Third District Court of Appeal
State of Florida
Opinion filed August 26, 2015.
Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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No. 3D13-2784
Lower Tribunal No. 10-30367
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Ronald Cotton,
Appellant,
vs.
The State of Florida,
Appellee.
An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Bronwyn Miller
and Rodney Smith, Judges.
Carlos J. Martinez, Public Defender, and Susan S. Lerner, Assistant Public
Defender, for appellant.
Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, and Nikole Hiciano, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Before LAGOA, EMAS and FERNANDEZ, JJ.
EMAS, J.
Ronald Cotton appeals his conviction of, and sentence for, two counts of
lewd or lascivious conduct on a person twelve to sixteen years old. We reverse
because the trial court improperly admitted into evidence certain Williams1 rule
testimony regarding three separate and unrelated prior acts of sexual battery and
attempted sexual battery.
BACKGROUND
On October 5, 2010, Cotton’s seventeen-year-old stepdaughter reported to
the police that Cotton had inappropriately touched and kissed her on several
occasions between 2006 and 2009. The inappropriate contact began when
Cotton’s stepdaughter was approximately thirteen years old, and progressed from
long hugs to tongue kisses and groping.
The State charged Cotton by Information with one count of lewd or
lascivious molestation by an adult on a child between twelve and sixteen years of
age, in violation of section 800.04(5)(c)2, Florida Statutes (2009); and two counts
of lewd or lascivious conduct by an adult on a child under 16 years of age, in
violation of section 800.04(6)b, Florida Statutes (2009).
Count One (lewd or lascivious molestation) alleged that between March 1
and July 30, 2009, Cotton did unlawfully, intentionally and in a lewd or lascivious
1Williams v. State, 110 So. 2d 654 (Fla. 1959), later codified in section 90.404,
Florida Statutes.
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manner, touch the breasts, genitals, genital area, or buttocks of his stepdaughter (or
the clothing covering those areas).
Counts Two and Three (lewd or lascivious conduct) alleged that on different
dates covering the time period between August 1, 2006 and June 30, 2008, Cotton
did unlawfully and intentionally touch his stepdaughter in a lewd or lascivious
manner.
During the pendency of the case, the State filed a Williams rule notice
pursuant to section 90.404(2)(b)-(d), indicating its intent to introduce at trial the
testimony of Cotton’s two adult daughters. During the hearing on the Williams
rule evidence, Cotton’s adult daughters each testified that Cotton’s inappropriate
contact with them started when they were thirteen or fourteen years old,2 beginning
with inappropriate hugs and progressing to tongue kisses and fondling. Both
daughters’ testimony, however, also included detailed allegations of separate
incidents of sexual battery committed by Cotton upon each of them. One of the
daughters also testified that, on a separate occasion, Cotton attempted to commit
another sexual battery upon her.
Following the hearing, the trial court expressed serious concern about the
unduly prejudicial nature of the testimony regarding the sexual batteries, and
indicated that it might limit the collateral offense evidence to the lewd and
2 The prior acts took place approximately fifteen to eighteen years before trial in
the instant case.
3
lascivious acts while excluding testimony regarding the alleged sexual batteries.
Nevertheless, at trial, and over Cotton’s objection, the court admitted into evidence
the entirety of the Williams rule testimony, which included each adult daughters’
graphic description of the sexual battery (and an attempted sexual battery)
committed upon them. The jury subsequently found Cotton guilty of two counts of
lewd or lascivious conduct.3
ANALYSIS
Cotton contends that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing his adult
daughters to testify about the prior sexual batteries (and attempted sexual battery)
allegedly committed by Cotton. We agree.
Generally, evidence of a defendant’s prior collateral offenses are
inadmissible to prove bad character or propensity to commit crime. § 90.404(2)(a),
Fla. Stat. (2013). However, where the prior bad acts are relevant to prove a
material fact in issue and not for the purpose of establishing propensity or bad
character, such evidence may be admissible if the trial court ensures that the
probative value of the evidence is not substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice, confusion of issues, misleading the jury, or needless presentation
of cumulative evidence. §§ 90.403, 90.404(2)(a), Fla. Stat. (2013).
3 The jury found Cotton not guilty of lewd or lascivious molestation.
4
In 2001, the Florida Legislature enacted section 90.404(2)(b), which
addresses the admissibility of collateral offenses in cases in which a defendant is
charged with child molestation. That subsection provides in pertinent part:
2) Other crimes, wrongs, or acts.--
...
(b) 1. In a criminal case in which the defendant is charged with a
crime involving child molestation, evidence of the defendant's
commission of other crimes, wrongs, or acts of child molestation is
admissible and may be considered for its bearing on any matter to
which it is relevant.
2. For the purposes of this paragraph, the term “child molestation”
means conduct proscribed by s. 787.025(2)(c), s. 787.06(3)(g), former
s. 787.06(3)(h), s. 794.011, excluding s. 794.011(10), s. 794.05,
former s. 796.03, former s. 796.035, s. 800.04, s. 827.071, s.
847.0135(5), s. 847.0145, or s. 985.701(1) when committed against a
person 16 years of age or younger.
While section 90.404(2)(b) permits the admission of other acts of child
molestation where the defendant is charged with a crime involving child
molestation, it limits consideration of such evidence to that which is relevant.
As the Florida Supreme Court clarified in McLean v. State, 934 So. 2d 1248
(Fla. 2006), collateral offense evidence admitted pursuant to section 90.404(2)(b)
must still be relevant to a material issue as required by section 90.402, and is also
subject to the balancing test provided in section 90.403:
Accordingly, the similarity of the prior act and the charged offense
remains part of a court's analysis in determining whether to admit the
evidence in two ways. First, the less similar the prior acts, the less
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relevant they are to the charged crime, and therefore the less likely
they will be admissible. Second, the less similar the prior acts, the
more likely that the probative value of this evidence will be
“substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion
of issues, misleading the jury, or needless presentation of cumulative
evidence.” § 90.403.
Id. at 1259.
The Court elaborated on the trial court’s critical role in conducting this
threshold analysis:
The similarity of the collateral act of molestation and charged offense
is a critical consideration for the trial court in conducting an
appropriate weighing under section 90.403. The trial courts are
gatekeepers in ensuring that evidence of prior acts of child
molestation is not so prejudicial that the defendant is convicted based
on the prior sexual misconduct.
Id.
Finally, the McLean court provided additional guidance to trial courts tasked
with determining whether to admit evidence of prior acts of child molestation:
In assessing whether the probative value of evidence of previous
molestations is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair
prejudice, the trial court should evaluate: (1) the similarity of the prior
acts to the act charged regarding the location of where the acts
occurred, the age and gender of the victims, and the manner in which
the acts were committed; (2) the closeness in time of the prior acts to
the act charged; (3) the frequency of the prior acts; and (4) the
presence or lack of intervening circumstances. This list is not
exclusive. The trial courts should also consider other factors unique to
the case.
Factors other than the potential for unfair prejudice are also pertinent
in a section 90.403 analysis. The trial court must determine whether
the evidence of the prior acts will confuse or mislead jurors by
distracting them from the central issues of the trial. Also necessary is
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an assessment whether the evidence is needlessly cumulative of other
evidence bearing on the victim's credibility, the purpose for which this
evidence may be introduced. Further, in accord with our precedent,
the trial court must guard against allowing the collateral-crime
testimony to become a feature of the trial. Finally, if requested, the
trial court shall give an appropriate cautionary instruction both at the
time the evidence is presented and in its final charge to the jury.
Id. at 1262.
While it is true that a trial court has broad discretion regarding the
admissibility of evidence, such discretion is not unfettered. In applying the
balancing test set forth in section 90.403, in conjunction with section 90.404(2)(b),
the admission of the adult daughters’ testimony describing the prior sexual
batteries offered little or no probative value, and any such minimal probative value
was substantially outweighed by the testimony’s undue prejudice.
The State’s very own argument in support of admitting the other collateral
offenses (i.e., the prior lewd or lascivious acts) illustrates the relative lack of
probative value for the prior sexual batteries. The State argued to the trial court
that Cotton’s prior lewd or lascivious acts upon his daughters were relevant and
probative in establishing Cotton’s intent, common scheme and plan, and modus
operandi. These prior bad acts dovetailed with the State’s theory at trial that
Cotton used his familial relationship with his stepdaughter, initiating his unlawful
conduct when his stepdaughter was thirteen years old. Cotton began with simple
hugs that escalated to longer and inappropriate hugs, then to kisses and
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inappropriate kissing, and then to inappropriate touching, fondling and molestation
of his stepdaughter. These acts all took place in the home where Cotton and the
stepdaughter lived. On one occasion, late at night in the home, Cotton climbed
into his stepdaughter’s bed and fondled her over her clothing.
In similar fashion, the admissible Williams rule evidence established that
Cotton, using his familial relationship, began engaging in lewd or lascivious acts
upon his two daughters when they were approximately thirteen years old (the same
age as the stepdaughter); Cotton’s acts upon his daughters progressed and escalated
over time and in a manner that was similar to the instant allegations (beginning
with hugs, and progressing to inappropriate hugs, tongue kisses, inappropriate
touching, fondling and molestation); and Cotton committed these lewd or
lascivious acts upon his two daughters in manner and under circumstances that
were similar to the instant allegations (in the home, late at night, during which
Cotton would climb into the daughter’s bed and fondle her over her clothing; on
other occasions he would come into the daughter’s bedroom, late at night, take her
from her bed and into a separate bedroom for the same purpose).
The trial court properly determined that these prior lewd or lascivious acts
committed by Cotton upon his two daughters were relevant to establish a modus
operandi, common scheme or plan, and intent, given the similarities between the
prior acts and Cotton’s acts allegedly committed on his stepdaughter. See
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Williams v. State, 621 So. 2d 413, 415 (Fla. 1993)(observing that “[s]imilar fact
evidence has been held admissible in sexual battery cases when the evidence was
found to have a logical relationship to some material aspect of the charged crime
beyond the character of the defendant or his propensity to force himself on
women.”). Each daughter’s testimony regarding Cotton’s prior lewd or lascivious
acts further served to corroborate the stepdaughter’s testimony regarding the
timing, circumstances and manner in which Cotton committed his lewd or
lascivious acts upon her. We therefore find no error in the trial court’s admission
of the two daughters’ testimony regarding Cotton’s prior lewd or lascivious acts
committed upon them.
However, we are compelled to conclude that the trial court abused its
discretion by allowing the State to present the testimony of the two daughters
regarding the prior acts of sexual battery (and attempted sexual battery) committed
upon them by Cotton. Unlike the properly-admitted prior lewd or lascivious acts,
the sexual batteries were not similar to charged offenses in their manner or
circumstances.4 To the extent this evidence was probative at all, it was only
4 The similarities were limited to the daughters’ ages and the existence of a familial
relationship. The testimony regarding the sexual batteries otherwise stood in stark
contrast in both manner and circumstances to the instant charges: One of the
alleged sexual batteries took place in Cotton’s car on a desolate street near the
woods. The other alleged sexual battery took place in a vacant duplex with nothing
inside but a mattress on the floor. Additionally, one of the daughters testified that
Cotton attempted to commit another sexual battery upon her when he drove her to
an area near the woods and was going to rape her until she told him that she was
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cumulatively so, failing to offer any further corroborative force beyond that
already provided by the daughters’ testimony regarding the prior lewd or lascivious
acts. As the supreme court observed in McLean, 934 So. 2d at 1259, “the less
similar a collateral offense to the charged offense, the less relevant and the more
likely it is that the probative value is ‘substantially outweighed by the danger of
unfair prejudice, confusion of issues, misleading the jury, or needless presentation
of cumulative evidence. § 90.403.’”
Each daughter’s testimony regarding the sexual batteries was graphic and
detailed, and its prejudicial impact both substantial and real. The testimony by
each of the daughters regarding Cotton’s prior sexual battery (and an attempted
sexual battery) was at best nominally probative of the material facts in issue at
trial, especially in light of and compared to the daughters’ admissible testimony
regarding prior lewd or lascivious acts committed upon them by Cotton. The
exclusion of the collateral sexual battery offenses would not have presented any
logistical challenges to the trial court, as these offenses were not inextricably
intertwined with the collateral lewd or lascivious acts to which the daughters had
already testified.
Given the fact that the jury had already heard testimony from the two
daughters regarding Cotton’s prior lewd or lascivious acts committed upon them,
menstruating. The daughter testified that Cotton made her pull down her pants and
show him her sanitary napkin.
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the introduction of the additional testimony regarding the prior sexual batteries was
needlessly cumulative. Any probative value was substantially outweighed by the
danger of unfair prejudice, tending to establish Cotton’s bad character or
propensity, and thereby significantly and unnecessarily increasing the risk that
Cotton would be convicted based upon his commission of these collateral crimes.5
McLean, 934 So. 2d at 1259; Corson v. State, 9 So. 3d 765 (Fla. 2d DCA 2009).
The trial court should have excluded this testimony and erred in failing to do so.
CONCLUSION
In light of the already-properly-admitted collateral offenses of lewd or
lascivious conduct and their similarity to the crimes charged, and given the nature
of the testimony regarding the sexual batteries, its lack of probative value and the
substantial danger of unfair prejudice, we conclude that the trial court abused its
discretion in admitting this evidence. The State has failed to meet its burden of
5 The substantial danger of unfair prejudice in permitting the jury to consider this
evidence was inescapable: Cotton was charged with acts of lewd or lascivious
conduct and molestation, but was not charged with sexual battery or attempted
sexual battery. The jury heard each of Cotton’s two adult daughters testify that
Cotton previously committed lewd or lascivious acts upon them (at a time, in a
manner, and under circumstances similar to his alleged acts upon his stepdaughter).
The jury then heard each daughter testify that beyond these lewd or lascivious acts,
Cotton committed a sexual battery upon each of them (as well as an attempted
sexual battery). Given the State’s theory of an escalating pattern of conduct by
Cotton (engaged in previously with his daughters and in similar fashion with his
stepdaughter), it was more than reasonable for jurors to draw the inference that if
they did not convict Cotton in this case, he would eventually commit a sexual
battery upon his stepdaughter as well.
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establishing beyond a reasonable doubt that the error did not contribute to the
verdict. See State v. DiGuilio, 491 So. 2d 1129 (Fla. 1986).
We reverse the judgment and sentence and remand for a new trial on the two
counts of lewd or lascivious conduct.
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