Court Opinion

ID: 5121063
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-10-26 08:02:03.517179+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:15:50.088871
License: Public Domain

NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
 UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
                 AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.

                                    IN THE
             ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
                                DIVISION ONE

                       STATE OF ARIZONA, Appellee,

                                        v.

                VICTOR MARTIN CABALLERO, Appellant.

                             No. 1 CA-CR 20-0599
                              FILED 10-26-2021

           Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
                        No. CR 2019-117618-001
                 The Honorable Jo Lynn Gentry, Judge

                                  AFFIRMED

                                   COUNSEL

Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
By Jennifer L. Holder
Counsel for Appellee

Maricopa County Public Defender’s Office, Phoenix
By Mark E. Dwyer
Counsel for Appellant
                          STATE v. CABALLERO
                           Decision of the Court

                      MEMORANDUM DECISION

Presiding Judge Jennifer B. Campbell delivered the decision of the Court,
in which Judge Samuel A. Thumma and Judge Maurice Portley1 joined.

C A M P B E L L, Judge:

¶1            Victor Caballero appeals his convictions and sentences for
two counts of aggravated domestic violence. Because he has shown no
reversible error, we affirm.

                             BACKGROUND2

¶2            While speaking with a 9-1-1 operator, Caballero’s teenage son
(the Son) reported that Caballero had hit him “in [his] eye,” “hit [his]
grandma” (Grandmother), and then fled from Grandmother’s house. In
response to the call, a patrol officer drove to the house and spoke to the Son
and Grandmother. Grandmother recounted that she had been sweeping her
floor when she saw Caballero enter her home through a back door. She told
Caballero that he was not allowed in her house, and he began yelling at her
and pushed her against a wall. The Son said that Caballero broke a security
screen off a window as he left the house. While speaking to the Son, the
officer observed that his left eye was red and slightly swollen.

¶3            Meanwhile, two other officers canvassed Grandmother’s
neighborhood, eventually locating Caballero a short distance away. While
taking Caballero into custody, an officer observed that he smelled like
alcohol, had bloodshot, watery eyes, slurred his words, and appeared
intoxicated, as the Son had described to the 9-1-1 operator.

¶4           The State charged Caballero with two counts of aggravated
domestic violence. The State also alleged aggravating circumstances, that
Caballero had historical prior felony convictions, and that he committed the
offenses while on probation.

1   The Honorable Maurice Portley, Retired Judge of the Court of Appeals,
Division One, has been authorized to sit in this matter pursuant to Article
6, Section 3, of the Arizona Constitution.
2   We view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdicts.
State v. Payne, 233 Ariz. 484, 509, ¶ 93 (2013).

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                          STATE v. CABALLERO
                           Decision of the Court

¶5             At trial, Grandmother denied Caballero had entered her
home on that day. When confronted with her prior inconsistent statements
to the responding patrol officer, Grandmother at first testified that she
could not remember making those statements about her son. After further
questioning, however, Grandmother admitted that she told the officer that
Caballero pushed her, but claimed she made it up because she wanted the
police to “help him, to take him.” Stating she had “made a mistake” and
did not “know what [she] was saying [to the officer],” Grandmother
testified that she wanted the case dismissed. Although subpoenaed by the
State, the Son did not appear at trial.

¶6            After Grandmother testified, the prosecutor called a detective
assigned to the police department’s domestic violence unit to testify as a
“cold” expert on victim recantation. Without addressing Grandmother’s
testimony, the detective explained that domestic violence victims often
recant and refuse to cooperate in the prosecution of their family members
because of financial dependence, fear of physical retaliation, or emotional
attachment.

¶7           After a three-day trial, a jury convicted Caballero as charged
and found that he had (1) caused physical harm to the Son, and (2)
committed the offenses while on felony probation.3 The superior court later
found Caballero had two historical prior felony convictions and sentenced
him, as a Category 3 repetitive offender, to concurrent, mitigated terms of
3.5 years imprisonment, awarding him 232 days of presentence credit.
Caballero timely appealed.

                               DISCUSSION

¶8           As his sole issue on appeal, Caballero challenges the
admission of the detective’s expert opinion testimony related to domestic
violence victims.4 He contends that “the question at issue” about

3     At trial, Caballero’s probation officer testified that Caballero was on
probation on that day, having been convicted of two prior domestic
violence offenses. At sentencing, however, the State dismissed the
allegation that the offenses were committed while Caballero was on
probation, making the “not less than the presumptive sentence” provision
of A.R.S. § 13-708(C) inapplicable.
4    In a footnote in his opening brief, Caballero also asserts that the State
repeatedly used leading questions to solicit hearsay testimony at trial. That
said, Caballero waived this issue by failing to develop a legal argument. See
State v. Sanchez, 200 Ariz. 163, 166, ¶ 8 (App. 2001).

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                            STATE v. CABALLERO
                             Decision of the Court

recantation “was well within the purview of the jury” and expert opinion
testimony on the matter was unnecessary. He also argues that the superior
court improperly permitted the detective to opine “whether [Grandmother]
was testifying truthfully.”

¶9             We generally review a superior court’s ruling on the
admissibility of expert opinions for an abuse of discretion. State v. Chappell,
225 Ariz. 229, 235, ¶ 16 (2010). To preserve a challenge to the admissibility
of evidence, a party must move to preclude the evidence by either a motion
or “a specific, contemporaneous objection to its admission.” State v. Moody,
208 Ariz. 424, 441, ¶ 39 (2004). “The motion or objection must state specific
grounds in order to preserve the issue on appeal,” id., and “an objection to
the admission of evidence on one ground will not preserve issues relating
to the admission of that evidence on other grounds.” State v. Hamilton, 177
Ariz. 403, 408 (App. 1993).

¶10            At trial, defense counsel objected to the detective testifying as
an expert, contending the prosecutor failed to adequately disclose the
detective’s prospective testimony. Given the prosecution’s multiple notices
that the detective may be called to testify as an expert witness about
“domestic violence, the domestic violence cycle, recantation, and victimology,” the
superior court properly overruled defense counsel’s objection.

¶11           Because Caballero objected to the detective’s expert testimony
based only on the adequacy of the prosecution’s disclosure, not the bases
he now raises, we review his appellate claim only for fundamental,
prejudicial error. State v. Henderson, 210 Ariz. 561, 567, ¶¶ 19-20 (2005).
Fundamental error goes to the foundation of the case, deprives the
defendant of a right essential to his defense, or is of such magnitude that
the defendant could not possibly have received a fair trial. State v. Escalante,
245 Ariz. 135, 142, ¶ 21 (2018). Under fundamental error review, the
defendant bears the burden of proving both error and resulting prejudice.
Henderson, 210 Ariz. at 567, ¶ 20.

¶12            Under Arizona Rule of Evidence (Rule) 702, a witness “who
is qualified as an expert” by knowledge or experience may render opinion
testimony if the witness’s “specialized knowledge will help the trier of fact
to understand the evidence or to determine a fact in issue.” In evaluating
whether expert opinion will assist the trier of fact, the superior court serves
as a gatekeeper, “with the aim of ensuring such testimony is reliable and
helpful to the jury.” State v. Romero, 239 Ariz. 6, 9, ¶ 12 (2016) (citing Ariz.
R. Evid. 702 cmt. (2012)). An expert’s testimony “is not objectionable just
because it embraces an ultimate issue,” Ariz. R. Evid. 704(a), but “[i]n a

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                           STATE v. CABALLERO
                            Decision of the Court

criminal case, an expert witness must not state an opinion about whether
the defendant did or did not have a mental state or condition that
constitutes an element of the crime charged or of a defense. Those matters
are for the trier of fact alone.” Ariz. R. Evid. 704(b).

¶13             While relevant evidence is generally admissible, Ariz. R. Evid.
402, it may be excluded if its probative value “is substantially outweighed”
by a danger of unfair prejudice. Ariz. R. Evid. 403. Subject to the limitations
of Rule 403, the testimony of a qualified “cold” expert who “educates the
trier of fact about general principles but is not tied to the particular facts of
the case” is admissible, despite Rule 702(d)’s requirement that the expert
must “reliably appl[y] the principles and methods to the facts of the case.”
State v. Salazar-Mercado, 234 Ariz. 590, 595, ¶ 21 (2014).

¶14            Applying this framework, we consider the detective’s expert
opinion testimony. Caballero does not dispute the detective’s qualifications
to render expert opinion testimony related to domestic violence and victim
recantation. See Ariz. R. Evid. 702(a). Instead, he argues that the detective’s
trial testimony was inadmissible because “the facts needed to make the
ultimate judgment” were wholly “within the common knowledge of the
ordinary juror.” Specifically, Caballero contends “[t]he possibility that a
mother might lie to protect her son is completely within the knowledge and
experience of any trial jury,” and rather than “assist the jury,” the
detective’s victim recantation testimony “dictated to the jury”―essentially
telling the jurors that they “should only believe what [Grandmother] told
the police at the time of the incident.”

¶15            As explained by our supreme court, abuse victims “may
exhibit behavioral patterns (e.g. recantation, conflicting versions of events,
confusion or inarticulate descriptions) which jurors might attribute to
inaccuracy or prevarication, but which may be merely the result” of other
factors. State v. Lindsey, 149 Ariz. 472, 474 (1986); see also State v. Moran, 151
Ariz. 378, 381 (1986). For this reason, a trial judge has discretion to allow
expert testimony about “general patterns of behavior” to aid jurors who
may be “unfamiliar with the behavioral sciences.” Lindsey, 149 Ariz. at 473-
74; see also Moran, 151 Ariz. at 382 (explaining “[s]uch evidence may harm
defendant’s interests, but we cannot say it is unfairly prejudicial; it merely
informs jurors that commonly held assumptions are not necessarily
accurate and allows them to fairly judge credibility”).

¶16         In no circumstance, however, may the court admit “direct
testimony on the question of credibility” because “[s]uch testimony is
tantamount to expert evidence on the question of guilt or innocence.”

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                           STATE v. CABALLERO
                            Decision of the Court

Lindsey, 149 Ariz. at 474; see also Moran, 151 Ariz. at 382-83, 385. As a result,
an expert may not opine about the likelihood that a particular witness is
truthful nor that “a certain percentage” of witnesses in general are truthful.
Lindsey, 149 Ariz. at 474-75; Moran, 151 Ariz. at 382, 385.

¶17           Asserting it is common knowledge that parents often act to
protect their children, Caballero contends that the detective’s opinion
testimony was not useful to the jury. This argument reflects a
misunderstanding of the substance of the detective’s expert opinion
testimony. Rather than testifying about the nature of the parent-child
relationship, the detective testified that domestic violence victims often
recant their prior statements because of fear or financial or emotional
dependence on the perpetrators of their abuse. The superior court properly
could conclude that this testimony was admissible to help jurors―likely
unfamiliar with the general patterns of behavior of abuse victims―to
understand why a victim who was initially forthcoming to police officers
may be uncooperative at trial. See State v. Haskie, 242 Ariz. 582, 586, ¶ 16
(2017) (“[E]xpert testimony that explains a victim’s seemingly inconsistent
behavior is admissible to aid jurors in evaluating the victim’s credibility.”).
And contrary to Caballero’s contention, the detective never opined about
the veracity of Grandmother’s trial testimony. In fact, on cross-examination,
the detective testified that he had never spoken to either Grandmother or
the Son and, when asked whether he believed they were lying, the detective
responded, “I have no idea.” Because the detective did not opine
concerning either victims’ veracity, suggest an appropriate verdict, or
otherwise invade the province of the jury, Caballero has not shown his
testimony was inadmissible. The superior court therefore did not err, much
less commit fundamental error, by admitting the detective’s testimony.

                               CONCLUSION

¶18           For these reasons, we affirm.

                             AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
                             FILED:    JT

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