Lead Opinion
¶ 1 While ostensibly concerning the interpretation of an evidentiary rule, this is actually a case about stare decisis. Petitioner Nakia Lee Otton seeks reversal of his convictions for second degree assault and felony harassment. The victim testified at Otton’s trial, and because her testimony was inconsistent with her prior sworn statement to police about the incident, the trial court admitted the victim’s prior statement as substantive evidence. Otton acknowledges that the trial court’s decision and the Court of Appeals opinion affirming that decision were proper in accordance with this court’s long-standing
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2 Otton and the victim had a romantic relationship and lived in the same household. The victim was disabled due to a history of multiple brain surgeries and sometimes had difficulties with memory and speaking. Late one night in December 2012, Otton and the victim had a confrontation. After Otton left the house, the victim called 911. When the police arrived, the victim gave a written statement, signed under penalty of perjury, alleging that Otton held her on the bed and against the wall by her neck so that she could not breathe and told her he was going to kill her. The State charged Otton with second degree assault and felony harassment.
¶3 At trial, the victim testified that while she would not have intentionally lied to police, her allegations against Otton were false, and that she had called 911 because she was “angry” and “had a couple of drinks.” 2A Verbatim Report of Proceedings (VRP) (Aug. 7, 2013) at 132. At the State’s request and over Otton’s objection, the trial court admitted the victim’s written statement as substantive evidence pursuant to ER 801(d)(1)(i), in accordance with State v. Smith,
ISSUE
¶4 Should this court reject Smith’s interpretation of ER 801(d)(l)(i)?
ANALYSIS
A. Standard of review and principles of stare decisis
¶5 A decision to admit or exclude evidence is generally reviewed for abuse of discretion. State v. Griffin,
¶6 “Stare decisis is a doctrine developed by courts to accomplish the requisite element of stability in court-made law, but is not an absolute impediment to change.” In re Rights to Waters of Stranger Creek,
¶7 When a party asks this court to reject its prior decision, it “is an invitation we do not take lightly.” State v. Barber,
B. The Smith decision and its application in this case
¶8 Smith was a case about the proper interpretation of ER 801(d)(l)(i), an evidentiary rule concerning the definition of “hearsay.” “Hearsay” is defined generally as “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” ER 801(c). “Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by these [evidentiary] rules, by other court rules, or by statute.” ER 802. However, ER 801(d)(1) provides that an out-of-court statement is not hearsay if
[t]he declarant testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to cross examination concerning the statement, and the statement is (i) inconsistent with the declarant’s testimony, and was given under oath subject to the penalty of peijury at a trial, hearing, or other proceeding, or in a deposition.
Because such a statement is not hearsay, it is admissible at trial as substantive evidence, that is, to prove the truth of matter asserted in the statement.
¶9 As noted, it is undisputed on appeal that the victim in this case testified at Otton’s trial, that she was subject to cross-examination about her prior written statement, that the prior written statement was inconsistent with the victim’s trial testimony, and that the prior written statement was given under oath and subject to the penalty of peijury. The only question is whether her police interview was an “other proceeding” within the meaning of ER 801(d)(l)(i).
¶10 When confronted with the same question in 1982, this court declined to issue a categorical ruling that a police interview is either always or never considered an “other proceeding.” Smith,
¶11 We have not reexamined Smith since it was issued. However, based on Smith, the Court of Appeals has formulated a four-factor test for determining whether an out-of-court statement by a nonparty witness is admissible pursuant to ER 801(d)(l)(i):
(1) whether the witness voluntarily made the statement, (2) whether there were minimal guaranties of truthfulness, (3) whether the statement was taken as standard procedure in one of the four legally permissible methods for determining the existence of probable cause, and (4) whether the witness was subject to cross examination when giving the subsequent inconsistent statement.
Thach,
C. Otton has not shown that Smith is incorrect or harmful
¶12 Smith reasonably held that the phrase “other proceeding” must be interpreted in a
1. Otton has not shown that Smith is incorrect
¶13 Where a party asks this court to reject its previous decision, the party must show that the previous decision is “incorrect.” Stranger Creek,
a. Interpretation of evidentiary rules
¶14 “This court interprets court rules the same way it interprets statutes, using the tools of statutory construction.” State v. Hawkins,
¶15 Smith noted that the first proposed version of the federal rule would have allowed “all prior inconsistent statements to be used as substantive evidence,” but a requirement “that the statement be made under oath, subject to penalty for perjury” was later added “to assure reliability.” Smith,
¶16 Smith also considered “the original purpose of the sworn statement,” and noted that the statement given in that case “was taken as standard procedure in one of the four legally permissible methods for determining the existence of probable cause.” Id. at 862 (citing State v. Jefferson,
¶17 Otton, however, argues that based on applicable principles of statutory interpretation, this court must hold that an “other proceeding” “mean[s] something similar to the preceding specific terms ‘trial’ or ‘hearing.’ ” Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 6. This, according to Otton, would include “judicial proceedings, often adversarial, where the declar-ant is officially placed under oath and subject to questioning” but not proceedings like those at issue here, where voluntary, sworn witness statements are given outside “a courtroom or
¶18 By focusing on the terms “trial” and “hearing,” Otton takes into account only some of the context in which the term “other proceeding” is used. However, we must “give[ ] effect to the plain language of a court rule, as discerned by reading the rule in its entirety and harmonizing all of its provisions.” State v. George,
¶19 Perhaps most problematically, even if we were to agree that the victim’s statement here was not given at an “other proceeding,” Otton does not propose a workable analytical framework for future cases. See Key Design, Inc. v. Moser,
¶20 We thus conclude that Smith’s interpretation of ER 801(d)(l)(i) was reasonable and that Otton’s reading of ER 801(d)(l)(i) is not compelled by the rule’s plain language.
b. Decisions from other jurisdictions
¶21 Where our prior interpretation is inconsistent with the decisions of “the vast majority of our sister states,” there may be good reason to reconsider our own approach. Davis v. Baugh Indus. Contractors, Inc.,
¶22 We begin with the one jurisdiction that clearly and completely disagrees with Smith—Florida. Florida courts have specifically rejected Smith’s case-by-case approach and instead use a “ ‘bright line’ test” to interpret Florida’s version of ER 801(d)(l)(i). Delgado-Santos v. State,
¶23 Notably, in the seminal case establishing Florida’s bright-line test, the court was plainly troubled by the circumstances under which the statement at issue in that case was made: the witness who gave the statement was 16 years old at the time, he was accused of participating in the homicide then under investigation, and he did not give his statement until he had been in custody (“although supposedly not ‘under arrest’ ”) for over six hours and subjected to “a long process
¶24 Nevertheless, the Florida court rejected a case-by-case approach, and it did so explicitly as a matter of legislative deference:
While the legislature and Congress may have been ultimately concerned with the “reliability” of a particular statement, they sought to vindicate that concern only by establishing given and objective criteria as to the circumstances, including the kind of forum, under which it was given. And it is for the legislature, not the courts, to determine not only the policy to be promoted, but the means by which that end is to be achieved.
Id. at 79. In Washington, however, evidentiary rules are adopted by this court pursuant to its inherent powers under the state constitution. State v. Gresham,
¶25 Moreover, ER 801 is subject to amendment according to prescribed procedures, and ER 801(d)(l)(i) has never been amended to reject Smith. See GR 9 (procedures for rule making by this court). When considering challenges to previous statutory interpretations, “[t] his court presumes that the legislature is aware ofjudicial interpretations of its enactments and takes its failure to amend a statute following a judicial decision interpreting that statute to indicate legislative acquiescence in that decision.” City of Federal Way v. Koenig,
¶26 Otton also suggests that federal courts interpreting the federal equivalent of ER 801(d)(l)(i) have rejected Smith’s interpretation. In United States v. Dietrich,
¶27 Moreover, like the Florida court in Delgado-Santos, the federal court in Dietrich was plainly concerned about the fact that the statements at issue were of questionable substantive reliability, in part because they were given by an individual who was under imminent threat of arrest for allegations related to the ultimate crime at issue.
¶28 Other federal cases also do not advance Otton’s argument. Some cases, though holding statements made to investigating police were not given at an “other proceeding,” explicitly acknowledge that the purpose of the rule is “to ensure the reliability and truthfulness of any prior inconsistent statement,” and therefore look to “the totality of the circumstances” under which the statement was given. United States v. Day,
¶29 If Washington were an extreme outlier in its interpretation of ER 801(d)(l)(i), we might reconsider Smith, even though it was a reasonable decision at the time it was made and has not been rejected by any intervening rule amendments. However, Washington is not such an outlier. Otton thus fails to show that Smith is clearly incorrect.
2. Otton has not shown that Smith is harmful
¶30 Even if Otton could show that Smith is clearly incorrect, we will not reject our precedent unless it is “both incorrect and harmful.”
¶31 Relying primarily on Crawford,
While it may readily be conceded that hearsay rules and the Confrontation Clause are generally designed to protect similar values, it is quite a different thing to suggest that the overlap is complete and that the Confrontation Clause is nothing more or less than a codification of the rules of hearsay and their exceptions as they existed historically at common law.
California v. Green,
¶32 The confrontation clause is a procedural guaranty that statements will be tested in “the crucible of cross-examination.”
¶33 Moreover, admissibility pursuant to ER 801(d)(l)(i) is not conditioned on each individual trial court’s unrestrained assessment of reliability. Washington courts must work within a specific four-factor framework. Otton does not point to any published Washington cases that have applied this framework and reached conflicting conclusions, and we can find none. Washington courts have proved themselves well up to the task of evaluating evidence sought to be admitted pursuant to ER 801(d)(l)(i) in a consistent, evenhanded manner.
¶34 To the extent that Otton implies that it is inherently harmful to allow prior inconsistent statements to be admitted as substantive evidence without requiring specific procedural formalities beyond those found in the plain language of ER 801(d)(l)(i), we disagree. Indeed, many states allow the admission of prior inconsistent statements as substantive evidence, even where the prior statements were given with few or no procedural formalities. See Douglas E. Beloof & Joel Shapiro, Let the Truth Be Told: Proposed Hearsay Exceptions to Admit Domestic Violence Victims’ Out of Court Statements as Substantive Evidence, 11 Colum. J. Gender & L. 1, 11 n.29 (2002) (collecting statutes and court rules). Otton does not show those states have suffered any harm. And the beneficial effects of the procedural formalities that are required by ER 801(d)(l)(i)’s plain language are clearly preserved by Smith and its progeny. State v. Lavaris,
¶35 Otton has not made a clear showing that Smith is incorrect or harmful. We thus adhere to the doctrine of stare decisis and reaffirm Smith’s interpretation of an “other proceeding” for purposes of ER 801(d)(l)(i).
CONCLUSION
¶36 A party asking this court to reject its precedent faces a challenging task. The party must show not merely that it would have been reasonable to reach a different conclusion in the first instance, but that the prior decision is so incorrect and harmful that it would be unreasonable to adhere to it. Otton has not made such a showing. We affirm the Court of Appeals.
Notes
The statement’s admissibility is subject, of course, to other applicable eviden-tiary and constitutional limitations.
This is not to imply that the court would be unwilling to revisit the interpretation of the rule and modify it for clarity through the rule making process.
To the extent that Otton argues Smith is harmful because it is incorrect, we reject that argument. Incorrectness and harmfulness are separate inquiries. Barber,
We note that the focus of Otton’s argument has shifted somewhat over the course of this appeal. His petition for review to this court appears to contend that Smith is no longer good law following Crawford. Pet. for Review at 9. At oral argument, however, Otton’s attorney acknowledged that Smith's interpretation of ER 801(l)(d)(i) is not jeopardized by Crawford as a matter of constitutional law. Wash. Supreme Court oral argument, State v. Otton, No. 91669-1 (Feb. 18, 2016), at 38 min., 3 sec., audio recording by TVW, Washington State’s Public Affairs Network, http://www.tvw.org. We agree. ER 801(l)(d)(i), by its plain language, applies only when “[t]he declarant testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to cross examination concerning the statement,” so the confrontation clause is necessarily satisfied for any statement admitted pursuant to ER 801(l)(d)(i). See Crawford,
Concurrence Opinion
¶37 (concurring) — I agree with the majority that this is a case about stare decisis. The petitioner, Nakia Lee Otton, concedes that the Court of Appeals’ decision is correct under this court’s holding in State v. Smith,
¶38 I also agree with the majority that the phrase at issue in this case—“other proceeding” in Evidence Rule (ER) 801(d)(l)(i)—is open ended. Had the drafters intended to strictly enumerate the “proceedings” covered by the rule, they would have done so. See Rivard v. State,
¶39 Indeed, among all the jurisdictions with identical rules whose courts have addressed the issue, Washington is the only one that interprets the phrase in this way. Other courts have consistently held that the “other proceedingfs]” covered by rules equivalent to ER 801(d)(l)(i) are limited to routinized proceedings, bearing hallmarks of formality such as oversight by a neutral officer and simultaneous transcription under authority of law, and thus exclude statements taken as part of a police officer’s investigation. For the reasons given in Part I below, I conclude that Washington’s contrary interpretation is inconsistent with ER 801(d)(l)(i)’s plain language and is therefore incorrect. I nevertheless concur in the majority’s decision to affirm the Court of Appeals because I agree that Otton has not met his burden to show that Smith is clearly harmful.
I. SMITH WAS INCORRECTLY DECIDED
¶40 As the majority correctly notes, ER 801(d)(l)(i)’s federal equivalent—the rule on which ER 801(d)(l)(i) was based
¶41 But the Smith court went on to address a more specific question: whether the open-ended phrase “other proceeding” in ER 801(d)(l)(i) included a situation in which detectives contacted a witness to request a statement, the witness talked with detectives and then wrote out a statement at the police station, and the witness subsequently signed the statement and swore to its accuracy before a notary.
¶42 To reach that conclusion, the Smith court relied on a single Ninth Circuit case, United States v. Castro-Ayon,
A. To conclude that a police interview can be an “other proceeding” within the meaning of ER 801(d)(l)(i), the Smith court relied on a misreading of Castro-Ayon and distinguished, without explanation, more apposite cases reaching the opposite conclusion
¶43 In Castro-Ayon, the Ninth Circuit held that a tape-recorded interrogation by border agents was admissible under FRE 801(d)(1)(A).
¶44 In this respect, Smith is actually inconsistent with Castro-Ayon. The Castro-Ayon court did not endorse the idea that certain statements might be reliable enough to fall within FRE 801(d)(l)(A)’s “other proceeding” exception regardless of the proceeding at which they were given. Instead, that court held that the particular proceeding at issue in that case was sufficiently similar to a grand jury proceeding to fall within the ambit of FRE 801(d)(l)(A)’s “other proceeding” exception:
[W]e note that the immigration proceeding before Agent Pearce bears many similarities to a grand-jury proceeding: both are investigatory, ex parte, inquisitive, sworn, basically prosecu-torial, held before an officer other than the arresting officer, recorded, and held in circumstances of some legal formality. Indeed, this immigration proceeding provides more legal rights for the witnesses than does a grand jury: the right to remain totally silent, the right to counsel, and the right to have the interrogator inform the witness of these rights.
We do not hold, as the question is not before us, that every sworn statement given during a police-station interrogation would be admissible. While this immigration proceeding bears many similarities to the station-house interrogation, we believe that it qualifies as an “other proceeding” within the meaning of the statute.
B. Contrary to the majority’s assertion, Smith is an extreme outlier; in the 30 years since Smith was decided, every other court to address the question has held that the “other proceeding^]” covered by rules equivalent to FRE 801(d)(1)(A) do not include interviews by investigating officers
¶45 As noted above, Smith adopted the minority position when it was decided 34 years ago. It held that witness statements taken during a police investigation could fall within ER/FRE 801’s “other proceeding” exception,
¶46 That is no longer true today, when many more cases have addressed the question. With the exception of Castro-Ayon, federal cases all hold that the “other proceeding[s]” contemplated in FRE 801(d)(1)(A) are proceedings in which “ ‘an official verbatim record is routinely kept . . . under legal authority,’ ” and that investigations by law enforcement do not meet this standard.
¶47 Indeed, outside of Washington, no case has relied on Castro-Ayon to admit, under FRE 801(d)(1)(A) or an equivalent state rule, a prior inconsistent statement given to law enforcement during an investigation. A Westlaw search yields 25 controlling decisions
• State v. Collins,186 W. Va. 1 , 7-8 & n.8,409 S.E.2d 181 (1990) (noting that Castro-Ayon is an outlier that has been criticized in scholarship on FRE 801(d)(1)(A)).
• State v. Smith,573 So. 2d 306 , 314-16 (Fla. 1990) (distinguishing proceeding in Castro-Ayon (admissible as an “other proceeding” under FRE 801(d)(1)(A)) from prosecutor’s transcribed investigative interrogation (inadmissible because it did not even remotely resemble a grand jury proceeding)).
• State v. Johnson,220 Neb. 392 , 394, 398-99,370 N.W.2d 136 (1985) (victim’s statement during interview with attorney was not an “other proceeding” under state equivalent of FRE 801(d)(1)(A); to the extent that Castro-Ayon supported that conclusion, it was “unique—and likely to remain so”), abrogated on other grounds by State v. Morris,251 Neb. 23 , 33-34,554 N.W.2d 627 (1996).
• Delgado-Santos v. State,471 So. 2d 74 , 78 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1985) (“the overwhelming weight of authority on the issue is that no variation of police investigatory activity constitutes an [FRE] 801(d)(1)(A)... proceeding” (collecting cases)).
• Tisdale v. State,498 So. 2d 1280 , 1282 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1986) (embracing Delgado-Santos’ interpretation of rule equivalent to FRE 801(d)(1)(A) and explicitly rejecting Smith’s contrary interpretation).
• United States v. Bonnett,877 F.2d 1450 , 1462 (10th Cir. 1989) (rejecting argument that witness’ statement to Federal Bureau of Investigation agents was admissible under FRE 801(d)(1)(A) because Castro-Ayon was “not persuasive and . .. clearly distinguishable”).
• United States v. Dietrich,854 F.2d 1056 , 1061-62 (7th Cir. 1988) (reading Castro-Ayon as limited to “pro-ceedingfs] . . . [that] contain! ] many of the same procedural protections as a grand jury proceeding” and distinguishing the proceeding at issue in Castro-Ayon from a sworn statement made to investigating police officers in an interview that was neither transcribed nor conducted in front of a neutral third party).
• United States v. Day,789 F.2d 1217 , 1222-23 (6th Cir. 1986) (declining to follow Castro-Ayon “to the extent the facts are not distinguishable”).
• Bell v. City of Milwaukee,746 F.2d 1205 , 1274 n.83 (7th Cir. 1984) (noting in dicta that district court probably erred by admitting witness’ sworn statement to investigator under FRE 801(d)(1)(A); noting that Castro-Ayon might be contrary), overruled on other grounds by Russ v. Watts,414 F.3d 783 (7th Cir. 2005).
• United States v. Powell,17 M.J. 975 , 976 (A.C.M.R. 1984) (rejecting Castro-Ayon to the extent that it would allow admission of “a statement made in a policeman’s office during a non-advocatory, inquisitorial police investigation merely because an oath was administered”).
• United States v. Whalen,15 M.J. 872 , 878 (A.C.M.R. 1983) (stating that prior inconsistent statement made to investigating officer was not given in an “otherproceeding” for purposes of hearsay exception; noting that Castro-Ayon is contrary).
• United States v. Luke,13 M.J. 958 , 960 (A.F.C.M.R. 1982) (rejecting Castro-Ayon to the extent that that case is not limited to its facts, i.e., to proceedings fundamentally similar to grand jury hearings).
• Livingston,661 F.2d at 243 (holding that Castro-Ayon proceeding was distinguishable, for purposes of FRE 801(d)(1)(A) admissibility, from interview by postal inspector that was conducted at home of government witness who gave sworn statement but was afforded no rights, and that was neither transcribed nor conducted in front of an independent officer).
Given this overwhelming and consistent authority, I disagree with the majority’s conclusion that “Washington is not such an outlier” in its interpretation of the phrase “other proceeding” in ER 801(d)(l)(i). Majority at 687.
C. Contrary to the majority’s assertion, Otton proposes a workable framework for analyzing ER 801(d)(l)(i) admissibility; it is the framework adopted by the other jurisdictions and compelled by the rule’s plain language
¶48 I also disagree with the majority’s assertion that “Otton does not propose a workable analytical framework for future cases.” Majority at 683. Otton asks us to adopt the interpretation of “other proceeding” that is used by every single other court that has considered the issue presented in Smith. See Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 11 (quoting Dietrich,
¶49 The majority acknowledges that such an interpretation is “reasonable” but asserts that “it is not clear why it is more reasonable than Smith’s interpretation.” Majority at 686. Again, I disagree. The interpretation of “other proceeding” adopted by the other jurisdictions is compelled by the rule of ejusdem generis, which holds that “ ‘specific terms modify or restrict the application of general terms where both are used in sequence’ ” in a statute. State v. Stockton,
¶50 In contrast to these other courts’ interpretation, the four-factor reliability test that Washington courts have derived from Smith bears absolutely no relationship to ER 801(d)(l)(i)’s plain language whatsoever.
¶51 Because Smith is inconsistent with ER 801(d)(l)(i)’s plain language and the overwhelming majority of precedent interpreting equivalent rules, I would hold that it was incorrectly decided.
II. OTTON, HOWEVER, HAS NOT MET HIS BURDEN TO SHOW THAT SMITH IS CLEARLY HARMFUL
¶52 Although I conclude that Smith was incorrectly decided, I concur in the majority’s decision because I agree that Otton has not made the requisite showing of harm sufficient to overcome the rule of stare decisis.
¶53 Our cases have identified various kinds of harm that can satisfy this standard. We have found precedent “harmful” because it was incorrect and inequitable. State v. Berlin,
¶54 I agree with the majority that Otton has not met that burden here. To support his argument that Smith is harmful, Otton simply asserts that ad hoc “reliability” determinations are inherently subjective and therefore unfair. Suppl. Br. of Pet’r at 12-14. But as the majority points out, these determinations pose no constitutional problems in the context of ER 801(d)(l)(i), majority at 688-89, and Otton offers no evidence that Smith has yielded uneven results in Washington courts.
CONCLUSION
¶55 Smith’s case-by-case reliability test conflicts with the plain language of ER 801(d)(l)(i) and the overwhelming majority of relevant precedent from other jurisdictions. I therefore conclude that Smith was incorrectly decided. I concur in the decision to adhere to Smith and affirm the Court of Appeals, however, because I agree that the petitioner has not met his burden to show that Smith is clearly harmful.
When Smith was decided, Washington’s ER 801(d)(l)(i) was identical to Fed. R. Evid. (FRE) 801(d)(1)(A).
Livingston,
E.g., State v. Johnson,
I have omitted six unpublished opinions and one decision, Robinson v. State,
Nine of the remaining cases admit or exclude prior statements under FRE 801(d)(1)(A) or an equivalent rule without deciding whether investigations can ever constitute “other proceeding[s].” Simmonds v. People,
Smith,
As the majority notes, subsequent state Court of Appeals decisions have derived from Smith four factors for determining admissibility under ER 801(d)(l)(i): “‘(1) whether the witness voluntarily made the statement, (2) whether there were minimal guaranties of truthfulness, (3) whether the statement was taken as standard procedure in one of the four legally permissible methods for determining the existence of probable cause, and (4) whether the witness was subject to cross examination when giving the subsequent inconsistent statement.’” Majority at 680 (quoting State v. Binh Thach,
