Lead Opinion
We granted certiorari to consider whether the Court of Appeals improperly limited this Court’s holding in Division 3 of Woodard v. State,
1. Appellant Michael Shane Bunn moved in with his step-sister sometime in 2005, becoming the primary after-school care provider for his two nieces, who were ages seven and nine at the time of trial. On January 20, 2006, the girls told their mother that Appellant had put his hand down their pants; they later said that Appellant also licked their private parts and touched his penis to their vaginal areas. The mother contacted law enforcement, and the children were separately interviewed by a forensic therapist at a child advocacy center. The interviews were video recorded.
At trial in May 2006, each girl testified about what Appellant had done to her and what she saw Appellant do to her sister, and Appellant cross-examined the children. The girls’ mother and the forensic therapist also testified against Appellant, and the recording of the children’s forensic interviews was played for the jury. Like the children’s in-court testimony, this evidence included not only each girl’s out-of-court statements about sexual contact Appellant had with her, but also sexual contact she saw Appellant have with her sister. Appellant testified in his own defense, denying any wrongdoing. The jury convicted Appellant of two counts each of cruelty to children in the first degree, aggravated child molestation, and child molestation. He was sentenced to serve a total of 12 years in prison followed by 18 years on probation. The trial court denied Appellant’s motion for new trial, and he timely appealed.
The Court of Appeals affirmed, rejecting Appellant’s claim that his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to make a hearsay objection when the forensic therapist testified about what each child said she saw Appellant do to the other child and when the unredacted recording of the children’s interviews was played for the jury.' See Bunn v. State,
2. (a) As originally enacted in 1986, Georgia’s Child Hearsay Statute provided as follows:
A statement made by a child under the age of 14 years describing any act of sexual contact or physical abuse performed with or on the child by another is admissible in evidence by the testimony of the person or persons to whom made if the child is available to testify in the proceedings and the court finds that the circumstances of the statement provide sufficient indicia of reliability.
Ga. L. 1986, p. 668, § 1.
In 1994, however, we held, as a matter of statutory interpretation, that the Child Hearsay Statute did not apply to out-of-court statements by a child under age 14 describing physical abuse he saw the defendant inflict on two other young children. See Thornton v. State,
In response to Thornton, the next year the General Assembly
A statement made by a child under the age of 14 years describing any act of sexual contact or physical abuse performed with or on the child by another or performed with or on another in the presence of the child is admissible in evidence by the testimony of the person or persons to whom made if the child is available to testify in the proceedings and the court finds that the circumstances of the statement provide sufficient indicia of reliability.
Ga. L. 1995, p. 937, § 1 (emphasis added). See Vicki Lynn Bell, Note, Peach Sheets, Evidence, 12 Ga. St. U. L. Rev. 197, 197-200 (1995). Thus, the hearsay exception was no longer limited to out-of-court statements by the child who was the victim of the defendant’s sexual contact or physical abuse — or to statements about sexual contact or physical abuse committed against children.
In Division 3 of Woodard, this Court considered the constitutionality of the 1995 amendment. See
(b) In deciding an equal protection challenge, the level of scrutiny applied by the court depends on the nature of the distinction drawn by the legislation at issue. If neither a suspect class nor a fundamental right is implicated, the most lenient level of judicial review — “rational basis” — applies. See Ambles v. State,
Woodard accurately described the 1995 amendment to the Child Hearsay Statute as creating a disparity in the substantive evidence admissible against defendants charged with identical crimes (in Woodard’s case, child molestation) “based on nothing more than the age of the hearsay declarant.”
The Woodard majority started its analysis of that point by saying, ‘We cannot identify any rational basis for this disparity,” that is, for the difference between the evidence potentially admissible at the trial of a defendant who committed his child molestation crime in front of another child and the evidence admissible against a defendant who committed the same crime in the presence of someone older than 14. Id. at 323. The Court accepted the premise that the State has a legitimate interest in protecting certain types of witnesses more than others, noting that “compelling reasons . .. support the admission of hearsay statements made by a child victim of physical or sexual abuse.” Id. In other words, the Court recognized that an interest in protecting certain witnesses more than others can justify a disparity in the evidence admissible against defendants accused of the same crime. The Court explained:
There are several compelling reasons for allowing a child victim’s hearsay statements to come into evidence, including (1) society’s desire to spare children who are subjected to abuse from further unnecessary trauma in the courtroom; (2) ensuring that the jury hears the statement of a child who has been traumatized by abuse and is psychologically unable to recount that incident while testifying; and (3) to protect the rights of victimized children who cannot defend those rights for themselves.
Id. at 323.
These same public policy reasons [that justify excusing a child victim from testifying at trial], however, do not support admitting the hearsay statements of children who only witness acts of physical or sexual abuse. The hearsay statements of children younger than 14 who witness violent crimes that do not involve physical or sexual abuse, such as assault, are not admissible per se in criminal prosecutions against the perpetrators of those crimes. The impact on a child witness to a violent criminal act is, we believe, the same regardless of the crime that is witnessed. Nothing about the crime witnessed distinguishes a child who observes the assault of a parent from another child who witnesses the physical or sexual abuse of a sibling. Both are repugnant, and both can be equally damaging to the child witness’s psyche. Yet the hearsay statement of the child who witnesses the assault is presumptively inadmissible, while the hearsay statement of the child observing the abuse is presumptively admissible. We believe that this illogical anomaly illustrates the lack of any rational basis for the disparity created by the amended statute.
Id. (footnote omitted).
This reasoning simply does not hold up. To begin with, while the reasons to protect (to some extent) children who have been victims of sexual and physical abuse from having to testify at a criminal trial may be more “compelling” than the reasons to protect children who have only witnessed a sexual or violent crime committed against another person, it does not follow that the State has no legitimate interest in also shielding such child witnesses from enduring the rigors of a criminal trial. A courtroom can be a scary place for a 13-year-old child, not to mention even younger children, when the child is required to testify and face cross-examination in front of a room full of adults, including the accused, a judge, and a dozen jurors, who scrutinize her every word about the criminal sexual or physical
Moreover, there is nothing irrational about creating disparate classes of criminal defendants based on the young age of the witnesses to their crimes. The State’s strong interest in protecting children from witnessing crimes involving “sexual contact or physical abuse” in the first place, much less from re-living that experience in courtroom testimony, is reflected in criminal offenses making it a form of cruelty to children to intentionally or knowingly allow a child under the age of 18 to witness a forcible felony, battery, or family violence battery, see OCGA § 16-5-70 (d) (l)-(2), and making it a felony to commit “any immoral or indecent act... in the presence of... any child under the age of 16 years with the intent to arouse or satisfy... sexual desires,” OCGA § 16-6-4 (a) (l).
Convictions under these criminal statutes that protect only children under certain ages have routinely been affirmed by Georgia’s appellate courts without any question of their rational basis. And if it is rational to imprison a defendant who causes a child to witness sexual contact or physical abuse, it is surely rational to make the defendant merely deal with hearsay from such a child (whom the defendant may require to appear in court to testify and face cross-examination, see footnote 4 above).
Finally, the fact that the General Assembly loosened the hearsay rule for child witnesses to crimes involving only sexual contact and physical abuse, as opposed to all crimes or all violent crimes, should pose no problem under rational basis review. Woodard’s Division 3 described this feature of the 1995 amendment to OCGA § 24-3-16 as an “illogical anomaly,” asserting:
The impact on a child witness to a violent criminal act is, we believe, the same regardless of the crime that is witnessed. Nothing about the crime witnessed distinguishes a child who observes the assault of a parent from another child who witnesses the physical or sexual abuse of a sibling. Both are repugnant, and both can be equally damaging to the child witness’s psyche.
Woodard,
But more importantly, the Woodard majority’s “ ‘all or nothing’ approach, which questions the wisdom of the legislature’s [incremental] action, conflicts with established principles of constitutional law.” Farley v. State,
It is also worth noting that the holding in Division 3 of Woodard is an anomaly in our law. “Rules of evidence, being procedural in their nature, are peculiarly discretionary with the law-making authority. . . .” Salsburg v. Maryland,
In sum, after careful reflection, we conclude that Division 3 of Woodard was wrongly decided.
(c) The Court of Appeals held that Woodard did not extend to hearsay by children who were both victims of and witnesses to sexual or physical abuse, rather than only being witnesses. See Bunn,
(d) Thus, like the Court of Appeals, we could simply decline to extend Woodard’s Division 3 to the circumstances presented in this case. However, having determined that Division 3 was wrongly decided, we believe that the better course is simply to overrule it. The legislature cannot correct our error by amending OCGA § 24-3-16, because Woodard’s holding was a misapplication of the Constitution, not the statute.
Having overruled the holding of Division 3 of Woodard, it follows that the Court of Appeals committed no reversible error in declining to extend that holding to the circumstances of this case. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Appeals’ judgment. See MCG Health, Inc. v. Owners Ins. Co.,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Division 2 of Woodard, which was unanimous, clarified the law regarding the admission of a witness’s prior consistent statements as substantive evidence. See
Prompted, by growing public awareness of the prevalence of and harm caused by child abuse, by the early 1990s about half the states had formally enacted, by statute or rule, exceptions to the hearsay rule for certain out-of-court statements by children. See Robert P. Mosteller, Remaking Confrontation Clause and Hearsay Doctrine under the Challenge of Child Sexual Abuse Prosecutions, 1993 U. Ill. L. Rev. 691, 697 & n. 20 (1993). See also 2 Kenneth S. Broun, McCormick on Evidence § 272.1 (6th ed. 2006) (explaining the development of the child hearsay, or “tender years,” exception to the hearsay rule and its connection to the historical hearsay exception for fresh complaints of rape).
Then-Justice Carley’s dissent, which then-Justice Hunstein joined, argued that the majority erred in reaching out to decide the case on equal protection grounds because “Woodard’s equal protection challenge was not raised or ruled upon in the trial court.” Woodard at 325 (Carley, J., dissenting). The dissent addressed and found meritless the Confrontation Clause claim Woodard had raised in the trial court. See id.
Division 3 of Woodard, is not the only obstacle to admitting a child’s out-of-court statements about sexual contact or physical abuse committed in the child’s presence. Even if OCGA§ 24-3-16 authorizes the admission of such evidence as an evidentiary matter, it may still be inadmissible as a violation of the accused’s rights under the Confrontation Clause. See U. S. Const. Amend. VI; Ga. Const, of 1983, Art. I, Sec. I, Par. XIV. See also Hatley v. State,
See also OCGA § 16-5-70 (b) (“Any person commits the offense of cruelty to children in the first degree [punishable by five to 20 years in prison] when such person maliciously causes a child under the age of 18 cruel or excessive physical or mental pain.”), (c) (“Any person commits the offense of cruelty to children in the second degree [punishable by one to ten years in prison] when such person with criminal negligence causes a child under the age of 18 cruel or excessive physical or mental pain.”); Hall,
In accordance with Woodard, the General Assembly removed the language added by the 1995 amendment from the Child Hearsay Statute when carrying it forward in the new Georgia evidence code, which will take effect on January 1,2013. See OCGA § 24-8-820. It is nevertheless appropriate for us to correct Division 3 of Woodard, both because it governs cases in the interim and to make clear that the General Assembly has the authority to amend the statute as it did in 1995 if it so chooses. The dissent’s assertion, see Dis. Op. at 193, that the General Assembly “give[s] its implicit legislative approval” to a decision by this Court that a statutory provision is unconstitutional, unless it manages to abrogate the decision by the momentous and difficult act of amending the Constitution - an act ultimately taken by the people of Georgia, not the General Assembly - is unsupported by any authority. And it is deeply ironic for the dissent to claim that our overruling of Woodard's Division 3 “has the same effect as ‘judicial alteration of language that the General Assembly itself placed in the statute.’ ” Dis. Op. at 194 (citation omitted). To the contrary, our decision today restores validity to ‘language that the General Assembly itself placed in the [Child Hearsay] statute” (specifically to overcome our statutory decision in Thornton) — language that was effectively deleted by our erroneous constitutional decision in Woodard.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I dissent because I believe the Court of Appeals erred when it ruled that trial counsel’s failure to object to a therapist’s testimony relating to hearsay statements did not constitute deficient performance. Bunn v. State,
1. In granting Bunn’s petition for a writ of certiorari, this Court fashioned the issue as whether the Child Hearsay Statute permitted a witness to testify as to what one of the defendant’s child victims said she saw Bunn do to another child victim. In Woodard v. State, supra,
To make matters worse, the majority acknowledges that its radical action is not required to resolve the issue on appeal in the case before us. Maj. Op., Division 2 (d). The majority could, instead, adopt the restrictive interpretation of Woodard taken by the Court of Appeals in its decision in Bunn. There, the Court of Appeals read the holding in Woodard as being a prohibition against the use of hearsay statements made by a child who only witnessed physical or sexual abuse inflicted on another. Bunn v. State, supra,
2.1 do not read Woodard as narrowly as did the Court of Appeals in its decision in Bunn. I agree that both children were victims and therefore the Child Hearsay Statute authorized the admission of the out-of-court statements of each child recounting the facts of the crime committed against her. I continue to believe that the defendant’s right to equal protection prohibits the admission of testimony repeating another witness’s out-of-court prior consistent statements in which the witness recounted what she observed, unless the witness’s
Now-Chief Justice Carley, joined by now-Presiding Justice Hunstein, dissented from this portion of Woodard not because they believed the statute did not violate equal protection, but because they believed this Court lacked subject-matter appellate jurisdiction to decide that issue. Woodard v. State, supra,
It appears that the majority’s disposal of equal protection as a basis for restricting the in-court use of child witnesses’ out-of-court statements will serve to resurrect defense contentions that the Child Hearsay Statute violates the Confrontation Clause. See Maj. Op. at 189, n. 4. If a child is required to testify at trial in order to satisfy the Confrontation Clause (see Hatley v. State,
