Opinion Number: 2001-NMCA-080
Filing Date: August 27, 2001
Docket No. 21,672
STATE OF NEW MEXICO,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
SEBASTIAN GOMEZ,
Defendant-Appellant.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
Lourdes Martinez, District Judge
Patricia A. Madrid
Attorney General
Katherine Zinn
Assistant Attorney General
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellee
Phyllis H. Subin
Chief Public Defender
Susan Roth
Assistant Appellate Defender
Santa Fe, NM
for Appellant
{1}
Defendant Sebastian Gomez appeals his convictions of
criminal sexual penetration (CSP) of a minor, criminal
sexual contact (CSC) of a minor, and kidnaping. The issues
on appeal center on the trial court's exclusion of the
child's inconsistent statements, the propriety of the
court's comments on the child's testimony, and Defendant's
decision not to accept the trial court's offer of a mistrial
based on improper jury instructions. We reverse on the
first two issues, and affirm on the third.
I. Exclusion of Inconsistent Statements
A. Background
{2}
The State's main witness was the seven-year-old victim
(Victim), who gave an unsworn, investigative Safehouse
interview (Safehouse Interview), videotaped a few days after
the incident at issue and ten months before trial. At
trial, Victim testified, out of the presence of Defendant
but before the trial court, through a videotape made
specifically for trial pursuant to NMSA 1978, § 30-9-17
(1978) and Rule 5-504(B) NMRA 2001. Parts of each videotape
were inconsistent, in whole or in part, with statements
contained in the other.
{3}
Defense counsel, in his cross-examination of Victim
during the trial video, asked Victim whether she had told
the truth on different occasions. Victim agreed that she
had told her mother the "whole truth" and her father the
"same truth." Defense counsel then asked her if she
remembered giving the earlier Safehouse Interview and
whether she had been truthful then. Victim agreed that she
had "told [the Safehouse counselor] the whole truth, too"
and that what she described during her trial testimony was
"pretty much the same thing." Finally, Victim agreed that
"the truth should be the truth, the same thing," implying
within the context of the questioning that there was only
one accurate version of the facts. There was no further
mention of the prior Safehouse Interview during the
videotaped trial testimony.
{4}
Victim's trial testimony on direct examination was that
one evening she was walking back from a visit to her aunt's
house when she met Defendant, her next-door neighbor, who
grabbed her. She said that he wrapped his arms around her
and carried her against his chest, in a way that she could
not see or scream, to the bedroom in his trailer next to her
home where she was violated. Victim described the incident
with some specificity.
{5}
After the jury had seen and heard the videotaped trial
testimony, both the direct and cross-examinations, defense
counsel sought to introduce the Safehouse Interview as
impeachment by a prior inconsistent statement under Rule 11-613(B) NMRA 2001. Rule 11-613(B) reads:
Extrinsic evidence of a prior inconsistent
statement by a witness is not admissible unless
the witness is afforded an opportunity to explain
or deny the same and the opposite party is
afforded an opportunity to interrogate the witness
thereon, or the interests of justice otherwise require. This provision does not apply to
admissions of a party-opponent as defined in
Subparagraph (2) of Paragraph D of Rule 11-801.
The State objected to the admission of the Safehouse
Interview. Defense counsel countered that showing the
Safehouse Interview videotape was proper under Rule 11-613(B), because during his cross-examination of Victim he
reminded her of the Safehouse Interview, and Victim agreed
that she consistently told the same truth in the Safehouse
Interview as in her trial testimony.
{6}
The trial court denied the admission of the Safehouse
Interview videotape reasoning that Rule 11-613(B) prohibited
its admission unless the child was available to deny or
explain the inconsistencies. The trial court also thought
the State would be impermissibly deprived of its opportunity
to rehabilitate its complaining witness. The trial court
never viewed the Safehouse Interview to determine its
relevance or whether it contained crucial impeachment
evidence.
{7}
The differences between the two videotaped statements
were substantive. Victim's Safehouse Interview testimony
was that Defendant transported her by choking her from
behind with her shirt and hair, and that Victim could not
see him "at all" before he grabbed her. Ten months later at
trial, Victim testified she saw Defendant "standing there"
as she walked toward her home. She was asked, "He was
facing you?" she responded, "Yes." Contrary to her
Safehouse Interview testimony, she said he carried her in a
bear-hug way that covered her eyes and mouth.
{8}
During the Safehouse Interview, Victim said she did not
see Defendant's "private," but at trial she said that she
could see Defendant's "number one" [private part].
{9}
In the Safehouse Interview, Victim was asked about
penetration of her vulva, "Did he go inside?" She
responded, "He kinda did". . . "a little bit". . . [he]
"just poked." At trial, though, Victim stated, "I can't
remember" whether she was penetrated and when asked if
Defendant touched her "inside," Victim remembered being
touched between the legs and demonstrated that Defendant
touched her first from the front, then from the back, but
showed no penetration.
{10}
When asked during the Safehouse Interview whether his
finger went inside her anus, Victim clearly answered, "No."
Ten months later during direct examination at trial, the
State asked, "He put a finger inside you?" Victim
responded, "Yes, it felt like ['the' or 'a'] big finger." On cross-examination at trial, however, Victim stated that
Defendant "pinched" her," the pinch caused "pain," and "he
didn't stick his hand in the hole."
{11}
During the Safehouse Interview, Victim said she kicked
Defendant in the stomach to get away, but at trial she
stated that she slapped him on the face to get away. During
the Safehouse Interview, Victim said she only pushed
Defendant's door to get out of his trailer and run away. At
trial, she described in some detail how she had unhooked a
sliding chain lock to get away. During the Safehouse
Interview, Victim stated that Defendant told her he would
kill her if she told anyone. Ten months later at trial,
Victim embellished her testimony in that she said he said
"when he escaped from jail," he would "do it again," kill
her, and hurt her family if she told anyone.
B. Discussion
{12}
Abuse of discretion is the standard of review on appeal
of a trial court's ruling admitting a prior inconsistent
statement pursuant to Rule 11-613. State v. Morales, 2000-NMCA-046, ¶ 16, 129 N.M. 141, 2 P.3d 878. Substantively,
the "Sixth Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the
right of an accused in a criminal prosecution 'to be
confronted with the witnesses against him.'" Davis v.
Alaska, 415 U.S. 308, 315 (1974). "Cross-examination is the
principal means by which the believability of a witness and
the truth of his testimony are tested." Id. at 316; see
State v. Fairweather, 116 N.M. 456, 463, 863 P.2d 1077, 1084
(1993). Impeachment is crucial to effective cross-examination because it gives a party the opportunity to
discredit a witness, so the jury properly has a way to
determine whether a witness is untruthful or inaccurate.
Davis, 415 U.S. at 316. This is especially "important in
the case of . . . the testimony of [an individual] whose
memory might be faulty." Id. at 316 n.4 (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted).
{13}
Defendant does not contend he did not have the
opportunity to cross-examine the chief witness against him.
He complains he was deprived of his right to impeach her by
demonstrating inconsistencies in her testimony. Not having
been made aware of the Safehouse Interview statements, the
jury could not compare those statements with her trial
testimony made ten months later and was denied the
opportunity to fully evaluate the Victim's credibility.
{14}
As noted in the Advisory Committee Notes in regard to
federal rule 613(b), "[t]he traditional insistence that the
attendance of the witness be directed to the statement on
cross-examination is relaxed in favor of simply providing the witness an opportunity to explain and the opposite party
an opportunity to examine on the statement, with no
specification of any particular time or sequence." The
federal rule, identical to our Rule 11-613(B), permits
departure from the traditional, although often still
preferred, method of confronting a witness with his
inconsistent statement prior to its introduction in to
evidence. United States v. Moore, 149 F.3d 773, 781 (8th
Cir. 1998); United States v. Hudson, 970 F.2d 948, 954-55
(1st Cir. 1992); Wammock v. Celotex Corp., 793 F.2d 1518,
1521-22 (11th Cir. 1986). Rule 11-613(B) permits the same
departure. Where a prior inconsistent statement of a
prosecution witness is proffered after the witness has
already testified, the statement may still be admitted as
long as the witness is given an opportunity to explain or
deny the statement and the opposing party is given an
opportunity to examine the witness on the statement. This
procedure fits within the "overriding mandate" regarding
evidence, including impeachment evidence, which is that it
be "relevant evidence that enhances the possibility of
ascertaining the truth and doing justice." Jack B.
Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein's Federal Evidence
§ 607.03[2][b] (2d ed. 2001); see also Rule 11-401 NMRA 2001
(definition of relevant evidence); Rule 11-402 NMRA 2001
(admissibility of relevant evidence); Rule 11-403 NMRA 2001
(exclusion of relevant evidence on grounds of prejudice,
confusion, or waste of time).
{15}
The State created the Safehouse Interview videotape and
was aware of its content. Victim was the only witness to
the crucial facts at issue in the case. Defense counsel's
cross-examination of Victim regarding the Safehouse
Interview necessarily alerted the State to Defendant's
interest in the Safehouse Interview. Although defense
counsel did not at the time of the trial video confront
Victim with contradictions between specific trial and
specific Safehouse Interview statements, the State, aware
that statements in the Safehouse Interview could prejudice
its case, could have anticipated a defense strategy of
proffering the Safehouse Interview at trial. The State
could have followed up during the trial video by examining
Victim on the content of the Safehouse Interview, or, as it
did, could have awaited trial and sought to exclude the
Safehouse Interview if proffered.
{16}
That the State had the opportunity for rehabilitation,
rather than whether the prosecutor chose to question Victim
on her inconsistencies, is a key here to determining whether
Rule 11-613(B) was satisfied. Cf. State v. Lucero, 109 N.M.
298, 304, 784 P.2d 1041, 1047 (Ct. App. 1989) (court not
persuaded by defense counsel who knew about a child's prior
consistent statements offered under Rule 11-801(D)(1)(b) NMRA 2001 to rebut charge but argued that he could not
cross-examine her about the statements because the opposing
party did not elicit them on direct examination). The
record does not reflect any showing by the State that it
could not have questioned Victim further at the time of the
trial video. Nor does the record reflect any showing by the
State that it could not have recalled Victim during the
trial for further questioning either in person or in another
videotaped deposition. During her videotaped trial
testimony, Victim stated she would agree to be questioned in
front of the jury as long as Defendant was not present in
the room. In exercising its discretion under Rule 11-613(B), under circumstances such as those in this case, the
court should not merely assume that a witness cannot be
recalled, or that judicial economy or inconvenience would be
significant factors with regard to affording the
opportunities stated in Rule 11-613(B). See Hudson, 970
F.2d at 953-56 (citing United States v. Barrett, 539 F.2d
244, 254-56 (1st Cir. 1976) for the proposition that
"defense counsel need not in the circumstances necessarily
have had to confront [the witness] with the earlier
inconsistent statements prior to their offer as part of the
defense case; and that there was no basis for assuming that
he could not be recalled by the government or that judicial
economy and convenience would have justified the trial
court's ruling.").
{17}
In looking at the Rule 11-613(B) foundation
requirements, in circumstances such as those in this case,
the trial court should consider various factors, including:
the statements alleged to be inconsistent; the unique
circumstances based on the Section 30-9-17 trial video
juxtaposed with the Safehouse Interview video taken ten
months earlier by the State; the availability of and
practicality of recalling Victim in person or through
another trial video; the significance of the issues to which
the inconsistent statements relate; and the statements'
probative value. The court should also determine whether
the foundation requirements should be waived in "the
interests of justice," under Rule 11-613(B) using much the
same analysis. Weinstein's Federal Evidence
§ 613.05[4][b].
{18}
The Safehouse Interview contained significant
contradictions to Victim's trial testimony, about a range of
details of the charges. The jury was denied the opportunity
to assess the credibility of Victim and inform its
determination of the facts by viewing the changes in the
testimony of the seven-year-old victim over the ten months
between the two video sessions. The trial court erred in
refusing to admit the Safehouse Interview for the jury's
review without first engaging in a full analysis of all factors important to an informed exercise of discretion.
II. Court's Comments
{19}
Victim's taped trial testimony concluded with words
from the trial court: "[Victim], you did very well. I'm
very proud of you. . . . [Y]ou did very well and we're all
very proud of you, that you came here and you told us the
truth." This portion of the videotape was shown to the jury
without objection.
{20}
"A trial judge should studiously avoid making any
remark or statement in the presence of the jury concerning
factual issues or which may be construed as conveying his
opinion concerning the merits of the case." State v.
Sanchez, 112 N.M. 59, 66, 811 P.2d 92, 99 (Ct. App. 1991).
When a comment, taken in context, can fairly be said to be a
comment by the trial court on the credibility of a witness,
reversal is appropriate. See, e.g., State v. Henderson,
1998-NMSC-018, ¶ 17, 125 N.M. 434, 963 P.2d 511. The
comments of the trial court gave rise to a presumption of
prejudice because they suggested to the jury that the court
thought Victim was telling the truth in her trial testimony.
See State v. Ortiz-Burciaga, 1999-NMCA-146, ¶ 10, 128 N.M.
382, 993 P.2d 96.
{21}
Defendant did not preserve this error below. He has
raised the issue as a matter of fundamental error, citing
State v. Osborne, 111 N.M. 654, 662, 808 P.2d 624, 632
(1991), ("The doctrine of fundamental error, even though it
applies only under exceptional circumstances, does apply to
prevent a miscarriage of justice[,] . . . if the question of
guilt is so doubtful that it would shock the conscience to
permit the conviction to stand.") (internal quotation marks
and citations omitted).
{22}
Our Supreme Court recently examined the fundamental
error doctrine exception to our general appellate rules in
State v. Traeger, 2001-NMSC-022, ¶¶ 17-25, ___ N.M. ___, 29
P.3d 518 (No. 26,155, filed July 31, 2001). Because we
reverse on the issue of exclusion of the Safehouse videotape
testimony, we need not, and do not, decide whether the
comments of the court require a fundamental error result
under Traeger. We take this opportunity, however, to say
that the court's affirmation of Victim's credibility, when
combined with the exclusion of the Victim's inconsistent
statements, substantially increase the concern that the
comments interfered with the independence of the jury and
bring the issue to the brink of fundamental error. On
remand, no such comments should be made.
III. Jury Instructions
{23}
Defendant asserts his convictions are illegal because
the jury instructions on CSP and CSC were impermissibly
confusing to the jury, see State v. Parish, 118 N.M. 39, 42,
878 P.2d 988, 991 (1994), and violated Defendant's
constitutional protection against double jeopardy. Herron
v. State, 111 N.M. 357, 358-61, 805 P.2d 624, 625-28 (1991).
The jury received one instruction on CSC and one instruction
on CSP. Both included language referring to either "the
vulva or the anus," even though some evidence supported CSC
and CSP of each orifice. During the trial conference
settling jury instructions, defense counsel argued that the
instructions were vague and confusing. His concern was that
the jury could convict Defendant of both the greater offense
of CSP and the lesser offense of CSC based on the same
conduct: "Because it's not clear what the activity for Count
1 is, and not clear what Count 2 is, . . . for the same
conduct, they could find him guilty of both and we would not
know." The prosecutor explained that she tried to avoid
overcharging and maintained it was proper under the evidence
to charge one count of "touching" (CSC) and one count of
penetration (CSP) _ and argue both in terms of both the anus
and the vulva.
{24}
As predicted by defense counsel, the jury was confused
by the instructions, as shown by their question during
deliberation: "Is it true that if we find the Defendant
guilty of sexual penetration in one event, the Defendant is
not guilty of sexual contact?" Counsel conferred with the
court at length about what answer should be sent back to the
jury. The court suggested that jury confusion was so great
that a mistrial was required , stating, "Now's the time to
declare the mistrial and start it over." The State asked
the court to answer the jury's question. Defense counsel
agreed: "I think that's the thing to do, rather than declare
a mistrial. " So without objection, the court prepared its
response: "Yes, you can find penetration or contact with
respect to the anus AND you can find penetration or contact
with respect to the vulva."
{25}
We agree with the State that though Defendant raised
serious concerns about the jury instructions, he waived any
error on this issue by declining the trial court's offer of
a mistrial. That is, Defendant has no right to ask for a
new trial on the issue of faulty jury instructions after he
rejected the court's offer to declare a mistrial. State v.
Musgrave, 102 N.M. 148, 150, 692 P.2d 534, 536 (Ct. App.
1984).
{26}
On remand, however, we suggest the parties and trial
court review Herron before preparing the jury instructions.
111 N.M. at 361, 805 P.2d at 628. Under the facts presented
at the original trial in this case, the parties are entitled to instructions for one count of kidnaping plus one count of
CSP with a step-down instruction for the lesser-included
offense of CSC. Pursuant to Herron, we see no break in
Defendant's "continuous attack" to support conviction of
more that one count of CSP. Id. Using the same rationale,
CSC can only be charged as a lesser-included offense of the
one CSP. Id.
IV. Conclusion
{27}
We reverse and remand this case for retrial consistent
with this opinion. The parties should note that a new
ruling supported by new findings on whether Victim will
testify by videotaped deposition pursuant to Section 30-9-17
and Rule 5-504(B) may be required. Lucero, 109 N.M. at 305,
784 P.2d at 1048.
{28}
IT IS SO ORDERED.
_________________________________
JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
WE CONCUR:
__________________________________
MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
___________________________________
IRA ROBINSON, Judge