Peo v. Ramirez
22CA0147
Colo. Ct. App.Aug 1, 2024Check TreatmentOpinion Summary
Facts
- David Ghusar and Sana Bhumbla are the plaintiffs in a civil case involving the defendant Park ‘N Shade of Tucson, Inc. [lines="3-11"].
- Plaintiff Sana Bhumbla's attorney filed a Motion to Withdraw due to a breakdown in communication and a fundamental disagreement over prosecution of the case [lines="13-15"], [lines="63-68"].
- The attorney complied with Local Rule 182(d) by notifying Bhumbla of the intent to withdraw and providing her last known address [lines="51-53"].
- The case is set for trial in February 2025, allowing time for Bhumbla to secure new counsel or represent herself [lines="69-72"].
- The court found no harm to the administration of justice that would result from granting the motion to withdraw [lines="73-74"].
Issues
- Whether there is sufficient cause for the attorney's withdrawal based on the client's conduct and communication issues [lines="58-60"].
- Whether the withdrawal would prejudice the plaintiff or other parties involved in the litigation [lines="70-75"].
Holdings
- The court granted the motion to withdraw due to a breakdown in communication and a breach of the retainer agreement by the client [lines="68"].
- The court found that there is a low risk of prejudice to the plaintiff or other litigants, allowing for the motion to be granted [lines="70-74"].
OPINION
22CA0147 Peo v Ramirez 08-01-2024
COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals No. 22CA0147
City and County of Denver District Court No. 19CR8711
Honorable David H. Goldberg, Judge
The People of the State of Colorado,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
John Alexander Ramirez,
Defendant-Appellant.
JUDGMENT REVERSED AND CASE
REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS
Division IV
Opinion by JUDGE NAVARRO
Pawar and Johnson, JJ., concur
NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e)
Announced August 1, 2024
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General, Jessica E. Ross, Assistant Attorney General,
Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee
Crane & Tejada, P.C., Beale C. Tejada, Denver, Colorado, for Defendant-
Appellant
1
¶ 1 Defendant, John Alexander Ramirez, appeals the judgment of
conviction imposed on jury verdicts finding him guilty of three
counts of second degree assault causing serious bodily injury. We
reverse and remand for a new trial.
I. Factual and Procedural History
¶ 2 The evidence admitted at trial allowed the jury to find that the
following events occurred. Because we remand for a new trial, we
express no opinion on whether the allegations against Ramirez are
true.
¶ 3 In November 2019, police officers responded to the home of
the alleged victim
1
after receiving a report of a domestic violence
incident. Jeffrey Hahl, the victim’s neighbor, had called the police
after he saw her in the street “[l]oudly calling for help.” Upon
arrival, the officers observed that the victim had lacerations on her
face as well as several broken or dislodged teeth. The victim
informed the officers that she and Ramirez got into an argument
and that he struck her multiple times in the face with a closed fist.
She also said she had attempted to defend herself with a
1
For brevity’s sake, we will refer to her as the “victim,” going
forward.
2
pocketknife; however, she claimed that Ramirez took the
pocketknife from her and cut her face with it. The interaction
between the victim and officers was recorded by the officers’ body
cameras.
¶ 4 Ramirez was ultimately arrested and charged with first degree
assault, two counts of second degree assault, and child abuse.
Before trial, he waived his right to counsel and represented himself.
The trial court appointed advisory counsel and a defense
investigator.
¶ 5 Although under subpoena, the victim did not appear at trial,
but her statements to the police and her neighbor were admitted
into evidence. A jury acquitted Ramirez of first degree assault but
convicted him of three counts of second degree assault.
2
¶ 6 On appeal, Ramirez contends that the trial court (1) erred by
concluding that he had opened the door to admission of the victim’s
hearsay statements on an unredacted video recorded from an
2
One of the second degree assault convictions represented a lesser
included offense of the first degree assault charge. The trial court
dismissed the child abuse count on Ramirez’s motion for judgment
of acquittal.
3
officer’s body camera; (2) violated his constitutional right to
confrontation by admitting those statements (because the victim did
not testify at trial); (3) erred by denying his request to rescind his
waiver of the right to counsel; and (4) erred by denying his request
to continue the trial based on the alleged discovery of new evidence.
¶ 7 Because we agree with his first contention, we reverse the
judgment and remand for a new trial. In light of that decision, we
need not resolve Ramirez’s other contentions.
3
II. Opening the Door to Hearsay
¶ 8 We agree with Ramirez that the trial court erred by ruling that
his questioning of Officer Matthew Van Portfliet opened the door to
admission of the victim’s hearsay statements on the unredacted
video recorded from the officer’s body camera.
3
To the extent the parties argue that we should also address the
constitutional issues raised on appeal, we decline to do so because
it is not necessary to resolve this appeal. Under the doctrine of
constitutional avoidance, we address constitutional issues only if
necessary. People v. Valdez, 2017 COA 41, ¶ 6; see also People v.
Lybarger, 700 P.2d 910, 915 (Colo. 1985) (“Axiomatic to the exercise
of judicial authority is the principle that a court should not decide a
constitutional issue unless and until such issue is actually raised
by a party to the controversy and the necessity for such decision is
clear and inescapable.”).
4
A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law
¶ 9 The People concede that Ramirez preserved this claim, and we
concur.
¶ 10 We review for an abuse of discretion a trial court’s decision to
admit evidence. People v. Glover, 2015 COA 16, ¶ 10. “A court
abuses its discretion if it misconstrues or misapplies the law or
otherwise reaches a manifestly arbitrary, unreasonable, or unfair
result.” Id.
¶ 11 The judicially created doctrine of “opening the door” aims to
prevent one party from gaining an “unfair advantage by the selective
presentation of facts that, without being elaborated or placed in
context, create an incorrect or misleading impression.” People v.
Murphy, 919 P.2d 191, 195 (Colo. 1996). Thus, “[w]hen a party
opens the door to inadmissible evidence, his opponent may then
inquire into the previously barred matter” more fully in order to
provide a complete picture of the evidence. Id.
¶ 12 The opening the door doctrine, however, has limits. People v.
Cohen, 2019 COA 38, ¶ 23. It does not give an opposing party
“unbridled license to introduce otherwise inadmissible evidence into
the trial, nor does it justify receipt of rebuttal evidence merely
5
because it is in the same category of excludable evidence as the
evidence previously offered.” Id. (quoting United States v. Martinez,
988 F.2d 685, 702 (7th Cir. 1993)). Rather, when one party injects
a particular issue into a case, the opposing party may introduce
otherwise inadmissible evidence but only to the extent necessary to
“rebut any adverse inferences which might have resulted” from the
original evidence, People v. Tenorio, 197 Colo. 137, 146, 590 P.2d
952, 958 (1979), or to correct “an incorrect or misleading
impression,” Golob v. People, 180 P.3d 1006, 1012 (Colo. 2008).
B. Additional Facts
¶ 13 As a result of the victim’s failure to appear at trial, the
prosecution chose to redact portions of the video from Officer Van
Portfliet’s body camera to omit the victim’s statements. In the
redacted version, the audio of her statements was mostly muted,
but the video depicted her talking as well as her demeanor.
¶ 14 When the officer testified on direct examination, the
prosecutor carefully avoided eliciting any hearsay statements of the
victim. The prosecutor explicitly instructed the officer to avoid
restating any of the victim’s comments and to discuss only what the
officer actually observed. The officer described the victim’s behavior
6
and appearance. The officer also testified that he did not observe
anything from the victim that gave him concerns about her
intoxication.
¶ 15 The prosecution offered into evidence Exhibit 2, which was
video from the officer’s body camera but with the victim’s
statements redacted. The officer then testified to the victim’s
reluctance to cooperate in the investigation. Specifically, he
testified that the victim did not agree to have him take photographs
her injuries and that she did not agree to have her home processed
by the crime scene unit (which would have included taking
photographs of the home). Noting that the victim was being
transported to the hospital, the officer also said the victim did not
agree to cooperate when he informed her that officers would
respond to the hospital “to complete further paperwork.”
¶ 16 On cross-examination of the officer, Ramirez asked a handful
of questions. As relevant here, Ramirez engaged in the following
colloquy with the officer:
Q: [The victim] told you that the knife was
hers?
A: Yes.
7
Q: Did she tell you how the argument started?
A: No, not that I recall.
Q: Okay. Didn’t tell you she was drinking or
that she might have been smoking meth?
A: No.
Q: You asked if she would allow the crime lab
into the house to take pictures?
A: Yes.
Q: And she told you no?
A: Correct.
Q: She refused to let the officers back in the
house to conduct a legal investigation?
A: Yes. She stated she didn’t want any photos
taken of the house.
Q: Then she stopped cooperating altogether?
A: Correct.
¶ 17 Based on this questioning, the prosecutor moved to admit the
unredacted video of the officer’s interaction with the victim from the
body camera (Exhibit 3). The prosecutor argued that, because
Ramirez had elicited some “statements made” by the victim during
her interaction with the officer, Ramirez had necessarily opened the
door to all the victim’s statements during that interaction. But the
8
prosecutor did not argue that Ramirez’s cross-examination
questions had left any misleading impression with the jury or
created any adverse inference against the prosecution’s case. Over
Ramirez’s objection, the trial court, in a brief ruling, permitted the
prosecutor to introduce the entire unredacted body camera video.
Like the prosecutor, the court did not identify any misleading
impression or adverse inference created by Ramirez’s questioning.
¶ 18 In addition to showing the victim’s injuries and demeanor, the
unredacted video revealed her statements directly accusing Ramirez
of the charged offenses as well as suggesting his prior criminality.
Specifically, the victim said, “My kid’s dad [Ramirez] knocked out
my teeth,” and “I have missing teeth now.” (Indeed, she frequently
lamented that Ramirez had knocked out her teeth.) She said she
had pulled out a knife for protection and that Ramirez had grabbed
it from her. She claimed that “[Ramirez] hit me with his fist and
knife” and that she was “sliced with a knife” near or on her lip. She
also told the officer that she and Ramirez had been arguing before
he attacked her and that, during the argument, he “put his hands
around my throat.” Finally, she asserted that Ramirez fled on foot
after the altercation because he had been drinking and his vehicle
9
had an “interlock” device preventing its use by someone who has
been drinking — suggesting that he had previously committed
offenses of driving under the influence.
C. Analysis
¶ 19 Ramirez contends that his questioning of Officer Van Portfliet
did not open the door to admission of the unredacted video.
Alternatively, he argues that, even if his questioning opened the
door to some degree, admission of the entire video exceeded what
was necessary.
1. Admitting the Unredacted Video Was Error
¶ 20 To reiterate, the purpose of the opening the door concept is to
prevent one party from gaining and maintaining an unfair
advantage by the selective presentation of facts that, without being
elaborated or placed in context, create an incorrect or misleading
impression. Murphy, 919 P.2d at 195. But while courts permit
inquiry into otherwise inadmissible evidence once a party opens the
door, the inquiry is limited to the extent necessary to “rebut any
adverse inferences which might have resulted,” Tenorio, 197 Colo.
at 146, 590 P.2d at 958, or to correct “an incorrect or misleading
impression,” Golob, 180 P.3d at 1012. The opening the door
10
doctrine does not justify admission of rebuttal evidence merely
because it is in the same category of excludable evidence as the
evidence previously admitted (e.g., a particular witness’s hearsay
statements). See Cohen, ¶ 23.
¶ 21 In this case, however, the trial court’s ruling seemed to rest on
the misunderstanding that, after one party elicits a portion (even, a
small portion) of a hearsay conversation, the opening the door
doctrine automatically authorizes the opposing party to elicit the
entire hearsay conversation. We say this because the court did not
articulate any misleading impression or adverse inference created
by Ramirez’s questioning that required correction under the
opening the door doctrine. A court abuses its discretion when it
misconstrues or misapplies the law. Glover, ¶ 10.
¶ 22 On appeal, the People argue that Ramirez’s questioning of the
officer sought to characterize the victim’s statements as admitting
that “she was responsible for her injuries (thus implying that he
acted in self-defense).” This argument is puzzling because no one
at trial — including Ramirez — posited that the victim’s injuries
were self-inflicted. And we conclude that no reasonable jury would
infer from Ramirez’s self-defense claim and his brief questioning of
11
Officer Van Portfliet that the victim injured herself. As the People
otherwise acknowledge, the self-defense claim was rooted in
Ramirez’s (allegedly justified) use of force against the victim.
¶ 23 The People also contend that Ramirez “elicited testimony
suggesting that the victim owned the knife, was on drugs, and
refused to cooperate with police (again, implying her consciousness
of guilt). This suggestion, however, was contrary to what the victim
had actually told police, misleading the jury on this subject.” The
suggestion that the victim owned the knife, however, was not
contrary to what she had told the officer. She said she pulled out a
knife to defend herself, without mentioning who owned it. And the
People do not attempt to explain how a suggestion that the victim
owned the knife — without indicating who, if anyone, used it or
how — created a misleading impression or an adverse inference
requiring correction.
4
On this point, the People’s argument is
gossamer-thin.
4
Before the unredacted video was admitted into evidence, Ramirez
did not claim that the victim had pulled a knife on him. He first
made this claim in his theory of defense instruction to the jury.
12
¶ 24 Moreover, Ramirez’s question about whether the victim said
she had been drinking or using drugs did not elicit evidence or
create an impression that was contrary to what she told police. As
the officer testified and the video confirms, the victim did not say
anything about her drinking or using drugs, so the officer’s answer
to Ramirez’s question (“no”) did not indicate a conflict with the
victim’s statements to the officer. On a related note, we disagree
that the evidence elicited by Ramirez’s questioning suggested that
the victim was “on drugs.” As noted, Ramirez elicited the officer’s
testimony that the victim had not said she consumed drugs or
alcohol. This testimony was consistent with the officer’s earlier
testimony, elicited by the prosecutor, that the officer did not detect
signs of intoxication in the victim. Therefore, Ramirez’s question
(and the officer’s answer) did not leave a misleading impression or
adverse inference. To the extent any question about the victim’s
possible drug or alcohol use was problematic, the prosecutor went
down that road first.
¶ 25 Likewise, to the extent Ramirez’s questioning of the officer
elicited testimony suggesting that the victim had refused to
cooperate with the police, that testimony was cumulative of
13
evidence previously elicited by the prosecutor. Ramirez elicited
testimony that the victim had refused to let the crime lab take
photographs of the house, refused to let the police back into the
house to conduct their investigation, and “stopped cooperating
altogether.” The officer had already testified to those facts on direct
examination. If those facts suggested the victim’s refusal to
cooperate with the police, the prosecutor’s questioning injected this
suggestion first.
5
¶ 26 In sum, neither the prosecution below nor the People on
appeal identify any adverse inference or misleading impression
created by Ramirez’s questioning of the officer that required
correction through admission of the unredacted video. Hence,
admitting the unredacted video under the opening the door doctrine
was error. And doing so revealed damning evidence against
Ramirez that the jury would not have otherwise heard. The video
allowed the jury to hear the victim’s statements describing the
assault, implying Ramirez had prior legal issues, and accusing him
5
Ramirez’s question whether the victim “stopped cooperating
altogether” did not solicit or elicit a hearsay statement. For this
additional reason, this question did not open the door to all the
victim’s hearsay statements on the unredacted video.
14
of fleeing the scene. Indeed, the video gave the jury the victim’s
account of the incident — from the victim herself — in greater detail
than provided by her brief hearsay statement admitted into
evidence through her neighbor’s testimony.
¶ 27 Alternatively, the People contend that the victim’s statements
on the unredacted video were admissible under the excited
utterances exception to the hearsay prohibition. See CRE 803(2).
We decline to resolve this contention because it is inconsistent with
the position the prosecution took in the trial court.
¶ 28 Before trial, it became apparent to the parties that the victim
would not be present to testify. As a result, the prosecutor decided
not to seek admission of the victim’s statements to the officers
recorded on the body camera, and the prosecutor redacted those
statements from the video. The prosecutor noted, however, that he
would seek to admit the victim’s statements to her neighbor under
the excited utterances exception.
¶ 29 Ramirez’s advisory counsel expressed concern about
proceeding to trial without the victim and about admitting the
victim’s statements by way of the excited utterances exception. In
response, the prosecutor said,
15
To respond to counsel’s comments, the excited
utterance piece is separate and apart from the
redacted videos. The excited utterance piece is
essentially that . . . [t]he victim exits her
home — this is before police have been
called — makes a number of statements to her
neighbor who observes her in a panic state
with physical injuries. Those would plainly be
excited utterances . . . .
¶ 30 The record reveals, therefore, that the prosecutor argued that
the excited utterance exception applied to the victim’s statements to
the neighbor but conspicuously declined to make this same
argument about the victim’s statements to the police. (Thus, the
trial court made no findings about whether the victim’s statements
to the police were excited utterances, and we have no ruling to
review for an abuse of discretion.) Instead, by redacting the victim’s
statements to the police on the video without requesting a ruling
from the court on the matter, the prosecutor conceded, at least
implicitly, that they were inadmissible.
¶ 31 Bolstering the existence of this concession is the prosecutor’s
use of the opening the door doctrine. As discussed, the prosecutor
argued that Ramirez opened the door to admission of the victim’s
statements to the police on the video by his questioning of the
officer. The opening the door doctrine, however, applies only if the
16
challenged evidence is otherwise inadmissible. By relying on this
doctrine, the prosecutor again acknowledged that the victim’s
statements to police were not otherwise admissible under any
theory, including as excited utterances.
¶ 32 Given the concession in the trial court, we decline to entertain
the People’s new argument on appeal regarding the excited
utterance exception. It is one thing for the People to argue for
affirmance on a ground not raised or ruled on below but supported
by the record. It is quite another thing for the People to assert on
appeal a position inconsistent with one they took below. In an
analogous context, our supreme court has admonished the People
that it is not appropriate for them “to walk back their concession[s]”
made before a lower court; a “prosecutor’s ultimate goal is justice,
which is not always synonymous with victory.” Garcia v. People,
¶ 5 (“It is unclear . . . why the People believe that they can concede
[reviewability] of an issue in the court of appeals and then take the
opposite position in this court . . . .”) (citation omitted). Therefore,
we decline to decide whether the excited utterances exception
applies to the victim’s statements to the police.
17
¶ 33 Given all this, we conclude that the trial court erred by
admitting the victim’s statements on the unredacted video.
2. The Error Was Not Harmless
¶ 34 Because Ramirez objected to the evidentiary error, we review
for ordinary harmless error. See Davis v. People, 2013 CO 57, ¶ 13.
Under this standard, we reverse if the error, when considered in
light of the entire record of the trial, substantially influenced the
verdict or impaired the fairness of the trial. People v. Stewart, 55
P.3d 107, 124 (Colo. 2002). We conclude that the error warrants
reversal under this standard.
¶ 35 During closing arguments, the prosecutor replayed Exhibit 3
(the unredacted video) for the jury and emphasized its importance.
The prosecutor argued that the victim and Ramirez had different
versions of the events but that the version “told by [the victim] is
the one that is true.” The prosecution reiterated the importance of
the video by telling the jurors that they “got to hear from [the
victim]” even though she did not testify. The prosecution further
pressed the video’s significance by stating that the victim “identifies
the person who attacked her” and that “she explains exactly what
happened.”
18
¶ 36 So the challenged video comprised a significant portion of the
prosecution’s case against Ramirez. The video supplied information
that was not elicited from other witnesses, such as the victim’s
detailed account of the assault. She described being sliced by a
knife and being hit with fists in the face, as well as Ramirez putting
his hands around her throat. She also alleged that Ramirez was
drinking, had an interlock device on his vehicle, and fled on foot.
¶ 37 In short, the evidence of the victim’s statements to the police
was the strongest and most direct evidence of Ramirez’s guilt.
While the other admitted evidence might have been sufficient to
support his convictions even absent the challenged statements, that
is not the question before us. The proper inquiry in determining a
harmless error question is not whether there was sufficient
evidence to support the verdict without the improperly admitted
evidence but, rather, whether the error substantially influenced the
verdict or affected the fairness of the trial proceedings. Yusem v.
People, 210 P.3d 458, 469 (Colo. 2009).
¶ 38 In light of the power of the victim’s statements to the police
directly accusing Ramirez of the crimes and the prosecutor’s
reliance on those statements, we cannot conclude that this evidence
19
had no substantial influence on the verdict. We are not persuaded
otherwise by the fact that the jury acquitted Ramirez of first degree
assault. Our role is to decide if the improperly admitted evidence
substantially influenced the verdict convicting Ramirez of second
degree assault. We conclude that it did, inasmuch as the
challenged statements more closely described second degree assault
(allegations of being punched in the face, with resulting teeth loss).
The victim’s references to the use of a knife were less clear.
III. Conclusion
¶ 39 The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new
trial.
JUDGE PAWAR and JUDGE JOHNSON concur.
