Opinion
Statement of the Case
Appellant Willie Alfred Hughey assaulted his wife and attempted to suffocate his three-month-old daughter with a pillow. After trial by jury, appellant was convicted of assault in violation of Penal Code section 240 and of child endangering in violation of Penal Code section 273, subdivision (a). He appeals from the judgment.
Statement of Facts
On January 19, 1986, Meya Brule, eight years old, was living in a two-bedroom house with her mother, Pamela Thomas; her stepfather, appellant;
Two Los Angeles police officers arrived shortly thereafter. As they were arriving, appellant threatened Ms. Thomas when he yelled at her, “You’re making the biggest mistake of your life. When I get out of [jail] I’m going to kill you . . . .” As the officers exited their vehicle approximately two blocks from the residence, they could hear an adult female. As they approached the house, they heard the woman scream, “Help me.” Ms. Thomas came out of the house, crying, with abrasions on her left forearm and her neck. While on the porch, Ms. Thomas told the officers that she had been struck by appellant. She also said that appellant tried to smother the infant. In the residence a few minutes later, the officers asked Ms. Thomas about the events. Ms. Thomas said appellant had repeatedly thrown her against the wall heater, she had struck her head on a bed post, and appellant had stomped her in the stomach. Prior to this incident, Ms. Thomas and appellant had physical fights.
At trial, Ms. Thomas did not testify. The statements she made immediately after the assaults were introduced through one of the investigating officers as spontaneous statements.
Spontaneous Statements
Appellant contends that the statements of the victim, Ms. Thomas, were improperly admitted because they were not spontaneous statements and because a proper foundation was not laid prior to their admission. Appellant’s assertions lack merit.
As the investigating officers approached the residence, they heard an adult female yelling, “Help me.” When Ms. Thomas ran out of the house, she was upset, crying and had abrasions on her neck and arm. While on the porch, she told the officers that appellant had struck her and tried to suffocate her baby. In the residence three or four minutes later, Ms. Thomas told the officers that appellant stomped her in the stomach, grabbed her around the neck, repeatedly threw her backwards and hit her breast with his elbow. All statements had the indicia of reliability to qualify as spontaneous statements. The statements described a startling event and were made under the excitement of the event. Ms. Thomas was screaming as the officers arrived, clearly indicating that the few-minute interval between the time of the assaults and the statements did not destroy their spontaneity.
Prior to the admission of these spontaneous statements into evidence, Meya testified that the police came to the house shortly after she saw the assault on her mother and the attempt to suffocate her infant sister. Therefore, a proper foundation was laid for the admission of Ms. Thomas’s spontaneous statements.
Right of Confrontation/Effective Counsel
Ms. Thomas was subpoenaed by the prosecution, present in the court, but not called to testify by either party. Her statements were admitted through the testimony of the officer under the spontaneous statement exception to
Appellant’s argument is without merit because (1) the failure to object on confrontation grounds may have been a reasonably competent tactical choice of counsel, and hence not grounds for reversal on appeal on the theory of incompetence of counsel and (2) in any event, the confrontation objection is without merit.
Trial counsel may well have believed that the prosecution case would appear weaker to the jury without the live testimony of Ms. Thomas than with it. Since Ms. Thomas was in fact apparently available and in the courtroom, trial counsel must have known that even if he made the confrontation objection and it were sustained, the prosecution could cure the objection by calling Ms. Thomas to testify, in which case the prosecution would have both the spontaneous statement and live testimony. Since the record on appeal does not show why counsel did not raise a confrontation objection after his statutory hearsay objection was overruled, but there could have been a satisfactory explanation or reasonable tactical purpose, incompetence of counsel has not been shown.
(People
v.
Pope
(1979)
In any event, we hold that the admission of the victim’s spontaneous statements under Evidence Code section 1240 did not violate appellant’s right to confront witnesses under the United States or California Constitutions. (U.S. Const., Amend. VI; Cal. Const., art. I, § 15.)
Citing a line of United States Supreme Court decisions involving the hearsay exception for prior testimony of a witness, and culminating in
Ohio
v.
Roberts
(1980)
Appellant quotes the language from
Ohio
v.
Roberts, supra,
Appellant’s interpretation of
Ohio
v.
Roberts, supra,
Inadi
states that the quoted language in
Ohio
v.
Roberts, supra,
The court distinguished the prior testimony exception from the coconspirator exception. We set out at some length the Supreme Court’s language because the court’s reasoning is very instructive in resolving the instant case. The court stated: “There are good reasons why the unavailability rule, developed in cases involving former testimony, is not applicable to co-conspirators’ out-of-court statements. Unlike some other exceptions to the hearsay rules, or the exemption from the hearsay definition involved in this case, former testimony often is only a weaker substitute for live testimony. It seldom has independent evidentiary significance of its own, but is intended to replace live testimony. If the declarant is available and the same information can be presented to the trier of fact in the form of live testimony, with full cross-examination and the opportunity to view the demeanor of the declarant, there is little justification for relying on the weaker version. When two versions of the same evidence are available, longstanding principles of the law of hearsay, applicable as well to Confrontation Clause analysis, favor the better evidence. See Graham, The Right of Confrontation and the Hearsay Rule: Sir Walter Raleigh Loses Another One, 8 Crim. L. Bull. 99, 143 (1972). But if the declarant is unavailable, no ‘better’ version of the evidence exists, and the former testimony may be admitted as a substitute for live testimony on the same point, flj] Those same principles do not apply to co-conspirator statements. Because they are made while the conspiracy is in progress, such statements provide evidence of the conspiracy’s context that cannot be replicated, even if the declarant testifies to the same matters in court. When the Government—as here—offers the statement of one drug dealer to another in furtherance of an illegal conspiracy, the statement often will derive its significance from the circumstances in which it was made. Conspirators are likely to speak differently when talking to each other in furtherance of their illegal aims than when testifying on the witness stand. Even when the declarant takes the stand, his in-court testimony seldom will reproduce a significant portion of the evidentiary value of his statements during the course of the conspiracy, [fl] In addition, the relative positions of the parties will have changed substantially between the time of the statements and the trial. The declarant and the defendant will have changed from partners in an illegal conspiracy to suspects or defendants in a criminal trial, each with information potentially damaging to the other. The declarant himself may be facing indictment or trial, in which case he has little incentive to aid the prosecution, and yet will be equally wary of
The reasoning of the United States Supreme Court about the special value of evidence under the coconspirator exception to the hearsay rule is even more strongly applicable to the spontaneous statement exception involved in this case. The opinion in Inadi closely follows Wigmore’s reasoning about the necessity and value of spontaneous statement evidence, not dependent on whether the declarant is unavailable.
The theory of the spontaneous statement exception to the hearsay rule is that since the statement is made spontaneously, while under the stress of excitement and with no opportunity to contrive or reflect, it is
particularly
likely to be truthful. As explained by Wigmore, this type of out-of-court statement, because of its “superior” trustworthiness, is
“better than
is likely to be obtained from the same person upon the stand . . . .” (6 Wigmore, Evidence (Chadboum ed. 1976) § 1748, p. 199, italics added.) Unlike other hearsay exceptions in which the unavailability of a witness maizes it “necessary” to resort to hearsay as a weaker substitute for live testimony (5 Wigmore, Evidence (Chadboum ed. 1974) § 1420, p. 251), the spontaneous statement exception involves a “necessity” of a different sort: “[T]hat we cannot expect, again, or at this time, to get
evidence of the same value
from the same or other sources”
(id.
at § 1421, p.253, italics in original) and “[t]he extrajudicial assertion being better than is likely to be obtained from the same person upon the stand, a necessity or expediency arises for resort
Here, as in
United States
v.
Inadi, supra,
475 U.S. at pages 395-396 [89 L.Ed.2d at pages 398, 399,
Appellant cannot realistically claim he was denied the right to confront witnesses in this case. Ms. Thomas was in the courtroom under prosecution subpoena. Had he thought it would help him, or if he so desired, appellant could have confronted and cross-examined her under Evidence Code section 1203.
3
According to appellant’s reasoning, if Ms. Thomas had been dead or beyond the jurisdiction of the court and thus actually unavailable for cross-examination, appellant’s constitutional right to confrontation would
not
be violated, but because she was there in the courtroom available for appellant to confront pursuant to Evidence Code section 1203, his constitutional right to confrontation
was
violated. The United States Constitution does not require such an anomaly. (See
California
v.
Green
(1970)
Appellant’s argument that the prosecution had to call Ms. Thomas as its witness was also rejected in
United States
v.
Inadi, supra,
In this case the police were fortunate to arrive at the scene at the same time the events were occurring, and the victim described the crime under circumstances qualifying for the spontaneous statement exception to the hearsay rule, which courts and commentators have recognized as a highly trustworthy, valuable and irreplaceable form of evidence. For whatever reasons, the prosecution decided to rely on that and other eyewitness evidence, and not to call Ms. Thomas as a live witness. The prosecution, nevertheless, subpoenaed her to court and she was in the courtroom apparently available for appellant to confront and cross-examine if he chose to do so. Appellant cites no persuasive authority or evidence that he was deprived of his right to confront witnesses against him. Appellant expresses concern that the pattern of evidence in this case could become a widespread practice which would change the usual pattern in criminal trials, but this concern is not well-founded. Usually the prosecution will want to call the victim as its witness. Furthermore, we doubt that it is commonplace for all the requirements of the spontaneous statement exception to occur. In any event, under the circumstances of this case, appellant’s constitutional right to confrontation was not violated.
Substantial Evidence
Appellant alleges that there was no substantial evidence to support the verdict. Appellant’s allegation lacks merit.
A spontaneous statement can prove that the startling event occurred.
(People
v.
Butler
(1967)
In addition, Ms. Thomas’s statements were fully corroborated by other evidence. The investigating officer heard Ms. Thomas screaming, “Help
Closing Argument
Appellant contends that the prosecutor committed misconduct in closing argument. He asserts that the prosecutor improperly argued that the defense could have called the victim, Ms. Thomas, to the stand; that the prosecutor improperly commented on facts outside the record; and that he improperly appealed to the passions of the jury. 6 The prosecutor’s actions do not warrant reversal.
In appellant’s closing statement, he argued that Meya’s testimony was unreliable and not to be believed. In response, the prosecutor commented upon appellant’s failure to call Ms. Thomas as a witness. He stated: “. . . If in fact it really happened the way [appellant] want[s] you to think, . . . [d]on’t you think [Ms. Thomas] would have gotten up for this man and said, ‘Hey, didn’t happen that way.?’ ” This was proper argument because the state may comment on the defendant’s failure to call logical witnesses, even if that witness is his wife. (Evid. Code, §§ 412, 413;
People
v.
Coleman
(1969)
Appellant also suggests that the prosecutor improperly appealed to the passions of the jury when he rhetorically asked: “. . . You want this case a few months from now and the next time somebody is dead? . . .” “A prosecutor may vigorously urge his points as long as he does not act unfairly.”
(People
v.
Rodriguez
(1970)
The judgment is affirmed.
Feinerman, P. J., and Hastings, J., concurred.
Appellant’s petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied December 23, 1987.
Notes
“The Confrontation Clause operates in two separate ways to restrict the range of admissible hearsay. First, in conformance with the Framers’ preference for face-to-face accusation, the Sixth Amendment establishes a rule of necessity. In the usual case (including cases where prior cross-examination has occurred), the prosecution must either produce, or demonstrate the unavailability of, the declarant whose statement it wishes to use against the defendant. See
Mancusi
v.
Stubbs,
Even this broad statement in
Ohio
v.
Roberts, supra,
however, contained a footnote which read: "A demonstration of unavailability, however, is not always required. In
Dutton
v.
Evans,
Three California cases have rejected challenges to Evidence Code section 1240 on confrontation grounds. Appellant correctly points out that in each of those cases the declarant was, as a matter of fact, unavailable as a witness.
(People
v.
Jones
(1984)
Evidence Code section 1203, subdivision (a), provides: “The declarant of a statement that is admitted as hearsay evidence may be called and examined by any adverse party as if under cross-examination concerning the statement.”
Appellant here was in an even better position than the defendant in
Inadi.
Here the declarant was actually present in the courtroom if appellant desired to call her. In
Inadi,
the declarant had not shown up at trial and the court did not require the prosecution to make any further effort to make the declarant “ ‘available.’ ”
(United States
v.
Inadi, supra,
Appellant’s only witness was Meya’s brother, Al, who stated that Meya never left the bedroom that night. This testimony is questionable at best. If Al’s statements were believed, it would not explain why he would have called his grandmother with information that his parents were fighting.
Without citation to authority, appellant’s suggestion that he was entitled to surrebuttal lacks merit.
Appellant’s citation to
People
v.
Smith
(1898)
The jury was told that statements made by the attorneys were not evidence. Further, the jury was instructed with CALJIC No. 1.02 (1979 rev.), which provides in pertinent part that “[statements made by the attorneys during the trial are not evidence . . . .”
