Appellant was convicted of attempted sexual battery. Over appellant’s objection, the state introduced testimony from the victim’s friend consisting of what the victim told her regarding the details of the attempted sexual battery. We find the trial court’s admission of this statement was error. Further, we find that the error in this case was not harmless, and therefore, we reverse appellant’s conviction.
The victim was a college student interested in becoming a physician’s assistant. She was introduced to appellant, a physician who agreed to allow her to observe him at his medical practice. When the work day ended between 7:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m., the victim and appellant would have dinner at a local restaurant, and the victim would continue to question appellant about his medical practice.
On the night of the incident, appellant and the victim left appellant’s office to eat at the restaurant at about 9:15 p.m. Appellant’s partner declined an offer to join them. After dinner, appellant started driving the victim to his office instead of to her car. She asked where he was going, and appellant said to the center. The victim testified at trial that she thought that appellant must have forgotten something at the office.
At this point, appellant stopped the car and turned to the victim. The victim testified that appellant pushed her backward and put his dead weight on her. She testified to appellant assaulting her by touching her breasts and vaginal area, as well as pulling at her clothes and exposing her breasts. Appellant kissed the victim, “grinded” on her, and exposed his erect penis before he eventually ejaculated.
During the assault, the victim testified to repeatedly saying no and mentioning appellant’s wife and children to him. Ap
The victim called her friend. Over defense objection, the friend testified that the victim was upset because appellant was chasing her. She asked the friend what to do, and the friend told the victim to meet her at the hospital where the friend worked. Instead the victim went to the friend’s home, where she met the friend’s boyfriend upon arriving.
Later that night, the friend arrived home and found the victim lying on the couch. The friend noticed a “hickey” on the victim’s neck but did not notice the victim’s clothes to be torn or ripped. In their second conversation, the friend testified that the victim said she was “very nervous” due to the “events that taken place” and because of “being followed and what had happened with [appellant] that night.”
The trial court denied appellant’s objection to the state asking the friend what details the victim had relayed to her about the events of that night. The friend testified:
She stated to me that he had, she was in the passenger side of the vehicle, of his vehicle and he had moved on over to pin her down and force her to kiss, you know, to kiss her and stuff and, and later, you know, as that was happening he, what she told me was that he ejaculated on her, that’s what she told me.
Appellant again raised an objection, which the trial court overruled finding the friend’s testimony admissible as an excited utterance or as the first recounting of a sexual battery crime. The friend testified that although the victim did not explicitly state the incident was not consensual, “that’s what it seemed like ... she was getting at,” and that the victim “was trying to fight him off.”
At trial, the other evidence introduced included a “controlled call” between the victim and appellant. During the conversation, the victim said that what happened was not something she wanted and that appellant crossed the line. Appellant apologized and said he would “make sure it doesn’t happen again.” Appellant also said, “I didn’t listen to you, you know, and it all happened.” Appellant gave a statement to law enforcement in which he said that the victim participated in everything and that he did not force her to participate.
The defense called the friend’s boyfriend to testify. He stated that when the victim arrived the night of the incident he asked her if she wanted to call the police and the victim said no. Later, but before the friend arrived home, the victim woke the friend’s boyfriend because she was upset about a “hickey” on her neck. The boyfriend told her to use a frozen spoon on the spot.
Appellant was found guilty as charged and appeals his conviction. Appellant argues that the trial court erred by admitting the hearsay statement of the victim through the testimony of the victim’s friend. The trial court overruled appellant’s timely objection to the friend’s recounting of the victim’s version of events from that night that occurred after the friend returned home.
The state argues, in response, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by admitting the friend’s testimony recounting the victim’s statements because (1) of the “first complaint” exception to the hearsay rule, (2) it was an excited utterance, and (3) the statement was not hearsay, but
“The standard of review for admissibility of evidence is abuse of discretion, limited by the rules of evidence. [W]hether evidence falls within the statutory definition of hearsay is a matter of law, subject to de novo review.” Lucas v. State,
As to the “first complaint” exception to the hearsay rule, the state points to Irvin v. State,
Even though there are Florida cases recognizing the “first complaint” exception, there are other cases holding that the adoption of the Florida Evidence Code eliminated any common law hearsay exceptions not codified by statute. In Chavez v. State,
Although section 90.102 states that common law that does not conflict with the Code is still applicable in Florida, section 90.802 prohibits courts from admitting hearsay “except as provided by statute.” ... The Florida Evidence Code has expressly established that to be admissible, hearsay evidence must fall under a statutory exception.
Our court adopted the reasoning of Chavez in Mortimer v. State,
Applying this reasoning to the common law “first complaint” rule leads to the conclusion that it is no longer a valid exception to the prohibition on admitting hearsay testimony. The Irvin case was decided in 1953, before the adoption of the Florida Evidence Code in 1976. Furthermore, no provision of the Florida Evidence Code has specifically authorized the “first complaint” exception to the hearsay rule, as set forth in section 90.802, Florida Statutes. Thus, because “only exceptions to the hearsay rule in Florida are the ones recognized by statutes,” and “the admission of hearsay evidence under the common-law ... contradicts this express directive,” the testimony of the victim’s friend should not be admissible. Mortimer,
Even if the “first complaint” rule remains a valid exception, the testimony of the victim’s friend in this case would still be inadmissible. In Irvin, in response to the question of “[w]hat did she tell you?,” the husband was allowed to testify that his wife, the victim, told him that she was raped.
In the present case, unlike Irvin, the friend’s testimony went far beyond the “single statement” of the attempted sexual battery, and amounted to a “narration of the criminal assault.” Thus, even under Irvin, the testimony of the friend would be improper and beyond the parameters of the “first complaint” exception. See also Burgess v. State,
For all the reasons stated above, we find the admission of the friend’s statement was inadmissible hearsay, and not admissible under the “first complaint” rule.
The trial court also relied on section 90.808(2), Florida Statutes (2010), to admit the friend’s recitation of the victim’s statement as an “excited utterance.” As this court has explained:
[I]n order for an excited utterance to be admissible, the following requirements must be met: (1) there must have been an event startling enough to cause nervous excitement; (2) the statement must have been made before there was time to contrive or misrepresent; and (3) the statement must have been made while the person was under the stress of excitement caused by the startling event.
Mariano v. State,
Thus, where the time between the event and the statement is long enough to permit “reflective thought,” the statement will be excluded unless there is evidence that the “declarant did not in fact engage in a reflective thought process.” Id. at 116 (citation omitted). The state must present evidence that the declarant did not engage in reflective thought during the time between the time of the event and the statement.
In Hutchinson v. State,
In the present case, it is also unclear from the record the time between the incident and the time when the victim told the friend of the incident. Therefore, the state did not meet its burden to establish that the victim did not engage in reflective thought before telling her friend of the incident. We find the trial court erred in relying on the excited utterances exception in admitting the victim’s hearsay statements.
The state also argues that we can affirm the admission of the friend’s testimony regarding the victim’s statement based on the application of the prior consistent statement rule, pursuant to section 90.801(2)(b), Florida Statutes (2010). Although the trial court did not rely on this ground, the state would have us affirm under the rule of “tipsy coachman.” See Robertson v. State,
Here, the defense accused the victim of having a motive to fabricate that the incident was non-consensual once she discovered the hickey on her neck. The defense proffered that the victim wanted to rekindle a relationship with an ex-boyfriend whom she knew would see the hickey. The testimony of the friend’s boyfriend revealed that the victim was aware of the hickey before the friend came home and before the victim spoke with the friend revealing details of the assault. In other words, the victim’s second conversation with the friend — during which she revealed details of the assault — occurred after the point in time at which the defense argued that she had a motive to fabricate. Thus, the victim’s hearsay statement to the friend was inadmissible as a prior consistent statement. See id.
The admission of inadmissible hearsay evidence is subject to harmless error analysis. Peterson v. State,
In Carter v. State,
Here, allowing the friend’s testimony was prejudicial and harmful in that it provided self-corroboration of the victim’s testimony, bolstered the victim’s credibility which was a crucial issue at trial, and was featured in the state’s closing argument before the jury. See Carter,
In conclusion, we find that the trial court’s error in admitting inadmissible hearsay from the friend, testifying to the details of the incident as relayed to her by the victim, is not harmless error beyond a reasonable doubt. Therefore, we reverse and remand for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.
