Harold McDaniel appeals his conviction entered after a jury trial for aggravated battery with a deadly weapon. We reverse McDaniel’s conviction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Prior to trial, McDaniel filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Florida Rule of Criminal Procedure 3.190(b). He claimed in his motion that he is immune from criminal prosecution pursuant to section 776.032(1), Florida Statutes (2007), because he has a valid defense of justifiable use of force under section 776.013, commonly known as the castle doctrine, and section 776.031, the defense of others statute. McDaniel further alleged that although the victim had been a houseguest at McDaniel’s mother’s house, where McDaniel was also living, the victim had not stayed at the house for several days prior to the incident at issue. On the day of the incident, McDaniel alleged, he and the victim got into a physical altercation during which the victim beat and attempted to strangle McDaniel. McDaniel escaped and returned home. According to McDaniel, the victim arrived at McDaniel’s house later that night and asked to enter to retrieve some clothing he had left there. McDaniel’s mother attempted to prevent the victim’s entry, but the victim forced his way into McDaniel’s home. McDaniel then struck the victim twice with a machete, causing lacerations to his scalp and left forearm.
The State filed a traverse to McDaniel’s motion to dismiss, alleging that the victim had lived at McDaniel’s house prior to the incident and that the record was unclear as to whether the victim was still living there. The State claimed that the evidence does not establish that McDaniel had a right in the residence exceeding that of the victim. The State also alleged that the evidence does not conclusively establish that the victim unlawfully entered the house because there was some evidence that McDaniel’s mother opened the door for the victim and that McDaniel invited the victim into the home to retrieve his clothes. The State further argued in its traverse that there was no evidence that the victim intended to commit a forcible felony such that McDaniel’s use of deadly force was necessary in the defense of others.
McDaniel filed a response to the State’s traverse, alleging that his motion to dismiss “is not based on the Rule 3.190(c)(4) grounds that there are no material disputed facts, [but] rather on the grounds that [McDaniel] is immune from prosecution pursuant to [section] 776.032.”
The trial court held an evidentiary hearing on March 10, 2008. After the evidence was presented, the State argued — still proceeding on the theory that the motion was
McDaniel proceeded to jury trial, at which he asserted the defense of justifiable use of deadly force in defense of his mother and to prevent the victim’s forcible entry into his home. McDaniel was found guilty and sentenced to ten years in prison followed by five years’ probation.
On appeal, McDaniel argues that the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss because he presented evidence establishing immunity under section 776.032. He also argues that it is not clear if the trial court applied the proper standard for a motion to dismiss based on immunity from prosecution under section 776.032. He claims that even though he argued in his response to the State’s traverse that the standard of rule 3.190(c)(4) should not be applied, the State proceeded on the theory that the motion to dismiss should not be granted because there are material disputed facts.
Section 776.032(1) provides that “[a] person who uses force as permitted in s. 776.012, s. 776.013, or s. 776.031 is justified in using such force and is immune from criminal prosecution and civil action for the use of such force.” “[W]hen immunity under this law is properly raised by a defendant, the trial court must decide the matter by confronting and weighing only factual disputes.”
Peterson v. State,
Because the trial court gave no reason for denying McDaniel’s motion to dismiss either in its oral ruling or in a written
The remaining issues raised by McDaniel on appeal are without merit, with the exception of his argument that the trial court improperly admitted hearsay evidence at the hearing on his motion to dismiss. While the rules of evidence are inapplicable or relaxed in certain proceedings, we have been unable to find— and the parties have not cited — any authority holding that hearsay evidence is admissible at a pretrial evidentiary hearing on a motion to dismiss based on immunity.
Cf.
Charles W. Ehrhardt,
Ehrhardt’s Florida Evidence
§ 103.1, at 5-7 (2009) (listing certain proceedings in which strict evidentiary rules are inapplicable). We note, however, that many of the objeeted-to statements
1
were admissible for the limited purpose of impeaching a witness’s testimony with prior inconsistent statements.
See
§ 90.614, Fla. Stat. (2007);
Varas v. State,
Reversed and remanded; conflict certified.
Notes
. The defense presented the testimony of McDaniel’s mother. She testified that after her son returned home on the night of the offense, she heard the victim banging on the door to her house. She opened the door about one or two feet, and the victim yelled that “he was gonna kill all of [them] and burn the house down." On cross-examination, McDaniel's mother stated that she did tell the investigating detective that the victim threatened to bum the house down and that the victim threatened to kill her. She also testified that her son did not unlock the door, but she could not recall whether she told the investigating detective that her son unlocked the door.
The State presented the testimony of the investigating detective, Robert Gizzi, who testified that he interviewed McDaniel's mother after the incident. The prosecutor asked Detective Gizzi what she told him happened on the night of the incident, and defense counsel objected on the basis of hearsay. The prosecutor responded: "It does call for hearsay, Your Honor. I believe hearsay’s admissible on a motion to dismiss." The court overruled the objection and allowed the hearsay testimony, stating that hearsay was admissible in this type of hearing. Detective Gizzi was permitted to testify that McDaniel’s mother told him that her son unlocked the door for the victim and that she opened the door. He also testified that she never told him that the victim threatened to kill her or burn the house down. He also stated, over a hearsay objection, that the victim told him that McDaniel hit the victim with the machete two times.
