RECORD IMPOUNDED
NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the internet, this
opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-1221-17T1
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
A.O.F.,
Defendant-Appellant.
____________________________
Submitted January 21, 2020 – Decided May 4, 2020
Before Judges Messano, Ostrer and Susswein.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Warren County, Indictment No. 15-04-0224.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Janet Anne Allegro, Designated Counsel, on
the briefs).
James L. Pfeiffer, Acting Warren County Prosecutor,
attorney for respondent (Kelly A. Shelton, Special
Deputy Attorney General/Acting Assistant Prosecutor,
of counsel and on the brief).
PER CURIAM
After a bench trial, the court convicted defendant A.O.F. of two counts
of aggravated sexual assault of a child under thirteen, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(1);
two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a related child between thirteen and
sixteen, N.J.S.A. 2C:14-2(a)(2)(a); two counts of second-degree sexual assault
of a child between thirteen and sixteen, with an actor four years older, N.J.S.A.
2C:14-2(c)(4); and third-degree endangering the welfare of child, N.J.S.A.
2C:24-4(a). The charges arose out of defendant's continual assaults of his niece,
B.D. (Beth), over more than three years. 1 We are constrained to agree with
defendant's contentions on appeal that the trial judge erred by admitting and then
misapplying fresh complaint testimony; and in relying on Child Sexual Abuse
Accommodation Syndrome (CSAAS) testimony, ruled inadmissible in State v.
J.L.G., 234 N.J. 265, 272 (2018). Therefore, we reverse defendant's conviction
and remand for a new trial.
I.
The State presented its case primarily through Beth's testimony. Her
allegations were unsupported by any eyewitness testimony or corroborating
physical evidence. The State bolstered Beth's testimony with that of two fresh
1
In accord with Rule 1:38-3(c)(9), we use initials and pseudonyms for the
reader's convenience.
A-1221-17T1
2
complaint witnesses – each described Beth's disclosures roughly three and six
years, respectively, after the last assault – and Beth's mother, her grandmother,
and police officers, who described Beth's demeanor when she disclosed the
assaults to them in 2014. The State also presented a Child Sex Abuse
Accommodation Syndrome expert, who described behaviors he opined were
typical of child victims of sexual assault.
Beth testified that defendant, then in his late thirties and her uncle by
marriage, began assaulting her in July 2005, two months shy of her eleventh
birthday. She said defendant engaged in sex acts with her at least three times a
week for over three years.2 These assaults included mostly penal-vaginal
intercourse, but also digital-vaginal penetration, fellatio, cunnilingus, and anal
penetration.
Beth's testimony at trial focused on the first-degree assaults, including the
first two times defendant assaulted her. In July 2005, Beth was with defendant
and her aunt in their apartment. They lived in the center unit of a modest row
home consisting of three side-by-side apartments, which defendant owned.
Beth, her mother, and baby brother lived next-door. Their two apartments
2
Although Beth occasionally testified that the assaults occurred over a four-
year period, the dates she provided coincided with a three plus year period.
A-1221-17T1
3
shared a wall. After Beth's aunt went to bed leaving the two of them alone,
defendant complimented Beth on her looks at a time when she was overweight,
had few friends, and lacked self-esteem. He then began petting her, and soon
pulled down her pants and underwear and engaged in penal-vaginal intercourse.
After the encounter ended, defendant told Beth that if she told anyone
about what had just happened, she, her brother, and her mother would have to
move out of the apartment, which would cause them great financial hardship,
since defendant allowed Beth's mother, who received public rental assistance,
to pay bills late, or not at all. Additionally, defendant implied Beth's aunt would
have to move out as well. Beth testified this convinced her not to tell anyone.
The next night, once defendant and Beth were alone again in his
apartment, defendant asked Beth if she wanted to be his girlfriend. She
responded, "I guess so." Then, defendant forced her to perform fellatio on him.
Beth could not breathe, so he stopped, and he then had penal-vaginal intercourse
with her. Beth stated most of the assaults occurred in the first floor living room,
after her aunt went upstairs to bed. Beth stated she remained quiet during the
assaults at defendant's direction, to avoid stirring her aunt.
Beth also testified that shortly after her thirteenth birthday, defendant
performed cunnilingus on her, despite the fact she was menstruating; he washed
A-1221-17T1
4
the blood off his face and mustache; and then committed penal-vaginal
intercourse. Beth also described an incident of digital-vaginal penetration, while
he was helping her tidy up his van; and an incident of penal-vaginal intercourse
in the backyard, where Beth kept pet rabbits. She also recounted that defendant,
while drunk, once attempted to enter her second-floor bedroom window because
she had a friend over and refused to see him. Beth's mother saw him outside,
standing on an old washing machine, and told him to go home.
As set forth at an N.J.R.E. 104 hearing, Beth first disclosed the abuse to
her high school boyfriend, J.W., in the summer of 2011 before her senior year,
after he revealed to her that he had been sexually abused as a child. He recalled
that she described three of the incidents she later described at trial – the first
assault; the instance in the backyard; and the time defendant tried to enter her
room. He testified that she was tearful and emotional as she related the assaults.
Beth's family physician testified that at a sick visit in summer 2014, Beth
disclosed that she was feeling depressed. Responding to the physician's follow-
up questions, and once assured of confidentiality, Beth disclosed that her uncle
had sexually assaulted her. The physician noted that Beth was emotional as she
did so. Beth did not share details as she had with J.W.
A-1221-17T1
5
The trial judge allowed both J.W. and the physician to testify as fresh
complaint witnesses. The judge found, "[t]he criteria for fresh complaint" were
satisfied, as "the statements were disclosed to two natural confidantes, . . . there
was no coercive questioning, and . . . an aura of intimidation existed." In
particular, the court found that Beth disclosed within a reasonable time,
notwithstanding she did so three and six years after the assaults ended. Citing
State v. L.P., 352 N.J. Super. 369 (App. Div. 2002), the court found that Beth
"did not disclose the abuse until after she was free from the aura of intimidation
which [d]efendant cast by threatening to evict her and her family should she
disclose." The court also relied on State v. R.E.B., 385 N.J. Super. 72 (App.
Div. 2006), where we permitted evidence of a fresh complaint two years after
the abuse.
Both fresh complaint witnesses testified consistently with their pre -trial
testimony. Although J.W. did not describe the three incidents at trial, both
witnesses described Beth's distraught or emotional state when she disclosed.
Over objection, J.W. testified that Beth had difficulties with intimacy
throughout their relationship. Beth told him she did not disclose the assaults
because she thought no one would believe her. On cross-examination, J.W.
A-1221-17T1
6
admitted that he and Beth borrowed defendant's pick-up truck to move her
things, when she and J.W. began living together.
In fall 2014, when she was 20 years old, Beth informed her mother of the
abuse during an argument, to explain why she sometimes acted the way she did.
Her mother testified that she supported her daughter. After learning of the
allegations, Beth's mother made arrangements to move to another apartment.
Once Beth's mother and children moved out, Beth's grandmother confronted
defendant with the allegations, which he denied. Outraged, Beth reported the
assaults to the police. Police officers who interviewed Beth testified about her
demeanor when she discussed the assaults.
Defendant was the sole defense witness. His wife had passed away before
trial. He denied sexually assaulting Beth. He alleged that Beth's allegations
were prompted by a "family vendetta" against his wife, who he said was
considered the "black sheep" of the family. He maintained that he was working
very long hours, and attending trade classes, during much of the period when
Beth alleged the assaults occurred. So, he was rarely home before Beth's
bedtime, and could not have committed the assaults.
He stated he was a supportive uncle who took an interest in all the children
in his wife's extended family. He admitted that he and Beth sometimes watched
A-1221-17T1
7
television together and went grocery shopping, and he attended her school
events. Addressing the incident outside Beth's bedroom window, he explained
that Beth and her friend had mischievously run into his apartment and turned off
his television. Unable to enter the front door of their apartment, he went around
the back, to try to scold the children. He admitted he had been drinking.
On cross-examination, the State elicited inconsistencies between his
custodial statement to police after his arrest, and his trial testimony, in which he
seemed to downplay the closeness of his relationship with Beth. The State also
elicited that defendant's wife drank alcohol throughout the day and also took
prescription pain medicine, to counter the defense suggestion that she would
have heard the sexual assaults.
In his extensive oral opinion, the trial judge reviewed the trial testimony
and said the case presented a credibility contest of "he said/she said." The judge
noted the State offered no eyewitnesses or physical evidence. The judge found
Beth very credible, and defendant not so. In crediting Beth, the court noted her
demeanor at trial. He found it "logical" that defendant preyed on Beth when she
was young, lacked friends and self-esteem, and was vulnerable to exploitation.
He also found Beth's testimony was "corroborated" by her prior consistent
A-1221-17T1
8
statements, as well as the fresh complaint witnesses' testimony. The judge also
gave some weight to the CSAAS testimony.
The court found that defendant's inconsistent statements, and his effort to
minimize his relationship with Beth, undermined his credibility. The court
rejected his contention that a "family vendetta" motivated Beth to falsely accuse
him of assault.
The judge sentenced defendant to an aggregate term of twenty years, with
a seventeen-year period of parole ineligibility under the No Early Release Act
(NERA) N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2. The court imposed concurrent twenty-year terms,
subject to NERA on the four first-degree counts; concurrent seven-year terms
on the two second-degree counts; and a concurrent four-year term on the third-
degree count. The court imposed parole supervision for life, and Megan's Law
requirements. The court also entered a permanent Nicole's Law restraining
order.
Defendant raises the following points for our consideration:
POINT I
THE COURT IMPROPERLY ADMITTED FRESH
COMPLAINT TESTIMONY OF TWO WITNESSES,
DEPRIVING DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL AND
WARRANTING REVERSAL.
A-1221-17T1
9
A. BETH's COMPLAINTS OF SEXUAL ASSAULT
WERE NOT MADE WITHIN A REASONABLE
TIME TO BE ADMISSIBLE AS FRESH-
COMPLAINTS.
B. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY ADMITTING
DUPLICATIVE FRESH-COMPLAINT TESTIMONY.
C. THE COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING THE
FRESH-COMPLAINT TESTIMONY SINCE THE
EXCESSIVE DETAILS PROVIDED WENT
BEYOND THE LIMITED PURPOSE OF THE RULE.
POINT II
THE COURT VIOLATED DEFENDANT'S RIGHT
TO DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR TRIAL BY
ADMITTING TESTIMONY AS TO THE ALLEGED
CHILD SEXUAL ABUSE ACCOMMODATION
SYNDROME.
A. CSAAS IS NOT SUPPORTED BY GENERALLY
SCIENTIFIC RESEARCH.
B. CSAAS FAILS UNDER N.J.R.E. 702 SCRUTINY.
C. CSAAS DOES NOT APPLY TO THE
PARTICULAR FACTS OF THIS CASE.
POINT III
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT GRANTING
DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS AFTER THE
STATE RESTED ITS CASE.
POINT IV
A-1221-17T1
10
THE COURT'S CREDIBILITY DETERMINATION
WAS NOT SUPPORTED BY SUFFICIENT
CREDIBLE EVIDENCE IN THE RECORD AND
MUST BE REVERSED SINCE THE COURT SAT AS
THE TRIER OF FACT IN THIS MATTER.
POINT V
THE SENTENCE IMPOSED BY THE COURT WAS
EXCESSIVE.
In his reply brief, defendant contended that the Supreme Court's decision in
J.L.G. should apply retroactively to his case.
Only the issues pertaining to CSAAS and fresh complaint testimony
warrant extended discussion. We address those in turn.
II.
In J.L.G., 234 N.J. at 272, the Court held that "expert testimony about
CSAAS in general, and its component behaviors other than delayed disclosure,
may no longer be admitted at criminal trials." Those alleged behaviors are
secrecy, helplessness, accommodation, delayed disclosure, and retractions. Id.
at 282-83. Although expert testimony about delayed disclosure may be
admissible at trial, such evidence must conform with the requirements of
N.J.R.E. 702. Id. at 272. "In particular, the State must show that the evidence
is beyond the understanding of the average juror," which is a fact-specific
inquiry. Ibid. Therefore, the Court found, "because the victim gave
A-1221-17T1
11
straightforward reasons about why she delayed reporting abuse, the jury did not
need help from an expert to evaluate her explanation. However, if a child cannot
offer a rational explanation, expert testimony may help the jury understand the
witness's behavior." Ibid.
In State v. G.E.P., 458 N.J. Super. 436, 443 (App. Div.), certif. granted,
239 N.J. 598 (2019), we "accord[ed] J.L.G. pipeline retroactivity," thereby
applying it both to prospective cases and "pending cases where the parties have
not yet exhausted all avenues of direct review." Id. at 445 (quoting State v.
Burstein, 85 N.J. 394, 402-03 (1981)).
As defendant had not yet "exhausted all avenues of direct review," we
apply J.L.G. to his case and conclude that it was plain error for the court to admit
CSAAS testimony. The CSAAS testimony at trial addressed all five aspects of
the "syndrome," including delayed disclosure. Even as to delayed disclosure,
expert testimony was unnecessary, as Beth provided a plausible explanation for
her delay, which was not beyond the ken of the fact-finder. See N. J. Div. of
Youth & Family Servs. v. Z.P.R., 351 N.J. Super. 427, 439 (App. Div. 2002)
(stating that the principles under N.J.R.E. 702 governing admissibility of expert
evidence in a jury trial apply equally to a bench trial). As noted, Beth testified
that she did not reveal the abuse until her disclosure to J.W. in August 2011
A-1221-17T1
12
because she feared defendant would evict or otherwise punish her family and
her aunt, who depended on defendant financially. Notably, even when she
disclosed to J.W. and her physician, she made sure they would keep that
information confidential. She also testified that she did not think anyone would
believe her.
No CSAAS expert was needed to explain Beth's delay. See J.L.G., 234
N.J. at 273-74 (CSAAS testimony regarding delay not admissible where victim
said defendant pointed gun at her, and "threatened to hurt her, her mother, or her
brother if word got out"); G.E.P., 458 N.J. Super. at 455-56 (in companion case
to G.E.P., CSAAS testimony not admissible where victim delayed disclosure
because she was "frightened," and thought something bad would happen to her
mother or family members if she reported abuse); Id. at 458 (in companion case
to G.E.P., CSAAS testimony not admissible where defendant told victim that if
she told anyone she would not be able to see him anymore, which she interpreted
as not being able to also see her mother or brother).
The trial court placed some weight, albeit not "great weight" on the
CSAAS testimony. In its decision, the court recognized that "CSAAS testimony
is not meant to be probative at all" and "it could be argued that presentation of
this type of expert testimony could unduly . . . prejudice the defendant or may
A-1221-17T1
13
confuse a jury," but the court concluded those concerns were "not present" in a
bench trial. Nonetheless, after referring to the CSAAS expert's testimony, the
court found evidence of secrecy, helplessness and accommodation – three
behaviors that are no longer admissible subjects of expert testimony. The judge
stated,
[T]he [c]ourt took note that several of the factors are
present, particularly that [Beth] kept the abuse a secret,
felt helpless in attempting to preserve the family and
protect her mother, and even the defendant, and her
aunt from financial consequences, and that there was,
perhaps, accommodation that he became her boyfriend
and she thought of it as a relationship after the initial
events . . . .
[(Emphasis added).]
Although the judge went on to say he "did not place great weight on the
CSAAS testimony," and he "placed more weight on the testimony of the victim
and the defendant and their credibility determinations," the judge implied he
placed some weight on the CSAAS testimony. That reliance may have been
critical to the ultimate verdict in what the judge described as a "he said/she said"
credibility contest. As we noted in G.E.P., 458 N.J. Super. at 449, reversing the
conviction, "the corroboration of the victim's testimony . . . was far less than in
J.L.G.," where the State presented a recording of the assault.
A-1221-17T1
14
We therefore conclude that the admission of the CSAAS testimony and
the court's reliance on it constitutes plain error, by "rais[ing] a doubt as to the
validity of the . . . verdict." G.E.P., 458 N.J. Super. at 448 (citing State v.
Daniels, 182 N.J. 80, 95 (2004)).3 In other words, it is an error "of sufficient
magnitude to raise a reasonable doubt as to whether it led the [court, sitting
without a jury] to a result it would otherwise not have reached." State v. Weston,
222 N.J. 277, 294 (2015) (quoting Pressler & Verniero, N.J. Court Rules, cmt.
2.1 on R. 2:10-2 (2015)).
As we held when CSAAS testimony was misused in a case involving a
close credibility contest, "[i]t is . . . clear that any error that could have
appreciably tipped the credibility scale would have to be regarded as plain error
having the capacity to have affected the outcome of the trial." State v. W.L.,
278 N.J. Super. 295, 301 (App Div. 1995). That is so here. Therefore, the
admission of CSAAS testimony warrants reversal.
III.
3
Given our conclusion, we need not decide whether it is appropriate even to
apply the more demanding plain error standard in a case where the Court has
post-trial adopted a new rule of law that trial counsel may not reasonably have
anticipated. See G.E.P., 458 N.J. Super. at 448 (noting, but declining to decide
the same issue).
A-1221-17T1
15
The court also erred by allowing Beth's physician to testify as a fresh
complaint witness – as Beth's complaint to the physician was not fresh by any
measure, and the testimony was cumulative – and by misusing both fresh
complaint witnesses' testimony to corroborate Beth's trial testimony.
Well-settled principles govern our analysis. The fresh complaint doctrine
allows "evidence of a victim's complaint of sexual abuse, otherwise inadmissible
as hearsay, to negate the inference that the victim's initial silence or delay
indicates that the charge is fabricated." State v. R.K., 220 N.J. 444, 455 (2015);
see also State v. Hill, 121 N.J. 150, 163 (1990) (noting that "fresh-complaint
evidence serves a narrow purpose . . . [to] allow[] the State to negate the
inference that the victim was not sexually assaulted because of her silence").
Consistent with that limited purpose, "the fresh complaint testimony is not
to be used 'to corroborate the victim's allegations concerning the crime.'" R.K.,
220 N.J. at 456 (quoting State v. Bethune, 121 N.J. 137, 146 (1990)). A jury, or
a court sitting without a jury, may not consider fresh-complaint testimony "as
substantive evidence of guilt, or as bolstering the credibility of the victim; it
may only be considered for the limited purpose of confirming that a complaint
was made." Ibid. For that reason, the testimony must exclude details of the
assault that the complaint may have conveyed. "Only the facts that are
A-1221-17T1
16
minimally necessary to identify the subject matter of the complaint should be
admitted." Ibid. Also, given the testimony's "narrow purpose of negating
inferences that the victim had failed to complain," a trial court must "assess . . .
whether repeated testimony of the victim's complaint is irrelevant or prejudicial
to the defendant." Hill, 121 N.J. at 169.
"[T]o qualify as fresh complaint, the victim's statements to someone she
would ordinarily turn to for support must have been made within a reasonable
time after the alleged assault and must have been spontaneous and voluntary."
Hill, 121 N.J. at 163. The "reasonable time" requirement has been relaxed where
the complainant is a child, "'in light of the reluctance of children to report a
sexual assault and their limited understanding of what was done to them.'" State
v. W.B., 205 N.J. 588, 618 (2011) (quoting State v. P.H., 178 N.J. 378, 393
(2004)); see also R.E.B., 385 N.J. Super. at 88 (stating two-year gap between
abuse and fresh complaint permissible, especially where neither party contended
the complaint did not satisfy fresh complaint components); State v. Pillar, 359
N.J. Super. 249, 281-82 (App. Div. 2003) (stating "even a substantial lapse of
time between the assault and the complaint may be permissible if satisfactorily
explainable by the age of the victim and the circumstances surrounding the
making of the complaint"); L.P., 352 N.J. Super. at 383 (permitting roughly
A-1221-17T1
17
year-long delay after adoptive father ceased abuse, where father threatened to
kill the child, and the child then lived in foster home with father's biological
daughter who physically abused her, and child disclosed several weeks after
leaving the foster home); State v. Hummel, 132 N.J. Super. 412 (App. Div. 1975)
(allowing fresh complaint testimony three years after repeated assaults began,
but just a few weeks after child left the foster home where she lived with the
abuser, and victim also confided in a fellow victim shortly after the assaults
began). The W.B. Court also cited approvingly to a Massachusetts decision
finding a "two-year delay reasonable where [the] first disclosure was to [her]
boyfriend when he tried to kiss [the] victim and she had been fearful of
disrupting [the] home where she and [the] defendant continued to live." W.B.,
205 N.J. at 619 (citing Commonwealth v. Hyatt, 579 N.E.2d 1365, 1367-68
(Mass. 1991)).
Applying these principles, we are convinced the court abused its
discretion in admitting the physician's testimony. See L.P., 352 N.J. Super. at
380-81 (stating admissibility of fresh complaint testimony left to trial court's
discretion). We focus on the doctrine's "reasonable time" requirement. 4
4
We do not question the spontaneity or voluntariness of Beth's complaints.
"The spontaneity prong merely requires that the complaint not be the result of
A-1221-17T1
18
Although the court's decision to admit J.W.'s testimony is questionable, as the
three-year delay puts the disclosure at the outer limit of what our courts have
deemed a "reasonable time," the six-year delay between when the alleged
assaults stopped and Beth complained to the physician far exceeds that. 5 See
Pillar, 359 N.J. Super. at 285 (court erred admitting a "fresh" complaint six years
after the abuse).
In permitting the fresh complaint testimony, notwithstanding the
complaint was anything but fresh, the court relied on an "aura of intimidation"
that deterred Beth's complaint. Yet, this case is unlike in L.P., where the
intimidation lifted when the victim left the foster home, freeing her to disclose
the assaults several weeks later. L.P., 352 N.J. Super. at 384-85. Here, the
retaliation threat continued unabated. Until shortly before defendant's arrest, he
remained Beth's mother's landlord who, Beth feared, could inflict financial
coercive interrogation." W.B., 205 N.J. at 617 (citing Bethune, 121 N.J. at 145).
Here, Beth's complaints to both J.W. and the physician were uncoerced. She
disclosed to J.W. in response to his own confession, and she invited her
physician's inquiries by disclosing feelings of depression.
5
We recognize that some courts have jettisoned the "reasonable time"
requirement entirely. People v. Brown, 883 P.2d 949, 950 (Cal. 1994).
However, our Court has not done so, see, e.g. R.K., 220 N.J. at 455 (reciting the
"reasonable time" requirement), although the Court has endorsed flexibility in
children's cases, W.B., 205 N.J. at 618.
A-1221-17T1
19
hardship.6 Fear of retaliation certainly may explain a victim's silence. But,
unabated fear does not explain why a victim like Beth would break her silence.
Nor does it justify admitting the physician's testimony of Beth's report six years
after the assaults stopped. The Supreme Court has recognized that under some
"factual circumstances . . . the child's disclosure is delayed sufficiently that there
is no fresh complaint." P.H., 178 N.J. at 393. This is such a case, at least with
respect to the physician's testimony.
Furthermore, the physician's testimony was cumulative. To the extent the
State wished to negate the inference drawn from the "timing myth" – "the
mistaken perception that a victim will report a sexual assault immediately," id.
at 392 – J.W.'s testimony sufficed. Evidence of the second disclosure added
little to negate the inference – especially since it occurred three years after the
first one. Rather, it inappropriately served to bolster Beth's trial testimony, by
providing evidence of Beth's prior consistent statement, and her demeanor when
she delivered it. In short, "repeated testimony of the victim's complaint [was]
irrelevant [and] prejudicial to the defendant." Hill, 121 N.J. at 169.
6
In his decision allowing the fresh complaint testimony, the trial judge also
mistakenly stated "[d]efendant in this case moved out of the home three years
before the victim first disclosed abuse." The record clearly established that
defendant remained in his apartment until his arrest. Beth moved out in 2012,
to live with J.W. Beth's mother moved out after Beth disclosed to her.
A-1221-17T1
20
Unlike when we review a jury trial, we need not speculate in this case
whether the fact-finder misused the fresh complaint testimony. The trial judge
expressly stated that he used J.W.'s and the physician's testimony to corroborate
Beth's trial testimony. The judge stated, "[Beth] showed those flashes of anger
when she had to answer questions about the particularities of the abuse. Her
testimony was consistent with earlier statements made and corroborated by
testimony of – and consistent with the testimony of the [f]resh [c]omplaint
witnesses."
That was error. "The testimony did more than rebut a charge of fabrication
based on silence." R.K., 220 N.J. at 460. The court used it to corroborate Beth's
testimony, and to bolster her credibility. As we have noted, that is an
impermissible use of fresh complaint testimony, which otherwise would be
barred by the hearsay rule. R.K., 220 N.J. at 455.7 Furthermore, in light of the
7
The State does not argue that Beth's complaints were admissible as prior
consistent statements to support her credibility, see N.J.R.E. 607 (stating "[a]
prior consistent statement shall not be admitted to support the credibility of a
witness except to rebut an express or implied charge against the witness of recent
fabrication or of improper influence or motive and except as otherwise provided
by the law of evidence"), or to establish the truth of the matters asserted in those
prior statements, see N.J.R.E. 803(a)(2) (stating that the hearsay rule does not
apply to statements made by a trial witness, which "would have been admissible
if made by the declarant while testifying and the statement . . . is consistent with
the witness' testimony and is offered to rebut an express or implied charge
against the witness of recent fabrication or improper influence or motive").
A-1221-17T1
21
court's statement, we cannot be confident that the court did not consider the
details of the assault that J.W. shared in the N.J.R.E. 104 hearing. Lastly,
"consistency alone does not constitute corroboration." N.J. Div. of Child Prot.
& Permanency v. N.B., 452 N.J. Super. 513, 523 (App. Div. 2017) (analyzing
N.J.S.A. 9:6-8.46(a)(4)).
In R.K., the Supreme Court held it was reversible error to omit a limiting
instruction and to permit a fresh complaint witness to provide excessive and
prejudicial details. 220 N.J. at 460. The Court evidently presumed that the jury
misused the testimony, absent appropriate instructions. Here, we are
constrained to conclude that the court, sitting without a jury, misused the fresh
complaint testimony as well, and denied defendant a fair trial.
IV.
Defendant's remaining arguments lack sufficient merit to warrant
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
Finally, we are constrained to remand to a new fact-finder. Since "the
trial court previously made credibility findings, we deem it appropriate that the
matter be assigned to a different trial court." R.L. v. Voytac, 199 N.J. 285, 306
(2009); see also Matter of Guardianship of R., 155 N.J. Super. 186, 195 (App.
Div. 1977) (remanding to a different trial judge, where "[t]he judge who heard
A-1221-17T1
22
the matter below ha[d] already engaged in weighing the evidence and ha[d]
rendered a conclusion on the credibility of the . . . witnesses.").
Reversed and remanded. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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23