IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 39203
STATE OF IDAHO, ) 2013 Unpublished Opinion No. 665
)
Plaintiff-Respondent, ) Filed: September 17, 2013
)
v. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
)
CODY WILLIAM PARMER, ) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED
) OPINION AND SHALL NOT
Defendant-Appellant. ) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY
)
Appeal from the District Court of the First Judicial District, State of Idaho,
Kootenai County. Hon. John P. Luster, District Judge.
Judgment of conviction for battery with intent to commit a serious
felony, affirmed.
Sara B. Thomas, State Appellate Public Defender; Sarah E. Tompkins, Deputy
Appellate Public Defender, Boise, for appellant.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; Mark W. Olson, Deputy Attorney
General, Boise, for respondent.
________________________________________________
GRATTON, Judge
Cody William Parmer appeals from the judgment of conviction entered upon the jury
verdict finding him guilty of battery with the intent to commit a serious felony, Idaho Code
§§ 18-903, 18-911. We affirm.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The victim, S.H., a minor, went to Parmer’s residence and drank alcohol, danced, and
played cards with Parmer and his roommates, including Ms. Seeling. While S.H. and Parmer
were dancing, Parmer allegedly bit S.H. multiple times and attempted to touch her vagina. Later,
S.H., Parmer, and Seeling went into a bedroom and lay down on a bed. Seeling momentarily left
the bed and Parmer allegedly rolled on top of S.H. and began having sexual intercourse with her.
S.H. testified that she told him to stop and then pushed him off of her and S.H. left the residence
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and reported the incident to authorities. Thereafter, Parmer was arrested and charged with rape,
both forcible rape and statutory rape, as alternate theories of the charged offense.
Following trial, Parmer was acquitted of the rape charge but convicted of a lesser
included charge of battery with attempt to commit rape. The district court imposed a unified
term of sixteen years with six years determinate and retained jurisdiction. Following the period
of retained jurisdiction, the district court suspended the sentence and placed Parmer on probation
for five years. Parmer timely appeals.
II.
ANALYSIS
Parmer claims that the prosecutor engaged in a pattern of misconduct while cross-
examining defense witness Seeling. Specifically, Parmer claims that the prosecutor committed
misconduct by using inflammatory language to influence the jury and by repeating inflammatory
questions after the district court ruled that the questions were inadmissible. The State asserts that
Parmer is required to meet the fundamental error standard because he did not move the district
court for a mistrial based on the alleged prosecutorial misconduct and therefore, the question of
whether the prosecutor’s conduct deprived him of a fair trial was not first addressed by the
district court. The State further contends that the prosecutor’s questions did not amount to
prosecutorial misconduct and that any error was harmless.
Although our system of criminal justice is adversarial in nature, and the prosecutor is
expected to be diligent and leave no stone unturned, the prosecutor is nevertheless expected and
required to be fair. State v. Field, 144 Idaho 559, 571, 165 P.3d 273, 285 (2007). However, in
reviewing allegations of prosecutorial misconduct we must keep in mind the realities of trial. Id.
A fair trial is not necessarily a perfect trial. Id. When there has been a contemporaneous
objection we determine factually if there was prosecutorial misconduct, then we determine
whether the error was harmless. Id.; State v. Hodges, 105 Idaho 588, 592, 671 P.2d 1051, 1055
(1983); State v. Phillips, 144 Idaho 82, 88, 156 P.3d 583, 589 (Ct. App. 2007). Where a
defendant meets his or her initial burden of showing that a violation occurred, the State has the
burden of demonstrating to the appellate court beyond a reasonable doubt that the constitutional
violation did not contribute to the jury’s verdict. State v. Perry, 150 Idaho 209, 227, 245 P.3d
961, 979 (2010).
2
During cross-examination of Seeling, the prosecutor asked her several questions
challenging her recollection of the events and her truthfulness. During the examination, the
prosecutor provided Seeling with a transcript of her interview with the prosecutor and an
investigator. The prosecutor attempted to impeach Seeling and refresh her memory on multiple
occasions by using the unsworn transcript from the interview. Throughout the extensive cross-
examination, defense counsel objected to thirty questions and the district court sustained sixteen
of the objections. 1
On appeal, Parmer argues that the prosecutor used inflammatory language and repeated
questions after the district court made adverse rulings. Parmer asserts that the prosecutor’s
questions constitute misconduct. To demonstrate the alleged misconduct, Parmer points to
various portions of the transcript wherein the district court sustained objections to the
prosecutor’s examination of Seeling. 2 First, Parmer attempts to demonstrate the prosecutor’s
inflammatory language by pointing to the following portions of the transcript where the
prosecutor attempted to impeach Seeling:
[STATE]: Oh, okay. Well, when you were smoking and you
say that Mr. Parmer was on top of [S.H.], didn’t you
look at her at some point?
SEELING: Yes.
[STATE]: And you saw her face?
SEELING: No. I saw her arm.
[STATE]: Didn’t you look and see her face?
SEELING: No.
[STATE]: Didn’t you look and see that she was scared when
Mr. Parmer was on top of her?
SEELING: I couldn’t see her face. It was on the bed.
[STATE]: Why don’t you turn to page 24. See if that refreshes
your memory about whether or not she was scared
when Mr. Parmer was on top of her.
SEELING: (witness complies).
1
Thus, there are numerous instances in the cross-examination where the prosecutor
successfully refreshed, impeached, and/or established a lack of recall of the witness without
objection or with the objection being overruled.
2
Parmer also attempts to demonstrate misconduct by pointing to various places in the
transcript where the district court allegedly admonished the prosecutor. After reviewing the
record, we determine that the alleged admonishments were merely elaborations from the district
court explaining its rulings. Only once during the relevant cross-examination did the district
court instruct the prosecutor to move on, which he did.
3
[STATE]: What do you think now?
SEELING: That I don’t remember what happened a year ago,
and I don’t know what I said, so I’m trying to
remember as close as I can.
[STATE]: What you said is right there.
SEELING: Uh-huh.
[STATE]: Didn’t you say that--
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor; this is improper
questioning.
COURT: Not sure what the question is right now.
[STATE]: Well, I hadn’t asked it yet.
COURT: Finish your question.
[STATE]: Was she scared or not when Mr. Parmer was on top
of her?
SEELING: By what I said, yes, but what I remember--I don’t
remember it, so . . .
[STATE]: Okay. So you were lying to myself and Mr.
Kirkhart?
SEELING: I’m not saying I was lying.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; argumentative.
COURT: Sustained.
[STATE]: You were not telling the correct version of what
happened when you spoke with Mr. Kirkhart and
myself?
SEELING: I’m not saying I was lying about it.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; I’d ask that you admonish counsel.
COURT: Sustained.
[STATE]: Which version is the correct one?
SEELING: I’m saying I don’t know. I don’t remember. That
could be right; it could not be right. I don’t know.
....
[STATE]: Ma’am, when you were speaking with [defense
counsel], you indicated there was sexual contact
between yourself and [S.H.]. Is that correct?
SEELING: Yes.
[STATE]: When you spoke with Officer Moore, you didn’t tell
him that, did you?
SEELING: Nope.
[STATE]: Why is that?
SEELING: Because he wasn’t asking about me.
[STATE]: Well, he asked if anything else happened, didn’t he?
SEELING: I don’t remember.
[STATE]: You didn’t tell him because it didn’t happen. Isn’t
that right?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; argumentative, your Honor.
COURT: Sustained.
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[STATE]: Have you ever told anyone else that there was no
sexual contact between yourself and [S.H.]?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; relevance, your Honor.
COURT: Overruled. You can answer that question.
SEELING: Uh, I told you and Mr. Kirkhart.
[STATE]: Why did you do that?
SEELING: ‘Cause you were asking the questions.
[STATE]: Why would you lie to myself and Mr. Kirkhart?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor, to the nature of the
question.
COURT: Sustained.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I’d ask that you admonish counsel about this line of
questioning, sir.
COURT: Well, that’s argumentative, [defense counsel].
Rephrase your question, please.
[STATE]: Ma’am, what did you tell myself and Mr. Kirkhart?
SEELING: That [S.H.] had--
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor; calls for hearsay, an out-of-
court statement offered for the truth.
COURT: I believe it’s offered for impeachment. [State], go
ahead and proceed. You can answer the question.
SEELING: All right. That [S.H.] had her hands down my
pants.
(Emphasis added.)
Parmer claims that the above-emphasized questions demonstrate that the prosecutor used
inflammatory language “calculated to inflame the passion and prejudice of the jury.” Further,
Parmer argues that the prosecutor repeated the questions after the district court sustained an
objection regarding the line of questioning. Parmer alleges that the prosecutor’s alleged
improper questions constituted misconduct. We disagree. The questions and answers between
the prosecutor and Seeling demonstrate an inelegant effort to impeach a recalcitrant witness
using an unsworn statement. The district court initially sustained an objection to an
impeachment question based on the improper structure of the question--that it was
argumentative--and not based on any improper substantive response the question would elicit.
Eventually, the prosecutor phrased the question in an unobjectionable manner and received a
response from the witness. While the original questions may have been improper phrasing when
impeaching a witness, the questions and responses were not improper as an attempt to inflame
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the jury. Further, the sustained objection to the structure of the question did not prevent the
prosecutor from rephrasing the question, as directed by the district court. 3
Second, Parmer points to the following colloquy to demonstrate that the prosecutor
continued to ask improper questions after the district court sustained objections from defense
counsel:
[STATE]: At the time that Mr. Parmer was poised above her
moving his bare buttocks back and forth, where was
[S.H.]’s pants?
SEELING: At her ankles.
[STATE]: And how did they get down there?
SEELING: I don’t know. I was smoking. I didn’t see what
happened at that point.
[STATE]: Didn’t he rip them down there?
SEELING: I don’t know.
[STATE]: Why don’t you turn to page 23? My question is
gonna be: Do you remember whether or not he
ripped them down there? Okay. Why don’t you
answer that question first. Do you remember
whether or not Mr. Parmer ripped [S.H.]’s pants
down?
SEELING: No, I don’t.
[STATE]: All right. Take a look at page 23 and see if that will
refresh your memory.
SEELING: As a quote, I said, “I think he ripped them off.” I
don’t know if he did, her pants. I don’t know.
[STATE]: So at some point, you told somebody that you think
Mr. Parmer ripped her pants off of her?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, your Honor. Lack of foundation,
personal knowledge.
COURT: Yeah, sustained.
[STATE]: And he ripped those down to her ankles?
3
Parmer likens the prosecutor’s questions in this case to those determined to be
prosecutorial misconduct in State v. Ellington, 151 Idaho 53, 253 P.3d 727 (2011). In Ellington,
the prosecutor intentionally elicited highly prejudicial and irrelevant responses from a witness
regarding the disturbing nature of the crime and asked the victim’s spouse four questions in a
row that included a version of the gratuitous and inflammatory phrase “ran over your wife” in
reference to the defendant. Id. at 62-63, 253 P.3d at 726-27. The present case does not involve
such substantive questioning, but rather impeachment. The challenged questions did not elicit or
reveal inadmissible evidence, reference inadmissible or damaging information about Parmer, or
implore the jury to find its verdict on some improper basis. Instead, the asserted impropriety of
the questions was based upon their argumentative and repetitive nature.
6
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Same objection, your Honor. This is asked and
answered.
COURT: Sustained.
(Emphasis added.)
Parmer argues that the objected-to questions rose to the level of misconduct for two
reasons: (1) when the prosecutor asked the first objected-to question, he was aware that the
witness did not recall the statement she made to him; and (2) when the prosecutor asked the
second objected-to question, he was aware that his line of questioning was not permissible
because the district court sustained the prior objection. After reviewing the record, we conclude
that the prosecutor’s questions do not constitute misconduct. As before, the prosecutor was
artlessly attempting to impeach Seeling’s memory by having her refresh her memory using an
unsworn statement. Seeling, after apparently reading page 23 of her prior statement, stated that
“[a]s a quote, I said, ‘I think he ripped them off,’” but then indicated she didn’t know, to which
the prosecutor asked, “So at some point, you told somebody that you think Mr. Parmer ripped
her pants off of her?” which was objected to and sustained on the basis of lack of foundation and
personal knowledge. However, the question was not objectionable as lacking foundation or
personal knowledge, as Seeling had just indicated that she had previously done so. The
prosecutor then asked, “And he ripped those down to her ankles?” This improper question 4 was
objected to on the basis of asked and answered which was properly sustained and the prosecutor
moved on. The first question inquired into what the witness previously reported, while the
second question inquired into what the witness actually saw. Parmer’s first argument--that the
prosecutor knew that the witness did not recall the statement she made to him--is belied by the
record. The record indicates that the prosecutor never asked that question and that Seeling never
testified that she did not remember making those statements to the prosecutor and his
investigator. Parmer’s second argument--that the prosecutor knew the line of questioning was
impermissible due to the sustained objection--is also unpersuasive. The prior objection was
4
It is clear from the cross-examination that the prosecutor was attempting to show
inconsistencies between Seeling’s testimony and her prior interview with the prosecutor and the
State’s investigator. Seeling’s inability or unwillingness to recall certain statements and events
was frustrating the prosecutor’s effort. That does not mean, however, that the prosecutor is free
to succumb to that frustration and argue with the witness, through argumentative or repeated
questions, and should be so cautioned.
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sustained on the basis that there was a lack of foundation as to the prior inconsistent statement.
There was no sustained objection supporting the assertion that the line of questioning was
improper. In fact, nothing suggests that the line of questioning was improper in the sense of its
substance, but only as to the questions themselves.
Parmer also argues that the following questions were improper because the district court
sustained a prior objection:
[STATE]: This opinion that [defense counsel] asked you about
and that you gave us, you’re giving us that opinion
after looking at those bite marks on that girl’s body?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; argumentative, your Honor.
COURT: Sustained.
[STATE]: Well, how can you think that his advances were not
unwanted when you look at those bite marks?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection; same objection, you Honor.
COURT: Sustained. [State], she’s testified as to her
knowledge of those marks. The question did not
refer to her opinion only but what was going on at
the time. Sustained. Stay away from this.
Defense counsel objected to the first question because of the method in which the
question was asked. As discussed above, it is not misconduct to rephrase a question in response
to an objection that was sustained based on the question’s structure. The fact that the second
question suffered from similar structural flaws as the first question does not make the question
misconduct. The question, unanswered by the witness due to the sustained objection, did not
itself provide inadmissible evidence and did not elicit inadmissible testimony from the witness.
Further, the prosecutor asked the questions to rebut Seeling’s testimony that she did not observe
anything that indicated Parmer “forced himself” on S.H. See State v. Frauenberger, 154 Idaho
294, 301, 297 P.3d 257, 264 (Ct. App. 2013) (holding that an investigator’s testimony was for
rebuttal purposes and not impermissible vouching, thus no misconduct occurred). Therefore, we
determine that the prosecutor’s questions did not rise to the level of misconduct. Accordingly,
we conclude that Parmer has failed to demonstrate the prosecutor committed misconduct or that
he was deprived of due process and a fair trial.
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III.
CONCLUSION
Parmer has failed to show that the prosecutor committed misconduct. Accordingly, his
judgment of conviction for battery with intent to commit a serious felony is affirmed.
Judge LANSING and Judge MELANSON CONCUR.
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