Mario DELGADO-SANTOS, Appellant,
v.
The STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
*75 Bennett H. Brummer, Public Defender and John H. Lipinski and Arthur W. Carter, Sp. Asst. Public Defenders, for appellant.
Jim Smith, Atty. Gen. and Charles H. Fahlbusch, Asst. Atty. Gen., for appellee.
Before SCHWARTZ, C.J., and HUBBART and FERGUSON, JJ.
SCHWARTZ, Chief Judge.
This appeal is from convictions, after a jury trial, of first degree murder and armed robbery. The controlling question presented is whether a police interrogation is a "proceeding" under section 90.801(2)(a), Florida Statutes (1981), so as to permit the admission as substantive evidence of a trial witness's prior inconsistent statement made during such questioning. On the conclusion that it is not, we reverse the judgment below for a new trial.
The appellant Delgado-Santos and one Pizzaro-Ortiz were accused of the stabbing death of the co-owner of a service station in Homestead, Florida in the course of a holdup on July 29, 1981; the murder weapon was later found in a room they shared in a nearby rooming house. At about 6:00 p.m. on August 12, 1981, Ortiz, who was then sixteen years old, was taken into custody although supposedly not "under arrest" and was transported in handcuffs first to one and then to another police station for "questioning."[1] Sometime after midnight, while confined to a holding cell, Ortiz made the statement which is the focal point of this case. At the conclusion of a long process of "pre-statement interrogation" and after being duly given his Miranda rights, he stated under oath, through an interpreter, that he had participated in the holdup only at the instigation of Delgado-Santos who had both planned and suggested it and who had stabbed the victim because he reached for something after being told to keep still. The statement was transcribed and read to Ortiz who initialed each page and signed at the conclusion. Only after the statement was taken, Ortiz was formally arrested and transported to Youth Hall.[2]
Ortiz and Santos were separately indicted for first degree murder and armed robbery. During the pendency of these cases, Ortiz, without conditions with respect to giving testimony in the Santos case, was *76 permitted to plead guilty to armed robbery and a reduced charge of second degree murder and was given an unrestricted life sentence.[3]
Before the commencement of the Santos trial which followed and with which we are now concerned, Ortiz then indicated that he would not testify against Santos. For this reason, the state sought and was granted leave to call Ortiz as a court's witness subject to cross-examination by both sides.[4] Upon initial questioning by the state, Ortiz stated that he had committed the holdup and murder entirely on his own and that Santos was home sleeping at the time and had nothing to do with it. When he was impeached, without objection, with the police statement, Ortiz acknowledged that he had made it, but said he had done so only to avoid the electric chair and that, insofar as Santos was concerned, it "was a lie." The state then offered the statement itself as direct evidence of Santos's guilt. Overruling the defendant's specific objection that it could not be received for that purpose, the trial court admitted it into evidence. This was reversible error.
The question before us is governed by section 90.801(2)(a), Florida Statutes (1981). For the first time in Florida, that provision permits, under rigidly circumscribed conditions, the use of prior inconsistent statements like Ortiz's, which are clearly hearsay, as substantive evidence, rather than, as before, solely for impeachment purposes. Moore v. State,
(2) A Statement is not hearsay if the declarant testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to cross-examination concerning the statement and the statement is:
(A) Inconsistent with his testimony and was given under oath subject to the penalty of perjury at a trial, hearing, or other proceeding or in a deposition... .
Since Ortiz testified at trial and his previous statement, which was violently inconsistent with his trial testimony, was under oath, compare, Mazzara v. State,
In answering this question in the negative, we draw on several sources of interpretation:
(1) First, the congressional history of the expression "other proceeding" demonstrates that its insertion by the conference committee represented a compromise between the version drafted by the advisory committee and approved by the Senate, which permitted the substantive use of any prior inconsistent statement, S.Rep. No. 1277, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974), and that adopted by the House, which required that the statement have been given at a trial, hearing or deposition under oath and subject to cross-examination. H.R.Rep. No. *77 650, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974). It is clear that the "other proceeding" language, taken with the dropping of the cross-examination requirement, "covers statements before a grand jury." H.R.Rep. No. 1597, 93rd Cong., 2d Sess. (1974) (Conference Committee Report) reprinted in U.S.C.A. The Federal Rules of Evidence and in 4 U.S.Code Cong. & Adm.News 7104 (1974), quoted in United States v. Castro-Ayon,
the term "other proceeding" ... was intended to inject into the Rule the stricter limitations of the House version ... lest the meaning of the compromise be read out of the Rule.
Case Comment, Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(A) Prior Inconsistent Statements Scope of the Term "Other Proceeding" United States v. Castro-Ayon,
the only appropriate construction of the term "other proceeding" is a narrow one... . [T]o give [it] a liberal construction is to undermine the foundation of reliability that Congress sought to establish for this Rule.
Note, United States v. Castro-Ayon: An Interpretation of Federal Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(A), 10 SW.U.L.Rev. 985, 987 (1978).
(2) Applying the widely used, but nonetheless valuable tool of statutory construction which has been Latinized as ejusdem generis, the general word "proceeding" must be construed so as to limit its meaning to one similar to that of the specific terms, "trial" and "hearing," which it follows. 49 Fla.Jur.2d Statutes § 128 (1984); Black's Law Dictionary 608 (rev. 4th ed. 1968). Indeed, the order of the words in section 90.801(2)(a), Florida Statutes (1981) indicates a descending sequence from the most formal setting to the least formal. Thus, an "other proceeding" must be no less formal than a deposition and no more so than a hearing. See Case Comment, Other Proceeding, 10 Loy.L.A.L.Rev. at 503.
(3) Even taken alone, the word "proceeding" itself implies employing various permutations of the expression a degree of formality, convention, structure, regularity and replicability of the process in question. Dunn v. United States,
Using these tools, it seems obvious to us on the face of it that no process of police questioning much less one of the kind involved here can qualify as a 90.801(2)(a) "proceeding." Investigative interrogation is neither regulated nor regularized; it contains none of the safeguards involved in an appearance before a grand jury and does not otherwise even remotely resemble that process; and it has no quality of formality and convention which could arguably raise the interrogation to a dignity akin to that of a hearing or trial.
In accordance with this view, the overwhelming weight of authority on the issue is that no variation of police investigatory activity constitutes an 801(d)(1)(A)-90.801(2)(a) proceeding. Martin v. United States,
The only Florida case directly on point[6] is Robinson v. State,
Robinson, and, even more, Smith, which the fifth district followed and which is the only decision which actually permits the admission of a police statement under 801(d)(1)(A), purport to make the question turn on the "reliability" of the contents of the particular statement and of the conditions under which it was given. In our view, the basic flaw in this conclusion is that it finds no basis in the statute. While the legislature and Congress may have been ultimately concerned with the "reliability" of a particular statement, they sought to vindicate that concern only by establishing given and objective criteria as to the circumstances, including the kind of forum, under which it was given. And it is for the legislature, not the courts, to determine not only the policy to be promoted, but the means by which that end is to be achieved. 10 Fla.Jur.2d Constitutional Law § 147 (1979). By suggesting, without statutory authority, that the determination that the existence of a proceeding can depend upon what is said before it, the Robinson-Smith test of reliability[7] violates this basic principle.
In sum, we think that a "bright line" test is mandated by the statute: in this context, this means that a police interrogation either is or is not an "other proceeding." Since, for the reasons outlined, we conclude that it is not, the Ortiz statement was incorrectly admitted as substantive evidence, and the judgment below is therefore reversed for a new trial.[8]
Reversed and remanded.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The trial court was obviously concerned with the propriety of this process.
Q. Now, why was Mr. Pizarro-Ortiz handcuffed in your car and not handcuffed any other place?
A. I would not put him in the back of my car without handcuffing him.
Q. For what reason?
A. Safety factor.
THE COURT: Whose safety factor are you concerned with?
THE WITNESS: The defendant as well as myself and my partner's.
THE COURT: Tell me under what theory of law are you permitted to handcuff a person, place that person in the automobile, shut the door and take that person to a jail or police station and still not charge that person with a violation of a crime?
Under what theory of law, please.
THE WITNESS: It was under his own voluntariness.
THE COURT: You mean he asked you to put handcuffs on him?
THE WITNESS: No, sir.
THE COURT: My question is what permitted you to handcuff a person who wasn't being charged with a violation of law?
THE WITNESS: I told him he was going to be handcuffed in order to ride down. He did not say
THE COURT: Officer, answer my question. Under what theory of law are you permitted to handcuff a person without placing them under arrest?
THE WITNESS: None, your Honor.
THE COURT: You just go ahead and take a sixteen-year-old kid and tell him I'm going to handcuff you and expect him to object to it?
THE WITNESS: No, sir.
Since Ortiz, as shall be seen, pled guilty, the propriety of the admission of his confession against him under Dunaway v. New York,
[2] But see sec. 39.032, Fla. Stat. (1981).
[3] We have not been told why the state attorney did not delay reducing the charge from first degree murder with its mandatory twenty-five years without parole until after Ortiz testified "truthfully" in the Santos case. See Alvarez v. State,
[4] The appellant does not challenge the propriety of this ruling.
[5] Thus, in the leading case of United States v. Castro-Ayon, which held that an immigration investigation was an "other proceeding," the court pointed out the similarities with the grand jury process:
[B]oth are investigatory, ex parte, inquisitive, sworn, basically prosecutorial, held before an officer other than the arresting officer, recorded, and held in circumstances of some legal formality.
[w]e do not hold, as the question is not before us, that every sworn statement given during a police-station interrogation would be admissible. While this immigration proceeding bears many similarities to the station-house interrogation, we believe that it qualifies as an "other proceeding" within the meaning of the statute.
[6] On a related question, Arner v. State,
[7] It should be noted, in contrast, that other provisions of the code explicitly render the court's assessment of the value of the particular item of evidence a condition of admissibility. See sec. 90.804(2)(c), Fla. Stat. (1981) ("A statement tending to expose the declarant to criminal liability and offered to exculpate the accused is inadmissible, unless corroborating circumstances show the trustworthiness of the statement."); Maugeri v. State,
In the absence of such a provision in 90.801(2)(a), the Robinson-Smith rationale, rendering a "reliable" statement admissible although there would otherwise be no "proceeding," would amount to the enactment of a catch-all or umbrella exception for the admission of trustworthy hearsay which does not fall within any of the specific exceptions. This principle is contained in the federal rules, 804(b)(5), but was pointedly not adopted in Florida.
[8] Because, as the appellant's counsel conceded at oral argument, there is other evidence of guilt, so that a directed verdict is not required by our ruling concerning Ortiz's statement, we are not confronted with the problem presented in Moore v. State,
