No.00.636
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2001 MT 245
STATE OF MONTANA
Plaintiff and Respondent,
v.
EDWARD GIANT III,
Defendant and Appellant.
APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
In and for the County of Yellowstone,
The Honorable G. Todd Baugh, Judge presiding.
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Kristina Guest, Office of Appellate Defender, Helena, Montana
For Respondent:
Mike McGrath, Montana Attorney General, John Paulson, Assistant Montana
Attorney General, Helena, Montana; Dennis Paxinos, Yellowstone County
Attorney, Ira Eakin and Beverly G. Tronmd, Deputy Yellowstone County
Attorneys, Billings, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: November 29, 2001
OEC 0 6 2001 Decided: December 6,2OOl
Filed:
Justice James C. Nelson delivered the Opinion of the Court
7’ Edward Giant III (Giant) was charged by information with attempted deliberate
homicide in violation of §§ 45-4-103 and 45-5-102, MCA, and aggravated assault in
violation of $ 45-5-202(l), MCA, in the District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
Yellowstone County. The attempted deliberate homicide charge was dismissed before trial.
At the close of the State’s evidence at trial, Giant moved for a directed verdict of acquittal.
The District Court denied the motion and the jury found Giant guilty. Giant appeals the
denial of his motion for a directed verdict, asserting that the evidence was insufficient for a
conviction as a matter of law because evidence of flight was the only corroboration of the
prior inconsistent statements of the victim identifying him as the assailant. He also appeals
a number of trial and sentencing issues. We reverse the District Court’s denial of his motion
for a directed verdict and, therefore, decline to address the remaining issues.
lP We address the following issue on appeal: Did the District Court err in denying
Giant’s motion for a directed verdict of acquittal when the prior inconsistent statements
identifying Giant as the assailant were corroborated solely by flight evidence?
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
13 On June 5, 1998, Deborah Giant (Deborah) was assaulted in her home after work.
While Deborah was standing at the kitchen sink, someone attacked her from behind by
wrapping duct tape around her neck. Her attacker then dragged her by the hair to her
bedroom, placed her on or near a large piece of black plastic on the floor, and placed duct
2
tape over her mouth, around her head and around her wrists. She struggled with her assailant
for an extended period, but was beaten about the face, choked, and stabbed in the arm with
an ice pick. The ice pick lacerated one of the radial nerves controlling her wrist and fingers.
After the attack, Deborah drove herself to the hospital. Upon continued questioning, she
possibly admitted to one doctor that her husband, Giant, was the assailant.’ Deborah returned
to her house, partially cleaned up, and spent the night there alone.
ll4 The next day, June 6, 1998, Deborah reported the assault to the police and told them
Giant was the assailant. In addition to the events described above, Deborah said Giant
threatened her with a gun. Deborah also told the police that Giant took their two younger
sons to a hotel the night of the assault, withdrew all their savings, and took cash advances on
all their credit cards. She said the youngest son, M., took a bag of approximately $27,000
cash from the hotel room and returned home by himself in the early morning hours of June
6, 1998. While with the police, Deborah made arrangements over the phone with Giant to
exchange the cash for the middle son, D. However, an exchange never took place and D.
was discovered at home later on June 6, 1998, when the police executed a search warrant.
The search produced pieces of duct tape, a broken steak knife, blood stained clothing and
bedding, a large piece of black plastic, and a gun and ammunition. No ice pick was found.
lI5 A warrant was issued for Giant’s arrest. Giant’s truck was found a couple days later
with the license plates inside the truck. Officer Richardson (Richardson) contacted Giant on
‘The doctor in question did not testify at trial. Deborah admitted at trial it was “possible”
she told him that her husband was the assailant.
3
June IO, 199S, by calling his cellular phone number. Giant confirmed his identity to
Richardson but refused to turn himself in. Phone records revealed Giant was in the San
Francisco area. Four months later, on October 8, 1998, Giant returned to Billings and turned
himself in to the police. The State charged Giant with attempted deliberate homicide and
later amended the information to add a charge of aggravated assault. Giant made a motion
to dismiss one of the charges for multiplicity or to charge in the alternative before trial and
the State responded by making a motion to dismiss the charge of attempted deliberate
homicide.
lI6 At the trial of aggravated assault, Deborah testified to the same sequence of events,
but said that her oldest son, E., was the assailant rather than her husband. She testified that
E. was high on drugs at the time, and that Giant walked in on the assault and engaged E. in
a struggle to get E. to stop. Deborah said that E. was angry at her because Giant told him that
Deborah was supposedly having an affair with an employee that was E.‘s age and also that
Deborah wanted to have E. committed in order to cure his drug problem. She testified that
Giant got the gun to protect her from E. The rest of her testimony--that Giant took the
younger boys to a hotel., converted their liquid assets to cash, and agreed to exchange D. for
the cash--was consistent with her earlier statements. Deborah explained the change in her
story by testifying that she and Giant were intending to get a divorce during the time of the
assault, that she did not want to report her son E. to the police, and that she was mad at her
husband for taking the children and the cash. Due to the inconsistency between Deborah’s
4
pre-trial statements and her trial testimony, the State introduced parts of her prior inconsistent
statements made to the police, to the county attorney’s office, to doctors, and to the District
Court in which she identified Giant as the assailant and questioned her regarding her
conversation with a doctor the night of the assault.
17 The remaining witnesses were three law enforcement officers, one of the doctors who
treated Deborah, and a victim witness assistant with the Billings County Attorney’s Office.
Some of the evidence seized at the home was introduced, as were pictures of Deborah’s
injuries taken shortly after the assault. None of the children testified at trial to corroborate
either of Deborah’s statements. Deborah moved to Texas after the assault and the State was
unable to properly serve her or her children. Deborah eventually agreed with the State to
come to Montana and voluntarily testify if the State would cease its efforts to serve process
on the three children.
v At the close of the State’s evidence, Giant moved for a directed verdict, arguing that
Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements could not serve as the sole basis for conviction
without corroboration. Giant argued there was no corroborating evidence to confirm that he
was the assailant rather than his son. The State admitted that no forensic testing was
performed on the evidence seized from the Giant’s home. The State said it had no indication
before trial that E. would be implicated as the assailant and that Deborah stopped cooperating
with their investigation. The State argued that the undisputed testimony of Giant’s flight
behavior was sufficient to corroborate Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements and that the
5
evidence seized from the home matched her statements. The District Court denied Giant’s
motion, citing evidence of Giant’s flight as sufficient to corroborate the prior inconsistent
statements. Giant declined to present any evidence, the case was submitted to the jury, and
the jury returned a guilty verdict. Giant now appeals from the denial of his motion for a
directed verdict. Further details of the testimony and evidence at trial will be discussed
below.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
lI9 This Court reviews denial of a motion for a directed verdict of acquittal to determine
whether the district court abused its discretion. State v. Cochrun, 1998 MT 1387 28,290
Mont 1, 128, 964 P.2d 707, fi 28. A directed verdict of acquittal is appropriate when the
State fails to prove its case and there is no evidence upon which a jury could base a guilty
verdict. Srnte V. Longstreth, 1999 MT 204,l 16,295 Mont. 457,l 16,984 P.2d 157, f[ 16,
cert. denied, 528 U.S. 1167, 120 S.Ct. 1187, 145 L.Ed.2d 1093 (2000); 3 46-16-403, MCA.
No abuse of discretion occurs if, after viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the
prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt. Cochran, 7 28. However, if the denial of directed verdict is
based on a conclusion of law, like our review of any conclusion of law by a district court, we
review the conclusion of law de nova to determine whether it is correct. State v. Simmons,
2000 MT 329,19,303 Mont. 60,519, 15 P.3d 408,19 (reviewing motion to suppress).
110 Because the State cites to evidence presented at the sentencing hearing along with
6
other evidence not admitted at trial in order to support its arguments regarding the directed
verdict, we must first emphasize that, in considering the denial of a motion for a directed
verdict, we only consider the trial testimony and the evidence properly before the j~ury. We
cannot consider potential evidence that was not introduced, offers of proof discussed during
arguments on motions if the evidence is not eventually offered and accepted, discussions in
chambers or during sidebars, or evidence not admitted at trial but admitted during the
sentencing hearing. To consider evidence outside the trial setting would defeat due process
generally and motions for directed verdict specifically. See § 46-16-403, MCA,
(determination of sufficiency of evidence to support guilt is made “at the close of the
prosecution’s evidence or at the close of all the evidence . .“).
III. DISCUSSION
Ill Did the District Court err in denying Giant’s motion for a directed verdict of
acquittal when the prior inconsistent statements identifying Giant as the assailant were
corroborated solely by flight evidence?
712 When considering a motion for directed verdict to determine whether any rational trier
of fact could find the elements of a crime satisfied beyond a reasonable doubt, the district
court and this Court must consider the evidence properly admitted and before the jury
according to the rules that govern the use of evidence in a criminal case. The interaction of
two evidentiary rules is at issue in this case. We have previously held that a criminal
conviction cannot be sustained where the only evidence of some essential element of the
crime is a prior inconsistent statement. State V. White Water (198 l), 194 Mont. 85, 89, 634
7
P.2d 636, 639; Stare v. Gomnrenginger (I 990), 242 Mont. 265,278, 790 P.2d 455, 463; St&e
V. Jo/ly (1941), 112 Mont 352, 355-56, 116 P.2d 686, 687-88 (holding prior inconsistent
statement insufficient for conviction before the current Montana rule was enacted); compare
State v. Fitzpatrick (1980), 186 Mont. 187, 195-98, 606 P.2d 1343, 1348-49 (holding prior
inconsistent statement of witness admissible as substantive evidence); State v. Woods (1983),
203 Mont. 401,411-12,662 P.2d 579,584.
113 Further, we have frequently held that evidence of flight is not sufficient in itself to
prove guilt. State v. Davis, 2000 MT 199, fi 41,300 Mont. 458,141,5 P.3d 547,B 41; State
v. Hall, 1999 MT 297,147,297 Mont. 111,147,991 P.2d 929,n 47; State v. Patton (1996),
280 Mont. 278,290,930 P.2d 635,642; State v. Banning (1921), 60 Mont. 362,364-65, 199
P. 274, 275 overruled on other grounds by State v. Campbell (1965), 146 Mont. 251,263,
405 P.2d 978, 985; State v. Paisley (1907), 36 Mont. 237, 252, 92 P. 566, 571; see also
United States v. Flows (5th Cir. 1977), 564 F.2d 717, 718-19 (finding flight alone
insufficient to infer guilt beyond a reasonable doubt). Because the District Court concluded
that evidence of Giant’s flight could serve to corroborate Deborah’s prior inconsistent
statements when it allowed the case to go to the jury, this case presents the question of
whether flight, insufficient to prove guilt as matter of law on its own, can corroborate a prior
inconsistent statement, also insufficient to prove guilt as a matter of law on its own. To
answer this question, we must analyze the rationale behind each rule.
114 Before we do that, however, it is important to summarize the evidence before the jury
8
in the instant case. The fact that an assault occurred is undisputed. The evidence seized from
the Giant home and Deborah’s physical condition after the assault are consistent with and
could corroborate either possible assailant identified by Deborah. Further, it is undisputed
Giant was present and held a gun in both versions of Deborah’s story of the assault. No
forensic testing was done on any of the evidence collected during the search of the Giant
home that could corroborate either Giant or E. as the assailant.
115 The evidence of flight is undisputed. Giant was preparing to leave town when he
withdrew all available cash from the couple’s savings accounts and credit cards and took the
two younger boys, D. and M., to a hotel. The night of the assault, Giant kept the money and
left the house. Later, Giant abandoned his truck with the license plates inside. Richardson
contacted Giant on his cell phone five days after the assault and asked Giant to turn himself
in. Giant refused and would not say where he was. Giant was at large for four months.
When Giant turned himself in, he said he was tired of running. Given this evidence,
Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements and Giant’s flight make up the only evidence against
Giant on the essential element of the identity of the assailant.
A. Prior Inconsistent Statements
1. History of the Enactment of the Current Federal and Montana Rules
of Evidence 801(d)(l)(a)
716 Originally, common law allowed prior inconsistent statements to be used for
impeachment purposes, but prohibited the use of prior inconsistent statements as substantive
evidence. 5 JOSEPH M. MCLAUGHLIN , WEINSTEIN ’S FEDERAL EVIDENCE, $ 8OlApp.01[2]
9
at 4 (2d ed. 2001) [hereinafter WEINSTEIN ’S]; JolLv, 112 Mont at 355-56, 116 P.2d at 687-88.
In 1975, the Federal Rules of Evidence amended the common law rule to allow prior
inconsistent statements to be considered substantive evidence when those prior statements
were “[gliven under oath subject to the penalty of perjury at a trial or hearing, or other
proceeding, or in a deposition . .” Rule 801 (d)(l)(A), Fed.R.Evid. The Montana rule,
enacted in 1976, differs from its federal counterpart in that all prior inconsistent statements
may be admitted as substantive evidence in Montana under Rule 801(d)(l)(A), M.R.Evid.
In re Goldman (1978), 179 Mont. .526,549-50, 588 P.2d 964, 977; Fitzpatrick, 186 Mont.
at 195-98, 606 P.2d at 1348-49; Woods, 203 Mont. at 411-12, 662 P.2d at 584; compare
State v. Ma& (1961), 139 Mont. 599,608-09,366 P.2d 868,873 (holding conviction based
in part on prior inconsistent statement valid before current rule was enacted); State v.
Borchert (1970), 156 Mont. 3 15, 320, 479 P.2d 454, 457; State v. Longacre (1975), 168
Mont. 311,312-13, 542 P.2d 1221, 1222.
117 The original drafi ofFederal Rule 801(d)(l)(A) as recommended to Congress by the
United States Supreme Court was identical to the current Montana rule and placed no
restrictions on the use of prior inconsistent statements as substantive evidence. Walker
Jameson Blakey, Substantive Use ofPrior Inconsistent Statements Under the Federal Rules
of Evidence, 64 Ky. L..J. 3, 6-9 (1975-76) [hereinafter Blakey] (analyzing the legislative
history behind and potential problems with applying the new Rule 801(d)(l)(A),
Fed.R.Evid.). The original federal proposal and Montana’s rule followed the corresponding
10
rules developed in the Model Code of Evidence and the Uniform Rules of Evidence. 2 JOHN
W. STRONG ET AL., MCCORMICK ON EVIDENCE, s 25L, at 116 & 11.14 (5th ed. 1999)
[hereinafter MCCORMKK]; Blakey, at 3.
118 The original version was initially recommended by the Advisory Committee on Rules
of Evidence, Rules of Practice and Procedure of the Judicial Conference of the United States
(Advisory Committee). Rules of Evidence for United States Courts and Magistrates,
Amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil and Criminal Procedure, 56 F.R.D. 183, 293
(1973); Blakey, at 6. This version was recommended based on the assertion by modem
commentators on evidence that cross examination during trial was sufficient both to remove
prior inconsistent statements from the definition of hearsay, and to provide the jury a means
to assess the reliability and trustworthiness of these statements. WEINSTEIN’S, $5
8OlApp.01[4] at 14-18, [5] at 36-36.3 (Advisory Committee’s letter to the Senate Judiciary
Committee and clarification after Rule 801(d)(l)(A) was enacted); Blakey, at 41; 56 F.R.D.
at 295-96. These commentators asserted that this reasoning was as sound as the rationale
behind the other exclusions and exceptions from the hearsay rule. WEINSTEIN’S, §
8OlApp.01[4] at 18; cowpare Rule 801(d)(l)(C), M.R.Evid., (pretrial identification); Rule
801(d)(2), M.R.Evid., (admissions by party-opponent); Rule 803, M.R.Evid., (allowing
exceptions to the hearsay exclusion rule for present sense impression, excited utterance,
recorded recollection, etc.); Rule 804, M.R.Evid., (allowing admission of statements by a
declarant who is unavailable). Finally, the original proposal was also supported by findings
that prior statements made nearer in time to an incident were more accurate and free from
outside influences. MCCORMICK, 4 25 1, at 116 & n. 12; WEINSTEIN’S, 5 80 1 App.Ol[4] at 15-
16.
719 The Commission Comments to Montana Rule 801(d)(l)(A) indicate that Montana
relied on the above rationale behind the original federal proposal in enacting this State’s rule.
The Comments state that the Commission believed cross examination during trial was
sufficient to remove such statements from the definition of hearsay and that to require the
prior inconsistent statement be made under trial conditions would defeat the usefulness of
the rule. Commission Comments to Rule 801(d)(l)(A), M.R.Evid., (citing the Advisory
Committee’s recommendation, 56 F.R.D. at 295). The Commission also noted as support for
the new rule the idea that, regardless of limiting jury instructions, juries tended to consider
such evidence substantively anyway. Commission Comments to Rule 801(d)(l)(A),
M.R.Evid.
720 Regardless of the reasons behind the original federal proposal, the federal legislative
history of 801(d)( l)(A), Fed.R.Evid., indicates the additional requirements for the substantive
use of prior inconsistent statements, i.e., oath subject to the penalty of perjury at a forma1
proceeding, were included because of concerns in Congress. Representatives expressed
concern about the possibility of convictions based solely on unsworn out-of-court statements
which were considered unreliable at common law. WEINSTEIN’S, 4 80 1App.O 1 [S] at 36.1;
Blakey, at 21; Kelly A. Kutler, The Admission of Prior Inconsistent Statements as
12
Suhstarltive Eviderzce-Conl/,lonwealth v. Brady, 60 Temp. L.Q. 427, 434 n.56 (1986) (now
Temp. L.R.). There was also testimony that prior inconsistent statements contained in police
reports and insurance claims are unreliable because of the subjective and bias interests of
police officers and claims examiners who take such statements. 30B MICHAELH. GRAHAM,
FEDERAL P RACTICE AKD P ROCEDURE, FEDERAL R ULES OF E VIDENCE 5 7011, at 116 n. 13
(2000).
12 1 To address congressional concerns, some commentators asserted there was confusion
between the issue of admissibility and the issue of sufficiency. Blakey, at 20-22. These
commentators argued that the original proposal was only intended to address the issue of
admissibility of prior inconsistent statements as substantive evidence and that whether
sufficient evidence existed to support a verdict would have to be addressed independentty
under substantial evidence review. Blakey, at 20-22. Further, the commentators stated that
under such review, such a conviction could not stand because of the high burden of the
reasonable doubt standard. Blakey, at 21-22. Regardless of the distinction between
admissibility and sufficiency, Congress chose to amend and narrow the original proposal to
its current version. WE~NSTEIN’S, 5 801App.01[5] at 36.1.
722 After the federal change in rule 801(d)(l)(A), all but nine states modernized from the
common law to allow some substantive use of prior inconsistent statements. Jennifer L.
Hilliard, Note, Substantive Admissibility of a Non-party Witness’ Prior Iucoruistent
Statements: Pennsylvania Adopts the Modern View, 32 Vill. L. Rev. 47 1, 489-96 (1987)
13
[hereinafter Hilliard]. Fourteen states adopted the federal rule verbatim. Hilliard, 492 &
11.98. Twenty states, including Montana, adopted the original proposal to allow substantive
use of all prior inconsistent statements. Hilliard, 491 & n.94. The remaining states adopted
various versions of the federal rule modified to ensure the reliability of the prior inconsistent
statements in different ways, Hilliard, 491-96. See Haw.R.Evid. 802. I( 1) (allowing prior
inconsistent statements to serve as substantive evidence if the statement is reduced to a
signed writing or electronically recorded, in addition to the statements allowed under Rule
8Ol(d)( l)(A), Fed.R.Evid.).
2. The Use of Prior Inconsistent Statements as Substantive Evidence:
Sufficiency vs. Reliability.
r/23 After the modernization of Rule 801 (d)(l)(A), state and federal case law began to
struggle with the issue of the sufficiency of prior inconsistent statements as the sole proof
supporting a conviction. Sufficiency of evidence is a determination that depends on the facts
specific to a case and addresses the question of whether the evidence supports a conviction
such that any rational trier of fact could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. State v.
Hocevar, 2000 MT 157,123, 300 Mont. 167, f 23, 7 P.3d 329,123. When a conviction is
supported solely by a prior inconsistent statement, a review of the evidence for sufficiency
so as to assess whether any rational trier of fact could find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt
inevitably involves a review of the degree of reliability of the prior inconsistent statement.
Thus, the reasoning behind using prior inconsistent statements as substantive evidence
becomes circular: prior inconsistent statements are admissible as substantive evidence
14
because cross examination at trial guarantees reliability, but when considered alone such
statements must be reviewed to see if they are reliable enough. A recognition of this
quandary is apparent in the fact that since the new rules were enacted, state and federal case
law has continually tutned to a review of the reliability of prior inconsistent statements.
124 This paradox was foreshadowed in California v. Green (1970), 399 U.S. 149,90 S.Ct.
1930, 26 L.Ed.2d 489, a case holding that the use of prior inconsistent statements as
substantive evidence does not violate the Confrontation Clause of the U.S. Constitution.
Justice Harlan’s concurring opinion in Green asserts that if a case rests entirely on a prior
inconsistent statement, the defendant would be entitled to a hearing on the reliability of the
statement. Green, 399 U.S. at 187, 90 S.Ct. at 1950, n.20. See also Stanley A. ‘Goldman,
Guilt by Intuition: the Insufficiency ofPrior Inconsistent Statements to Convict 65 N.C. L.
Rev. 1 (1986) (criticizing the substantive use ofprior inconsistent statements by questioning
the reliability of such statements). While there is precedent establishing that convictions
based entirely on unreliable evidence cannot stand, Green, 399 U.S. at 187,90 S.Ct. at 1950,
n.20 (citations omitted), the Court has not addressed the specific issue of whether a prior
inconsistent statement as the sole proof of conviction violates other due process rights.
725 The Court’s later cases indicate that sufficiency of such evidence is completely
dependent on its reliability. The Court has held that statements admitted under a residual
hearsay exception, rather than a firmly-rooted exception to hearsay, cannot be considered for
substantive purposes if the statements do not have adequate indicia of reliability as required
I5
under the Confrontation Clause. fdaho v. Wright (1990), 497 U.S. 805, I IO S.Ct. 3 139, 1 I 1
L.Ed.2d 638 passim (holding child’s pre-trial statements to doctor regarding sexual abuse
were not admissible for substantive use). In contrast, the Court has also held that no
reliability hearing is necessary for Confrontation Clause purposes for an out-of-court
identification admitted under Rule 801 (d)(l)(C), Fed.R.Evid., when the person who made
the identification is available at trial for cross examination. United States v. Owens (198Q
484 U.S. 554,560-61, 108 S.Ct. 838,843,98 L.Ed.2d 951. See also Ohio v. Roberts (1980),
448 U.S. 56,70-73, 100 S.Ct. 2531,2541-43,65 L.Ed.2d 597 (holding pre-trial statements
admissible as substantive evidence because statements were subject to cross examination
when given).
126 In federal case law, the issue of sufficiency of a prior inconsistent statement alone was
first addressed in United States v. Orrico (6th Cir. 1979), 599 F.2d 113. In Orrico, a
conviction for fraudulent transportation of checks in interstate commerce was reversed based
on the rationale that the entire case rested on a prior inconsistent statement and a past
recorded recollection which were insufficient to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Orrico, 599 F.2d at 118-19. The entire analysis in the case revolves around the questionable
reliability of those statements. Orrico, 599 F.2d at 116-17. In contrast, the same circuit
found in United States V. Woods (6th Cir. 1980), 613 F.2d 629, 637, that the conviction was
sufficiently supported by the evidence even though pre-trial testimony before a grand jury
apparently was the only direct evidence linking defendant Underwood to the robbery.
16
C’oq~~re Ticey V. Peters (7th Cir. 1993) 8 F.3d 498, 503-04 (holding on lruhens colp~s
petition that prior inconsistent statements of rape victim were sufficiently reliable as sole
support for conviction, even though statements were testified to and paraphrased by the
police officer who took statements); United States v. Bahe (D.N.M. 1998), 40 F. Supp. 2d
1302 (prior inconsistent statement of niece was insufficient to support conviction for sexual
abuse).
727 As criminal prosecution of domestic abuse cases has increased, states are more often
dealing with the difficultly of the substantive use ofprior inconsistent statements. See State
v. Clark (Haw. 1996), 926 P.2d 194 (holding prior inconsistent statements of domestic abuse
victim were sufficient as the sole proof of identity for conviction even though she testified
at trial the wounds were self inflicted because she was high on drugs). See also Neal A.
Hudders, Note, The Problem of Using Hearsay in Domestic Violence Cases: Is a New
Exception the Answer? 49 Duke L.J. 1041. (2000) (analyzing current and potential exceptions
to hearsay for domestic violence cases); Peter R. Dworkin, Confrontitzg Your Abuser in
Oregon: a New Domestic Violence Hearsay Exception, 37 Willamette L. Rev. 299 (2001)
(analyzing constitutionality of Oregon’s new hearsay exception that specifically allows
substantive admission of domestic abuse reports); Andrea G. Nadel, Use or Admissibility of
Prior Inconsistent Statements of Witness as Substantive Evidence of Facts to Which They
Relate in Criminal Case-Modern State Cases, 30 A.L.R.4th 414 (1984).
128 Our review of state case law indicates that appellate courts have inevitably walked
17
down the path of categorizing particular prior inconsistent statements depending on
reliability, in order to determine the sufficiency of evidence. Pennsylvania established a rule
similar to Montana’s by judicial decision in Commonwealth v. Brady (Pa. 1986), 507 A.2d
66. This decision has been continually refined and limited to the point that Pennsylvania’s
rule is now similar to the statutory rule in Hawaii mentioned above. See Commonwealth v.
.Wson (Pa. 1998), 707 A.2d 1114, 1118 (explaining some of the case law refinements since
Brady and holding prior inconsistent statement must be electronically recorded in order to
qualify as substantive evidence).
129 Massachusetts has almost approached a case-by-case analysis of convictions based
solely on the substantive use of prior inconsistent statements. Prior inconsistent statements
given at a probable cause hearing are sufficient to support a conviction alone, but prior
inconsistent statements given at a grand jury must be corroborated. Compare Commonwealth
v. Clements (Mass. 2001), 747 N.E.2d 682, 687-88 (grand jury testimony corroborated by
pretrial photographic identification admitted under 801(d)(l)(C), Mass.R.Evid.), rehearing
granted by 752 N.E.2d 241 (2001); Commonwealth v. Sineiro (Mass. 2000), 740 N.E.2d 602,
609-10 (cross-examined probable cause testimony sufficient alone). New Jersey has adopted
a fifteen factor test for reviewing the reliability of a prior inconsistent statement, in addition
to its statutory rule. State v. Mancine (N.J. 199 l), 590 A.2d 1107, 111 5.2 See also R. TL. v.
2 The factors include: (1) the declarant’s connection to and interest in the matter
reported in the out-of-court statement, (2) the person or persons to whom the statement
was given, (3) the place and occasion of giving the statement, (4) whether the declarant
18
S’ln/e (Fla. 2000), 764 So.2d 871 (prior inconsistent statement insufficient alone); Nu~ce v.
State (Md. 1993), 629 A.2d 633 (prior inconsistent statement sufficient alone if reliable);
State v. Robar (Vt. 1991), 601 A.2d 1376 (same); People v. Chvies (Mich. 1999), 593
N.W.2d 655 (prior inconsistent statement may serve as sole basis for conviction; credibility
of statement is issue for the jury), cert. denied, 531 U.S. 841, 121 S.Ct. 105, 148 L.Ed.2d.
63 (2000); Stute v. Zgoe (N.D. 1973), 206 N.W.2d 291 (same). While the approach is
different in the various jurisdictions, the effect of the modified rules is to narrow the issue
of the sufticiency of evidence, and therefore its reliability, either by requiring corroboration
or by constraining the admissibility of prior inconsistent statements for use as substantive
evidence in the first place,
3. The Use of Prior Inconsistent Statements in Montana
130 White Water was the first Montana case to recognize the sufficiency limitations of
using a prior inconsistent statement as the sole substantive evidence. White Wuter, 194
Mont. at 8%89,634. P.2d at 638-39. In a trial charging sexual intercourse without consent,
was then in custody or otherwise a target of the investigation, (5) the physical and mental
condition of the declara,nt at the time, (6) the presence or absence of other persons, (7)
whether the declarant incriminated himself or sought to exculpate himself by his
statement, (8) the extent to which the writing is in the declarant’s hand, (9) the presence or
absence, and the nature of, any interrogation, (10) whether the offered sound recording or
writing contains the entirety, or only a portion [or a] summary, of the communication,
(11) the presence or absence of any motive to fabricate, (12) the presence or absence of
any express or implicit pressures, inducement or coercion for making the statement, (13)
whether the anticipated use of the statement was apparent or made known to the
declarant, (14) the inherent believability of the statement, and (15) the presence or
absence of corroborating evidence. Murzcine, 590 A.2d at 1115.
19
the victim testified that no penetration occurred. W/rile W&Y, 194 Mont. at 87, 634 P.2d at
637. We affirmed the district court’s directed verdict where the only evidence of penetration,
an essential element of sexual intercourse without consent, was an unreliable, unsworn, prior
inconsistent statement made by the victim and written by the sheriff who interviewed her.
White Wufer, 194 Mont. at 87-88, 634 P.2d at 637. We held that a prior inconsistent
statement admitted as substantive evidence under Rule 8Ol(d)( l)(A), M.R.Evid., although
admissible, is insufficient by itself to support a conviction without corroboration by
independent evidence. White Water, 194 Mont. at S-89,634 P.2d at 638-39. See also Jolly,
112 Mont at 355-56, 116 P.2d at 687-88 (before current Rule 801(d)(l)(A) was enacted,
finding prior inconsistent statement substantive evidence, but insufficient to convict).
13 1 We based our holding in U?lite Water on the reasoning that a rational juror could not
likely be convinced beyond a reasonable doubt based solely on a prior inconsistent statement.
FVJChite Fluter, 194 Mont. at 89, 634 P.2d at 639. We emphasized the insufficiency of such
evidence by noting that if “the entire case for the prosecution was a prior inconsistent
unsworn statement it would be difficult indeed to see how [a judge] could avoid directing a
verdict.” White Wuter, 194 Mont. at 89-90, 634 P.2d at 639. However, the paradox
discussed above between admissibility and sufficiency was realized in White Water because
the reasoning in White Futer is wholly based on an analysis of the questionable reliability
of the prior inconsistent statement of the victim. White Wafer, 194 Mont. at &g-90,634 P.2d
at 639. We held the directed verdict was appropriate because the unreliability of the victim’s
20
statement made conviction beyond a reasonable doubt impossible. Further, in reaching our
holding in R%z’te Water, we relied on the concerns expressed in the legislative history which
resulted in the current federal rule, a rule which would have prohibited the substantive use
of the victim’s statements in White Water. JVhite Water, 194 Mont. at 88-90, 634 P.2d at
638-39 (quoting legislative history and commentary discussed in Blakey, at 21-22).
132 Our focus on the reliability of the victim’s prior inconsistent statement in White Water
left open the possibility that some types of reliable or SWOI’IZ prior inconsistent statements
could be used as the sole basis for conviction and that only unreliable or unsworn prior
inconsistent statements required corroboration. In State v. Stringer (1995), 271 Mont. 367,
382,897 P.2d 1063, 1072, a domestic abuse case similar to the case at bar, the victim denied
an assault even occurred when questioned at trial. We determined her prior inconsistent
statements were more reliable than those in White Wuter because the victim wrote and signed
the statements herself the day after the assault. Stringer, 271 Mont. at 382, 897 P.2d at
1072.
733 This holding could be interpreted to mean that we drew a distinction between reliable
and unreliable prior inconsistent statements and intended to allow similarly reliable prior
inconsistent statements to serve as the sole basis for conviction. However, this interpretation
of Stringer ignores our fundamental concern about the questionable reliability of prior
inconsistent statements and ignores the fact that, in Stringer, the victim’s prior inconsistent
statements were corroborated by other evidence. The corroboration included photographs
21
of her injuries, observations by the police who arrived shortly after the incident, and
statements of the victim’s children to the police. Stringer, 271 Mont. at 382, 897 P.2d at
1072.
134 The above review of the issue of sufficiency of the evidence when a conviction is
based on a prior inconsistent statement alone demonstrates that sufficiency is dependent on
the reliability of that statement. We decline to continue down the path of analyzing the
reliability of each and every type of prior inconsistent statement as many states have done.
Rather, in order to create a clear, bright-line rule for trial courts and practitioners, we reaffirm
our holdings in JYlzite Wuter and in Gommenginger that require prior inconsistent statements
admitted as substantive evidence of guilt be corroborated in order to sustain a conviction.
In doing so, we are in line with states that use this approach to address sufficiency when a
conviction is based on a prior inconsistent statement. See State v. Moore (Fla. 1986), 485
So.2d 1279, 1281 (finding that the risk of convicting an innocent person is too great where
a prior inconsistent statement was sole substantive evidence); Brower v. State (Alaska 1986),
728 P.2d 645. We also clarify JVhite Wafer and Stringer to make clear that prior inconsistent
statements admitted at trial pursuant to Rule 801(d)(l)(A), M.R.Evid., as substantive
evidence must be corroborated by other evidence, even if those prior statements seem as
reliable as those in Stringer.
135 Judge Learned Hand’s statement in Di Carlo V. United States is often cited in support
of allowing prior inconsistent statements to be used as substantive evidence. Di Carlo v.
22
Urrited Stntes (2d Cir. 1925), 6 F.2d 364, 368. He stated that “[i]f, from all that the jury see
of the witness, they conclude that what he says now is not the truth, but what he said before,
they are none the less [sic] deciding from what they see and hear of that person and in court.”
Di Carlo, 6 F.2d at 36% However, this rationale only addresses the credibility a jury gives
to one witness. It does not address whether the out-of-court statement is so reliable it
supports guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See Di Carlo, 6 F.2d at 365 (beginning discussion
of that case by stating that “no question is raised of the sufficiency of the proof’). Therefore,
we conclude that requiring corroboration is the best way to ensure that the variations in the
reliability of such statements are addressed in a way that can support a conviction beyond a
reasonable doubt.
736 The State argues here that, following Stringer, Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements
should be considered reliable and sufficient as the sole basis for identifying Giant as the
assailant because her prior statements were consistent with the physical evidence, three of
her statements were given right after the incident, at least one was tape-recorded, and the
statement submitted to the District Court on the issue of bail reduction was notarized.3
However, as clarified above, Stringer does not support this assertion because the victim’s
prior statement that an assault had actually occurred--the issue in dispute in that case--was
corroborated by independent evidence. Therefore, Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements
must be corroborated by independent evidence of Giant’s identity as the assailant for the
-
’ Only certain portions of this statement were read aloud in court. The entire statement
was not admitted as evidence and was not submitted to the jury.
23
denial of directed verdict to stand.
1137 In that regard, we note that much of the evidence presented at trial goes to the
reliability of each of Deborah’s statements. For example, in order to reinforce the credibility
of the prior statements, the State attempted to show that Deborah stopped cooperating with
the County Attorney’s office when Giant was released on bail and also attempted to show
that Deborah asked that the case be dismissed after her divorce proceedings were voluntarily
dismissed. However, this evidence only affects the reliability of the prior inconsistent
statements; none of this evidence independently corroborates the statements. Therefore,
Deborah’s prior statements alone are insufficient as a matter of law to support Giant’s
conviction.
B. Flight Evidence
138 This brings us to the issue presented in this case: can evidence of flight be the sole
corroboration of prior inconsistent statements? As mentioned above, we have held that flight
evidence cannot be the sole basis of guilt. Hall, 7 47. The rationale behind this rule lies in
the fact that evidence of flight without any other evidence can be as consistent with
innocence as it is with guilt. In Wang Sun v. United States (1963), 371 U.S. 471,484, 83
S.Ct. 407, 415, 9 L.Ed.2d 441, a case holding evidence of flight alone insufficient for
probable cause, the Supreme Court stated “we have consistently doubted the probative value
in criminal trials of evidence that the accused fled the scene of an actual or supposed crime.”
Wang SZM quoted Alberry v. United States and reaffirmed the following reasoning:
[I]t is not universa1lly true that a man who is conscious that he has done a
24
-
wrong “will pursue a certain course not in harmony with the conduct of a man
who is conscious of having done an act which is innocent, right, and proper,”
since it is a mat:ter of common knowledge that men who are entirely innocent
do sometimes fly from the scene of a crime through fear of being apprehended
as the guilty parties, or from an unwillingness to appear as witnesses. Nor is
it true as an accepted axiom of criminal law that “the wicked flee when no man
pursueth, but the righteous are as bold as a lion.”
Wang Sun, 371 U.S. a,t 484, 83 S.Ct. at 415 (quoting Alberty v. United States (1896) 162
U.S. 499, 511, 16 S.Ct. 864, 868, 40 L.Ed. 1051). The Court in Alberty reversed jury
instructions that created a presumption of guilt if the elements of a crime were established
and there was evidence of flight by the defendant. Alberty, 162 U.S. at 5 11, 16 SCt. at 868,
40 L.Ed. 1051; see also Bonning, 60 Mont. at 364-65, 199 P. at 275; Hickory v. United States
(1896), 160 U.S. 408, 16 S.Ct. 327,40 L.Ed. 474. Further, in order to avoid the court making
an unnecessary comment on the evidence, a separate jury instruction on flight evidence
should not be given. Hall, 1 45. Therefore, because evidence of flight by itself is as
consistent with innocence as it is with guilt, we reaffirm our precedent that flight by itself is
insufficient as a matter of law to support a conviction,
C. Flight and Prior Inconsistent Statements
139 Having reviewed both forms of evidence and having pointed out the inherent
weaknesses in each, we now reach the question of whether evidence of flight is sufficient to
corroborate prior inconsistent statements admitted as substantive evidence of guilt. We
conclude that the answer to this question must be, “No.” Holding that two forms of
evidence, each unreliable in its own right, nonetheless, when taken together, are sufficient
to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, accords the sum of the evidence a characteristic
25
trustworthiness that neither of its constituent parts possesses. Simply put, zero and zero
cannot make one. Therefore, we hold, as a matter of law, that evidence of flight cannot be
the sole corroboration of a prior inconsistent statement admitted as substantive evidence of
guilt.
740 We now turn to apply this rule to the instant case. Here, Deborah’s prior inconsistent
statements and Giant’s flight implicate him as the assailant. Deborah’s prior inconsistent
statements require corroboration because Deborah refused to identify Giant as the assailant
at trial. Because of the divorce and Giant’s possible fear of being falsely accused, Giant’s
flight is as consistent with innocence as it is with guilt. The remaining evidence in this case
consists of the physical evidence recovered from the home and the photographs of Deborah’s
injury. This evidence., which would normally be sufficient corroborating evidence, is
insufficient in this case because it does not corroborate the essential element of identity
needed because Deborah identified another possible assailant.
CONCLUSION
741 Because all the evidence identifying Giant as the assailant--Deborah’s prior
inconsistent statements and Giant’s flight--is insufficient as a matter of law, the District
Court’s denial of Giant’s motion for a directed verdict is reversed.
142 Reversed and remanded to the District Court for entry of an order granting Giant’s
motion for a directed verdict and for a verdict of acquittal.
26
We Concur:
Chief Justice
Justices
21
Chief Justice Karla M. Gray, dissenting,
143 Notwithstanding my agreement with virtually everything in the first 37 paragraphs of
the Court’s 42-paragraph opinion, I respectfully dissent from that opinion. In doing so, it is
important to state without equivocation my total agreement that, under our jurisprudence, a
criminal conviction cannot be sustained where the only evidence of an essential element of
the offense is a prior inconsistent statement. I also agree that evidence of flight is not
sufficient on a stand-alone basis to prove guilt.
144 Having agreed with those basic principles at issue here, I observe that, while much of
the Court’s discussion is of interest from an intellectual standpoint, little of it bears on the
issue presently before us. Indeed, the only pertinent facts in 11 16 though 22 of the Court’s
opinion are that, under Rule 801(d)(l)(A), M.R.Evid., prior inconsistent statements are not
hearsay in this state and may be admitted as substantive, direct evidence. It is difficult to
discern the reason for the rest of the Court’s lengthy discussion in these paragraphs, except
that it may indicate the Court’s displeasure with the Montana rule. Nonetheless, Rule
801(d)(l)(A), M.R.Evid., is our Rule and it--rather than the federal rule, concerns of
“commentators” or different approaches in other states--is at issue here.
145 Similarly, the Court’s discussion of the “reliability” question in federal case law and
other jurisdictions at 1123 through 29, insofar as it relates to prior inconsistent statements
as the sole evidence of an element of a criminal offense, is largely extraneous. This Court’s
jurisprudence on the issue is contained in White Water, and that principle is that a criminal
28
conviction cannot be sustained where the only evidence of some essential clement of the
crime is a prior inconsistent statement, because such a statement generally is unsworn. As
to the Court’s lengthy discussion ofboth other jurisdictions’ case law and white Water in this
regard, it is based on the premise that the prior inconsistent statements are the only evidence
of an element of the charged offense. That is not the situation in the present case.
146 Simply stated, the prosecution in this case presented substantial evidence identifying
Giant as the assailant. As the Court states, Deborah’s multiple prior statements to that effect
are direct and substantive evidence of the identity of her assailant. While that evidence
standing alone--that is, without corroboration--is insufficient to go to the jury on the identity
element of the charged offense, the prosecution also presented circumstantial evidence on
the identity element via the flight evidence. On the basis of that evidence, the District Court
denied Giant’s motion for a directed verdict and allowed the case to go to the jury, which
convicted Giant. On this record, and under this Court’s jurisprudence, I would affirm the
District Court.
747 The fact is that Giant does not present the “reliability” question in the broad context
in which the Court ultimately decides it. Instead, Giant first argues on appeal that, under
Fi%hire Water, Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements cannot be the sole evidence on which
the jury could be allowed to determine that Giant was her assailant because the prior
statements were unsworn. Under this Court’s cases, his argument is correct and I join the
Court in so concluding.
29
ll48 Giant’s second argument is that the State’s flight evidence here is so “tenuous” that it
is insufficient to corroborate Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements because flight evidence
can be consistent with either guilt or innocence. The argument is based on Giant’s contention
that the only flight evidence is that he went “to his parents in California right after the
assault.” His argument does not raise the question the Court states is the issue presented in
this case of whether flight evidence can be the sole corroboration of prior inconsistent
statements.
749 In any event, the Court does not agree with Giant’s premise, namely, the “tenuous”
nature of the flight evidence, and neither do I. Indeed, the Court states that the following
“evidence of flight is undisputed[: 3”
Giant was preparing to leave town when he withdrew all available cash from
the couple’s savings accounts and credit cards and took the two younger boys,
D. and M., to a hotel. The night of the assault, Giant kept the money and left
the house. Later, Giant abandoned his truck with the license plates inside.
Richardson contacted Giant on his cell phone five days after the assault and
asked Giant to turn himself in. Giant refused and would not say where he was.
Giant was at large for four months. When Giant turned himself in, he said he
was tired of running.
This is significant and substantial flight evidence which, although circumstantial evidence
going to Giant’s identity as Deborah’s assailant, corroborates her prior inconsistent statements
as required by our cases.
150 The Court having implicitly rejected Giant’s argument that the flight evidence is
“tenuous,” it is my view that the remainder of his argument, that the evidence is insufficient
to corroborate Deborah’s prior inconsistent statements, also must be rejected. At that point,
30
our analysis having covered Giant’s arguments on appeal, we should affirm the District
Court’s denial of Giant’s motion for a directed verdict. That our case law properly holds
flight evidence can be consistent with innocence as well as guilt means only that it is
insufficient on a stand-alone basis to support a conviction. Here, as corroboration of
Deborah’s statements, ii: creates ajury question, and the same is true regarding the weight and
credibility to be given Deborah’s direct and substantive evidence--via her numerous prior
inconsistent statements--identifying Giant as her assailant.
75 1 In this latter regard, it is important to keep in mind the extent and timing of Deborah’s
prior statements--inconsistent with her later trial testimony--about the June 5, 1998, assault.
As the Court mentions, Deborah testified she possibly told a doctor at the hospital almost
immediately after the assault that Giant was her assailant. In addition, her undisputed
testimony was that she told doctors at the hospital the following day that her “husband did
it.” That same day, she told police that Giant was her assailant. Aside from the “insufficient
standing alone” issue, these statements made nearer in time to the incident could be
considered by the jury to be more accurate and free from outside influences than those made
later. Indeed, according to MCCORMICK, $ 25 1, 116 n. 12, “[t]he fresher the memory, the
fuller and more accurate it is.” It is my view that, because they were corroborated by
substantial flight evidence, the jury was entitled to weigh Deborah’s prior statements,
together with her trial testimony and credibility, and find beyond a reasonable doubt that
Giant was the assailant.
31
1152 My view is strengthened by an additional prior inconsistent statement of Deborah’s
mentioned only in passing by the Court as one “only certain portions of which were read
aloud.” It is true that Deborah read only certain portions of this additional statement during
her testimony, admitting she swore to the statement before a notary; it is somewhat
misleading, however, for the Court to omit the substance of these statements and the time
frame in which they were made. Unlike the statements made so soon after the assault,
Deborah made the following statements on December l&1998, more than six months after
the assault:
Ed [Giant] committed an extremely violent and near fatal act on me on June
5, 1998.
He planned it out for a week and had everything organized to carry out his plan
to kill me.
Again, these numerous statements by Deborah, made to different people at significantly
different times, are insufficient on a stand-alone basis to establish the identity element of the
offense with which Giant was charged. Taken together with the substantial corroborating
evidence of flight, however, it strikes me as beyond dispute that the evidence was sufficient
to withstand a motion for a directed verdict which was based on insufficient evidence of the
identity of Deborah’s assailant.
753 As Judge Learned Hand said in Di Carlo, “[i]f from all that the jury see of the witness,
they conclude that what [s]he says now is not the truth, but what [s]he said before, they are
none the less deciding from what they see and hear of that person and in court.” That is what
32
the jury in this case determined with regard to Deborah’s trial testimony and her statements
at earlier times, respectively, and--together with the substantial flight evidence--it is what the
jury had a right to do after the District Court properly denied the motion for a directed
verdict. Ignoring Giant’s actual arguments on appeal, the Court instead turns jury credibility
and weight questions into a question of law, ma sponte and without any citation to authority,
and concludes that all of the evidence of identity--taken together--was so inherently
unreliable as to be insufficient to allow the case to go to the jury.
754 Moreover, the Court’s “zero and zero cannot make one” statement is insupportable on
this record. There are no “zeroes” here. The Court simply disregards the fact that both direct
and substantive evidence from Deborah near the time ofthe assault and later, and substantial
flight evidence from Giant’s own conduct immediately after the assault, were presented by
the prosecution.
755 I could not disagree more strongly with the Court’s approach and result in this case.
I dissent.
Justice Jim Rice joins in the foregoing dissenting opinion.