delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶ 1 Chris Leonard Hansen (Hansen) was convicted by a jury of deliberate homicide in the death of his wife, Nanette Hansen (Nanette). The District Court for the Fourth Judicial District, Mineral County, sentenced Hansen to 60 years in the Montana State Prison and declared him ineligible for parole for 30 years. From this judgment and sentence, Hansen appeals. We affirm.
¶2 Hansen raises the following issue on appeal: Whether the District Court abused its discretion when it admitted evidence of Nanette’s out-of-court statements for the purpose of establishing the corpus delicti.
*284 Factual and Procedural Background
¶3 Hansen and Nanette married in 1990 and divorced in late 1991. They continued to live together, however, and, in July 1994, they remarried. They owned 20 acres in a rural setting near De Borgia on which they built a house and barn. Nanette worked as a waitress at Lincoln’s Silver Dollar restaurant in Haugan. Hansen had been diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1993 and was not employed.
¶4 Scott Abe (Abe), Hansen’s son from a previous marriage, had recently reentered his father’s life after 23 years of no contact. He had visited his father while on vacation in 1992 and soon thereafter moved in with Hansen and Nanette. Abe eventually moved to а trailer two or three miles from Hansen’s property. Abe also worked at Lincoln’s Silver Dollar in Haugan until he was injured jumping off'a roof.
¶5 On the morning of November 28,1995, Hansen called the Mineral County Sheriff’s Office to report that Nanette had been “stomped” by a horse and was either dead or dying. When the emergency medical team arrived, Nanette was lying face up in the mud and manure in Hansen’s barnyard. She was not breathing, did not have a pulse, and appeared to be dead. Nanette had purportedly left the house that morning to feed the horses, yet, despite the cold weather, she was wearing a light shirt and no jacket. Hansen and Abe were the only other individuals present.
¶6 The emergency medical team began resuscitation efforts on Nanette, but she did not respond or improve. At one point during the resuscitation efforts, air being released from Nanette’s lungs made a sound like an exhale or a breath. Hansen asked the emergency medical team if Nanette was breathing. Abe, upon hearing Hansen’s question, fell to the ground and hyperventilated. The emergency medical team continued their resuscitation efforts оn Nanette until the ambulance arrived and transported her to the Mineral County Community Hospital where she was pronounced dead.
¶7 The State Medical Examiner, Dr. Gary Dale, performed an autopsy on Nanette the following day. He found multiple blunt force and other traumatic injuries to Nanette’s head, face, neck, chest, back, arms and legs, yet none of the injuries to Nanette’s head were severe enough to have caused her death. Dr. Dale also determined that Nanette’s injuries were inconsistent with being trampled by a horse. Because of the pattern injuries on the back of Nanette’s head and because Nanette’s airways were plugged with mud and other soil-like *285 materials, Dr. Dale determined that Nanette died from asphyxiation and that it was likely she had been forced face down into the mud and held there until she died. Hence, Dr. Dale certified her death as a homicide.
¶8 Deborah Hewitt, a forensic scientist with the State Crime Lab and an expert in fingerprint and other impression evidence, examined the photographs of the pattern injuries on Nanette’s scalp and determined they were similar in size and tread design to a pair of boots that had been seized from Abe. Hewitt believed that the evidence was consistent with Dr. Dale’s theory and that more than one person was involved in Nanette’s death.
¶9 On February 26,1996, the State charged Hansen and Abe with the offense of deliberate homicide in connection with N anette’s death. Abe’s case was eventually severed from Hansen’s and Abe was convicted of deliberate homicide by accountability on October 24,1996. His conviction was affirmed by this Court on August 25, 1998.
State v. Abe,
¶10 On December 19,1996, the District Court granted leave to the State to file an amended information charging Hansen with deliberate homicide in violation of § 45-5-102(l)(a), MCA, or, alternatively, deliberate homicide by accountability in violation of §§ 45-5-102(l)(a) and 45-2-302, MCA. Thereafter the State filed notice of its intent to offer evidence, pursuant to Rule 404(b), M.R.Evid., of acts of physical abuse alleged to have been committed by Hansen against Nanette. These acts were allegedly committed between the winter of 1992 and the spring of 1993. However, the court cautioned that if the State attempted to introduce such evidence, the door would be opеn for the defense to bring up Nanette’s failure to complain to law enforcement officers about Hansen’s conduct. Thereafter, the State withdrew its notice of intent to introduce evidence of other acts and stated it would limit its evidence of such alleged acts to the two-week period preceding Nanette’s death.
¶11 In addition, the State disclosed that it intended to introduce at trial evidence of several out-of-court statements allegedly made by Nanette to family members, friends and fellow employees in the two-week period prior to her death. The State contended such evidence was admissible as part of the corpus delicti of the charged offenses. Along with statements by Nanette that “something big is going to happen in the next few days” and, if something happened to her, Nanette’s friends would know who did it, Nanette’s statements *286 pertained to alleged acts of physical violence toward her by Hansen; Nanette’s fears relating to the continuation of her relationship with Hansen; Hansen’s removal of Nanette’s name from their bank accounts and other property; and Nanette’s plan to terminаte her relationship with Hansen and to leave the area. The State also disclosed that it intended to introduce various out-of-court statements made by Abe in which he expressed anger at Nanette and threatened to kill her.
¶12 Defense counsel objected to the admission of this evidence asserting that not only was it inadmissible hearsay, it was inflammatory and unfairly prejudicial and should be excluded by application of Rule 403, M.R.Evid. The District Court issued an Opinion and Order on January 31,1997, wherein the court resolved a number of pretrial issues, but reserved ruling on the admissibility of specific statements. The court stated that
if the sole purpose of statements of the victim which the State wishes to draw from its witnesses is to establish the victim’s state of mind, such statements are not relevant. However, if the victim’s statements are directly connected to the chain of events leading up to her death such that they are an inseparable, and vital, part of the corpus delicti of the crimes charged, they are not hearsay, and as such, are admissible.
Thus, the court sustained the defense’s objection with regard to evidence which goes solely to the state of mind of thе victim and overruled the defense’s objection as to evidence which is “an inseparable, and vital, part of the corpus delicti of the crimes charged.” The court determined that any rulings as to which of the two categories specific evidence might fall, must necessarily be reserved for trial.
¶13 On February 3,1997, the first day of trial, the State tried to introduce Nanette’s statements into evidence as part of the corpus delicti. The defense objected maintaining that the statements were inadmissible hearsay and not part of the corpus delicti. So that the District Court could make specific rulings on the statements, the State broke them down into six types or categories. Over defense counsel’s objections, the court ruled that the following four categories of Nanette’s statements, as characterized by the State, were admissible: (1) “If anything happens to me, you’ll know who did it;” (2) “Something big is going to happen in the next few days;” (3) “He and Scott have taken my name off the house and accounts;” and (4) “This is my home. I’m not going to let them run me off.”
*287 ¶ 14 Hence, the State called several witnesses to testify concerning statements made to them by Nanette to the effect that she was afraid of Hansen and Abe; that she was going to leave for a few days with a girlfriend and then leave for good; that Hansen had taken her name off of everything including the bank accounts and the truck; and that she wanted to buy a vehicle in her own name. The jury was instructed that the testimony with regard to these statements attributed to Nanette was not offered to show the truth of the matter asserted. In fact, as the State pointed out, Hansen had not taken Nanette’s name off their joint checking account as she had stated. Instead, Hansen had his own name removed from their joint account prior to opening a new account in his and Abe’s names.
¶ 15 Additionally, an employee of the Mineral County Clerk and Recorder’s office and a Norwest Bank representative testified about financial changes Hansen made prior to Nanette’s death. On October 20, 1995, Hansen removed Nanette’s name from the title to their property. However, he did not remove her name from the mortgage to the property held by Norwest. Nanette was the primary borrower on the mortgage and a credit life policy was issued in her name. When Nanette was killed, the policy paid off the mortgage.
¶16 At trial, Hansen testified that he and Nanette had had serious marital problems and that the situation worsened after the summer of 1995. He also testified that Nanette and Abe had had a disagreement and that this affected his own relationship with Nanette. Hansen further testified that he would not let Nanette drive the truck and that he eventually took Nanette’s name off of the title to the truck because he did not want her driving it when she had been drinking, which he claimed she had been doing quite often prior to her death. Hansen testified that he was unhappy with Nanette for not spending enough time with him, for spending too much time in the bars, and for squandering their money. Even so, Hansen asserted that he had not killed Nanette.
¶ 17 The defense attempted to portray Hansen as frail and incapable of participating in a violent murder. However, Dr. Terry Smith had treated Hansen in 1994 for some loss of vision and later for multiple sclerosis. Dr. Smith also treated Hansen in July 1995, prior to Nanette’s death, and determined that Hansen was much improved through the use of medications. Dr. Smith testified that, based upon his prior observations of Hansen and his examinatiоn of Hansen in February 1996, Hansen was physically capable of participating in *288 Nanette’s murder. In addition, Hansen was videotaped walking and exercising in the Mineral County jail without difficulty. And, despite Hansen’s claim that he was nearly blind, he was observed watching television at the jail, playing cards and board games, and filling out his own commissary request sheets.
¶18 On February 8,1997, the jury convicted Hansen of deliberate homicide. The defense moved for a new trial, based in part on the State’s witnesses testifying to hearsay regarding Nanette’s state of mind. The court did not formally rule on the motion for a new trial.
¶19 The District Court held a sentencing hearing on March 13, 1997, wherein the court sentenced Hansen to 60 years in the Montana State Prison and declared him ineligible for parole for 30 years. Hansen now appeals his conviction and sentence.
Standard of Review
¶20 The standard of review for evidentiary rulings is whether the district court abused its discretion.
State v. Lantis,
Discussion
¶21 Whether the District Court abused its discretion when it admitted evidence of Nanette’s out-of-court statements for the purpose of establishing the corpus delicti.
¶22 In its January 31,1997 Opinion and Order, the District Court determined that Nanette’s state of mind was not relevant to the crime charged, thus, testimony by others as to statements made by Nanette in the two weeks prior to her death would not be admissible if offered solely to establish her state of mind. At the same time, the court determined that if the State could establish that the statements went to the corpus delicti of the crime charged, then the testimony would not constitute hearsay and would be admissible. Hence, at trial, the District Court allowed the State to admit testimony of statements made by Nanette regarding her fear of Hansen and Abe; her intention to *289 leave for a few days with a girlfriend and then leave for good; her desire to buy a vehicle in her own name; and her belief that Hansen had removed her name from their bank account and from the truck title.
¶23 Hansen contends that the trial court erred on three levels in admitting this evidence. First, because evidence of Nanette’s state of mind was not necessary or relevant to establish the corpus delicti of the crime charged. Second, because the trial court’s designation of evidence as part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged does not remove such evidence from application of the hearsay rule. And third, because the prejudicial impact of the evidence outweighed its probative value.
¶24 Hansen maintains that Nanette’s out-of-court statements were not part of the prosecution’s proof of the corpus delicti of the homicide. To that end, Hansen argues that the doctrine of corpus delicti has been expanded beyond its fundamental limits in part because this Court has addressed the urn-elated doctrines of res gestae and corpus delicti as being interchangeable.
¶25 An extensive review of the more than 80 cases in Montana since 1881 that use the phrase corpus delicti, as well as the more than 150 cases in Montana that use the phrase res gestae, shows that Hansen is correct. Not only has this Court in recent years addressed the unrelated doctrines of res gestae and corpus delicti as being interchangeable, but, over the years, both concepts have been expanded beyond their fundamental limits and, by doing so, both terms have been misapplied.
¶26 To sort out these confusing bodies of law, we review the prior Montana cases for each concept in turn to determine how the problem started and how it may be remedied. We then discuss how these concepts, in their correct interpretations, apply or do not apply to the case before us on appeal.
A.
Corpus Delicti
¶27 The concept of corpus delicti refers to “the body, foundation or substance of the crime.” Black’s Law Dictionary 344 (6th ed. 1990). Corpus delicti is “the objective proof or substantial fact that a crime has been committed.” Black’s, at 344.
Because the phrase “corpus delicti” literally means “body of the crime,” people often mistakenly think it only refers to the body in a homicide. A popular misconception has grown up that the police *290 cannot prove a murder unless they find the body. This is not so. Producing the corpse only proves a death, not a crime. Murder has been proven many times by circumstantial evidence of the crime even though the body was lost forever.
In the days of sailing ships, an English murder case (Rex v. Hindmarsh, 2 Leach C.C. 569) established a rule that is still followed today. There was an indictment for two counts of murder, one for killing by beating and the other for killing by drowning. The alleged crime occurred at sea. A witness testified that he was awakened at midnight by a violent noise, that on reaching the dеck he saw the accused murderer pick the captain up and throw him overboard, and that the captain was not heard from again. Another witness stated that he had earlier heard the prisoner threaten to kill the captain. Near where the captain had been seen a large piece of wood was found, and the deck and part of the accused’s clothing were stained with blood. The defense counsel called for an acquittal because the body was never found, arguing that the captain might have been picked up at sea by a passing ship. The court found sufficient proof of corpus delicti, however, and sent the case to the jury. The jury found the defendant guilty, and he was executed.
Larceny can be proved without recovering the stolen jewels, kidnapping without finding the victim, England’s great train robbery without the million pounds — just as long as the prosecution can prove by other evidence that a crime was committed, that is, the corpus delicti.
Julian R. Hanley & Wayne W. Schmidt, Introduction to Criminal Evidence 9-10 (1982) (hereafter, Hanley).
¶28 A successful criminal prosecution generally requires proof of three distinсt elements: (1) the occurrence of a specific injury or loss (as, in homicide, a person deceased; in arson, a house burned down; in larceny, property missing); (2) that someone is criminally responsible for that loss or injury (in contrast to an accidental occurrence); and (3) the identity of the doer of the crime. 7 Wigmore on Evidence § 2072 (James H. Chadbourn ed., 1978). Wigmore contended that corpus delicti, in its orthodox sense, encompassed only the first element, namely, the fact that a specific loss or injury has been sustained. It “warns us to be cautious in convicting, since it may subsequently appear that no one has sustained any loss at all; for example, a man has *291 disappeared, but perhaps he may later reappear alive.” Wigmore, § 2072. However, Wigmore points out that most courts also include the second element in the concept of corpus delicti, namely, that someone is criminally responsible for the loss or injury. Wigmore, § 2072.
¶29 In every criminal case, the burden is on the prosecution to prove the corpus delicti, however, the prosecution is not required to prove the identity of the perpetrator of the crime as part of the рroof of the corpus delicti, nor is the identity of the victim required to be proven. “Proof that the defendant was the person who engaged in the unlawful conduct is of course necessary for a conviction, but it is not an element of the corpus delicti.” 1 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 17 (Charles E. Torcia ed., 14th ed. 1985).
¶30 Wigmore emphatically agreed, for he stated that to include the third element, i.e., the accused’s identity, is “too absurd indeed to be argued with.” Wigmore, § 2072. Moreover, Wigmore stated:
In a charge of criminal homicide, it is necessary in the first place by full and substantial evidence to establish what is technically called the “corpus delicti,” — the actual offence committed; that is, that the person alleged to be dead is in fact so; that he came to his death by violence and under such circumstances as to exclude the supposition of a death by accident or suicide and warranting the conclusion that such death was inflicted by a human agent; leaving the question who that guilty agent is to after consideration.
Wigmore, § 2072 (quoting Commonwealth v. Webster (Mass. 1850), Bemis’ Rep. 473 (Little & Brown, Boston) (emphasis added). Thus, a “jury cannot deliberate as to who committed [the crime] unless the state first proves that therе has been a criminal act.” Hanley, at 8.
¶31 Historically, a showing of proof of the corpus delicti of a crime was required prior to allowing the introduction of a confession. This doctrine, which dates back to seventeenth and eighteenth century English law, became known as the corpus delicti rule. Thomas A. Mullen, Rule Without Reason: Requiring Independent Proof of the Corpus Delicti as a Condition of Admitting an Extrajudicial Confession (Winter 1993), 27 U.S.F. L. Rev. 385, 399 (hereafter, Mullen).
The corpus delicti rule may be seen as a rule of evidence (in that it bars the admission of an extrajudicial confession until a predicate showing is made that the crime charged was committed by someone), and a rule of substantive criminal law (in that it requires a conviction based on a confession to be supported by the requisite degree of proof of the corpus delicti). In both respects, the *292 rule is an anomaly. The rules of evidence generally do not condition the admission of one kind of evidence on the admission of another. *304 immediately before, during, or immediately after the commission of a crime, by the accused, victim, or a bystander, as a spontaneous reaction or utterance stimulated by the excitement of the occasion, and made under such circumstances as to preclude contrivance or fabrication. In short, the basic theory which supports this exception to the hearsay rule is that the circumstances under which a res gestae statement is made stand as a guaranty of the statement’s truthfulness. Thus, a witness may testify that the deceased came to her door and said, “Call the police. My wife stabbed me.” Testimony as to a res gestae statement may be given in court by the declarant himself or by a person who heard such statement.
*292 Mullen, at 386-87.
¶32 “The main purpose of the corpus delicti rule is to prevent deranged people from being punished for imaginary crimes they claim to have committed.” Mullen, at 385. Historians focus on the revulsion in England over unwarranted executions, such as in Perry’s Case (1660), 14 How. St. Tr. 1311, “as a galvanizing force in the development of the rule.” Mullen, at 400. In that case, a suspect confessed to the murder of a man and in his confession, implicated his mother and brother. All three were executed. Later, the alleged victim “materialized with a bizarre story about having been sold into slavery in Turkey.” Mullen, at 400.
¶33 In Montana, early criminal cases follоwed Wigmore’s opinion that the
corpus delicti
of a crime included only the first two of the three elements necessary for a successful criminal prosecution, i.e., evidence of the occurrence of a specific injury or loss and evidence that someone was criminally responsible for that loss or injury.
See State v. Pepo
(1900),
¶34 Additionally, early Montana criminal cases also followed the
corpus delicti rule
holding that there must be evidence, independent of the accused’s self-incriminating statements, establishing that the offense charged was actually committed.
See Territory v. Farrell
(1886),
*293
¶35 Eventually, the
corpus delicti rule
outlived its usefulness and the rule was thoroughly disparaged by commentators. “The corpus delicti rule ... frequently suffers distortions of such magnitude that a want of intellectual honesty must rank among the costs of maintaining it. The common need to work around the rule to achieve justice suggests that justice would be better served by abandoning the rule.” Mullen, at 417. Judge Learned Hand, one of the early detractors of the
corpus delicti rule,
expressed his doubts that the rule “has in fact any substantial necessity injustice....”
Daeche v. United States
(2d Cir. 1918),
¶36 In a pair of 1954 decisions, the United States Supreme Court rejected the
corpus delicti rule
in favor of a less stringent requirement for the federal courts.
See Opper v. United States
(1954),
¶37 The confusion in Montana with the concept of
corpus delicti
itself, began with this Court’s decision in
State v. Jensen
(1969),
¶38 Contrary to prior decisions of this Court, as well as Wigmore and other commentators, the Court in
Jensen
stated that the concept
of“corpus delicti
includes both proof of a crime and proof of
the defendant’s
criminality.”
Jensen,
¶39 Evidence pertaining to a defendant’s intent is not within the proper bounds of the concept of
corpus delicti
because intent relates to a particular defendant’s criminality or identity as the perpetrator of the crime. As we previously noted, proof that the defendant was the person who engaged in the unlawful conduct is necessary for a conviction, but it is not an element of the
corpus delicti.
Wharton’s, § 17.
See also
Wigmore, § 2072;
Kindle,
¶40 In addition, the Court in
Jensen
correctly noted that Montana recognizes the general rule that “when a defendant is put upon trial for one offense, he should be convicted, if at all, by evidence which shows that he is guilty of that offense alone; and evidence which in any manner shows, or tends to show, that he has committed another crime wholly independent, even though it be a crime of the same sort, is irrelevant and inadmissible.”
Jensen,
¶41 Nevertheless, the Court in
Jensen
recognized several exceptions to this general rule: the similarity of the crimes or acts; the nearness in time of the crimes or acts; and the tendency to establish a common scheme, plan or system.
Jensen,
¶42 Less than three years later, in
State v. Frates
(1972),
¶43 Once again, while the evidence may have been admissible on other grounds, the Court erred by saying that it was admissible as part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged. By so doing, the Court incorrectly expanded the concept of corpus delicti to include the admission of evidence of other criminal acts committed by a defendant.
¶44 Still later, in
State v. Just
(1979),
¶45 Furthermore, the Court in
Just
set forth certain procedures that must be followеd before evidence of other crimes or acts may be admitted. First, the defendant must be given notice that evidence of other crimes is to be introduced and the purposes for which such evidence is to be admitted. Second, at the time of the introduction of such evidence, the trial court shall explain to the jury the purpose of the evidence and shall admonish the jury to weigh the evidence only for such purposes. Third, in its final charge, the trial court should instruct the jury that such evidence was received only for the limited purposes earlier stated and that the defendant may not be convicted for any offense except that charged.
Just,
*296
¶46 The
Just
Rule was later modified to eliminate the limitation that evidence is admissible only if it shows a common scheme, plan or system, and to incorporate the various purposes described in Rule 404(b), M.R.Evid. (proof of motive, opportunity intent, preparation, plan, knowledge, identity, or absence of mistake or accident).
State v. Matt
(1991),
¶47 With the implementation of the Just Rule and the Modified Just Rule dictating specific requirements and procedures for the admission of other crimes evidence, the problems and confusion with the concept of corpus delicti were compounded. In many cases to follow, if the other crimes evidence was inadmissible under the Just Rule or the Modified Just Rule, either because that evidence did not fit within one of the elements of those rules or because the State had not complied with the notice requirement, an attempt was made to admit the evidence under the pretext that it was part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged.
¶48 For example, in
State v. Riley
(1982),
¶49 Although the defendant argued on appeal that by allowing this evidence of “other crimes” the trial court failed to adhere to the decisions of this Court in
Just,
the Court did not address the
Just
requirements. Instead, this Court relied on its earlier decision in
Frates
and determined that “the State is entitled to present the entire corpus delicti of the charged offense
including matters closely related to the offense and explanatory of it,
even when such evidence discloses crimes other than those charged.”
Riley,
*297 ¶50 While it may not have been incorrect to allow the State to introduce “matters closely related to the offense and explanatory of it,” it was incorrect to characterize such evidence as part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged. The corpus delicti in Riley was established by evidence that the boy was dead and that his death was caused by a criminal means. Evidence that the defendant participated in the beatings of the deceased and of several other children, was evidence tending to prove who perpetrated the crime, which, as we have repeatedly stated in this opinion, is not an element of the concept of corpus delicti.
¶51 One year after this Court’s decision in
Riley,
the Court once again misapplied the concept of
corpus delicti
to introduce evidеnce that was not within the proper bounds of that concept and as a means of circumventing the requirements of
Just.
In
State v. Gillham
(1983),
¶52 The defendant in
Gillham
was convicted of attempted deliberate homicide for placing a bomb behind the seat of his intended victim’s logging truck. At trial, the State attempted to introduce evidence that defendant told others of his plan to kill the victim, that defendant had visited the victim’s home, and that defendant had followed the victim’s vehicle intending to harm him. The trial court determined that this evidence was admissible as part of the
corpus delicti
of the crime charged because it provided an explanatory context in which the jury was entitled to view defendant’s actions. Citing
Riley,
this Court stated in
Gillham
that the rule that the State is entitled to present the entire
corpus delicti
of the charged offense including matters closely related to the offense and explanatory of it, “override the requirements of
Just.” Gillham,
¶53 Once again, while the statement that matters closely related to and explanatory of the charged offense “override thе requirements of Just” may or may not be a correct statement of the law, to characterize evidence that the defendant threatened to kill the victim, visited the victim’s home, and followed the victim’s vehicle intending to harm him, as part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged, was error. The corpus delicti in that case was established by showing that a bomb had been placed in the victim’s car, thereby establishing that if the *298 victim had met with death in this manner, his death would have been the result of a criminal act and not an accident.
¶54 In numerous cases after this Court’s decisions in
Riley
and
Gillham,
the Court continued to follow its inaccurate interpretation of the concept of
corpus delicti
as set forth in those two cases.
See State v. Canon
(1984),
¶55 In contrast, there are two cases decided by this Court during this time period, where the Court correctly interpreted the concept of
corpus delicti.
In the first case,
State v. Howell
(1987),
¶56 In the second case,
State v. Davis
(1992),
¶57 Nevertheless, it was not until
State v. Cameron
(1992),
¶58 The defendant in
Cameron
was charged with criminal sale of dangerous drugs. At trial, the District Court allowed the State to introduce evidence that defendant had threatened a witness with a firearm two or three months prior to the charged act as well as evidence of another drug sale that had taken place the day before the charged act. On appeal, this Court determined that the gun-threat evidence was not admissible under the Modified
Just
Rule as the State failed to give written notice specifying the evidence to be admitted and there was no similarity between the alleged gun threat and the charged crime of criminal sale of dangerous drugs.
Cameron,
*300
¶59 The Court further determined that the District Court erred in allowing the State to introduce evidence of the prior drug sale as part of the
corpus delicti
of the crime charged. In so holding, the Court specifically overruled
Frates
(discussed earlier in this opinion as one of the early cases misinterpreting the concept of
corpus delicti).
The Court in
Frates
had admitted evidence of a prior drug sale under the concept of
corpus delicti
holding that the two crimes were so related that proof of one tended to establish the other.
Frates,
¶60 Although by overruling
Frates,
the Court made a start in the right direction in
Cameron,
it did not go far enough to correct the misinterpretation and misapplication of the concept of
corpus delicti.
This is borne out by this Court’s determination in
State v. Hage
(1993),
¶61 The defendant in
Hage
was charged with deliberate homicide. At trial, the District Court allowed the State to introduce evidence that on the night of the murder, defendant was waving a gun around and threatened to kill someone other than the deceased. The State claimed that these acts showed defendant’s state of mind and were thus relevant to the crime. This Court, citing
Riley, Frates,
and
Gillham
for their conclusion that the State is entitled to present the entire
corpus delicti
of the charged offense even when such evidence discloses crimes other than those charged, held that defendant’s statements and actions prior to the crime are relevant to defendant’s state of mind and to the crime charged.
Hage,
¶62 While the evidence objected to in Hage may have been admissible as determined by the Court, it was error to characterize that evidence as part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged. As we have ex *301 plained numerous times throughout this opinion, evidence of a defendant’s state of mind does not fall within the bounds of the concept of corpus delicti since that evidence goes instead to prove the identity of the perpetrator of the crime.
¶63 The same is true as to proof of ownership of the weapon involved in the crime. In
State v. Byers
(1993),
¶64 While the shotgun itself was admissible under the concept of corpus delicti to show that death resulted from a criminal agency, the fact that the shotgun was illegally short was used to prove the ownership of the weapon and, thus, who perpetrated the crime. Consequently, that evidence does not fall within the bounds of the concept of corpus delicti. That is not to say, however, that the evidence was not admissible on other grounds.
¶65 Although the list of cases wherein the Court incorrectly interpreted the concept of corpus delicti is lengthy, there are, as shown earlier in this opinion, occasional exceptions. Such is the situation in two very recent decisions where the evidence did indeed fall within the proper bounds of the concept of corpus delicti.
¶66 In
State v. Langford
(1994),
¶67 A charge of burglary is based on an allegation that an individual knowingly entered or remained unlawfully in an occupied structure with the purpose to commit an offense. Section 45-6-204(1), MCA. Thus, to establish the corpus delicti of the charge of burglary in this case, the State had to introduce evidence to establish that someone had entered or remained unlawfully in D Block of the maximum security unit with the purpose to commit the offense of riot, i.e., to disturb the peace by engaging in an act of violence or threatening to commit an act of violence as part of an assemblage of five or more persons. Section 45-8-103(1), MCA. Evidence of the officer’s act of firing a warning shot at defendant was admissible as part of the corpus delicti to show that the officer believed he was being threatened with violence.
¶68 In making this determination, however, the Court relied, in part, on Hage to hold that the evidence in Langford went to that defendant’s state of mind in the same way that the evidence in Hage went to the state of mind of the defendant in that case. As we stated in our analysis of Hage in this opinion, a defendant’s state of mind does not fall within the proper bounds of the concept of corpus delicti. Nevertheless, this Court also relied on Rules 403 and 404(b), M.R.Evid., clearer and more precise statements of the law regarding admissibility of evidence, in making its determination that the evidence was part of the corpus delicti of the crime charged.
¶69 Similarly, in
State v. Monaco
(1996),
¶70 With all this in mind, we turn then to the case before us on appeal. In Hansen’s case, the State had already established the cor *303 pus delicti, without introducing Nanette’s statements, by presenting evidence that Nanette was dead and that her death was caused by criminal means. These elements were established by the testimony of the emergency medical team, the hospital staff who pronounced Nanette dead, and by Dr. Dale, the pathologist, who testified that Nanette’s death was a homicide and was not caused accidentally or as a result of being trampled by a horse.
¶71 Testimony regarding Nanette’s statements about her plans to leave Hansen, her fear of him, his removing her name from marital property, and references to future occurrences do not fall within the proper bounds of the concept of corpus delicti because they tend to establish the perpetrator of the crime, which, as we have stated enumerable times in this opinion, is not an element of the corpus delicti. Hence, these statements by Nanette were improperly admitted under the theory that they were part of the corpus delicti of the crime of deliberate homicide.
B.
Res Gestae
¶72 Although the District Court did not discuss the concept of res gestae in admitting Nanette’s statements, nor did it admit the statements under that theory, Hansen argues that the statements would not be admissible under the concept of res gestae any more than they were admissible under the concept of corpus delicti. We agree.
¶ 73 Res gestae generally refers to spontaneous declarations that are so closely connected to an occurrence that they are considered part of the occurrence. “The ‘res gestae’ rule is that where a remark is made spontaneously and concurrently with an affray, collision or the like, it carries with it inherently a degree of credibility and will be admissible because of its spontaneous nature.” Black’s, at 1305. “The rule is extended to include, not only declarations by the parties to the suit, but includes statements made by bystanders and strangers, under certain circumstances.” Black’s, at 1305. It is a “spontaneous declaration made by a person immediately after an event and before the mind has an opportunity to conjure a falsehood.” Black’s, at 1305.
¶74 “The term res gestae seems to have come into common usage in discussions of admissibility of statements accompanying material acts or situations in the early 1800’s.” McCormick on Evidence § 268 (John W. Strong ed., 4th ed. 1992). For the most part, res gestae refers to statements made
*304 2 Wharton’s Criminal Evidence § 288 (Charles E. Torcia ed., 14th ed. 1986).
¶75 Today these statements fall into four specific exceptions to the hearsay rule: (1) statements of present sense impressions, (2) excited utterances, (3) statements of present bodily condition, and (4) statements of present mental states and emotions. These four exceptions are found in Rule 803, M.R.Evid. Cases in Montana following this definition of the concept of
res gestae
include:
Phillip R. Morrow, Inc. v. FBS Ins.
(1989),
¶76 The concept of res gestae has not always been associated only with spontaneous declarations.
In some states, res gestae is given an even broader scope to include not only a spontaneous utterance made before, during, or after the commission of a crime, but also real or demonstrative evidence relevant to the crime charged, such as the torn dress of a *305 prosecutrix to show that she had been raped; testimony by a police officer or other witness as to what he heard or observed before, during, or after the commission of the crime; all that occurred at the time and place of the crime, or immediately before or after the crime if causally related thereto; a declaration of intent by the victim; a statement, confession, or admission by the defendant; or a declaration or conduct of a coconspirator or accomplice.
Wharton’s, § 288.
¶77 Such is the case in Montana where the concept of res gestae has also been associated with the “transaction rule,” which provides:
Declaration, act, or omission which is a part of the transaction. Where the declaration, act, or omission forms part of a transaction which is itself the fact in dispute or evidence of that fact, such declaration, act, or omission is evidence as part of the transaction.
Section 26-1-103, MCA. Cases in Montana following this definition of the concept of
res gestae
include:
State v. Wing
(1994),
¶78 The Federal Rules of Evidence avoid using the term res gestae. The phrase is too vague and, therefore, it has been disparaged by judges and commentators alike.
As employed in the common law, res gestae is so broadly and loosely defined that its main thrust is simply to forestall rational analysis as to the admissibility of a particular statement challenged as hearsay. The “phrase is used only because the courts insist on retaining it in spite of condemnation by text-writers and most distinguished judges.”
Michael H. Graham, Evidence: Text, Rules, Illustrations and Problems 279-80 (1983) (hereafter, Graham) (quoting Edmund M. Morgan, Basic Problems of Evidence 328 (1961).
*306
¶79 One judge complained about the use of the term
res gestae
saying, “Definitions of the term ‘res gestae’ are as numerous as the various cures for rheumatism and about as useful.” Hanley, at 189 (quoting
Coryell v. Reid
(1931),
¶80 Wigmore has characterized the term res gestae as useless and harmful:
The phrase res gestae has long been not only entirely useless, but even positively harmful. It is useless, because every rule of evidence to which it has ever been applied exists as a part of some other well-established principle and can be explained in the terms of that principle. It is harmful, because by its ambiguity it invites the confusion of оne rule with another and thus creates uncertainty as to the limitations of both. It ought therefore wholly to be repudiated as a vicious element in our legal phraseology. No rule of evidence can be created or applied by the mere muttering of a shibboleth. There are words enough to describe the rules of evidence. Even if there were no accepted name for one or another doctrine, any name would be preferable to an empty phrase so encouraging to looseness of thinking and uncertainty of decision.
6 Wigmore on Evidence § 1767 (James H. Chadbourn ed., 1976). And, McCormick has characterized the term res gestae as confusing:
The marvelous capacity of a Latin phrase to serve as a substitute for reasoning, and the confusion of thought inevitably accompanying the use of inaccurate terminology, are nowhere better illustrated than in the decisions dealing with the admissibility of evidence as “res gestae.”
McCormick, § 268 n.6 (quoting Edmund M. Morgan, A Suggested Classification of Utterances Admissible as Res Gestae (1922), 31 Yale L. J. 229, 229).
¶81 The phrase res gestae, in itself, adds nothing but confusion to an already complex area of the law. The better practice is to abandon the *307 use оf the phrase altogether and to, instead, use the specific rule of evidence or statute that applies to the particular factual situation presented.
¶82 In the case before us on appeal, Nanette’s statements do not fit within the traditional definitions of the concept of res gestae, because these statements were made several days before her death.
A declaration made by a homicide victim immediately before the act of homicide is ordinarily admissible as part of the res gestae. Declarations have also been held to be admissible as part of the res gestae even though made a few minutes ... or several hours, before the act of homicide. However, declarations will ordinarily not be regarded as part of the res gestae where the time interval between the declaration and the act of homicide is several days ....
Wharton’s, § 290. For that same reason, Nanette’s statements also do not fit within the specific rules of evidence governing such statements.
(1) Present sense impression. A statement describing or explaining an event or condition made while the deсlarant was perceiving the event or condition, or immediately thereafter.
(2) Excited utterance. A statement relating to a startling event or condition made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by the event or condition.
Rule 803, M.R.Evid. (emphasis added).
¶83 Accordingly, to admit Nanette’s statements under the concept of res gestae would have been error.
¶84 There is one other problem with the concepts of
res gestae
and
corpus delicti
that requires this Court’s attention. In at least three instances,
State v. Hayworth,
C.
Harmless error
¶85 The State argues that even if the trial court erred in the use of the terms corpus delicti and res gestae, “so what;” there was substantial evidence without Nanette’s statements to uphold the verdict of guilty of deliberate homicide. Although we disagree with the State’s *308 terminology, we agree that the admission of Nanette’s statements was merely cumulative and constituted harmless error.
¶86 Cumulative evidence is “additional evidence of the same character to the same point.”
State v. Stuit
(1996),
¶87 The evidence presented at trial established that no person or persons, other than Hansen and Abe, were present either immediately before or at the time of Nanette’s death. In addition, Abe claimed to have given Nanette mouth-to-mouth resuscitation upon finding her lying face down in the mud, however, no traces of mud were found on his face or mouth. Instead, a mark matching the tread of Abe’s boot was found on Nanette’s head.
¶88 It was also established at trial that Hansen was not as frail as he claimed to be. Two days after Nanette was killed, Hansen was observed standing in the bucket of a tractor and assessing the barn loft. Hansen was also videotaped walking and exercising without difficulty in the Mineral County jail.
¶89 Furthermore, both the Mineral County Sheriff and the Under-sheriff testified that, a day or two after Nanette’s death, they asked Hansen to remove his shirt so they could look for marks on his body. They testified that they found recent four- to six-inch long scratches on his chest and shoulder. Hansen first told them that he received the marks when hе tripped over a lamp and broke it, then he said he tripped over a table with a plant on it, then he said he might have received the marks from a bedroom or bathroom doorjamb where he may have tripped the previous evening after coming home from the bar. Hansen also made inconsistent statements regarding the events of both the morning Nanette was killed and the prior evening, including the time when Nanette arrived home, the time she went to feed the horses, the time Hansen called Abe, and the time Nanette was found and by whom.
¶90 There was also a considerable amount of testimony introduced at trial regarding statements both Hansen and Abe themselves had *309 made regarding Nanette both prior to and after her death. For example, Robert Finley, one of Hansen’s neighbors, had visited the Hansens a couple of times a week for three or four years. Finley testified at trial that a few days before Nanette died, Hansen and Finley had a conversation wherein Hansen stated that “he was going to get [Nanette] out of the house if he had to kill her” and that “he would like to just beat the hell out of her.”
¶91 Another of Hansen’s neighbors, Mary Jensen, testified that the night before Nanette’s memorial service, Mary and her husband were visiting Hansen. Mary testified that at one point in the evening when she was alone with Hansen, he said to her, “I killed her, but I don’t remember it all.”
¶92 In addition, Tim Hayes, a detention officer at the Mineral County jail where Hansen was incarcerated awaiting trial, testified to events that occurred on April 26,1996, when he and Hansen were in Hansen’s cell. After Hayes handed Hansen his eye drops, Hansen took the cap off the bottle, tipped his head back, lost his balance, and stumbled backward. When Hansen looked down, he gave a slight smile and told Hayes, “That is what I did when I stood on my wife’s head.” Hayes testified that Hansen did not appear to be joking, nor did Hayes take the statement as a joke.
¶93 Hansen’s cellmate, David Ronemus, testified that, over a period of six weeks, he and Hansen had several conversations about Nanette’s death. Ronemus testified that during one discussion, Hansen asked Ronemus what he thought of the situation. Wb.en Ronemus answered that he thought Hansen had killed Nanette, Hansen replied, “Yeah, I did it. So what? They still have to prove it.”
¶94 Moreover, Jerry Parriсk, Abe’s best friend, testified that Abe had told him several times that he hated Nanette with “an evil hate, vengeful evil hate.” Parrick also testified that Abe told him, in Hansen’s presence, that he had offered to kill Nanette for Hansen.
¶95 Having examined the totality of the circumstances, we hold that any error committed by the trial court in admitting Nanette’s statements was not prejudicial to Hansen as this evidence was merely cumulative and, thus, the error was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
Carter,
Conclusion
¶96 Although the District Court erred in admitting evidence of Nanette’s out-of-court statements for the purpose of establishing the corpus delicti, that error was harmless. Furthermore, the terms cor *310 pus delicti and res gestae are vague and imprecise and have been misinterpreted and used incorrectly in the past. Therefore, we urge that these terms not be used in future. We suggest, instead, that the practicing bar and trial courts of this State rely on the clearer and more precise statements of the law, i.e., the Montana Code Annotated and the Montana Rules of Evidence, rather than vague Latin phrases that can easily be misinterpreted and misapplied. Indeed, henceforth, we will review claims of error in the admission of evidence as part of the corpus delicti or res gestae by determining whether the evidence was admissible under some provision of the Montana Code Annotated or under the Montana Rules of Evidence.
¶97 Affirmed.
