Nedra Fields v. State of Arkansas , 2023 Ark. App. 321 ( 2023 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2023 Ark. App. 321
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION IV
    No. CR-22-531
    NEDRA FIELDS                                  Opinion Delivered May   31, 2023
    APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    V.                                            FIRST DIVISION
    [NO. 60CR-19-1940]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS
    APPELLEE HONORABLE LEON JOHNSON,
    JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    BART F. VIRDEN, Judge
    The Pulaski County Circuit Court convicted appellant Nedra Fields of committing a
    fraudulent insurance act. The trial court placed her on probation for a period of two years
    and ordered her to pay a fine and court costs. Fields argues that the trial court abused its
    discretion by admitting prejudicial hearsay evidence. We affirm.
    I. Background
    The testimony at Fields’s bench trial established the following sequence of events. On
    July 29, 2018, Scott Johnson, a police officer at UAMS, was dispatched to a report of an
    accident in the hospital’s employee parking deck. Fields told Johnson that she had been
    sitting in her parked 2002 white Ford Explorer taking a break when a 2018 black Mercedes-
    Benz backed into her vehicle while maneuvering into a parking space. Fields claimed that
    the driver of the Mercedes had gotten out of the vehicle and walked into the hospital without
    acknowledging the accident or Fields’s pleas to stop. Johnson saw very little damage to either
    vehicle. He nevertheless completed an incident report containing the insurance information
    for the Mercedes and gave Fields a copy of the report. Dr. Swathi Kovelamudi, the driver of
    the Mercedes, testified that she was surprised to receive a call from her insurer, Esurance, a
    couple of days after the alleged accident, informing her that a claim had been made. She
    denied having hit another vehicle.
    An audio recording of Fields’s telephone call to Esurance on July 31 was played in
    court without objection. On the recording, Fields stated that she was calling to “start the
    process” and reported that she had been involved in an accident with Esurance’s insured. In
    describing the accident to the Esurance representative, Fields claimed that Dr. Kovelamudi
    had struck her vehicle twice from behind. Fields described that her vehicle’s rear bumper
    had been “pushed up a little and it’s got a nice dent in it.” Fields stated that the Mercedes
    had some damage as well in that the rear bumper had been dented and had some of her
    vehicle’s white paint on it. Fields also told the representative that she planned to get an
    estimate on repairs to her vehicle and that she had already been to a chiropractor because
    she had hurt her neck and back. The representative told Fields, “Give me one second just to
    submit this information so it can generate for us a claim number.” Fields agreed to text-
    message updates about her claim and was told that an adjuster would contact her that day to
    “go over the next steps in the claims process.” Fields asked what information she needed to
    provide to her chiropractor, and the representative told her to give him or her the incident
    2
    report or the claim number and “then they should be able to speak with us in regard to this
    claim.”
    An investigator was assigned to investigate what Esurance described as a suspicious
    hit-and-run claim. After inspecting Dr. Kovelamudi’s Mercedes and finding no damage, the
    investigator sought a warrant for Fields’s arrest.
    Fields testified about the circumstances of the accident. She downplayed both her
    personal injuries and property damage. She stated that she did not know whether her neck
    and back pain were the result of the car accident or from the stress of her job. Fields further
    testified that there were a lot of dents on her vehicle’s bumper prior to the accident and that
    she had gotten an estimate for repairs because she had been instructed to do so by Esurance.
    Chip Casper, a regional manager for Esurance, testified that a claim file had been
    prepared with respect to Fields’s claim involving Dr. Kovelamudi. As part of the claim file,
    Fields’s initial telephone call to Esurance had been recorded and transcribed. Casper was
    then asked about the other contents of the claim file and confirmed that Fields had claimed
    that she sustained personal injuries and property damage. When Casper was asked about
    Esurance’s “exposure” in connection with Fields’s claim, he referred to two exhibits in the
    claim file: exhibit No. 26, which was a bill for neck and back injuries that had been faxed to
    Esurance from Central Arkansas Chiro, and exhibit No. 27, which was an estimate from
    Landers Autobody to repair damage to Fields’s vehicle.
    Counsel for Fields objected to each exhibit on the basis of hearsay and argued that
    the exhibits did not qualify under the business-records exception pursuant to Ark. R. Evid.
    3
    803(6). The trial court initially overruled defense counsel’s objections, but the trial court
    later revisited both of its earlier rulings and concluded that the exhibits were not hearsay
    because they had not been offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. The following
    exchange occurred between the trial court and defense counsel:
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]:           So it’s offered for the limited purpose that she did go to
    a chiropractic clinic and she did get an estimate for her
    damages?
    THE COURT:                   That’s all it’s offered for, yes.
    [DEFENSE COUNSEL]:           But not for any particulars?
    THE COURT:                   Right.
    II. Discussion
    A person shall not commit a fraudulent insurance act. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 23-66-502
    (a)
    (Repl. 2012). “Fraudulent insurance act” means an act or omission committed by a person
    who, knowingly and with intent to defraud, presents or causes to be presented to an insurer
    false information as part of or in support of a claim for payment or benefit pursuant to an
    insurance policy. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 23-66-501
    (4)(A)(iii) (Supp. 2021).
    “Hearsay” is a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the
    trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Ark. R. Evid.
    801(c). Hearsay is not admissible except as provided by law or by the Rules of Evidence. Ark.
    R. Evid. 802. A statement made out of court is not hearsay if offered for the purpose of
    proving the statement was made. Jackson v. State, 
    274 Ark. 317
    , 
    624 S.W.2d 437
     (1981). The
    decision to admit or exclude evidence is within the sound discretion of the trial court.
    4
    Sitzmann v. State, 
    2019 Ark. App. 78
    , 
    569 S.W.3d 913
    . An appellate court will not reverse a
    trial court’s ruling on a hearsay objection unless the appellant can demonstrate an abuse of
    discretion. 
    Id.
     An abuse of discretion is a high threshold that does not simply require error
    in the trial court’s decision but requires that the trial court act improvidently, thoughtlessly,
    or without due consideration. 
    Id.
     Additionally, this court will not reverse an evidentiary
    ruling absent a showing of prejudice. 
    Id.
    In arguing that the trial court erred in admitting hearsay, Fields contends that there
    were two truths asserted by the exhibits: (1) that she, either directly or indirectly, submitted
    an insurance claim, and (2) that the claim was for a payment or benefit. Fields argues that
    she was prejudiced by the trial court’s ruling that the exhibits were not hearsay because there
    was no other proof that she had made a claim and had sought a payment or benefit.
    We first note that Fields has changed her argument on appeal. Below, after obtaining
    clarification as to the basis of the court’s ruling on admissibility, set forth above, defense
    counsel continued to object on the basis that the exhibits did not qualify under the business-
    records exception. Defense counsel also said the following:
    Well, I understand the State’s not agreeing with what Ms. Fields said was her
    damages, but they’re saying that it’s true that she said those things that are in the
    records. So you’re saying that—I mean, I think that you’re saying they’re automatically
    the truth that she did actually claim that stuff.
    The trial court responded, “No . . . the Court’s not looking at it like that.” It is well settled
    that a party is bound by the nature and scope of the objections and arguments made at trial
    5
    and may not enlarge or change those grounds on appeal. Sullivan v. State, 
    2012 Ark. 74
    , 
    386 S.W.3d 507
    .
    In any event, we agree with the trial court that the exhibits were not hearsay because
    they were not offered to prove the truth of the matter asserted. Here, the only matters both
    asserted by the exhibits and considered by the trial court were simply that Fields had gone to
    a chiropractor to be treated for neck and back pain and that her vehicle had been taken to
    an auto-body shop to get an estimate to repair damage. Neither the extent of Fields’s personal
    injuries and property damage nor the cost to treat her injuries and to repair that damage
    were “truths” that the trial court needed to consider in determining whether the elements
    of the fraudulent-insurance-act statute were proved. Both exhibits were part of a claim file
    compiled by Esurance in connection with the claims process that Fields herself began when
    she called and spoke with an Esurance representative. Esurance generated a claim number
    for Fields. Fields questioned the representative about what she needed to provide to ensure
    that records related to her claim were transmitted to Esurance, and Casper confirmed that
    those records had, in fact, made it into Esurance’s claim file. Fields does not explain, and it
    is not apparent to us, what—if not a payment or, more broadly, a benefit—she could have
    been seeking by contacting a third-party’s automobile insurance provider about its insured,
    whom she had accused of being at fault in a car accident. We cannot say that the trial court
    abused its discretion in admitting the exhibits for a nonhearsay purpose.
    While Fields claims that there was no other evidence that she submitted a claim for
    payment or benefit, her telephone call to Esurance demonstrated that she initiated the claims
    6
    process, that she asserted personal injuries and property damage allegedly caused by its
    insured, and that Esurance assigned to the claim a number in response to Fields’s allegations.
    There is no apparent reason that we can discern for contacting another party’s insurer about
    damages allegedly caused by its insured other than a desire to be somehow compensated.
    Moreover, Casper confirmed that Esurance’s claim file contained records related to Fields’s
    claim for damages for which Esurance faced some financial exposure.
    Furthermore, although Fields suggests that the trial court considered the exhibits for
    the truth of the matter asserted, in cases tried without a jury, there is a presumption that a
    trial court will consider only competent evidence. Banks v. State, 
    2009 Ark. 483
    , 
    347 S.W.3d 31
    . Here, in addition to this presumption, the trial court expressly stated that it considered
    the evidence for a limited purpose and did not consider any truth asserted by the individual
    records themselves. In the absence of a showing to the contrary, we accept that the trial court
    did not consider the exhibits for any improper purpose.
    Affirmed.
    HARRISON, C.J., and ABRAMSON, J., agree.
    Mac J. Carder, Public Defender, by: Clint Miller, Deputy Public Defender, for
    appellant.
    Tim Griffin, Att’y Gen., by: Michael Zangari, Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
    7
    

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 2023 Ark. App. 321

Filed Date: 5/31/2023

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/31/2023