NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
DOCKET NO. A-5585-17T2
STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
Plaintiff-Respondent,
v.
EDWIN MCGOLDRICK,
Defendant-Appellant.
__________________________
Submitted October 31, 2019 – Decided January 15, 2020
Before Judges Nugent and DeAlmeida.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
Division, Gloucester County, Indictment No. 17-03-
0178.
Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
appellant (Alicia J. Hubbard, Assistant Deputy Public
Defender, of counsel and on the briefs).
Charles A. Fiore, Gloucester County Prosecutor,
attorney for respondent (Jonathan I. Amira, Assistant
Prosecutor, on the brief).
PER CURIAM
In a single-count indictment, a grand jury charged defendant, Edwin
McGoldrick, with violating N.J.S.A. 2C:40-26(b), the fourth-degree crime of
driving while one's license is suspended for a second or subsequent driving-
while-intoxicated (DWI) or refusal-to-submit-to-a-chemical-breath-test offense.
A petit jury found defendant guilty as charged, following which the trial judge
tried and convicted defendant of several related motor vehicle offenses,
including DWI, N.J.S.A. 39:4-50.
For defendant's fourth-degree crime, the judge sentenced him to serve 365
days in jail, with 180 days of parole ineligibility. For the DWI, the judge
sentenced defendant to a consecutive 180-day jail term. The judge also
suspended defendant's driving privileges for ten years, ordered him to spend
forty-eight hours in an intoxicated driver resource center, and imposed
appropriate fines, penalties, and surcharges.
On appeal, defendant makes one argument:
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING A
HEARSAY STATEMENT THAT THE ORIGINAL
CALL TO THE SCENE WAS FOR AN
INTOXICATED DRIVER INVOLVED IN A CRASH.
THAT TESTIMONY WAS IRREL[E]VANT AND/OR
HIGHLY PREJUDICIAL AND IMPROPER
HEARSAY TESTIMONY. U.S. CONST. AMENDS.
V, VI, AND XIV; N.J. CONST. ART. I, PAR. 9, 10.
U.S. CONST. AMENDS. V, VI, AND XIV; N.J.
CONST. ART. I, PAR. 9,10.
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We agree the trial court erred by admitting unduly prejudicial hearsay evidence
and thus reverse.
On the morning the trial started, before jury selection, counsel and the
court discussed the assistant prosecutor's intention to elicit from the arresting
officer testimony that defendant had an odor of alcohol on his breath. In view
of stipulations that narrowed the factual disputes to one, namely, whether
defendant was driving, the court precluded the prosecutor from doing so. The
court and counsel agreed the assistant prosecutor would "lead" the officer
through his testimony about approaching defendant. According to the court,
leading the officer through testimony and avoiding a reference to alcohol would
be "cleaner."
During trial of the indictable offense, the State presented one witness,
Washington Township Police Officer Ryan Kelly. Defendant also presented one
witness, his wife. The parties stipulated that on September 5, 2016, "defendant's
New Jersey driver's license was suspended . . . and/or revoked for a second or
subsequent violation of driving while intoxicated or refusal to submit to a
chemical breath test and . . . defendant knew his license was suspended or
revoked."
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Officer Kelly, a patrolman when he arrested defendant, now a detective,
testified that while on patrol at approximately 9:00 p.m. on September 5, 2016,
he was dispatched to an accident scene. Specifically, he said:
I was dispatched to a crash. An off-duty officer was
there. I didn't get his name. I think he left before I got
there. But the original call was there was an intoxicated
male that was stuck off the road after he crashed his car.
Defendant objected to this testimony. The attorneys had a sidebar
discussion with the court. The record states, "[s]idebar discussion, not audible."
Following the sidebar discussion, the judge said and did nothing. The judge
gave no curative instruction following the sidebar conference, nor did he give a
curative instruction when he charged the jurors before they began to deliberate.
Upon arrival at the accident scene, Kelly observed a single vehicle
"wedged up on the side of the road," its passenger-side tires flat and "ground
into the curb" or stuck. The driver's door was open. Defendant was "leaning
back into the corner of the open driver's door." No one else was present. Kelly
estimated that he had arrived within five minutes of receiving the dispatch.
According to Kelly, he approached defendant, who said, "I just made a
wide left turn. Why are you making a big deal about this? I -- I just missed the
curb." After learning defendant had a suspended license, Kelly placed him under
arrest.
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Defendant's wife testified she was the car's driver, not defendant. Earlier
that evening, her daughters had come to her house to wish her a happy birthday,
which was the next day. Because she had to work the following morning, she
did not drink that evening.
During the evening, defendant, who was drinking, was unkind and
obnoxious, belittling her and calling her derogatory names. Around 8:00 p.m.,
defendant said he wanted cigarettes. His wife said she would get them, and she
headed for the Toyota Camry they jointly leased. Defendant followed her and
asked to come along, promising to "be good," and he sat in the passenger seat.
Not long after leaving their development, defendant began calling his wife
names. As he taunted her, she saw a skunk in the road, made a wide turn to
avoid it, and crashed into the curb. Furious with defendant and upset she had
wrecked the car, defendant's wife threw the car keys at him, told him to handle
the situation, ran "about two miles down the road," walked the rest of the way
to her home, and went to bed.
The next day defendant told his wife he had been arrested. Because she
was angry and "wanted him to squirm for a while," she did not talk with police,
and waited until July 2017, roughly four months after defendant's indictment, to
tell her husband's investigator she was the driver. She claimed to have had a
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"change of heart" because she felt it was wrong to let her husband "get in trouble
for this."
The jury disbelieved defendant's wife and found him guilty on the sole
count of the indictment. Defendant appealed.
On appeal, defendant argues the trial court improperly permitted the jury
to consider Kelly's testimony about the content of the call that resulted in his
being dispatched to the accident scene. Defendant asserts the hearsay statement
from the unidentified caller was unduly prejudicial for several reasons. First,
the hearsay statement that the driver was intoxicated was not relevant to the
issue the jury was to decide, namely, whether defendant was driving. Next, the
hearsay statement established the one disputed issue in the case, operation, and
thus unfairly bolstered the State's case through a witness defendant could not
cross-examine. Defendant adds that the hearsay statement violated the court's
pretrial ruling prohibiting the State from introducing evidence of alcohol. Last,
the statement implied an unnamed off-duty police officer had information
defendant had been operating the crashed vehicle. Defendant contends the trial
court compounded the prejudice by not giving either a prompt curative
instruction or a curative instruction during its general charge to the jury.
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In response, the State argues the testimony constituted "admissible
hearsay because although made by an unknown declarant, it simply described
why Officer Kelly responded to the scene, and only for that purpose." The State
also argues one can infer from the off-the-record sidebar following defendant's
objection that the court ruled the statement admissible. The State asserts the
trial court did not abuse its discretion in doing so. The State also asserts the
hearsay statement did not imply defendant was intoxicated. Although conceding
Officer Kelly's testimony "assisted in proving the defendant's guilt," the State
insists "independent evidence established credibility and reliability."
Appellate review of a trial court's evidentiary determinations is limited to
examining such decisions for an abuse of discretion. Hisenaj v. Kuehner, 194
N.J. 6, 12 (2008). The reviewing court may not "create anew the record on
which the trial court's admissibility determination was based." Ibid. Generally,
a trial court's evidentiary determinations are given considerable latitude and will
not be disturbed unless the decision was so "wide of the mark that a manifest
denial of justice resulted." State v. Kuropchak, 221 N.J. 368, 385-86 (2015)
(quoting State v. Marrero, 148 N.J. 469, 484 (1997)). If the trial court has made
"a clear error in judgment" which constitutes an abuse of discretion, the
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appellate court "must then determine whether any error found is harmless or
requires reversal." State v. Prall, 231 N.J. 567, 580-81 (2018).
Here, admission of the hearsay statement was erroneous and requires
reversal. The State concedes the statement of the unknown caller was hearsay.
"Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by [the New Jersey Rules of
Evidence] or by other law." N.J.R.E. 802. The hearsay exclusionary rule is
particularly important in a criminal case where the right of a criminal defendant
to confront witnesses is grounded in federal and state constitutional law. U.S.
Const. amend. VI; N.J. Const. art. I, ¶ 10. "The Confrontation Clause generally
prohibits the use of out-of-court testimonial statements by an absent witness who
has not been subject to cross-examination." State v. Roach, 219 N.J. 58, 85
(2014) (Albin, J., dissenting) (citing Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 51
(2004)).
Thus, though "witnesses may testify that they took certain investigative
steps based 'upon information received[,]' . . . [t]hey cannot repeat specific
details about a crime relayed to them by a radio transmission or another person
without running afoul of the hearsay rule." State v. Luna, 193 N.J. 202, 217
(2007) (citing State v. Bankston, 63 N.J. 263, 268-69 (1973)). Moreover, an
officer "may not imply to the jury that he possesses superior knowledge, outside
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the record, that incriminates the defendant." State v. Branch, 182 N.J. 338, 351
(2005). Such hearsay testimony will be disallowed "[w]hen the logical
implication to be drawn from the testimony leads the jury to believe that a non -
testifying witness has given the police evidence of the accused's guilt."
Bankston, 63 N.J. at 271.
Kelly's testimony concerning the unidentified caller's hearsay statement
violated these well-established prohibitions, so we must determine whether they
were harmless error. See Prall, 231 N.J. at 581. Under the harmless error
standard, "[t]he question is whether there is a reasonable possibility that the
[error] complained of might have contributed to the conviction." State v.
Dennis, 185 N.J. 300, 302 (2005) (quoting Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18,
23-24 (1967)). Here, such a reasonable possibility exists.
The hearsay statement defendant was intoxicated was prejudicial. The
trial court's pretrial ruling excluding the mention of alcohol on defendant's
breath demonstrated the court's opinion that any probative value associated with
defendant having consumed alcohol was substantially outweighed by the risk of
undue prejudice or other countervailing factors. See N.J.R.E. 403. Despite the
court's ruling and the assistant prosecutor's agreement not to elicit such
A-5585-17T2
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testimony, the officer provided hearsay evidence not merely of alcohol on
defendant's breath, but of defendant's intoxication.
Of greater significance, concerning the sole element at issue, operation,
the outcome of the trial turned on whether the jury believed Kelly or defendant's
wife. This turned out not to be an easy task for the jury, as the jurors requested
to have the testimony of each witness replayed in its entirety.
Perhaps of greatest significance, the court provided no limiting
instruction. For that reason, even if, as the State suggests, the statement was
admissible for the limited purpose of demonstrating why the officer responded
to the accident scene, the jury did not know that and could have considered it
for the truth of its content. The content established the single disputed issue in
the case, whether defendant or his wife was operating the Camry.
In short, the hearsay statement of the unidentified caller should not have
been admitted, was not harmless, and requires reversal. Hence, we reverse and
vacate the judgment of conviction in its entirety, defendant's conviction of the
motor vehicle offenses having been predicated in part upon the jury's verdict.
Reversed and remanded for a new trial. We do not retain jurisdiction.
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