OPINION
Thе defendant, David R. Poulin (Poulin), appeals from his convictions on one count of committing an abominable and detestable crime against nature and on two counts of indecent assault on the complainant, a nine-year-old girl. He claims that the trial justice admitted the testimony of three witnesses that contained inadmissible hearsay evidence. In addition to his hеarsay contentions, Poulin asserts that the testimony of the complainant’s mother, Sandra, included highly prejudicial allusions to assaults on the complainant other than those charged in the state’s information.
Poulin lived with the complainant’s family for two and one-half years in a number of Rhode Island and Massachusetts residences. He allegedly committed two of the оffenses charged in Pawtucket on February 6, 1976. The other charge arose from an assault that allegedly occurred on June 30, 1976, in Providence.
At trial, the complainant testified to the following events. On the morning of June 30, 1976, Poulin sexually assaulted her in the bedroom that he shared with her mother. After the assault, she spent several hours in the company of her friends but did not at that time tеll anyone of the assault. When she returned to the apartment in the late afternoon, Poulin called her back to the bedroom and again told her to lie down on the bed. He hugged her, and then allowed her to leave him without repeating the intimate contact that he had forced upon her in the morning. After she left Poulin, the complainant told Michael and Jоhnnie, two boys who lived upstairs, that “David told me to go to bed with him.” She then went upstairs and related the morning’s events to Carol, an adult neighbor, who required her to stay upstairs until her mother came home from work.
Sandra, the complainant’s mother, arrived home from work at five o’clock that afternoon and encountered Poulin leaving the premises in his car. As she entered the
Poulin’s hearsay objections relate to the testimony of Sаndra, Carol, and Michael, one of the boys who lived upstairs. Sandra and Carol each repeated out-of-court statements made by the complainant on June 30 concerning the assault that had occurred that morning. Michael testified also that the complainant had described the assault to him, but the trial justice excluded testimony about the details of thаt conversation. Instead, the trial justice ruled that Michael could repeat statements that he heard the complainant make to Carol. As a result, Michael testified that he observed a conversation between Carol and the complainant but could not hear what was said. Defense counsel objected to the testimony of Michael, Carol, аnd Sandra at trial, claiming that each account contained inadmissible hearsay evidence. Poulin reasserts those objections on appeal and claims that the trial justice committed reversible error because he permitted those witnesses to repeat statements made by the complainant on June 30. We therefore must examine the rulings of the trial justice with respect to the disputed portion of each witness’s testimony.
We have often stated that hearsay is an out-of-court statement offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted in that statement.
E. g., State v. Santos,
R.I.,
Upon application of these standards, our review of the transcript clearly discloses that the contested portion of Michael’s testimony was not hearsay. After Poulin’s counsel objected to Michael’s testimony, the trial justice cautioned the jury against using that testimony as evidence that the assault occurred and stated that he admitted it as corroborative of the complainant’s testimony that statements were made. Furthermore, Michael testified only that he observed a conversation; he did not repeat statements made by the complainant at that time. In view of the cautionary instruction and the substance of Michael’s testimony, we conclude that his testimony was not hearsay.
Carol, the adult neighbor, testified to the substance of thе complainant’s out-of-court statements after the trial justice ruled her testimony admissible to corroborate that of the complainant. According to Poulin, however, we must review Carol’s testimony as hearsay admitted for its full probative value because the complainant’s credibility was not impeached on matters covered by Carol’s testimony. For suрport, he relies on the principle discussed in
State v. Ouimette,
The record in this case discloses that Poulin’s counsel failed to request the trial justice to instruct the jury on the limited purpose for whiсh Carol’s testimony was admitted. His hearsay objection constituted the sum of his efforts “to direct the attention of the trial court” to the need for a cautionary instruction. However, a cautionary instruction must be requested expressly.
State v. Harris,
Poulin objects to the testimony of Sandra, the complainant’s mother, on two grounds. He claims first that the statements contained inadmissible hearsay evidence and second that they contained highly prejudicial references to Poulin’s prior assaults on the complainant. In opposition, the state contends that neither of Poulin’s objections are properly before this court. According to the state, the trial justice admitted Sandra’s testimony for the same purpose that he admitted the testimony of Carol and Michael. Thus, the state considers trial counsel’s failure to request a jury instruction limiting the permissible use of Sandra’s testimony fatal to Poulin’s hearsay objection. In regard to Poulin’s second objection, the state claims that counsel neithеr objected nor requested a cautionary instruction when Sandra alluded to Poulin’s prior assaults on the complainant. The state therefore urges this court to reject Poulin’s objections to Sandra’s testimony as improperly raised.
Our review of the trial justice’s decision to admit Sandra’s testimony reveals that he relied on the spontaneous-utterance еxception to the hearsay rule. 1 We therefore reject the state’s claim that Sandra’s testimony was admitted only to corroborate that of the complainant and that counsel should have requested a cautionary instruction to that effect. We therefore consider Poulin’s contention that Sandra’s testimony included inadmissible hearsay evidence.
In
State v. Jalette,
R.I.,
Our examination of the record 2 discloses that the state failed to show that the complainant’s remarks to Sandra constituted “a spontaneous verbal reaction” to Pou-lin’s assault. Although the state presented three witnesses to whom the complainant had reported the assault, it elicited no testimony from them with respect to her demeanor. The total absence of demeanor evidence in this case impedes our ability to determine whether the complainant’s statements constituted part of a “spontaneous verbal reaction” or were the product of calm reflection. The lack of demeanor evidence is particularly troublesome because the complainant spoke with Sandra more than five hours after the assault and had reported the assault previously to two other people.
We note also that the complainant’s testimony on cross-examination indicаtes that she did not spontaneously inform Sandra of Poulin’s assault. She stated that Carol first reported the incident “from the hallway” and that Carol’s report prompted Sandra to ask “why David left so quick.” At that point, the complainant told Sandra about the events of June 30, and also revealed Poulin’s previous assaults. In view of the lack of demeanor evidence аnd the complainant’s own testimony, we conclude that the state failed to establish the admissibility of Sandra’s testimony under the spontaneous-utterance exception.
Although it was error to admit hearsay evidence contained in Sandra’s testimony, reversal does not follow automatically. We must examine “the record with a view to determining what in our judgment would havе been the probable impact of the improper evidence on the minds of the average jury. Once that judgment is made, we will assume that the objectionable evidence had a similar impact on the jury” in this case.
State v. Bower,
Sandra’s hearsay testimony consisted solely of the following statements:
“ ‘Mummy, David made me go to bed again with him.’ I said, ‘What do you mean by again? This happened before?’ And she said, ‘Yeah, it happened a lot of times before.’ She said, T told Barbara. I told Carol and Madeline and the boys upstairs.’ ”
Thе only reference to the June 30 assault is the vague statement, “David made me go to bed.” In contrast to her mother’s vague statement, the complainant testified in great detail concerning the events of the June 30 assault. She stated that Poulin “put his hands in [her] pants” and stuck “his fingers inside” her vagina. He then “got on top of” her and “made [her] rub his thing.” Thus, Sandra’s statement was merely cumulаtive, adding little to the evidence of Poulin’s guilt. Moreover, the out-of-court declarant and the complainant, who testified in this case, are one and the same. Defense counsel had ample opportunity to cross-examine the complainant and to impeach her credibility, thereby diminishing the risk that the jury would place undue emphasis on her out-of-court statements.
See State v. Angell,
R.I.,
Poulin claims that Sandra’s allusions to his prior assaults on the complainant were “extraordinarily prejudicial” and that their erroneous admission under the spontaneous-utterance exception to the hearsay rule cannot be regarded as harmless error. He asserts that the statements, “David made me go to bed again ” (emphasis added) and “it happened a lot of times before,” made it appear to the jury as if he had assaulted the complainant on a daily basis.
We must examine the circumstances surrounding erroneous admission of evidence of prior criminal acts to assess the impact of such evidence on the minds of the jury.
State v. Roderick,
R.I.,
Viewed in conjunction with the complainant’s testimony, the effect of Sandra’s repetition of the statements, “David made me go to bed again” and “it happened a lot of times” was merely cumulative. 4 We do not believe that the jury could have drawn from those statements the “extraordinarily prejudicial” inference that the assaults occurred daily in light of the complainant’s prior testimony. Rather, the complainant testified that Poulin assaulted her on only three occasions prior to February 6, 1976. She testified also that Poulin did not touch her between February 6 and June 30. That testimony presented the jury with a clear picture of the frequency of Poulin's assaults.
We observe also that defense counsel had an opportunity to cross-examine the complainant and to impeach the credibility of her in-court account of Poulin’s prior assaults. We believe that counsel’s extensive cross-examination on the subject of prior assaults substantially lessened the risk, if any, that the jury would draw a prejudicial
We conclude in light of those circumstances attending admission of Sandra’s hearsay testimony concerning prior assaults that it is not reasonаbly possible that her testimony influenced the jury in its decision to convict. Thus admission of Sandra’s testimony constituted harmless error.
The defendant’s appeal is denied and dismissed, the judgment appealed from is affirmed, and the case remanded to Superior Court.
Notes
. We note that the trial justice briefly discussed corroboration as an alternative ground for his ruling on admissibility. Howevеr, we find his statement that “[t]he Court will overrule the objection on ground number one, it qualifies under the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule * * * ” sufficiently clear to disclose that he admitted the testimony without limitation.
. We undertake “independent consideration of the circumstances surrounding” the alleged spontaneous utterance.
State v. Jalette,
R.I.,
. Prior to trial, the state moved to consolidate two criminal informations that charged Poulin with nine separate sex offenses against the complainant. The trial justice granted the motion in part, joining for trial the three counts that alleged offenses on February 6, 1976, and June 30, 1976. As a result, counsel sought to exclude evidence of those earlier offenses charged in the unconsolidated portion of the two informations.
. Poulin relies on
State v. Jalette,
R.I.,
