IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
MARK BARTELL, §
§ No. 271, 2017
Defendant Below, §
Appellant, § Court Below—Superior Court
§ of the State of Delaware
v. §
§ Cr. ID No. .511001595(K)
STATE OF DELAWARE, §
§
Plaintiff Below, §
Appellee. §
§
Submitted: January 17, 2018
Decided: March 29, 2018
Before STRINE, Chief Justice; VALIHURA, and TRAYNOR, Justices.
ORDER
This 29th day of March, 2018, having considered the briefs, the record below,
and the argument of counsel, it appears to the Court that:
Appellant Mark Bartell was indicted on two counts of rape in the first
degree and one count each of rape in the fourth degree, terroristic threatening, and
offensive touching. The victim was Bartell’s wife. Six months later, but still eight
months before trial, he was further charged with two counts of criminal solicitation
in the second degree, which alleged that while he was awaiting trial, he solicited two
of his fellow inmates to murder his wife so that she could not testify against him.
Bartell moved to sever the criminal solicitation charges for trial on the
grounds that the joinder of those charges with the underlying offenses “impugned
his character”1 and “forced [the jury] to make an improper inference as to [his]
criminal disposition.”2 The Superior Court denied the motion and, after a six-day
jury trial, Bartell was convicted on all but the terroristic-threatening and offensive-
touching charges. He was sentenced to seventy-five years of incarceration followed
by various levels of probation.
In this direct appeal, Bartell raises two claims of error. First, he asserts
that the Superior Court erred when it denied his motion to sever. He claims to have
suffered substantial prejudice because the State was permitted to use the criminal
solicitation evidence to impugn his character and draw an improper inference as to
his general criminal disposition. Second, Bartell contends that he was deprived of a
fair trial when the Superior Court failed to declare a mistrial after witnesses injected
inadmissible, irrelevant and prejudicial testimony about his past conduct.
Under Superior Court Criminal Rule 8(a), “[t]wo or more offenses may
be charged in the same indictment or information in a separate count for each offense
if the offenses charged are of the same or similar character or are based on the same
act or transaction or on two or more acts or transactions connected together or
1
Opening Br. 2.
2
Id. at 6.
2
constituting parts of a common scheme or plan.” But if it appears that a defendant
or the State will suffer prejudice by a joinder of offenses, the Superior Court may
sever the offenses and order separate trials or provide such other relief as justice
requires.3
This Court reviews the Superior Court’s denial of a motion to sever for
abuse of discretion.4 “The trial court’s decision to deny a motion to sever will be
reversed only if the defendant establishes a ‘reasonable probability’ that the joint
trial created ‘substantial injustice.’”5 The defendant has the burden of demonstrating
prejudice, which must be more than “mere hypothetical prejudice.”6
We have recognized that “a crucial factor to be considered [in the
prejudice analysis] is whether the evidence of one crime would be admissible in the
trial of the other crime, because if it were admissible, there would be no prejudicial
effect in having a joint trial.”7 Evidence of other crimes is generally admissible if it
has “independent logical relevance” and its probative value is not outweighed by the
danger of unfair prejudice.8
3
Del. Super. Ct. Crim. R. 14.
4
Jackson v. State, 990 A.2d 904, 909 (Del. 2007).
5
Ashley v. State, 85 A.3d 81, 84 (Del. 2014) (quoting Winer v. State, 950 A.2d 642, 648
(Del. 2008)).
6
Skinner v. State, 575 A.2d 1108, 1118 (Del. 1990).
7
Garden v. State, 815 A.2d 327, 333–34 (Del. 2003) (citing Wiest v. State, 542 A.2d 1193,
1195 n.3 (Del. 1988)).
8
Getz v. State, 538 A.2d 726, 730 (Del. 1988) (quoting Diaz v. State, 508 A.2d 861, 865
(Del. 1986)).
3
The Superior Court astutely drew a parallel between the facts of this
case and those presented in Ashley v. State.9 In that case, the defendant was charged
with several sex offenses against an 11-year old. After he was indicted, the
defendant participated in a scheme to bribe the child’s mother into withdrawing her
cooperation and declining to testify, which led to further charges of bribery and
related offenses. The defendant’s motion to sever the new charges was denied by
the Superior Court, and the defendant was found guilty of numerous offenses. On
appeal, we held that the motion was properly denied. First, we recognized that the
bribery charges met the criteria for joinder under Rule 8(a) because the charges—
which arose from the defendant’s attempt to stop the victim’s mother from testifying
against him on the underlying charges—were “based on the same act or transaction”
as the underlying charges.10 Second, we observed that the defendant was not
prejudiced by the joinder of the bribery charges because evidence of that conduct
would have been admissible in a stand-alone trial on the underlying charges for the
purpose of showing consciousness of guilt. Finally, we pointed out that if the
charges had been severed, the State would have had to call several of the same
witnesses from the trial on the underlying charges to prove motive and interest in
9
85 A.3d 81 (Del. 2014).
10
Id. at 85.
4
connection with the bribery charges, which would have wasted judicial resources
and subjected the witnesses to a needless second turn on the stand.
The same dynamics are present here. Bartell’s solicitation of the two
prison inmates to kill his wife was admissible on the original charges to show his
consciousness of guilt. Had the solicitation charges been severed, the State would
have had to call many of the same witnesses from the trial of the underlying charges
to show why Bartell was offering the inmates money to kill his wife.
Bartell raises the possibility that the evidence introduced to prove his
guilt on the solicitation charges—which included the fact that the solicitation
occurred while Bartell was jailed—may have allowed the jury to make an improper
inference of guilt from the fact that had been detained prior to trial. But as we
observed, even if the underlying charges were tried separately, his jury was going to
hear of the conduct giving rise to the solicitation charges as evidencing his
consciousness of guilt of the underlying charges. Bartell’s concern that the jury
could misuse the knowledge that he had been detained prior to trial is a valid one,
but the trial court met his concern by instructing the jurors two separate times that
they should not infer that pretrial detention had any bearing on his guilt. In sum,
Bartell has not demonstrated that he suffered substantial prejudice by virtue of the
joinder of offenses.
5
Bartell also claims for the first time on appeal that the Superior Court
should have declared a mistrial because of “the injection of unsolicited, inadmissible
and highly prejudicial testimony from multiple State witnesses, regarding Bartell’s
prior history.”11 Because he did not move for a mistrial below, we review his
contention only for plain error.12
During the trial, a nurse who examined Bartell’s wife testified that his
wife had told her that “this has happened before,” despite an earlier ruling that the
wife’s statement to the nurse was inadmissible. Bartell’s counsel promptly objected.
At sidebar, the two sides suspected that the nurse was testifying from a document
that had not been properly redacted to remove the offending statement, and the
following exchange occurred:
THE COURT: Well, at this stage, so we don’t have any more
difficulties, maybe we’ll excuse the jury for a moment . . . and you can
review what [the nurse] has up there carefully. And then we’ll have
them back in and I’ll sustain the objection and give a curative
instruction, more of a disregard instruction, unless a curative instruction
is specifically requested. . . . I’m going to, in fact, sustain that
[objection] now and do that.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: That is fine.
THE COURT: So the defense is in agreement with that?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Yes, Your Honor.13
11
Opening Br. 8.
12
Cruz-Webster v. State, 155 A.3d 833, 2017 WL 464536, at *4 (Del. 2017) (unpublished
table decision).
13
App. to Opening Br. A64.
6
Later, during the State’s direct examination of Bartell’s sister, Mary
Davis, the State played an audio recording of a prison phone call between her and
Bartell. During the call, the sister made reference to a “PFA”— shorthand for a
protection-from-abuse order—that Bartell’s wife had against him. Bartell did not
object. Shortly thereafter, in an answer that was not directly responsive to the
prosecutor’s question, Davis mentioned that “[t]here was a protection order,”14
without specifying the parties or the identity of the person against whom the order
was entered. Once again, Bartell did not object. Only when the prosecutor
voluntarily brought to the court’s attention the two inadvertent references to PFA
orders and his understanding that they violated a prior in limine order did Bartell’s
counsel address them, and he downplayed their significance, noting that “Davis
mentioned [a] protective order, not specifically a PFA, protection from abuse order”
and that she did not object when either reference was made. The court then asked
defense counsel how she wished to proceed:
THE COURT: . . . [T]he Court’s satisfied it was actually inadvertent
on both parts as far as violating the order . . . [I]t would be up to the
defense whether you want a curative instruction or not because many
jurors, they may or may not be able to know when there’s an isolated
reference to a PFA what that even is.
[A]re you going to want a curative instruction at this point or not?
DEFENSE COUNSEL: I don’t think so, Your Honor, at this point.
14
Id. at A115.
7
THE COURT: The defense is making strategic --
DEFENSE COUNSEL: Yes, Your Honor.15
In the wake of each of the improper references upon which Bartell now
bases his claim that the Superior Court should have sua sponte declared a mistrial,
Bartell’s preferred remedial response was adopted by the court. In the first instance,
Bartell agreed that a curative instruction was sufficient and, in the second, made a
strategic decision to decline the court’s offer to give an instruction.
To warrant reversal under the plain-error standard, the error must be
“so clearly prejudicial to substantial rights as to jeopardize the fairness and integrity
of the trial process.”16 This means that the error must have affected Bartell’s trial.17
And the burden of demonstrating that the error is prejudicial is on Bartell.18
Bartell has not carried his burden of showing that the three
inappropriate references, all of which were inadvertent and two of which—the PFA
references—only vaguely pointed accusatory fingers at Bartell, resulted in
substantial prejudice. The principal evidence of Bartell’s guilt was the detailed
testimony of his wife, who had promptly reported the assault to the police and then
recounted the brutal facts to the nurse who treated her later that same day at the
15
Id. at A118.
16
Wainwright v. State, 504 A.2d 1096, 1100 (Del. 1986).
17
Brown v. State, 897 A.2d 748, 753 (Del. 2006).
18
Id.
8
hospital. The jury also heard the chilling testimony of the two prison inmates who
Bartell attempted to hire to “make the case go away” by murdering his wife,19 which
was buttressed by a prison phone call recording in which Bartell told his sister that
“[he] needed somebody to take her out.”20 What is more, Bartell’s claim of prejudice
is undermined by the fact that the jury acquitted him of the terroristic-threatening
and offensive-touching charges and, on the rape in the first degree charge, found him
guilty of the lesser included offenses of rape in the second degree—a verdict that
could scarcely be attributed to an inflamed jury. In short, there was no plain error
here.
NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the judgment of the
Superior Court is AFFIRMED.
BY THE COURT:
/s/ Gary F. Traynor
Justice
19
App. to Opening Br. A100.
20
Id. at A145.
9