Peter Button was found guilty, after a second jury trial, of lewd conduct with a minor child under sixteen years of age. Button was sentenced to seven years, with three years fixed; the sentence was suspended and Button was placed on four years probation. Button appeals. We reverse.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Button was indicted for lewd conduct with a minor child under sixteеn years of age. I.C. § 18-1508. The indictment alleged that Button had engaged in sexual intercourse with K.P., fourteen years of age, over a period of months from August 25, 1992 to June 2, 1993. The first trial was held in September of 1996. 1 The primary evidence against Button consisted of the testimony of K.P. and Mitko Andreeva, KP.’s brother-in-law and Button’s former friend.
Andreeva testified that Button, then twenty-sеven years old, had told him that he had touched K.P.’s genitals and had intercourse with her. Unable to recall the specific date of Button’s admission, Andreeva testified that he remembered that Button and K.P. had just returned to K.P.’s home, where Andreeva was visiting, after going somewhere to work for a woman named Sharon and that it was after dark. Andreeva notiсed that K.P. looked unhappy and confused as he saw her exit Button’s van and walk into her home. Button then gave Andreeva a ride. In the van, Andreeva asked, “Did you do anything to [K.P.]?” to which Button re
sponded
Andreeva also testified that in the summer of 1995 he called Button, in KP.’s presence, and recorded their conversation conducted in the Romaniаn language. Andreeva said that during the conversation Button admitted to having sex with K.P. Andreeva testified that he translated the conversation for K.P., who did not understand Romanian. Andreeva also related that he later reviewed the transcribed English translation of his tape recording and believed it to be fair and accurate.
On cross-examination, Andreeva admitted to lying to the grand jury about when he first discovered that Button had engaged in intercourse with K.P. On redirect examination and when called as a defense witness, Andreeva testified that he had told the grand jury that he first learned of Button’s sexual relations with K.P. during the phone conversation in 1995, not in his previous conversation with Button in the van. During deliberаtions the jury deadlocked and a mistrial was declared.
Prior to the second trial, the indictment was amended on the state’s motion to reflect a single incident of sexual contact on August 25, 1992. A second trial was held beginning on April 8, 1997. Again, the main evidence against Button was to be the testimony of K.P. and Andreeva.
On the first day of trial, K.P. testified that on August 25, 1992, Button drovе her in his van to the home of a woman so that they could collect payment for yard work K.P. and Button had done for her. While waiting for the woman to arrive home, Button pushed K.P. to the floor of the van, pulled off her shorts and underwear and penetrated her vagina with his penis. On cross-examination, K.P. testified that Button had intercourse with her on other occasions, until she moved with her family to Seattle in June of the following year. K.P. testified that Button had a sear on his lower abdomen, but acknowledged that she had never seen Button’s penis. K.P. also testified that she had visited her sister and Andreeva in August 1995, staying about a week, and during that time Andreeva had recorded a telephone conversation with Button, but she could not recall if she was present at the time the call was made.
As trial resumed on the second day, Andreeva apparently missed his flight from Seattle, Washington to Twin Falls, Idaho and was, therefore, not present in the courtroom on the morning he was to testify. Rather than asking for a continuance, the state moved to have Andrеeva declared unavailable under I.R.E. 804(a)(5). In its offer of proof, the state asserted: 2
Judge, the facts as I know it, is that we contacted Mr. Andreeva, Mitko Andreeva, who is the witness which is unavailable, on numerous occasions previous to this hearing. At a previous hearing, he was present and testified.
The arrangements that we made each time was that we had contacted him, he was voluntarily making himself available to testify. We provided transportation and lodging for him and paid for his plane ticket, set it up. He appeared at the previous hearing that we had with no problems, no hitches.
This morning he had called and spoke to Robin Saldiva in our office indicating that we hаd arrangements for him to fly into, and be here - or his arrival time, I know, in Twin Falls was at 9:25 this morning.
The call that she received this morning indicated that on the way to the airport he had been stopped, for some reason. My interpretation of that was that he got a traffic ticket. I don’t know that for certain, but he was stopped, the result of which is he missed his flight.
Thе logistics of the situation is, Judge, that he could obtain another flight which would leave at 10:30 but he would not arrive in Twin Falls until 2:00 p.m. today. That, Your Honor, would place him here after the state’s case-in-chief would be over with even, and I don’t know that the court, would be willing to continue this until he could get here.
He had not indicated an unwillingness to be here; however, I would note to the court, I do personally have some concerns about him ultimately showing up.
The state again represented that there was no indication that Andreeva acted intentionally in missing his flight or was indicating an unwillingness to be present and that the state would pay his lodging. Nevertheless, the state asked that Andreeva be declarеd unavailable, asserting that the state had been unable to secure his attendance or testimony by process or other reasonable means.
Counsel for Button objected, arguing that the state had never subpoenaed Andreeva and that use of his prior testimony would deny Button his right of confrontation. The state argued that the language of I.R.E. 804(a)(5), “the proponent of his statement has been unable to procure the declarant’s attendance by process or other reasonable means,” was in the disjunctive and therefore, the state did not need to have Andreeva subpoenaed in order to have him found unavailable. The state acknowledged that Andrеeva resided out of state, but explained that it had opted not to seek an out-of-state subpoena.
The district court found that Andreeva was an out-of-state witness for whom the state had purchased transportation, that he was not present at trial, and that waiting until two o’clock to see if Andreeva would arrive would delay the proceedings, requiring another full day of trial. The court then found and concluded that the state had exercised due diligence in attempting to procure Andreeva’s testimony and that Andreeva was unavailable under I.R.E. 804(a)(5).
Following the testimony of the state’s social worker and counselor, Andreeva’s testimony was read into the record, аnd the state’s Romanian translator testified about the translation of Andreeva’s recorded telephone conversation with Button. The transcript of Andreeva’s telephone conversation with Button was admitted into evidence against Button.
Button adamantly denied the charge. During his case-in-chief, Button and seven other witnesses testified in Buttоn’s defense. A portion of Andreeva’s testimony from the first trial concerning his motive for lying to the grand jury — fear of Button — was also read into the record in Button’s defense.
The jury returned a verdict of guilty to lewd conduct with a minor child under sixteen years of age. At sentencing, the district court imposed a suspended unified term of seven years, with three years fixed and placed Button on probation for four years.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review, rules of evidence are treated like statutes.
State v. Moore,
In the event error is found in either the interpretation of the rule or admission of evidence under that rule, we must determine whether the error was harmless. The test for harmless error is “whether a reviewing court can find beyond a reasonable doubt that the jury would have reached the same result without the admission of the challenged evidence.” Id.
III.
DISCUSSION
Idaho Rule of Evidence 804 provides in pertinent part:
(a) Definition of Unavailability. “Unavailability as a witness” includes situations in which the declarant:
(5) is absent from the hearing and the proponent of declarant’s statement has been unable to procure declarant’s attendance (or in the case of a hearsay exception under subdivision (b)(2), (3), or (4), the declarant’s attendance or testimony) by process or other reasonable means.
(1) Former testimony. Testimony given as a witness at another hearing of the same or different proceeding, ... if the party against whom the testimony is now offered, ... had an opportunity and similar motive to develop the testimony by direсt, cross, or redirect examination.
In
Ohio v. Roberts,
Unavailability of a witness’s testimony is a preliminary fact, which must be established by the proponent to the satisfaction of the trial court.
People v. Enriquez,
As several courts have noted, the unаvailability of a witness must be of such duration that a continuance is not a practical alternative.
See, e.g., United States v. Amaya,
The district court’s finding of unavailability is not supported by the record and is clearly eironeous. The unavailability exception provided for under I.R.E. 804(a)(5) is not a rule of simple convenience or a mere procedural technicality. Considerations of time, money savings and inconvenience to the trial process must be strictly balanced against the fundamentally important right of confrontation and the jury’s evaluation of the credibility of witnesses. Accordingly, we conclude that the district court abused its discretion by admitting Andreeva’s testimony from the first trial.
We also conclude that the erroneous admission of this prior testimony necessitates reversаl of the conviction. Idaho Criminal Rule 52 provides: “Any error, defect, irregularity or variance which does not affect substantial rights shall be disregarded.” An error in the admission of evidence will not warrant a new trial if the appellate court can conclude, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the jury would have reached the same result had the error not occurred.
State v. Pecor,
Here, Button presented testimony from eight witnesses. The state had only two primary witnesses. The evidence in Button’s first trial was substantially that presented in the second trial. The first trial ended in a hung jury. Andreeva’s testimony was not merely corroboration of K.P.’s testimony; it was evidence of an independent admission by Button to Andreеva. Additionally, Andreeva’s testimony was essential to establishing the foundation for the admission of the taped telephone conversation itself, which Andreeva had recorded and provided to the state for transcription and translation into English; a eonvei’sation that K.P. could not recall at the second trial and could not have undеrstood without translation from Romanian by Andreeva. 5
Due to the critical nature of Andreeva’s testimony — as evidence of an independent admission and as foundation for the single most damaging piece of evidence against Button, the transcript of the telephone conversation with Andreeva — we cannot say, beyond a reаsonable doubt, that a jury would have reached the same result had Andreeva’s testimony from the first trial not been erroneously admitted at the second trial. Accordingly, Button’s conviction must be reversed.
IV.
CONCLUSION
The state failed to establish that Andreeva was unavailable, leading the district court to erroneously admit his testimony from Button’s first trial. The admission of Andrеeva’s prior testimony was not harmless. Accordingly, Button’s judgment of conviction for lewd conduct with a minor child under six
teen
Notes
. The transcript of the first trial is not a part of the record in this appeal.
. This colloquy occurred at 9:30 a.m. on the second day of trial.
. Andreeva’s missed flight and the prospective delay in his testimony was no more compelling evidence of unavailability than would be a call from an out-of-county witness explaining that he had a flat tire or other breakdown which would cause him to be several hours late for court.
. The state admittedly did not utilize the Uniform Act to Secure Attendance оf Witnesses in Criminal Cases, I.C. § 19-3005, to issue an out-of-state subpoena to Andreeva. Given our ruling herein, we do not need to determine whether the state’s decision not to pursue an out-of-state subpoena, in and of itself, constituted a lack of good faith reasonable efforts to obtain Andreeva's testimony at Button's second trial. We do notе, however, that use of interstate process would have provided Andreeva with additional incentive to attend and the threat of court imposed sanctions for failure to comply. The far better procedure would surely have been to utilize I.C. § 19-3005 to seek an out-of-state subpoena.
See State v. Cross,
. At oral argument the state argued that Buttоn stipulated to the admission of the transcribed and translated telephone conversation with Andreeva. The record does not support the state’s assertion. Rather, counsel for Button, after the district court had overruled his objection to the admission of Andreeva’s testimony from the first trial, did not object to the admission of the transcriрt after Andreeva’s testimony had been read into the record. Andreeva’s testimony was the foundation for the transcript of the telephone conversation. After objecting to the admission of Andreeva’s testimony from the first trial, counsel was not required to object to the admission of the transcript of the telephone conversation. Counsel’s lack of objection was not a stipulation to the admission of the transcript of the telephone conversation without foundation.
