PER CURIAM.
Defendant, M.A.W. (fictitiously, Matt), appeals from his conviction on one count of first-degree aggravated sexual assault,
We reverse.
Evidence at the trial of this matter would permit a jury to conclude that, on June 30, 2007, T.M. (fictitiously, Terry), then twenty-seven years of age, attended a party to celebrate her brother's return from Iraq. Also in attendance at the party was D.V. (fictitiously, David), Terry's boyfriend of six months, and David's long-time friend, Matt. All three consumed considerable amounts of alcohol at the party. At approximately 1:00 a.m. on July 1, Terry, Matt and David left the party and walked back to David's residence, which was located several blocks away. Although Terry had driven to the party in her car, she decided that it would be safer to leave the car where it was parked and to walk.
Once at David's house, the two men fixed themselves additional drinks and continued drinking, talking and smoking. Terry went to sleep, fully clothed, in David's bed. Thereafter, David gave Matt a blanket and pillow and directed him to sleep on the living room couch, where he had slept the prior night. David then went to sleep.
At approximately 4:00 a.m., Terry awoke to find that a man was having intercourse with her. Although she assumed the person to be David, it in fact was Matt, who quickly got up and went to the side of the bed. At this point, Terry roused David, asking him "What's going on?" "What is your friend doing in your room?" and "Get him out of here." When David asked Matt why he was in the bedroom and what had occurred, Matt invoked his friendship with David and said additionally, "Don't believe her."
Having gotten up within a minute, Terry went into the living room where she spoke briefly to David, telling him that Matt "was on me." She then left the house and called her mother, who set out for David's residence in a taxi. Terry sat on the curb, crying. When David and Matt also came outside, Terry initially refused to respond to David's questions as to what had occurred, but eventually stated that she had been raped.
Terry's mother arrived at the scene approximately thirty minutes after she was called. David was standing next to Terry, and Matt was pacing back and forth between the curb and the house. The mother placed Terry in the cab, and they returned to the location of the previous night's party to retrieve Terry's car, which Terry's mother then drove back to David's residence.
Upon questioning by her mother, Terry, who continued to cry uncontrollably, stated that all she wanted to do was to go home. However, she eventually told her mother what had occurred. On learning that she had been raped, Terry's mother insisted that Terry go to the hospital, which she did in the company of her mother and David. A medical examination disclosed that the vaginal opening appeared reddened and scraped. A rape kit was prepared. Additionally, the examining nurse took possession of Terry's dress and underpants. In the meantime, David, who had briefly returned to his residence, gave the police as evidence the sheets and blankets that had been on the bed. He then locked his home and returned to the hospital.
En route from the hospital to police headquarters, David began questioning Terry as to why she did not scream during the assault or disclose what had happened sooner. Terry's mother interpreted David's comments as unsupportive and ordered him out of the car. When he returned home, he found the front porch window open and the screen cut. Matt's belongings were gone.
Several days after the incident, Terry reported to the police that she had developed bruising on the inside of her left thigh. The police took photographs of the bruises, which were shown to the jury at trial.
At trial, Matt claimed that Terry had "come on to him" on the walk from the party to David's home. Thereafter, when Terry came to bed, she lay down in such a fashion that her pubic area rested on Matt's hand. He commenced to stroke her vagina while trying unsuccessfully to stimulate himself manually. Perceiving Terry to be responsive, he then pushed her underwear aside and performed cunnilingus on her, but stopped out of guilt and because he needed to urinate.
Forensic evidence presented at trial disclosed no seminal material or sperm on any of the swabs from the rape kit. Additionally, no seminal fluid was detected on the blanket or Terry's dress. However, seminal fluid or sperm was detected in a stain on the bed sheet and on a stain in the crotch area of Terry's underpants. DNA testing disclosed that David could not be ruled out as the donor of the fluid on the sheet; Matt could not be ruled out as the donor of the fluid on the underpants. It was disclosed that Terry and David engaged in sexual intercourse three days before the events at issue. Whether the stains on Terry's underwear were from seminal fluid or saliva was unclear. One expert ruled out the presence of saliva; the other testified that the non-sperm cells found on Terry's underwear could have come from saliva.
Following deliberations, the jury convicted defendant of first-degree aggravated sexual assault. This appeal followed.
At trial, the State introduced as fresh-complaint evidence testimony by Terry's mother that, on July 1, when she and Terry were returning from the location of the party in Terry's car, Terry, after much urging, told her mother that, while in bed, she had felt someone on top of her, and when she opened her eyes, it was Matt, and he was having intercourse with her. Additionally, the State elicited from David as fresh complaint evidence the testimony that when he and Terry were in the living room after the incident at issue, she had told him that Matt "was on me," and later, while crying on the curb, she stated after considerable questioning that she had been raped. The trial judge gave no instruction at the time that the statements were introduced or at the conclusion of the trial that the jury could not use these hearsay statements as evidence of defendant's guilt or Terry's credibility. Defendant claims that the omission constituted plain error. We agree.
The model jury charge concerning fresh-complaint evidence contains the following cautionary language:
Instead of giving this charge, the judge merely instructed, in relevant part:
The judge thus informed the jury that the fresh-complaint rule had a "narrow purpose," but he did not specifically instruct the jury that hearsay evidence admitted pursuant to that rule could not be used as proof that the offense took place or that the victim was credible. We find this omission to be critical. As the Supreme Court stated in
As a consequence of the foregoing considerations, in
The State argues that the judge's error was immaterial because the contested hearsay statements were admissible as statements of present sense impression pursuant to
Further, we find the two exceptions upon which the State relies to permit the introduction, at most, of only one of the three statements elicited by the State at trial.
Terry's statement to David in the living room that he "was on me" arguably satisfies the requirements of both of these rules.
This was a close case, the result of which turned almost entirely upon the jury's estimation of the veracity of the testimony of the two participants in the otherwise unwitnessed events, both of whom had consumed large amounts of alcohol just hours earlier. Forensic evidence tended to establish that a sexual encounter of some sort involving Matt occurred. Matt contended that he had engaged in a consensual act of cunnilingus; Terry contended that what had taken place was nonconsensual sexual intercourse. While Matt had no support other than his own testimony for his version of events, because the judge permitted the introduction of fresh-complaint evidence without providing proper limiting instructions to the jury, Terry's version of events was improperly buttressed by the testimony of both her mother and David. As a consequence, we find a reasonable doubt to exist as to whether the error led the jury to a result it would not otherwise have reached.
Reversed.