Dоnald Lee Caison, Jr., (appellant) was convicted in a jury trial of manslaughter, in violation of Code § 18.2-35. On appeal, he contends the trial court erred in admitting into evidence a recording of a 911 call and in finding the evidence sufficient to support his
I. BACKGROUND
“On appeal, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, grаnting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.”
Zoretic v. Commonwealth,
After appellant fled, McLachlan and Gann carried Green, who appeared unconscious, back to the front yard of their residence. Within minutes, McLachlan called 911 and spoke to an operator employed by the Fairfax County Police. The dialogue between McLachlan and the 911 operator, in relevant part, transpired as follows:
911 OPERATOR: What’s the problem?
CALLER: I don’t know. My friend was hit in the stomach with a beer bottle.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. How did it happen?
CALLER: I don’t know. I don’t know. He was here, then one of my friends came and they just started fighting, and then he hit him with a beer bottle.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Ma’am. Ma’am, I cannot understand a word that you’re saying. You need to settle down and take the phone away from—like further away from your mouth; it’s mumbled.
You said that he hit him with it?
CALLER: Yes.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Is he bleeding?
CALLER: Yes.
911 OPERATOR: Is he conscious?
CALLER: No.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Is he breathing?
CALLER: He’s breathing, yes.
$ $ $ ^ $
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Where is the guy that cut him?
CALLER: He ran.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. What does he look like?
CALLER: A tall black male, about 6 foot, 6 foot 1.
911 OPERATOR: Does anybody know who he is?
CALLER: Yes. He’s Donald Lee Caison.
❖ * * * *
911 OPERATOR: Okay. All right. What’s he wearing?
CALLER: A black hoodie.
911 OPERATOR: Say that—
CALLER: A white tee-shirt.
911 OPERATOR: I’m sorry—a black hoodie?
CALLER: White tee-shirt.
911 OPERATOR: And a white tee-shirt?
CALLER: And black Dickies.
^ ^ ^ ^
911 OPERATOR: Does he have any weapons on him still?
CALLER: No, I don’t know.
911 OPERATOR: And do you know which way he ran?
CALLER: He ran towards Herndon Parkway.
911 OPERATOR: How many minutes ago?
CALLER: About five minutes ago.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. All right. You’re—okay, you’re outside there with your friends?
CALLER: Yes.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Let me stay on the phone with you to make sure his condition doesn’t get worse, and I’ve got to get somebody to call Herndon. Okay? Hold on just one second.
CALLER: Okay.
* Hí # ❖ H*
911 OPERATOR: Is he awake?
CALLER: Yes.
911 OPERATOR: Okay. Tell him—do you have a cloth or something you can hold on his stomach? You need to get a clean shirt or a clean towel and hold it on the bleeding. Okay?
CALLER: Okay.
Following the incident, Green died as a result of stab wounds inflicted with a knife during the altercation. Subsequently, a jury convicted appellant of manslaughter and this appeal followed.
II. 911 CALL
On appеal, appellant contends the trial court abused its discretion in admitting the 911 recording into evidence under the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule. We disagree with appellant.
“As a general rule, hearsay evidence is incompetent and inadmissible,” and “the party seeking to rely upon an exception to the hearsay rule has the burden of establishing admissibility.”
Neal v. Commonwealth,
“There is no fixed rule by which the question whether the statement is admissible as an excited utterance can be decided.”
Clark v. Commonwealth,
“A statement comes within the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule and is admissible to prove the truth of the matter stated, when the statement is spontaneous and impulsive, thus guaranteeing its reliability____ The statement must be prompted by a startling event and be made аt such time and under such circumstances as to preclude the presumption that it was made as the result of deliberation. In addition, the declarant must have firsthand knowledge of the startling event. The decision whether the statement qualifies as an excited utterance lies within the discretion of the trial court.”
Esser v. Commonwealth,
Here, during rebuttal, the Commonwealth moved .to admit into evidence the recording of McLachlan’s dialogue with the 911 operator. Out of the jury’s presence, the trial court heard the 911 recording. In resolving that the recording qualified as an excited utterance, the trial court found McLachlan, a witness to the event, made “spontaneous” statements, under the influence of and contemporaneous with the “very startling event,” and without “any time for reflection” or “premeditation.” Appellant claims, nonetheless, that the call does not qualify as an excited utterаnce because McLachlan’s statements were made “in response to questions from the 911 operator.”
We addressed the same argument in
Bowling v. Commonwealth,
“To pivot the admissibility of a subsequent statement, however spontaneous, on the question[ ] of whether it was prompted by an equally spontaneous inquiry would serve no useful purpose. If the question or questioner suggested or influenced the response, then the deсlaration may lack the necessary reliability to be admitted.”
Id.
at 176,
The same rationale applies here. McLachlan, who had just witnessed a violent confrontation, aided the victim who lay mortally wounded from the stabbings. McLachlan also faced the threat that the assailant would return to the scene to perpetrate further harm. McLachlan spoke to the 911 operator and described the incident and the assailant within minutes of the event. The operator responded to McLachlan’s initial report of the confrontation to quickly ascertain the gravity of peril McLachlan faced and by directing McLachlan to render aid to a dying man. Considering the reliability of the statements in accord with Bowling, we conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in finding that McLachlan’s responses to the 911 operator’s questions were not suggested or influenced by the questions posed by the 911 operator.
Thus, the fact that McLachlan was answering questions, rathеr than relaying a spontaneous narrative, does not indicate her statements were not excited utterances.
See United States v. Joy,
Appellant next contends the Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment precluded admission of the 911 recording. Relying on
Crawford v. Washington,
Although we will not disturb on appeal decisions regarding the admissibility of evidence absent an abuse of the trial court’s discretion,
Breeden v. Commonwealth,
The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, a “procedural guarantee” that also “applies to state prosecutions,” Michels v. Commonwealth,47 Va.App. 461 , 466,624 S.E.2d 675 , 678 (2006), provides that, “In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to be confronted with the witnesses against him,” U.S. Const, amend. VI.
Id.
at 753,
Subsequently, in Davis, the United States Supreme Court expounded on what Crawford characterized as “testimonial” statements in the context of an interrogation during a 911 call. In doing so, the Court announced the primary purpose doctrine, as follows:
Statements are nontestimonial when made in the course of police interrogation under circumstances objectively indicating that the primary purpose of the interrogation is to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency. They are testimonial when the circumstances objectively indicate that there is no such ongoing emergency, and that thе primary purpose of the interrogation is to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.
Davis,
(1) the caller was describing the events as they were happening; (2) the caller was facing an ongoing emergency; (3) the nature of what was asked and answered was necessary to resolve the present emergency rather than learn what happened in the past; and (4) the caller’s answers were frantic[, provided over the phone, in an environment that was not tranquil, or even (as far as any reasonable 911 operator could make out) safe].
United States v. Proctor,
Applying the primary purpose doctrine to the facts of this case, we conclude that McLachlan’s statements to the 911 operator were not testimonial in nature. Viewing the circumstances objectively, it is clear that McLachlan faced an ongoing emergency manifested by two sources of distress: Green’s life-threatening condition and the present and proximate danger that appellant, a potentially armed assailant who had stabbed Green and fled into the neighborhood, would return to the scene to injure Green, McLachlan, or Gann.
McLachlan described the events as they were happening. She spoke of whether Green was conscious, bleeding, and breathing as the deteriorating condition was actually occurring. The operator responded to the trauma by directing McLachlan to apply pressure to the wounds -with a clean towel to slow the bleeding and kept her on the phone “to make sure [Green’s] condition [did not] get worse.” Asked by the operator how Green was injured, who committed the stabbing,
Appellant claims, however, that McLachlan’s statements were testimonial because the original emergency ended when the altercation between appellant and Green ceased. Thus, he argues, the call focused on a criminal investigation of a completed event evident from the oрerator’s questions as to “who was the cause of the wounds, where that person went and what he was wearing.” Appellant’s contention has no merit.
In
Proctor,
a witness called 911 immediately following the crime, recounting that the defendant stole a gun, fired it twice, and fled into a nightclub with the loaded weapon.
Proctor,
The same conclusion is equally applicable in this case. The emergency had not ended and was not limited to rendering aid to Green. Rather, the emergency also involved a dangerous assailant who had just stabbed Green, was potentially armed, and fled into the surrounding neighborhood with no guarantee that he would not return and cause further harm to Green, McLachlan, Gann, or other residents of the neighborhood. McLachlan could have “reasonably feared” that she, Green, аnd Gann were in danger. In fact, the operator’s questions showed that she was trying to resolve the emergency by attempting to compose McLachlan, asking her to “settle down,” and then by seeking to understand the seriousness of the peril McLachlan faced.
Here, as in
Proctor,
the operator’s effort to resolve the ongoing emergency by establishing the identity of the assailant, including his location and physical description, so that the officers might know whether they would be encountering a violent felon, did not render McLachlan’s responses testimonial.
See also Cadieux,
Appellant further contends that the “prejudice of the 911 call” to appellant “far
“In determining whether evidence should be admitted, the trial court must apply a balancing test in assessing the probative value of the evidence and its prejudicial effect.”
Dandridge v. Marshall,
In a sense, all “evidence tending to prove guilt is prejudicial”—at least from the point of view of the person standing trial. Virginia law, however, intervenes only when the alleged prejudice tends to inflame irrational emotions or leads to illegitimate inferences. And even then, it bеcomes a matter of degree____ We generally defer to trial judges on this subject because they, unlike us, participate first person in the evidentiary process and acquire competencies on the subject that we can rarely duplicate merely by reading briefs and transcripts.
Thomas v. Commonwealth,
In this case, the trial court judge implicitly found no prejudice when he made a finding of fact that he “couldn’t hear Mr. Green say anything” on the 911 recording. “Principles of appellate review require that we affirm determinations of fact made by the trial court unless there is no support for such determinations in the record.”
Commercial Underwriters Ins. Co. v. Hunt & Calderone, P.C.,
III. SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
Appellant asserts the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction for voluntary manslaughter because he claims he acted in self-defense. We disаgree.
In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction, “‘we must discard the evidence of the accused in conflict with that of the Commonwealth, and regard as true all the credible evidence favorable to the Commonwealth and all fair inferences that may be drawn therefrom.’ ”
Watkins v. Commonwealth,
A defendant claiming self-defense “implicitly admits the killing was intentional.”
McGhee v. Commonwealth,
At trial, appellant testified that Green introduced the knife into the altercation and wielded it in appellant’s direction. Appellant further claimed that he believed Green was going to stab him and stated that he pried thе knife from Green’s hand. Appellant also admitted that he swung the knife at Green as Green continued to punch him. Gann testified that during the altercation, she saw nothing in Green’s hand. A forensic pathology expert testified that Green sustained three stab wounds to the chest and one stab wound to the back.
Considering the evidence adduced at trial, the jury could have concluded that appellant lied during his testimony and could have found that he, in faсt, introduced the knife into the affray and stabbed Green. Indeed, the jury was entitled to credit the Commonwealth’s evidence that Gann did not see Green with a knife. In the alternative, the jury could have found that Green originally had the knife but that appellant wrestled it from him and then stabbed Green. Upon either plausible explanation, the jury, acting within its fact finding discretion, could have found that the amount of force appellant used, as evidenced by the four stab wounds to Green, was not reasonable against Green, who either never possessed the knife, or no longer had the knife. Thus, the jury “resolv[ed] the conflicts and inconsistencies [therein] against [appellant] and [found] ultimately that the evidence constituted proof of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”
Lockhart v. Commonwealth,
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and appellant’s conviction.
Affirmed.
