The STATE of Arizona, Appellee, v. Olin Gene TAYLOR, Appellant.
No. 2 CA-CR 98-0451.
Court of Appeals of Arizona, Division 2, Department B.
Oct. 19, 1999.
Review Denied May 23, 2000.
2 P.3d 674
CONCURRING: J. WILLIAM BRAMMER, JR., Presiding Judge, and JOSEPH W. HOWARD, Judge.
CONCURRING: J. WILLIAM BRAMMER, JR., Presiding Judge, and JOSEPH W. HOWARD, Judge.
OPINION
HOWARD, Judge.
¶ 1 After a jury trial, appellant Olin Gene Taylor was convicted of child molestation and sentenced to a partially aggravated twenty-year prison term. He contends that
BACKGROUND
¶ 2 We view the evidence and all reasonable inferences therefrom in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdict. State v. Nihiser, 191 Ariz. 199, 953 P.2d 1252 (App. 1997). Late in the evening, the victim, an eight-year-old girl, was sleeping at her babysitter‘s house when her father took her to his friend‘s house, where he, appellant, and the friend had been drinking. The victim‘s father put her to bed in a bedroom in his friend‘s house and then he and the friend briefly left the house and went to the store. The victim woke up to find appellant rubbing her genitals, over her clothes, with his fingers and thumb. After the victim twice told him to stop, appellant said “I just want to play with [] you” and then left the room. When her father returned, the victim tried to tell him what happened, but he could not understand her because she was crying too hard. The victim, who was screaming, crying, and yelling after the incident, was still upset and crying when she returned home and told her stepmother that appellant had touched her “private part.” Two days later, a police detective conducted a videotaped interview in which the victim described the incident. Appellant denied intentionally touching the victim and testified the victim had come out of the bedroom crying and he had picked her up and put her back to bed.
¶ 3 At trial, the court admitted the victim‘s statement to her stepmother, over appellant‘s objection, as an excited utterance. After the victim testified consistently with her statement to her stepmother and with her videotaped statement, the trial court, over appellant‘s objection, admitted the videotaped statement into evidence pursuant to
VIDEOTAPED STATEMENT
A. Constitutionality of A.R.S. § 13-4252
¶ 4
A. The recording of an oral statement of a minor made before a proceeding begins is admissible into evidence if all of the following are true:
- No attorney for either party was present when the statement was made.
- The recording is both visual and aural and is recorded on film or videotape or by other electronic means.
- Every voice on the recording is identified.
- The person conducting the interview of the minor in the recording is present at the proceeding and available to testify or be cross-examined by either party.
- The defendant or the attorney for the defendant is afforded an opportunity to view the recording before it is offered into evidence.
- The minor is available to testify.
The recording equipment was capable of making an accurate recording, the operator of the equipment was competent and the recording is accurate and has not been altered. - The statement was not made in response to questioning calculated to lead the minor to make a particular statement.
B. If the electronic recording of the oral statement of a minor is admitted into evidence under this section, either party may call the minor to testify and the opposing party may cross-examine the minor.
¶ 5 Appellant contends the trial court erred in admitting the victim‘s videotaped statement pursuant to
¶ 6 “The Constitution . . . divides the powers of government into three separate departments and directs that ‘no one of such departments shall exercise the powers properly belonging to either of the others.‘” State ex rel. Napolitano v. Brown, 194 Ariz. 340, 16, 982 P.2d 815, 16 (1999), quoting
¶ 7 The supreme court has exercised its constitutional power by promulgating rules defining hearsay and governing the admissibility of out-of-court statements offered “to prove the truth of the matter asserted.”
¶ 8
¶ 9 In other respects, the statute is more expansive than the court‘s rules. According to the statute, as long as the minor is available to testify, all recorded out-of-court statements that satisfy the statutory requirements are admissible regardless of whether they satisfy any of the court-made hearsay exceptions in
¶ 10 Additionally, “[t]he test for admissibility of evidence is not different for different parties.” Seidel, 142 Ariz. at 589, 691 P.2d at 680. The record is devoid of evidence that a different test for admissibility is appropriate because recorded hearsay statements by minors are any more reliable than similar hearsay statements made by other out-of-court declarants. The state in fact has not suggested any rationale for admitting hearsay statements that do not satisfy the court‘s rules for admissibility when the statements are made by a minor victim or witness, as opposed to another declarant, such as a defendant.
¶ 11
B. Alternative Grounds for Admission
¶ 12 Although
¶ 14 We need not address all of these requirements here, however, because the victim‘s videotaped statement does not satisfy the third requirement: being more probative than other evidence that can be reasonably obtained. Thompson. Unlike Robinson, the victim in this case testified in court. Hence, the statement was not more probative than her in-court testimony because she testified fully, consistently, and in similar detail to the videotaped statement. See Thompson, 167 Ariz. at 234, 805 P.2d at 1055 (“In most instances, hearsay evidence will not satisfy the ‘more probative’ requirement of subsection B of rule 803(24), because the declarant‘s testimony usually will lessen the probative value of the hearsay statements.“); see also State v. Tucker, 165 Ariz. 340, 798 P.2d 1349 (App.1990). At oral argument, the state claimed that the videotaped statement was more probative of the victim‘s demeanor than her testimony. The victim‘s demeanor at the time of the incident, however, was more relevant and probative than her demeanor at an arbitrary later date. Substantial evidence of the victim‘s demeanor immediately after the incident was admitted to justify admission of the excited utterance. The victim‘s demeanor two days later was not “more probative” than that evidence and has no independent relevance. The videotaped statement, therefore, was not admissible under the catchall exception, Tucker; Thompson, or any other rule of evidence or criminal procedure. See
C. Harmless Error
¶ 15 Although the court erred in admitting the hearsay videotaped statement, we need not reverse unless there is a “reasonable probability that the verdict would have been different had the evidence not been admitted.” State v. Lacy, 187 Ariz. 340, 349, 929 P.2d 1288, 1297 (1996). Here, credibility was the primary issue—there was no corroborating physical evidence or eyewitness testimony, and appellant‘s and the victim‘s stories were markedly different. See Thompson. Through the hearsay videotaped statement, the state presented the victim‘s testimony twice, the second time without an opportunity for cross-examination. In closing argument, the prosecutor exacerbated the error when she invited the jury to view the hearsay videotaped statement and repeatedly referred to the statement as “corroboration” of the victim‘s version of the incident.
¶ 16 Prior consistent statements “may not be routinely admitted” to “buttress the alleged victim‘s credibility. . . .” State v. Vess, 157 Ariz. 236, 238, 756 P.2d 333, 335 (App. 1988). Mere repetition of an unimpeached witness‘s testimony does not enhance the witness‘s credibility or the statement‘s veracity. See Tucker. See also United States v. Williams, 573 F.2d 284 (5th Cir.1978); 4 John Henry Wigmore, Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 1124, at 255 (James H. Chadbourn rev., 1972) (When a witness is not impeached, prior consistent statements are “unnecessary and valueless“; the story “is not made more probable or more trustworthy by any number of repetitions of it.“).
There are cases in which the receipt of a witness‘s extrajudicial statements in evidence has been held to be harmless error, on the ground that the statements added nothing of substance and the witness was available for cross-examination. Those cases are not appropriate here. The state
¶ 17 Although we reverse, we address appellant‘s remaining argument because the issue is likely to reoccur on retrial. See State v. Miguel, 125 Ariz. 538, 611 P.2d 125 (App. 1980).
EXCITED UTTERANCE
¶ 18 Appellant contends the trial court erred in admitting, as an excited utterance, the victim‘s statement to her stepmother forty-five minutes after the incident, claiming the statement that appellant had touched her “private part” was made after the excitement from the startling event had abated. We will not reverse a trial court‘s decision to admit a hearsay statement as an excited utterance absent an abuse of discretion. State v. Jeffers, 135 Ariz. 404, 661 P.2d 1105 (1983); State v. Anaya, 165 Ariz. 535, 799 P.2d 876 (App.1990).
¶ 19 A statement is admissible as an excited utterance if there was a startling event, the statement related to the startling event, and the statement was made before the declarant had time to fabricate or reflect. State v. Johnson, 183 Ariz. 623, 905 P.2d 1002 (App.1995). See also
¶ 20 After the incident, the victim was screaming, yelling, and crying; when she returned home forty-five minutes later, she was still upset, crying, and shaking. Although the victim and her father briefly stopped at a relative‘s house on the way home, the victim testified that she was still scared while she was at the relative‘s house and her father testified that he told the relative that, “I got to go home, [the victim‘s] crying.” Under these circumstances, the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the victim‘s statement to her stepmother, concluding that it occurred while the victim was still under the stress of the incident. See State v. Ritchey, 107 Ariz. 552, 490 P.2d 558 (1971) (statements by children with altered demeanors made forty-five minutes after returning home admissible); State v. McLain, 74 Ariz. 132, 245 P.2d 278 (1952) (child‘s statement made less than an hour and a half after incident admissible); State v. Bauer, 146 Ariz. 134, 704 P.2d 264 (App. 1985) (child‘s statement made within forty-five minutes of incident admissible).
CONCLUSION
¶ 21 Appellant‘s conviction is reversed and the case is remanded for a new trial.
CONCURRING: J. WILLIAM BRAMMER, Jr., Presiding Judge.
¶ 22 I concur in the result, but write separately because I question whether wholesale invalidation of the statute is required under the facts of this case. It seems to me sufficient to say that, as applied here, the statute conflicts with the rules of evidence promulgated by our supreme court. There could be many situations, however, in which the admission of a victim‘s prior statement under
¶ 23 In this case, I am not as certain as the majority that the minor victim‘s videotaped statement and demeanor forty-eight hours after the alleged offense are not more probative for purposes of
¶ 24 In interpreting a statute, courts should, if possible, give it a constitutional construction. Mardian Constr. Co. v. Superior Court, 113 Ariz. 489, 557 P.2d 526 (1976); State v. Book-Cellar, Inc., 139 Ariz. 525, 679 P.2d 548 (App.1984). Because admissibility of the minor victim‘s testimony under the rules of evidence is, in my view, a close question, and because the introduction of evidence under
