Henry MANKA, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District.
Gene Reibman, Fort Lauderdale, for appellant.
*1110 Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Douglas J. Glaid, Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
STONE, Chief Judge.
We affirm Appellant's conviction on counts of attempted second-degree murder and aggravated battery.
At trial, Appellant sought to introduce a co-defendant's sworn taped statement, under the hearsay exception for statements against interest. § 90.804(2)(c), Fla. Stat. (1997) The co-defendant was "unavailable" at Appellant's trial because of his intent to exercise his Fifth Amendment rights if called to testify. The trial court, in rejecting this evidence, found that the statement was not contrary to the co-defendant's penal interest because it was exculpatory in nature rather than a confession, and also found that the statement lacked trustworthiness because it was contradicted by the medical testimony regarding the victim's injuries.
At the close of the trial, as it had indicated in the charge conference, the court instructed the jury on the offense of attempted second-degree murder and on the offense of aggravated battery and the lesser-included offense of simple battery. Appellant neither requested, at the charge conference, that the jury be instructed on the lesser-included offense of attempted manslaughter, nor objected, during or after the jury instructions, to the court's failure to instruct the jury on the charge of attempted manslaughter.
We reject Appellant's assertion that the co-defendant's statement is admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. Section 90.804(2)(c), Florida Statutes, provides:
(c) Statement against interest.-A statement which, at the time of its making, was so far contrary to the declarant's pecuniary or propriety interest or tended to subject the declarant to liability or to render invalid a claim by the declarant against another, so that a person in the declarant's position would not have made the statement unless he or she believed it to be true. 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.
This court has previously recognized the requirements for admitting a co-defendant's pre-trial statement as a statement against interest under sec. 90.804(2)(c) in Perry v. State,
(1) the declarant is unavailable as a witness, (2) the statement must so far tend to subject the declarant to criminal liability that a reasonable person in the declarant's position would not have made the statement unless he or she believed it to be true, and (3) corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.
Id. at 980. Patently, all three requirements for admissibility must be met. See also Denny v. State,
We also find that by failing to preserve his objection to the omission of the instruction on the lesser-included offense of attempted manslaughter, Appellant waived his right to appeal that issue. The failure to charge on the lesser-included offense to a non-capital offense is not fundamental error. In McKinney v. State,
We also reject Appellant's claim that the crime of attempted second-degree murder does not exist in Florida. The supreme court, in Gentry v. State,
We have considered the recent decision of State v. Gray,
WARNER and GROSS, JJ., concur.
