*81 OPINION OF THE COURT BY
Defendant Lawrence M. Rodrigues (Rodrigues) appeals his conviction of Robbery in the First Degree in violation of Hawaii Revised Statutes § 708-840(l)(b)(i) (1985). 1 The dispositive issue on *82 appeal is whether the trial court’s admission of hearsay testimony violated Rodrigues’ constitutional right to be confronted with the witnеsses against him. We hold that it did. We therefore vacate the judgment of conviction and remand for retrial.
I.
The State’s evidence presented at the jury trial shows that before daybreak on May 17, 1985, two witnesses, Randy Bowles (Bowles) and Keene McMahone (McMahone), saw two males standing over a man, later identified as Robert S. Morrow (Morrow), on the ground in the Hawaiian Colony Hotel’s (Hotel) parking lot. McMahone observed one of the males striking Morrow with a rock in his hands. Bowles testified that she saw Morrow bleeding and one of the mаles with a rock in his hand: Upon the arrival of the police officers, Bowles informed them that the two males had gone into room 111 of the Hotel.
While police officer Herbert Schreiner (Officer Schreiner) and another police officer were questioning the two males, later identified as Rodrigues and codefendant Leie J. Filo (Filo) (collectively Defendants), in room 111, police officer Gary Lahens (Officer La-hens) and Bowles were escorting the bleeding Morrow to room 122. Enroute to room 122, they saw the poliсe officers and Defendants in room 111 through the open door.
Officer Schreiner testified that Morrow ran to the doorway of room 111 and yelled, “That’s the one [Filo] who hit me and that’s the one [Rodrigues] who took my wallet.” Oct. 21, 1985 Transcript at 98. The trial court admitted the hearsay testimony over Defendants’ objection. 2 Bowles and Officer Lahens similarly testified about what Morrow yelled out at the doorway of room 111.
Morrow did not appear at trial and never testified. The jury found Defendants guilty and this appeal followed. 3
*83 II.
Rodrigues contends that the State’s failure to produce Morrow at the trial violated his “fundamental right to be confronted with the witnesses against him” in violation of the constitutions of the United States and Hawaii. He asserts that such violation constituted reversible error. 4 Based on the facts disсlosed in the record, we hold that Rodrigues’ constitutional right under the Confrontation Clause was violated.
A.
The Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution guarantees the right of an accused in a criminal prosecution “to be confronted with the witnesses against him” and is applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pointer v. Texas,
While it has repeatedly recognized the importance of the confrontation right, the Suprеme Court has nonetheless held that a declarant’s hearsay may sometimes be admitted at trial even though the declarant is unavailable for cross-examination. The Court has concluded that “certain hearsay exceptions rest upon such solid foundatiоns that admission of virtually any evidence within them comports with the ‘substance of the constitutional protection.’ ”
Roberts,
In
Roberts,
the Court held that the Confrontation Clause restricts the range of admissible hearsay in two ways.
First,
“[i]n conformance with the Framers’ preference for face-to-face accusation, the Sixth Amendment establishes a rule of necessity. In the usual case .. . , the prosecution must either produce, or demonstrate the unavailability of, the declarant whose statement it wishes to use against the defendant.”
Roberts,
B.
We are cognizant of the recent case of
United States v. Inadi,
The
Inadi
majority opinion states that
“Roberts
must be read consistently with the question it answered, the authority it cited, and its own facts.”
Id.
at _,
In explaining why the unavailability rule applies to cases involving a declarant’s former testimony but not a co-conspirator’s hearsay, the Court distinguished the two types of statements.
[F]ormer testimony often is only a weaker substitute for live testimony. It seldom has independent evidentiary significance of its own, but is intended to replace live testimony. .. . When two versions of the same evidence are available, longstanding principles of the law of hearsay, applicable as well to Confrontation Clause analysis, favor the better evidence. ... But if the declarant is unavailable, . .. the former testimony may be admitted as a substitute for live testimony on the same point.
*86 Those same principles do not apply to co-conspirator statements. . . . Conspirators are likely to speak differently when talking to each other in furtherance of their illegal aims than when testifying on the witness stand. Even when the declarant takes the stand, his in-court testimony seldom will reproduce a significant portion of the evidentiary value of his statements during the сourse of the conspiracy.
Id.
at _,
We therefore conclude that the law of Roberts, rather than Inadi, applies in this case.
C.
Applying the Roberts standards, we conclude that the State failed to meet the first requirement — demonstrating the unavailability of Morrow at trial.
In meeting the first requirement, the State must show that it “made a good faith attempt to secure the presence of the witness [the hеarsay declarant][.]”
State v. White,
In
White,
the supreme сourt stated only that “the record” established the State’s good faith attempt to obtain the declarant’s presence at trial.
White,
The State did not make such a showing in the instant case. The record discloses that on October 8, 1985, the State prepared an affidavit (in support of a Motiоn for Continuance of Trial which was filed on October 9, 1985) cataloging its efforts to locate Morrow. In the affidavit and at the motion hearing held on October 17, 1985, the State affirmed that it had not yet located Morrow but that its efforts were continuing. Moreover, the State аsserted that it would proceed to trial with or without Morrow. At the hearing the State made a showing of Morrow’s unavailability, based on the facts stated in the October 8 affidavit. At trial, 6 however, the State failed to make any showing of either Morrow’s unavailability or its efforts to sеcure his presence. Thus, the State’s showing was in the wrong place at the wrong time.
The State’s declared intent to continue trying to find Morrow even after the motion hearing, and its intent to proceed with trial whether or not Morrow was located, accentuatеd the need for a reaffirmation on the record at trial of the State’s efforts and its success or failure to locate the declarant. Since these assurances of *88 Morrow’s unavailability at trial are absent from the trial record, we hold that the State failed to demonstrate adequately Morrow’s unavailability at trial in violation of Rodrigues’ right to confrontation.
III.
A constitutional error by the trial court does not require a reversal if it is “unimportant and insignificant in the total setting of a particular case[,]” and therefore harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Corpuz,
We conclude that the State failed to rebut the presumption and the trial court’s error was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. While the State did not expressly address the harmless error question in its brief, it did argue that Rodrigues’ opportunity to cross-examine Officer Schreiner, Bowles, and Officer Lahens as to the hearsay rendered Morrow’s аbsence from trial immaterial. We reject that argument. The confrontation right includes the opportunity to cross-examine the declarant himself, not any witness who might relate the declarant’s statements.
Adrian,
Judgment vacated and case remanded for retrial.
Notes
Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 708-840(1) (b) (i) (1985) provides:
(1) A person commits the offense of robbery in the first degree if, in the course of committing theft:
* * *
(b) He is armed with a dangerous instrument and:
(i) He uses force against the person of anyone presеnt with intent to overcome that person’s physical resistance or physical power of resistance^]
HRS § 708-840(2) (1985) states:
(2) As used in this section, “dangerous instrument” means any firearm, or other weapon, device, instrument, material, or substance, whether animate or inanimate, which in thе manner it is used or threatened to be used is capable of producing death or serious bodily injury.
In the disposition of this appeal, we will assume that the hearsay testimony was admissible. We need not, and do not, decide whether the testimony was admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule.
Codefendant Leie J. Filo’s appeal was docketed separately as No. 11618.
Rodrigues also contends that the State’s failure to produce Robert S. Morrow at the preliminary hearing constituted reversible error. We do nоt agree because (1) a preliminary hearing “is a proceeding to determine probable cause” and “is not a trial[,]”
Toledo v. Lam,
In
Bourjaily v. United
States, _ U.S. __,
The trial commenced on Friday, October 18, 1985, when the jury was selected. The opening statements of the parties were made on Monday, October 21, 1985.
