] ... to prove the character of a person in order to show that he acted in conformity therewith.” In support of the relief defendant seeks, he contends that the State’s trial strategy rested upon the credibility of the girlfriend. He claims that the State had no other evidence apart from the girlfriend’s testimony, nor any reliable corroboration of her story, and that the State relied upon the girlfriend’s unresponsive testimony in its closing statement. He notes that the jury asked for a read-back of the entire testimony of the girlfriend, showing what importance they placed upon it. 4 He argues that he needed to test the girlfriend’s credibility to successfully challenge the State’s case and that her nonresponsive and prejudicial answers should have been subject to a curative instruction. Thus, he argues that the testimony was not invited error, but unresponsive answers to proper questioning.
¶ 5. On these bases, he argues that the denial of his motion for a mistrial was an abuse of discretion and reversible error. He further argues that the court’s failure to grant lesser relief, such as a curative instruction, was plain error.
¶ 6. We review the denial of a motion for mistrial for abuse of discretion.
State v. Messier,
¶ 8. In reaching this conclusion, we recognize defendant’s argument that the State had a weak case and the girlfriend’s credibility was central to the jury’s consideration of the charges. In fact, the State had the additional eyewitness testimony of the third-party observer. Defendant had no alibi witness and notably did not call his mother to testify — the person who apparently was with him that morning and, according to the girlfriend, drove him to the girlfriend’s house. We cannot agree that the State’s case was so weak that the weight of the nonresponsive testimony was obviously controlling.
¶ 9. There is another reason for our conclusion. We have held, in previous rulings on mistrial motions, that any potential prejudice to the defendant could be reduced in large part by the court’s prompt issuance of a curative instruction. E.g.,
State v. Mears,
¶ 10. We noted in Turner that “defense counsel bears some responsibility to inform the court if he or she feels corrective action is necessary in order to cure an error.”
If this Court were indiscriminately to entertain claims of error which defense counsel expressly — perhaps, strategically — declined to pursue before the trial court, it would encourage counsel, at times when correction is simple, to convey the impression that all is well while preparing to seek reversal in the event of an adverse verdict.
Id.
at 403-04,
¶ 11. The same principle applies to this case. Defendant did not timely object to the girlfriend’s first nonresponsive answer, which was the most prejudicial. More importantly, defendant did not seek a remedy
¶ 12. We recognize that the trial court’s characterization of the girlfriend’s testimony as invited error was an exaggeration. See
State v. Smith,
II.
¶ 13. The second issue defendant raises on appeal is whether one of his probation conditions is overly broad and therefore invalid. The relevant facts are as follows. Defendant’s first sentencing hearing was on November 29, 2012. After hearing testimony regarding defendant’s efforts to improve his own behavior, the court sought probation conditions that would be rehabilitative. To that end, defense counsel requested home-confinement furlough pursuant to 28 V.S.A. § 808b, noting that it was important that defendant be “very well monitored.” For the violation of the RFA order, the court sentenced defendant to six to ten months, all suspended with three months to serve on home-confinement furlough. For the violation of conditions of release, he was further sentenced to two to six months, all suspended with probation, to be concurrently served with the other sentence.
¶ 14. When defendant reported to a correctional center in order to begin his home-confinement furlough, the Department of Corrections (DOC) confined him instead of furloughing him. Defendant moved for emergency relief, and the trial court stayed defendant’s sentence pursuant to Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 38(a), effectively releasing him, and ordered sentence reconsideration pursuant to Criminal Rule 35.
¶ 15. At the sentence reconsideration hearing on January 17, 2013, the court removed the home-confinement furlough condition and replaced it with a work-crew condition, based on the court’s understanding that DOC would follow that direction. At the same time, the court added a condition that if defendant was no longer able to live at his parents’ address, 68 US Route 2 in Grand Isle, then the probation officer had to approve where defendant would live while serving his probation. The condition reads: “Defendant] to reside at 68 US Route 2; any change in residence must be approved in advance by the [probation officer].” Along with other alterations, the court changed the suspended sentences from running concurrently to consecutively, increasing the total length of the sentence.
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¶ 16. Defendant argues that the added condition restricting his place of residence is overbroad and unduly restrictive, relying upon
State v. Freeman,
¶ 17. Defendant concedes that we review his unpreserved objection to his probation condition for plain error only. The
standard for finding plain error is high: “(1) there must be an error; (2) the error must be obvious; (3) the error must affect substantial rights and result in prejudice to the defendant; and (4) we must correct the error if it seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings.”
State v. Herrick,
¶ 18. In
Freeman,
the defendant’s sentence included several special conditions, one of which was: “Defendant] shall reside/ work where [probation officer] or designee approves. Defendant] shall not change residence/employment without prior permission of [probation officer] or designee.”
¶ 19. The present case is distinguishable from
Freeman.
Defendant’s condition, unlike those at issue in
Freeman
or
Moses,
indicates that defendant should live at the specific address of his parents’ home unless unable to do so, and only then would the probation officer be able to determine an alternative. This condition was imposed as a means of replacing the home-confinement furlough which the DOC would not implement. The home-confinement furlough in turn was sought by defendant and was imposed after the court found that defendant functioned best while supervised and working. The court’s decision to require defendant to reside at a specific address was therefore related to the rehabilitative purpose of keeping defendant near the supervision of his family and his employer.
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Unlike
Freeman
and
Moses,
the condition here is “fine-tuned to the specific rehabilitative and preventative goals applicable to this case.”
Moses,
¶ 20. Defendant raised another issue on appeal related to the modified sentences the court imposed after the DOC rejected home confinement. The issue was settled by a stipulation of the parties. We therefore remand for the trial court to consider the stipulation.
Affirmed as to the motion for mistrial and the validity of defendant’s probation condition. Remanded for the trial court to consider the parties’ stipulation regarding the sentence imposed.
Notes
Defendant originally raised another issue involving his sentence, but the parties have agreed to a resolution of that issue, and it is no longer before us. As we state in the text, the trial court has to consider the stipulation of the parties. See infra, ¶ 20.
Defendant also challenged the State’s proof of service of the REA order, but that element is not relevant to the mistrial ruling at issue here.
It is unclear what the prosecutor was objecting to and also unclear whether the court made a definitive ruling on the objection. In any event, the testimony came into evidence before there was any ruling, so the proper motion was to strike it. See V.R.E. 103(a)(1). This motion must be timely made. See
State v. Kinney,
171
Vt. 239, 253,
Because defendant made no motion to strike, we review the introduction of the initial nonresponsive testimony only for plain error. Id. Clearly this testimony was the most prejudicial. Nevertheless, defendant has argued his mistrial claim as arising from the second incident of nonresponsive testimony and the cumulative effect of both. In light of defendant’s position, the discussion in the text assumes that defendant’s argument is fully preserved.
The read-back occurred, but only up to the point of the testimony on which the motion for mistrial was based.
The criminal case was apparently related to the RFA proceeding because the condition of release prevented defendant from having contact with the girlfriend and the third person who lived in the same house as the girlfriend.
The parties have now stipulated that the trial court was without authority to impose this increase in sentence. See infra, ¶ 20.
Defendant has argued that the condition does not serve the rehabilitative goal because it requires defendant to live at a particular address and not with his parents if they were to move. We conclude that defendant is seeking unnecessary fine-tuning.
