OPINION
Defendant David M. Stewart appeals from a conviction of aggravated robbery, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-802 (1996). Specifically, defendant appeals the trial court’s ruling excluding evidence of a State witness’s mental health history. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict.
State v. Strausberg,
At approximately 4:00 a.m. on May 9,1994, a masked man robbed a 7-Eleven convenience store in Ogden. The man wore two red bandanas on his face, revealing only his eyes, and carried a sawed-off shotgun. He also wore a black sweat suit, a black ski mitten on one hand, and he carried a briefcase.
Two store employees were working when the robbery occurred. The robber leveled the shotgun at the store clerk, placed the briefcase on the counter, and demanded “mu-cho dinero.” One of the employees filled the briefcase with money, and the other called the police from a back office. The robber left the store as soon as he was given the money.
One of the employees recognized the robber as defendant, a frequent customer of the store. The other employee initially thought the robber was someone else, then changed her mind and identified him as defendant. Both employees based their identification of defendant on his lazy eye, blond hair, and speech impediment. The two employees individually identified defendant in two separate photo lineups.
Defendant was arrested. Initially, defendant denied any involvement in the robbery. However, at the end of his interrogation, defendant confessed, but then refused to give a written statement. Defendant was tried before a jury and convicted.
One of the State’s witnesses (“the witness”) testified that defendant had talked with him twice regarding the robbery. The first conversation occurred on May 8, 1994, the day before the robbery, during which defendant asked the witness if he would help him commit a robbery. The second conversation occurred in January 1995, during which defendant asked the witness to provide alibi testimony for a robbery defendant had committed. The witness refused both requests.
Defendant sought to attack the witness’s credibility. Specifically, defendant asked to use the witness’s history of mental illness and substance abuse, and the witness’s plea of not guilty by reason of insanity to an offense committed six weeks after his first conversation with defendant. The court denied defendant’s request, reasoning that defendant failed to show the witness suffered from any mental health problems affecting his credibility during the trial or during his conversations with defendant. The court therefore concluded the evidence was not admissible because first, the evidence was irrelevant, and second, if the evidence was relevant, its probative value was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice.
On appeal, defendant argues the trial court abused its discretion by prohibiting him from introducing evidence of the witness’s mental illness, past psychiatric treatments, and plea of insanity, offered for the purpose of attacking the witness’s credibility.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review for correctness whether the trial court applied the correct legal rule
*600
in deciding to exclude the contested evidence on cross-examination.
See State v. Reed,
ANALYSIS
Irrelevant evidence is inadmissible. Utah R. Evid. 402. “ ‘Relevant evidence’ means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.” Utah R. Evid. 401. Therefore, for the witness’s mental health history to be relevant, it must have some (“any”) tendency to make the existence of a fact of consequence to the ease more or less probable.
Because the witness’s mental health history has nothing to do with any elements of defendant’s crime, its only relevance to this case is to cast doubt on the credibility of the witness, the ground upon which defendant sought to have it admitted. Defendant argues that the witness’s mental illness impacted his credibility because, like blindness, it affected the witness’s ability to accurately perceive, recall, and relate events.
For this kind of evidence to be admissible, the party offering the evidence must lay a sufficient foundation to show the evidence is relevant. Such a foundation requires evidence of two facts. First, the party must show that the witness’s mental condition
1
is such that it affects the witness’s ability to accurately perceive, recall, and relate events. We are not convinced that all mental disorders affect a person’s credibility.
See United States v. Lopez,
Second, the party seeking to introduce evidence of a mental disorder for impeachment purposes must also demonstrate that the mental disorder existed either at the time of the event regarding which the witness has been called to testify, or at the time testimony is given. The time period between the witness’s observations and the witness’s testimony may also be important if in the interim the witness suffers from a mental, disorder that impairs the witness’s ability to accurately recall his observations. This transitional period is properly included in the analysis of how the mental condition affects the witness at the time testimony is sought.
The reasons for requiring a relationship in time to the observed event or the testimony of the witness are obvious. Consider a witness who suffered blindness, but who has healed and is able to see at the time of the event in question. The blindness that witness suffered earlier in life would be irrelevant to the witness’s credibility, because it would not have affected the witness’s ability to accurately perceive the event in question, or to accurately recall and relate the event at trial when the witness testified of the event. Similarly, a witness’s credibility is not affect *601 ed if the witness has suffered a mental disorder at a remote time in life, but not during the event in question, nor subsequently such that it would affect the witness’s ability to testify.
A party seeking to impeach the credibility of a witness on the basis of a mental disorder must establish both of these elements of foundation to show the witness’s mental health history is relevant to the witness’s credibility. If the party is unable to establish either of the requirements, the evidence is irrelevant, and thus inadmissible. See Utah R. Evid. 402.
Even if the party successfully lays this foundation, the trial judge still may exclude the evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, misleading the jury, or any other consideration under Rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence.
Applying Rule 402 to the facts of this case, we turn first to the foundation offered by the defendant. In support of his argument that the witness’s mental health history should be admissible to attack his credibility, defendant has merely made a broad assertion that the witness’s mental illness affects his ability to perceive, recall, and relate events. Defendant supports this assertion with examples of the witness’s mental health history: hospitalization in 1984 and 1985; use of Thorazine and Mellaril; a personal decision to discontinue treatment over a year before his conversations with defendant; commission of an offense six weeks after his first conversation with defendant, to which the witness pleaded “not guilty by reason of insanity”; drug abuse; and suicide attempts. Although these specific details support the assertion that the witness has suffered from mental health disorders and does not always obey the law, they do not support the argument that the witness cannot accurately perceive, recall, and relate events. Thus, these details fail to demonstrate how the witness’s mental health history is relevant to his testimony in this case.
In addition, the details of the witness’s mental health history were obtained exclusively from the witness’s self-serving statement to competency evaluators after the witness, having been arrested, pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity. Defendant presented no independent corroboration of these details, nor an independent evaluation suggesting the witness was mentally deficient in any material respect. On the contrary, the competency evaluators to whom the witness gave this information found the witness to be competent to stand trial.
Defendant also supports his argument with two events. First, defendant cites a statement the witness gave before trial to the effect that the witness recalled a time that he did not have a “grip on reality” but “pretty well do[es] now.” Second, defendant cites the witness’s inconsistent answers to questions asking whether defendant mentioned a gun in their conversations. However, these examples are not relevant to whether the witness could accurately perceive events during his conversations with defendant and recall and relate them at trial. The first example is merely a vague reference to the witness’s past; the second shows the witness either became confused or lied while on the witness stand, but certainly does not clearly prove that the witness’s testimony was affected by a mental disorder, as defendant argues.
Defendant has failed to establish that the witness’s mental disorder affected the witness’s ability to perceive, recall, and relate events. 2 This lack of adequate foundation is fatally defective.
*602 In holding as we do, we specifically reject defendant’s unsupported argument that any mental disorder should be presumed to affect a person’s credibility as a witness. As with heart disease or flu, mental illness or partial blindness, any physical disability suffered by a potential witness may or may not have an impact on the witness’s ability to perceive, recall, and relate events. Proof of the impact of any illness, or its treatment, on a witness’s ability to perceive, recall, and relate events in question is important to the search for truth in the courtroom. The suggestion that mental illness, as a category, somehow should be accepted by the court as evidence of diminished credibility, without further evidence of actual diminished ability related in time to the events in question, is simply unsupportable.
In this instance, defendant has also failed to meet the second requirement of a proper foundation. Defendant has not shown that the witness’s mental disorder was related in time in any meaningful way to the witness’s conversations with defendant or to the witness’s testimony. 3 Instead, defendant offered specific details of the witness’s mental health history that occurred from ten months to ten years before the witness’s first conversation with defendant on May 8, 1994. 4 No evidence of any relationship between the alleged mental disability of the witness and his ability to perceive, recall, and relate events related to the charges against defendant was offered. No evidence of any overlap in time of the alleged disability and the events or testimony in question was offered.
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Therefore, defendant failed to lay the necessary two-step foundation of relevance needed to admit evidence of the witness’s mental health history, offered for the purpose of attacking the witness’s credibility.
See State v. Hackford,
We hold the disputed evidence was properly excluded as irrelevant. As a result, we need not examine whether, if the evidence was relevant, the trial judge abused his discretion by excluding it under Rule 403 of the Utah Rules of Evidence. 6
CONCLUSION
Defendant failed to meet his burden to lay the necessary two-part foundation of relevance to admit evidence of the witness’s mental health history, offered for the purpose of attacking the witness’s credibility. Defendant did not show the witness’s mental health disorder impaired the witness’s ability to accurately perceive, recall, and relate events, nor did defendant offer evidence that the disability was contemporaneous with the witness’s observations or testimony. Therefore, we hold the trial court correctly applied the law to its determination and did not abuse its discretion in excluding the disputed evidence on the grounds of relevance.
Affirmed.
Notes
. We acknowledge the distinctions between the terms mental illness, mental disorder, mental health history, and mental condition as applied by health care professionals. For our purposes here, the terms are essentially interchangeable. Each refers to the alleged deficiency of the witness’s mental capacity. We intend no significance by the selection of one term to the exclusion of others.
. Our decision echoes other courts that have also found a witness's mental health history is irrelevant when the party seeking to admit it fails to show that it actually affects the witness's credibility.
See, e.g., United States v. Butt,
. Many other courts also have concluded that evidence of a witness's mental health histoiy which is not contemporaneous with the witness’s observations or testimony in the case is irrelevant and inadmissible.
See, e.g., Butt,
.
Cf. United States v. Bari,
. Defendant argues the disputed evidence was admissible under
State v. Morrell,
. As previously noted, under Rule 403 the trial court may still exclude relevant evidence if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury. We do not decide whether the suggestion of a witness's prior mental illness alone may fall into this category, but reserve the question.
