Present: Carrico, C.J., Compton, Stephenson 1 , Lacy, Hassell and
Keenan, JJ., and Poff, Senior Justice
JAMES LLOYD JENKINS
OPINION BY
v. Record No. 961459 SENIOR JUSTICE RICHARD H. POFF
September 12, 1997
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
We awarded this appeal to consider whether the trial court's
admission of certain expert testimony introduced by the
Commonwealth constituted reversible error.
A jury assembled in the Circuit Court of the County of
Henrico found that "[d]uring the period September, 1992 through
March, 1993 . . . James Lloyd Jenkins did . . . commit aggravated
sexual battery on . . . a male minor child under the age of
thirteen years old . . . [in violation of] Virginia Code Section
18.2-67.3". 2 In a final judgment entered February 22, 1994, the
trial judge confirmed the verdict and imposed the twenty-year
sentence fixed by the jury.
On appeal to a panel of the Court of Appeals of Virginia,
Jenkins contended, inter alia, that "the trial judge erred in
1
Justice Stephenson participated in the hearing and decision of
this case prior to the effective date of his retirement on July 1,
1997.
2
In relevant part, Code § 18.2-67.3 provides as follows:
A. An accused shall be guilty of aggravated sexual
battery if he or she sexually abuses the complaining
witness, and
1. The complaining witness is less than thirteen
years of age . . .
. . . .
B. Aggravated sexual battery is a felony punishable by
confinement in a state correctional facility for a term
of not less than one nor more than twenty years . . . .
allowing expert testimony on an ultimate fact at issue . . .
[and] in allowing the expert witness to testify to hearsay
statements of the child". Jenkins v. Commonwealth, 21 Va.App.
222, 223, 463 S.E.2d 330, 330-31 (1995). With regard to the
first contention, the panel held that "[b]ecause that testimony
invaded the province of the jury and was not harmless, the ruling
was reversible error." Id. at 226, 463 S.E.2d at 332. Upholding
Jenkins' argument concerning the child's hearsay statements, the
panel reversed the conviction on both grounds.
Upon a rehearing en banc, the Court of Appeals expressly
agreed that "the trial court erred in allowing the expert to
testify that the child had been sexually abused"; the court
ruled, however, that "such error was harmless in light of the
other evidence adduced at trial." Jenkins v. Commonwealth, 22
Va.App. 508, 517, 471 S.E.2d 785, 789 (1996). Finding no merit
in Jenkins' argument on the hearsay issue, the Court affirmed the
conviction. We awarded Jenkins an appeal to consider the hearsay
issue and whether the Court of Appeals erred in finding that the
admission of expert testimony on an ultimate issue of fact was
harmless.
Expert opinion on an ultimate fact in issue is inadmissible
in a criminal case because it "invade[s] the province of the
jury." Llamera v. Commonwealth, 243 Va. 262, 264, 414 S.E.2d
597, 598 (1992). 3 Such an invasion implicates the due process
3
Cf. Code § 8.01-401.3(B) (rule applicable in civil cases).
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and fair trial guarantees of the Constitution of the United
States. "[B]efore a federal constitutional error can be held
harmless, the court must be able to declare a belief that it was
harmless beyond a reasonable doubt 4 ." Chapman v. California, 386
U.S. 18, 24 (1967); see Mu'Min v. Commonwealth, 239 Va. 433, 441-
42, 389 S.E.2d 886, 892 (1990), aff'd 500 U.S. 415 (1991); Dunn
v. Commonwealth, 222 Va. 750, 753, 284 S.E.2d 807, 808-09 (1981).
We will apply that standard of review.
The victim identified in the indictment was a male child
born February 26, 1990. In September 1992, his mother began
observing radical changes in his behavior indicating precocious
sexual awareness. In March 1993, she took her son to see a
licensed clinical psychologist. The psychologist conducted ten
interviews with the child. He testified in detail to several
statements couched in sexual language made by the child and to
certain physical demonstrations the child performed with his own
body and with male dolls illustrating sexual conduct between a
male adult and a male child. Asked if he had formed "an opinion
. . . whether [the child] was suffering from any psychological
disorder", he said that he "suffers from an adjustment disorder",
and that "[a]n adjustment disorder is a persistent or unusual
reaction to some identifiable stress." Asked further to identify
4
Compare the standard for collateral review of constitutional
error, that is, "whether the error had 'substantial and injurious
effect or influence in determining the jury's verdict.'" Brecht
v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 637 (1993) (quoting Kotteakos v.
United States, 328 U.S. 750, 776 (1946)).
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the stressor underlying the disorder, the expert opined that the
child "had been sexually abused."
Explaining its finding that admission of this testimony was
not prejudicial, the Court of Appeals said that "[w]hen an
element of the crime is fully established by other competent
evidence, an error in improperly admitting evidence with respect
to that point is harmless." Jenkins, 22 Va.App. at 518, 471
S.E.2d at 790. The "other competent evidence" the Court
considered "[m]ost probative" was "appellant's admission that he
participated in one sexual episode with the child." Id.
The Court had reference to a statement written and signed by
the defendant in the presence of a police investigator. That
statement was read into evidence as follows:
I was sitting in the recliner and Michael was sitting
in my lap, as we watched TV. I began to fantasize how
Michael would look and act as he got older. He was
leaning against my chest and sitting on my lap. I
reached down and picked him up, holding him between his
legs and laid him beside me in the chair, because my
thoughts for him were sexy, as he was laying on top of
me. He laid down beside me and looked up and said I
love you, Bubba. All this took place at my mom's house
and within a short period of time. When I reached
down, I placed my hand on his penis and held it there
for about a minute before I moved him over to the side,
because I was having sexual fantasies as to how he
would be as he got older and mature. I was thinking
how it would be to have oral sex with him, as he would
tell me, 'I love you.' This was the only time that I
touched Michael's penis, or any other part of him in a
sexual way. We were both fully clothed at the time.
Code § 18.2-67.3 provides that "[a]n accused shall be guilty
of aggravated sexual battery if he or she sexually abuses the
complaining witness . . . ." The term "sexual abuse" is defined
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in § 18.2-67.10(6)(a) as "an act committed with the intent to
sexually molest, arouse, or gratify any person, where . . . [t]he
accused intentionally touches the complaining witness's intimate
parts or material directly covering such intimate parts . . . ."
That definition was recited in an instruction to the jury.
Clearly, the defendant's handwritten statement satisfies
that definition. It was fully sufficient, without benefit of the
expert's opinion, to support a jury finding that the accused was
guilty of one act of aggravated sexual battery. Had the expert
based his opinion that the child's adjustment disorder had been
caused by the stress of "one sexual episode", the error in
admitting that opinion into evidence would have been harmless as
merely cumulative. But the expert's opinion was not based upon a
single act of sexual abuse. Rather, it appears from his
testimony that his opinion was based upon what his ten interviews
with the child disclosed about his premature sexual cognizance
and upon what he learned from separate interviews with the
child's mother about the myriad sexually-oriented behavioral
changes the child had undergone over a period of several months.
Notwithstanding the defendant's confession to one sexual
episode and the lack of any other evidence identifying the
accused as the criminal agent in any other episode with the
child, the jury could have been persuaded by the testimony of one
witness, a witness qualified by the trial judge as an expert in
the diagnosis and treatment of child abuse victims, to believe
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that the accused had committed not one but multiple acts of
sexual abuse and that his criminal conduct was more aggravated
than he was willing to confess.
While the error in admitting the expert's opinion may have
been harmless for purposes of conviction, we think it was
prejudicial for purposes of fixing the quantum of punishment
imposed. In closing argument, the Commonwealth relied upon
Jenkins' written confession but urged the jury "not to believe
the part that it only [happened] once" and "to give him the
[statutory] maximum, which is twenty years in the penitentiary."
Applying the standard of review defined in Chapman, we
cannot agree that the trial court's error in admitting the
expert's opinion testimony was harmless beyond a reasonable
doubt, and we will reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals
on that question. Because the hearsay issue may arise in a new
trial, we will consider the Court of Appeals' ruling reversing
the panel's decision that the trial court erred in allowing the
expert witness to testify to statements made to him by the child.
Overruling the defendant's hearsay objection, the trial
court permitted the expert to testify that the child had told him
that he had been "sexed". He had illustrated his understanding
of that term by "gyrat[ing] his pelvic area in sort of a forward-
thrusting motion" and had "pointed down towards his groin area"
when asked where he was sexed. In a divided opinion, the Court
of Appeals affirmed the trial court's ruling on the hearsay
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question. We agree with the dissent subscribed by four members
of that Court.
The Court majority concluded that "because the child's
statement . . . was not offered for its truth, the statement did
not qualify as hearsay." Jenkins, 22 Va.App. at 519, 471 S.E.2d
at 790.
We have defined hearsay evidence as "testimony in court
. . . of a statement made out of court, the statement being
offered as an assertion to show the truth of matters asserted
therein, and thus resting for its value upon the credibility of
the out-of-court asserter." Stevenson v. Commonwealth, 218 Va.
462, 465, 237 S.E.2d 779, 781 (1977) (quoting E. Cleary,
McCormick's Handbook on the Law of Evidence § 246, at 584 (2d ed.
1972)); accord State Farm Fire and Casualty Co. v. Scott, 236 Va.
116, 122, 372 S.E.2d 383, 386 (1988); Donahue v. Commonwealth,
225 Va. 145, 151-52, 300 S.E.2d 768, 771 (1983). The child's
statement that he had been "sexed" was uniquely probative of the
truth of the pending charge. That statement falls within the
definition of hearsay.
Next, the majority of the Court of Appeals held that "[e]ven
if the child's statement constituted hearsay", it was admissible
"if it fell within one of the many established hearsay
exceptions." Jenkins, 22 Va.App. at 521, 471 S.E.2d at 791. The
Court quoted the comment in Cartera v. Commonwealth, 219 Va. 516,
518, 248 S.E.2d 784, 785-86 (1978) relating to the hearsay
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exception that permits "a physician to testify to a patient's
statements concerning his 'past pain, suffering and subjective
symptoms' to show 'the basis of the physician's opinion as to the
nature of the injuries or illness.'" Here, as in Cartera, the
child's statement to the psychologist went "beyond a recital of
'past pain, suffering and subjective symptoms'". Id. That
statement was evidence of the very criminal act that was an
essential element of the offense charged against the defendant.
We hold that the statement was hearsay, it was not subject to
this exception, and the trial court erred in admitting it before
the jury.
The Commonwealth contends that we should apply the hearsay
exception extended in some jurisdictions to statements made by a
patient to a treating physician. As the Commonwealth recognized
on brief, "many of these out-of-state cases are partially based
on their state's adoption of rules equivalent to Federal Rule of
Evidence 803(4)".
Neither this Court nor the General Assembly has adopted any
such rule. The rationale for such an exception is that a patient
making a statement to a treating physician recognizes that
providing accurate information to the physician is essential to
receiving appropriate treatment. See 2 John W. Strong, McCormick
on Evidence § 277, at 246-47 (4th ed. 1992). Because the patient
in this case was a two-year old child who could not appreciate
the need for furnishing reliable information, we decline to apply
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the exception here.
Urging yet another exception to the hearsay rule, the
Commonwealth argues on brief that the child's statement was
admissible as a "recent-complaint" under Code § 19.2-268.2. That
statute provides that "in any prosecution for criminal sexual
assault . . . the fact that the person injured made complaint of
the offense recently after commission of the offense is
admissible, not as independent evidence of the offense, but for
the purpose of corroborating the testimony of the complaining
witness."
That statute is inapplicable here. As we have said, the
child's statement that he had been sexed was uniquely probative
of the charge of sexual abuse; as such, it was "independent
evidence of the offense". Moreover, that statement was not made
"for the purpose of corroborating the testimony of the
complaining witness"; the child never testified in court. 5
To correct the errors committed by the trial court, we will
reverse the judgment of the Court of Appeals, annul the
conviction, and remand the case to that court with direction to
remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings
5
The Commonwealth cites McManus v. Commonwealth, 16 Va.App.
310, 312, 429 S.E.2d 475, 476 (1993) where the Court, in its
consideration of "a rule unique to rape trials", held that "the
underlying rationale for the [recent-complaint] rule does not
limit its application to those cases where the victim actually
testifies." We will reserve judgment on that question until it is
raised by assignment of error in an appeal of a rape conviction to
this Court.
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consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
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