IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
No. 22-1110
Filed April 24, 2024
STATE OF IOWA,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs.
CHRIS WILLIAM KELLY, JR.,
Defendant-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Johnson County,
Deborah Farmer Minot, Judge.
A defendant challenges the denial of his motion for a new trial on weight-of-
the-evidence grounds. AFFIRMED.
Thomas M. McIntee, Williamsburg, for appellant.
Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Thomas J. Ogden, Assistant Attorney
General, for appellee.
Considered by Tabor, P.J., and Badding and Buller, JJ.
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BADDING, Judge.
While renting an attic room in a large, older home in Iowa City, Chris Kelly
repeatedly exposed his penis and masturbated in front of his neighbors. A jury
convicted him on one count of indecent exposure, and the district court denied his
motion for a new trial. Kelly appeals, claiming the jury’s verdict was contrary to the
weight of the evidence.
“We generally review rulings on motions for new trial asserting a verdict is
contrary to the weight of the evidence for an abuse of discretion.” State v.
Stendrup, 983 N.W.2d 231, 246 (Iowa 2022) (quoting State v. Ary, 877
N.W.2d 686, 706 (Iowa 2016)). “Our review is not to determine whether the verdict
is contrary to the weight of the evidence but only to determine whether the district
court abused its considerable discretion in denying the motion.” Id. “This is a
deferential standard, and we will not reverse the district court’s ruling absent a
‘clear and manifest abuse of discretion.’” Id. We find no abuse of discretion here.
Kelly started renting his attic room in October 2020. He had his own kitchen
but shared a bathroom with the residents on the second floor. Rosa was one of
those residents, and she had many complaints about Kelly after he moved in
upstairs. First, it was his loud music. Then, Kelly began exposing himself to her.
Rosa thought the first time was in late January 2021. She was walking down the
hall to the kitchen, and Kelly came out of the nearby bathroom completely naked
from the waist down. Shocked, Rosa went back to her bedroom.
The second time happened when Kelly begged Rosa to clean his apartment
before his son and girlfriend came for a visit. Rosa agreed only after Kelly asked
her “I don’t know how many times” and promised to pay her $20 per hour. Kelly
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stayed in his bedroom with the door shut and the lights off while Rosa cleaned,
although he did come out one time to ask her to cook dinner for his son. When
Rosa was done, she knocked on Kelly’s bedroom door. He told her to come in.
Rosa testified that when she opened the door, Kelly’s
TV was on with porn on it. He was sitting in his chair with his shorts
down to about his knees or his ankles. He was playing with himself,
stroking his penis. His laptop was laying on his lap, and it was open
all the way to where it was almost flat, and there was porn on it too.
Rosa was shocked and “ready to go out the door,” but she told Kelly what he owed
her. She testified that Kelly told her “to come on in.” When she refused, Kelly
threw $20 on the bed. Rosa grabbed the money and left. She made a complaint
to the landlord, but his office directed her to contact law enforcement.
Rosa tried to avoid Kelly after that incident, which left her “[v]ery
uncomfortable, very insecure, very agitated.” But she had another run-in with him
after a grocery store trip. Rosa was walking to her room with her groceries when
Kelly came up the stairway behind her. He followed her into her room. As she
was setting her groceries down, Kelly “sat down in the chair that was behind [her]
and again pulled his penis out and was in there playing with it.” She told him to
get out, but Kelly moved to her bed and began “making remarks about [Rosa]
getting on the bed.” Rosa again told Kelly to leave, but he “thought it was funny.”
Kelly finally left after she went toward her door to “holler at somebody” for help.
Rosa made another complaint to the landlord, who again directed her to call the
police. She did, and they came to talk to Kelly, but nothing more happened.
The “last straw” for Rosa was when she started getting text messages from
Kelly “about him wanting [her] to be naked on the bed and he wanted to use a dildo
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on [her] and all this stuff.” Now with documentary evidence of Kelly’s unsavory
behavior, Rosa contacted the police again.
Officer Dan Boesen responded to the complaint on February 24. He
testified Rosa told him that Kelly “had been walking around partially nude, shaking
his penis at her, and sending her unwanted messages.” She showed Officer
Boesen the incoming text messages on her cell phone from February 23 that were
“sexual in nature.” Officer Boesen later confirmed the phone number those
messages were sent from belonged to Kelly. He also spoke with other tenants
and visitors at the home, who reported witnessing similar behavior. One of those
tenants and his brother said that the weekend before the officer’s visit, they saw
Kelly masturbating in the communal bathroom with the door open.
Kelly was charged by trial information with three counts of indecent
exposure. He was found guilty under count one, which related to his conduct
toward Rosa.1 For that count, the jury was instructed the State had to prove the
following beyond a reasonable doubt:
1. On or about the 22nd day of February, 2021, the
Defendant exposed his genitals or pubes to Rosa. . . .
2. At the time, Rosa . . . was not the defendant’s spouse.
3. The Defendant did the act with the specific intent to arouse
or satisfy the sexual desire of the Defendant or another person.
4. The Defendant knew or reasonably should have known
that the act was offensive to Rosa . . . or other viewers.
5. Rosa . . . was offended by the Defendant’s act.
Kelly filed a motion for a new trial, in which he argued the jury’s verdict was
contrary to the evidence on the first three elements. The court ruled on the motion
1 The jury acquitted Kelly under count two for his conduct toward the tenant and
his brother who saw him in the bathroom, and the court granted Kelly a judgment
of acquittal under count three for a victim who did not testify at trial.
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at the start of the sentencing hearing, observing that its power to grant a new trial
on weight-of-the-evidence grounds “should be invoked only in exceptional cases
in which the evidence preponderates heavily against the verdict.” See Ary, 877
N.W.2d at 706. After considering the evidence presented on each of the elements
challenged by Kelly, the court found “that the greater weight of the evidence”
supported the guilty verdict. So the court denied Kelly’s motion for a new trial.
Kelly appeals, challenging the weight of the evidence on same elements
raised in his motion for a new trial: (1) the date of the offense, (2) whether he and
the victim were spouses, and (3) whether his acts were specifically intended to
arouse or satisfy his or the victim’s sexual desires.2
The district court may grant a defendant’s motion for a new trial when the
verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence. See Iowa R. Crim.
P. 2.24(2)(b)(6) (2022); Ary, 877 N.W.2d at 706. “The weight-of-the-evidence
standard requires the district court to consider whether more ‘credible evidence’
supports the verdict rendered than supports the alternative verdict.” Ary, 877
N.W.2d at 706 (citation omitted). “The question for the court is not whether there
was sufficient credible evidence to support the verdict rendered or the alternative
verdict, but whether ‘a greater amount of credible evidence’ suggests the verdict
rendered was a miscarriage of justice.” Id. (quoting Ellis, 578 N.W.2d at 658–59).
2 Kelly also suggests the court “wrongly employed a de facto ‘sufficiency of the
evidence analysis here, in a light most favorable to the [S]tate, rather than a
‘contrary to the weight of the evidence’” standard. See State v. Ellis, 578
N.W.2d 655, 659 (Iowa 1998) (noting application of the wrong standard is a ground
for reversal). The record does not support that claim. In ruling on the new-trial
motion, the court carefully stated the standard to be applied from Ellis and
evaluated Kelly’s motion under that standard.
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1. Date of Offense
In claiming the jury’s conclusion about the date of the offense was contrary
to the weight of the evidence, Kelly points out that the marshaling instruction for
count one required the State to prove that the offense occurred “on or about”
February 22, 2021. He argues the “strong weight of the evidence was that the
incident happened substantially earlier than” that date. Kelly relies on a written
statement that Rosa gave to the police on February 24, which stated the “1st
incident was about a month and [a] half ago” and then described the attic incident.
Beyond that, he highlights portions of Rosa’s “unreliable testimony revealing a lack
of credibility, questionable veracity, with mixed up or made up dates, confusion
about details, and inconsistent statements.”
The first problem with Kelly’s argument is that count one was not limited to
the attic incident. The marshaling instruction, as quoted above, encompassed any
act of Kelly exposing his genitals to Rosa. She testified there were three incidents
that occurred between January and February 2021. Although Rosa could not
recall the specific date of each, we agree with the State that it is generally “not
required to prove the precise time and place of a crime.” State v. Yeo, 659
N.W.2d 544, 550 (Iowa 2003); cf. State v. Juste, 939 N.W.2d 664, 676 (Iowa Ct.
App. 2019) (approving of a jury instruction that stated the date of the alleged crime
“is not critical to whether a crime did occur”). Although this principle has only been
applied to sufficiency-of-the-evidence claims, at least so far as we can find, Kelly
offers no reason why it shouldn’t apply equally to claims invoking the weight of the
evidence. He also fails to dispute that the acts described by Rosa occurred. Under
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similar circumstances, our supreme court has held “any uncertainty as to the
precise date is immaterial.” State v. Laffey, 600 N.W.2d 57, 60 (Iowa 1999).
Second, in exercising its discretion to deny the motion for a new trial, the
district court considered and rejected Kelly’s arguments about Rosa’s “unreliable
testimony” on when the incidents occurred:
To the extent that [Rosa’s] testimony was as the Defendant
argues, conflicting and confusing about the date of the offense or
other matters, I conclude that this could be attributable to the fact that
there were multiple incidents involving multiple residents. . . .
[O]verall I found her testimony regarding the elements of indecent
exposure to be credible.
The court did exactly what it was supposed to do under a weight-of-the-evidence
standard—it considered Rosa’s “credibility, weighed the evidence, and gave
reasons for its conclusion that the verdict was not contrary to the weight of the
evidence.” State v. Finck, No. 18-0731, 2019 WL 325811, at *2 (Iowa Ct. App.
Jan. 23, 2019) (citing State v. Reeves, 670 N.W.2d 199, 209 (Iowa 2003)). Kelly
makes no argument about how the court abused its discretion in those findings,
but instead asks us to reweigh the evidence on appeal. See Stendrup, 983 N.W.2d
at 246 (“On appellate review, however, we do not reweigh the evidence and make
an independent determination on whether the verdict was contrary to the weight of
the evidence.”). “That determination was left to the discretion of the district court
in the first instance.” Id. And we find no abuse of the court’s discretion on this
issue.
2. Spousal Status
Next, Kelly claims the verdict was contrary to the weight of the evidence
because the State presented no evidence that he and Rosa were not spouses.
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Kelly is correct there was no direct evidence on that element. But there was an
abundance of circumstantial evidence that Kelly and Rosa were not married to one
another, and no evidence that they were. Because “[a] verdict is contrary to the
weight of the evidence only when ‘a greater amount of credible evidence supports
one side of an issue or cause than the other,’” and there was no evidence on the
other side of the issue, we conclude the district court did not abuse its discretion
in denying the motion for new trial on this point. See Ary, 877 N.W.2d at 706
(citation omitted).
3. Intent
Finally, Kelly claims the jury’s conclusion that he had the specific intent to
arouse the sexual desires of himself or another was contrary to the weight of the
evidence. He says the alleged conduct occurred in his own bedroom, and he was
“masturbating to satisfy his own sexual desires simply with respect to the porn.” In
other words, he argues “there was no evidence that he had any sexual purpose in
being observed by [Rosa]” when she was exposed to his genitals during the attic
incident.
As discussed above, the marshaling instruction did not limit the jury to the
attic incident.3 Even if it did, “[b]eing in one’s home does not insulate a person
from criminal liability for indecent exposure.” State v. Blair, 798 N.W.2d 322, 326
(Iowa Ct. App. 2011). “The requisite intent to arouse or gratify the sexual desire
of any person can be inferred from an accused’s conduct, remarks, and all
3 On another occasion that Kelly doesn’t address, he followed Rosa into her own
room, sat in a chair, and exposed and fondled himself. Then he moved to the bed
and made remarks about Rosa getting on the bed. He also sent Rosa sexually-
charged text messages.
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surrounding circumstances.” State v. Jorgensen, 758 N.W.2d 830, 837
(Iowa 2008). Kelly invited Rosa into his room while he was openly masturbating.
He kept masturbating after she opened the door and tried to lure her into the room
by putting the money he owed her on his bed. See State v. Isaac, 756
N.W.2d 817, 820 (Iowa 2008) (noting continued masturbation with exposure to an
unwilling viewer can be evidence of sexual motivation); see also Blair, 798 N.W.2d
at 326 (“[T]he fact that he was stroking his penis while standing in front of a bay
window is sufficient evidence of Blair’s sexual motivation.”).
The district court considered these circumstances in denying Kelly’s new-
trial motion on this element:
[Rosa] described at least one specific occasion when she observed
Defendant masturbating in her presence, that her presence was
known to him and he looked directly at her. She described his hand
moving along his penis, seeing his penis in a state of arousal or semi
arousal.
Considering all the evidence in the record, we cannot say the evidence
preponderates heavily against the guilty verdict on the intent element—or any of
the others challenged by Kelly on appeal. See Ary, 877 N.W.2d at 706. As a
result, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Kelly’s motion for a
new trial.
AFFIRMED.