State v. Feliciano. ( 2021 )


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  •   ***   FOR PUBLICATION IN WEST’S HAWAIʻI REPORTS AND PACIFIC REPORTER   ***
    Electronically Filed
    Supreme Court
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    29-JUN-2021
    01:31 PM
    Dkt. 12 OP
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF HAWAI‘I
    ---o0o---
    ________________________________________________________________
    STATE OF HAWAIʻI,
    Respondent/Plaintiff-Appellee,
    vs.
    ALLAN MICHAEL G. FELICIANO,
    aka ALLAN M. GAMON FELICIANO,
    Petitioner/Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    SCWC-XX-XXXXXXX
    CERTIORARI TO THE INTERMEDIATE COURT OF APPEALS
    (CAAP-XX-XXXXXXX; CASE NO. 3FFC-XX-XXXXXXX)
    JUNE 29, 2021
    RECKTENWALD, C.J., NAKAYAMA, McKENNA, WILSON, AND EDDINS, JJ.
    OPINION OF THE COURT BY McKENNA, J.
    I.    Introduction
    Michael G. Feliciano (“Feliciano”) appeals his jury
    conviction in the Family Court of the Third Circuit (“family
    court”) for abuse of family or household member.            Feliciano
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    allegedly struck the complaining witness (the “CW”), his wife,
    in the face in the early morning hours of January 14, 2017.
    Before trial, the State of Hawaiʻi (“the State”) filed a
    notice of intent to use evidence of Feliciano’s “prior bad
    acts,” seeking to introduce a 2016 incident in which Feliciano
    allegedly pushed the CW out of a chair (“chair incident”).               The
    State asserted the chair incident was relevant because: (1) it
    contributed to the CW’s medical use of marijuana; (2) Feliciano
    indicated his intent to raise CW’s marijuana use the night of
    January 13, 2017; (3) it explained the CW’s medical marijuana
    use; and (4) it would rebut Feliciano’s expected defenses.               The
    family court ruled the State could introduce the chair incident
    “[i]f the door is opened” by Feliciano through evidence of the
    CW’s marijuana use.
    During direct examination, the CW testified she used
    medical marijuana to treat her chronic back pain.            On cross-
    examination, defense counsel asked about her marijuana use and
    the couple’s prior six-month separation, but did not ask why the
    couple had separated.      Feliciano later testified that the
    couple’s relationship began to deteriorate after the CW “started
    going heavy on marijuana usage” and that the CW voluntarily left
    their home in February 2016.       During his cross-examination, the
    family court overruled defense counsel’s objection to the State
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    asking Feliciano about the chair incident, ruling that Feliciano
    had “[o]pened the door.”
    The family court then allowed the CW to testify as a
    rebuttal witness regarding the chair incident because the
    “defendant testified on the relationship between the parties by
    saying she used drugs or marijuana and that -– well, the
    relationship was raised and the inference also was left that she
    moved out for different reasons.”          The family court gave
    limiting instructions to the jury that the chair incident could
    only be considered as to the relationship between Feliciano and
    the CW as well as to Felicano’s motive.
    On appeal to the Intermediate Court of Appeals (“ICA”),
    Feliciano argued the family court abused its discretion in
    admitting the chair incident evidence and that the family
    court’s limiting instructions did not mitigate the prejudicial
    effect of the evidence.
    In its August 31, 2020 memorandum opinion, the ICA majority
    rejected Feliciano’s arguments.           State v. Feliciano, CAAP-17-
    0000581, 
    2020 WL 5111230
     (App. Aug. 31, 2020) (mem.).             The ICA
    majority ruled: (1) the family court properly admitted the chair
    incident evidence under the “opening the door” doctrine because
    Feliciano offered evidence that could be false or misleading in
    isolation; (2) the chair incident evidence passed muster under
    Hawaiʻi Rules of Evidence (“HRE”) Rules 404(b) and 403 (1980);
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    and (3) the family court’s limiting instructions mitigated any
    unfair prejudice resulting from the chair incident evidence.
    Judge Leonard dissented.
    We hold the ICA erred by ruling Feliciano “opened the door”
    to the chair incident evidence.            We have not adopted the
    “opening the door” doctrine and, in any event, Feliciano did not
    first introduce inadmissible evidence or evidence that was false
    or misleading in isolation.        We also hold the ICA erred by
    ruling the chair incident evidence admissible under HRE Rule
    404(b).     Moreover, even if the chair incident evidence had
    otherwise been admissible, it should have excluded by HRE Rule
    403.    We further hold the family court’s limiting instructions
    failed to mitigate the prejudicial impact of the chair incident
    evidence.     Finally, we hold that the improper admission of the
    chair incident evidence was not harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt.
    Hence, we vacate the ICA’s September 28, 2020 judgment on
    appeal and the family court’s June 2, 2017 judgment, and we
    remand this case to the family court for further proceedings
    consistent with this opinion.
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    II.   Background
    A.     Factual background
    Feliciano and the CW were married around 2012,1 and owned a
    house together in Kona, Hawaiʻi.             Feliciano worked as a porter
    and bartender.        He was also an ammo specialist and sergeant in
    the Hawaiʻi Army National Guard, which he had entered
    approximately eleven years earlier.             Feliciano is five feet six
    inches tall and weighs 170 pounds, and the CW is five feet tall
    and weighs 105 pounds.
    B.     Procedural background
    1.     Family court proceedings
    a.    Pre-trial
    On February 2, 2017, the State charged Feliciano via
    complaint with abuse of a family or household member, in
    violation of Hawaiʻi Revised Statutes (“HRS”) § 709-906(1) (Supp.
    2016) of the CW “[o]n or about the 13th day of January, 2017[.]”2
    1      The CW testified she was in the process of filing for a divorce.
    2      HRS § 709-906(1) provides in relevant part:
    (1) It shall be unlawful for any person, singly or in
    concert, to physically abuse a family or household member .
    . . .
    For the purposes of this section:
    . . . .
    “Family or household member”:
    (a) Means spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries,
    former spouses or reciprocal beneficiaries,
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    Feliciano indicated his defenses would be a lack of the
    requisite state of mind and self-defense.
    Before trial, the State filed a notice of intent to use
    evidence of Feliciano’s “prior bad act” at trial, specifically
    of “[f]acts and [c]ircumstances documented in police report
    C17001634 and in interviews with [the CW] detailing an incident
    in 2016 in which [Feliciano] pushed [the CW] out of a chair.”
    The State indicated its intent to introduce this evidence
    “pursuant to Hawaii Rules of Evidence Rule 404 to show state of
    mind (victim; witnesses; and Defendant) motive, intent, plan,
    absence of mistake, knowledge, modus operandi, and/or other R.
    404 purposes.”     The State argued: (1) the chair incident
    contributed to the CW’s medical marijuana use; (2) Feliciano had
    indicated his intent to raise the issue of the CW’s marijuana
    use on the night of January 13, 2017; (3) the chair incident was
    necessary to explain the CW’s medical marijuana use; and (4) the
    chair incident was also relevant to rebut Feliciano’s expected
    defenses of ignorance or mistake as well as self-defense
    regarding the initial aggressor issue.          Feliciano opposed and
    also filed a motion in limine to exclude any such evidence.
    persons in a dating relationship as defined
    under section 586-1, persons who have a
    child in common, parents, children, persons
    related by consanguinity, and persons
    jointly residing or formerly residing in
    the same dwelling unit[.]
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    The family court3 ruled the chair incident would be admitted
    if Feliciano “opened the door,” stating:
    [Deputy prosecuting attorney (“DPA”)]: —- far as the prior
    bad acts, the State is just trying to reserve its ability
    to bring up a prior incident between the defendant and the
    complainant with regard —-
    . . . .
    THE COURT: . . . .
    So you talking about prior actions of the defendant
    may be relevant?
    [DPA]:     If that —-
    THE COURT:        If the –
    [DPA]:     —- her marijuana usage is brought up.
    THE COURT:        If the door is opened.
    [DPA]:     Yes.
    THE COURT: So well to that extent, if the motion in limine
    is prohibiting that, motion is denied.
    Trial then began.
    b.       Jury trial
    i.       Feliciano’s opening statement
    During Feliciano’s opening statement, the deputy public
    defender (“DPD”) described the CW as being “under the influence
    of various substances” and “behaving aggressively” on January
    13, 2017, Feliciano’s actions as “justified,” and the couple’s
    relationship as “rocky.”
    3     The Honorable Ronald Ibarra presided.
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    ii.   The CW’s testimony
    The State called the CW as its first witness, who testified
    as follows.
    On the evening of January 13, 2017, the CW and Feliciano
    had a get-together with friends at their home.           Feliciano was
    “drinking the whole time”; the CW did not know how much alcohol
    Feliciano consumed.      The CW did not drink alcohol that evening,
    but she used marijuana.      She had a valid medical marijuana
    license for chronic back pain.
    At some point during the evening, “some roughhousing” broke
    out between two of the male guests and Feliciano became
    involved.    The CW intervened to calm Feliciano down to keep him
    from fighting.     Feliciano told her to “get out of his way[,]”
    while grabbing and twisting her wrists.          She then went inside
    the house, turned off the lights, pulled out the pull-out couch
    bed in the living room, and fell asleep alone with her clothes
    on.
    In the early morning hours of January 14, 2017, Feliciano
    pulled the CW off of the couch bed.         She saw one of Feliciano’s
    friends also sleeping on the couch bed with his clothes on.
    Feliciano told her to “get [her] ass out of bed” and asked “what
    the heck was [she] doing sleeping with his friend.”            She
    responded that “[she] didn’t wanna go and sleep in the room with
    him, in the same bed, and [she] told him to take his friend with
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    him ‘cause [she] was sleeping on the couch first.”              Feliciano,
    who appeared to be under the influence of alcohol, “got mad at
    [her].”     He said, “Oh, why you don’t wanna come sleep in the
    room with me, ‘cause I hurt you?            You don’t know what hurting
    is.   You don’t know what abuse is.          I’ll show you.”
    Feliciano then punched the left side of the CW’s face with
    his right fist.       She had her arms down at her side when
    Feliciano struck her; she blacked out and fell to the ground.4
    When she came to, she was lying on the ground and Feliciano was
    angrily standing over her.         The CW went into the bathroom and
    took pictures of her face, and when she went back to the living
    room, the friend was gone.         She did not call the police and went
    back to sleep.
    The next morning, the CW went to get a massage.             Feliciano
    texted, asking if he had hit her the night before, stating that
    if he had, he was sorry.5        She did not respond.       Approximately
    four days after Feliciano struck her, the CW went to the police
    4     The complaint alleged the abuse occurred “[o]n or about the 13th day of
    January, 2017[.]” Although evidence was elicited that Feliciano grabbed and
    twisted the CW’s wrists that night, the State appeared to elect the punch
    that allegedly occurred the morning of January 14, 2017, as the abuse
    incident; in any event, the jury was given an unanimity instruction. See
    State v. Hironaka, 99 Hawaiʻi 198, 207-08, 
    53 P.3d 806
    , 815-16 (2002) (an
    unanimity instruction is required, absent an election by the prosecution,
    when at trial, the prosecution adduces proof of two or more separate and
    distinct culpable acts and the prosecution seeks to submit to the jury that
    only one offense was committed).
    5     A screenshot of the text messages was received into evidence.
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    station, where she had three photographs of her face taken.6                 She
    then went to the family court to obtain a temporary restraining
    order (“TRO”).7
    On cross-examination, the DPD asked the CW about her
    marijuana use, medical marijuana card, and the other prescribed
    medications she took the night of January 13, 2017.8              The DPD
    also asked about the couple’s prior separation, and the CW
    responded she had been separated from Feliciano for six months.
    The DPD did not ask why the couple had separated.
    iii. Feliciano’s testimony
    Feliciano disputed the CW’s account of events, testifying
    as follows.
    After the get-together, Feliciano fell asleep in the master
    bedroom and when he woke up, the CW was not in bed with him.
    Worried, Feliciano looked for her and found her in the living
    room on the couch bed “under the covers” with one of his
    friends.     He woke the CW and pulled her up to go back to the
    6     The photographs, which showed a laceration and slight discoloration on
    the left side of the CW’s face, were admitted into evidence.
    7     The CW testified regarding the January 30, 2017 TRO hearing, and the
    family court received into evidence a video disc that recorded the TRO
    hearing; the TRO hearing was played for the jury. According to the CW,
    Feliciano testified at the TRO hearing that he pulled the CW out of the bed
    and that he open-hand slapped the CW.
    8     The CW testified she took Trazodone, which was supposed to help her
    sleep, and Clonazepam, which was supposed to help with her night terrors.
    The CW also stated she was prescribed Progesterone for anxiety and Cymbalta
    for depression; although she stated she always took her medication as
    prescribed, it is unclear from the record whether she was also on
    Progesterone and Cymbalta on the night of January 13, 2017.
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    bedroom.     As they were walking to the bedroom, she pulled her
    hand away from his, became angry, started yelling, and kept
    pushing him; Feliciano reacted by slapping the CW’s face.                 He
    then walked into his room, and he did not see the CW again that
    night.    Feliciano denied telling the CW, “You don’t know what
    abuse is, I’ll show you what abuse is.”
    Feliciano then testified regarding the effect of the CW
    “going heavy on marijuana usage” on their relationship: the CW
    stopped going to work, watched television while “smoking all
    day[,]” and Feliciano had to do the chores after working all
    day.    The CW was on a number of medications, including
    marijuana.     Their relationship was “rocky” and although the CW
    wanted to separate, he did not want to as he felt they could
    work things out.
    On cross-examination, the State asked Feliciano, “Did [the
    CW] move out because of something you had done to her in
    February of last year?”       Defense counsel objected; the family
    court overruled the objection, stating, “Opened the door.”                The
    State then asked, “Did you push her out of a chair in February
    because you were upset about something to eat?” to which
    Feliciano responded he had not.
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    iv.   The CW’s chair incident testimony and the
    family court’s limiting instructions
    After the defense rested and the jury left the courtroom,
    the State stated it would call the CW as a rebuttal witness.
    After a discussion with counsel, the family court indicated it
    would instruct the jury that the chair incident evidence could
    be considered only on “the issue of the relationship of the
    parties” and for no other reason.
    After the jury returned to the courtroom, the family court
    held a bench conference, stating:
    THE COURT: This is a bench conference on the record.
    The reason the court is giving this instruction and
    to allow the rebuttal question is because the defendant
    testified on the relationship between the parties by saying
    she used drugs or marijuana and that -- well, the
    relationship was raised and that the inference also was
    left that she moved out for different reasons. That was
    the inference. And the court has also looked at the 403
    balancing factor, prejudicial versus probative, and finds
    this is more probative than prejudicial.
    The family court then instructed the jury as follows:
    THE COURT: . . . .
    So, Ladies and Gentlemen, you are about to hear
    evidence that the defendant at another time may have
    committed other wrongs. This evidence, if believed by you,
    may be considered only on the issue of the relationship of
    the parties. You must not -- do not consider this evidence
    for any other reason. You must not use this evidence to
    conclude that because the defendant at another time may
    have committed other wrongs that he is a person of bad
    character and, therefore, must have committed the offense
    charged in this case.
    The State then called the CW as a rebuttal witness:
    Q. Ma’am, on January 13th, 2017, did you push the
    defendant before he hit you in the face?
    A.   No, I did not.
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    Q. In -- when you moved out in 2016, did you move out
    because he pushed you out of a chair in February of 2016?
    A.   Yes, yes.
    After the parties rested, during its instructions to the
    jury, the family court instructed the jury in relevant part:
    [THE COURT:] Several times during the trial I’ve told you
    that certain evidence was allowed in this trial for a
    particular and limited purpose. When you consider that
    evidence, you must limit your consideration to that
    purpose.
    . . . .
    You have heard evidence that the defendant at another time
    may have engaged in other acts. This evidence, if believed
    by you, may be considered only on the issue of defendant’s
    motive to commit the offense charged. Do not consider this
    evidence for any other reason. You must not use this
    evidence to conclude that because the defendant at other
    times may have engaged in other acts that he is a person of
    bad character and, therefore, must have committed the
    offense charged in this case. In considering the evidence
    for the limited purpose for which it has been received, you
    must weigh it in the same manner as you would all other
    evidence in this case and consider it along with all other
    evidence in this case.
    v.     Sentence and appeal
    On June 2, 2017, the jury convicted Feliciano of the
    charged offense.     The family court sentenced Feliciano to
    probation for two years with conditions and entered its judgment
    that same day.
    2.     ICA proceedings
    On appeal to the ICA, Feliciano argued (1) the family court
    abused its discretion when it allowed the State to cross-examine
    Feliciano about the chair incident and allowed the State to call
    the CW to rebut Feliciano’s testimony denying the chair
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    incident; (2) the chair incident evidence should have been
    excluded under HRE Rule 404(b);9 and (3) the limiting
    instructions did not mitigate the prejudice from the chair
    incident evidence.       Feliciano also argued that the nature of the
    marital relationship, and the reasons why the CW moved out of
    the house, were only “slightly relevant,” if at all, to either
    party’s theory of the case.
    The State responded: (1) Feliciano “opened the door” to the
    chair incident evidence by testifying on direct examination
    about the alleged deterioration of the marriage due to the CW’s
    marijuana use; and (2) the chair incident evidence independently
    passed muster under HRE Rule 404(b).           The State also argued “the
    entire defense was to portray [the CW] as an unfaithful and
    intoxicated person of bad character[.]”            The State contended
    “[d]efense counsel’s presentation at trial suggested the
    evidence of [the CW’s] use of marijuana was very relevant[,]”
    and that Feliciano adduced evidence of the CW’s marijuana use to
    attack her character and credibility.
    9     HRE Rule 404(b) provides in relevant part:
    Other crimes, wrongs, or acts. Evidence of other crimes,
    wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the character of
    a person in order to show action in conformity therewith.
    It may, however, be admissible where such evidence is
    probative of another fact that is of consequence to the
    determination of the action, such as proof of motive,
    opportunity, intent, preparation, plan, knowledge,
    identity, modus operandi, or absence of mistake or
    accident.
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    The ICA majority affirmed.         Feliciano, mem. op. at 2.         It
    ruled the family court did not abuse its discretion by allowing
    the State to (1) cross-examine Feliciano about the chair
    incident, then (2) call the CW to rebut Feliciano’s testimony.
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 21.       Specifically, the ICA majority
    concluded: (1) Feliciano “opened the door” to the chair incident
    evidence because Feliciano’s testimony “created at least the
    strong impression that the CW’s marijuana usage had led to the
    deterioration of the couple’s relationship and their temporary
    separation” and the State was entitled to counter that
    impression; (2) the chair incident evidence independently passed
    muster under HRE Rule 404(b); and (3) the limiting instructions
    mitigated any unfair prejudice.        Feliciano, mem. op. at 13-21.
    Judge Leonard dissented (“the ICA dissent”).             Feliciano,
    mem. op. at 22 (Leonard, J., dissenting).
    3.     Certiorari application
    On certiorari, Feliciano presents the following question:
    “Whether the ICA gravely erred when it concluded that ‘the
    Family Court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the State
    (1) to cross-examine Feliciano about the chair incident, and (2)
    to call his wife, to rebut Feliciano’s testimony about the chair
    incident.’”
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    III. Standards of review
    A.     Evidentiary rulings
    “The appellate court applies ‘two different standards of
    review in addressing evidentiary issues.             Evidentiary rulings
    are reviewed for abuse of discretion, unless application of the
    rule admits of only one correct result, in which case review is
    under the right/wrong standard.’”            State v. Acker, 133 Hawaiʻi
    253, 274, 
    327 P.3d 931
    , 952 (2014).
    B.     Admissibility of prior bad acts
    “[A] trial court’s balancing of the probative value
    of prior bad act evidence against the prejudicial effect of
    such evidence under HRE Rule 403 (1993) is reviewed for
    abuse of discretion.” State v. Cordeiro, 99 Hawaiʻi 390,
    404, 
    56 P.3d 692
    , 706 (2002) (quoting State v. Torres, 85
    Hawaiʻi 417, 421, 
    945 P.2d 849
    , 853 (App. 1997)). When such
    an abuse of discretion is identified, it is grounds to
    vacate a conviction unless it is harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt. State v. Kazanas, 138 Hawaiʻi 23, 43, 
    375 P.3d 1261
    , 1281 (2016).
    State v. Gallagher, 146 Hawaiʻi 462, 470, 
    463 P.3d 1119
    , 1127
    (2020) (alteration in original).
    C.     Jury instructions
    When jury instructions or the omission thereof are at
    issue on appeal, the standard of review is whether, when
    read and considered as a whole, the instructions given are
    prejudicially insufficient, erroneous, inconsistent, or
    misleading. Erroneous instructions are presumptively
    harmful and are a ground for reversal unless it
    affirmatively appears from the record as a whole that the
    error was not prejudicial. However, error is not to be
    viewed in isolation and considered purely in the abstract.
    It must be examined in the light of the entire proceedings
    and given the effect which the whole record shows it to be
    entitled. In that context, the real question becomes
    whether there is a reasonable possibility that error might
    have contributed to conviction. If there is such a
    reasonable possibility in a criminal case, then the error
    is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and the judgment
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    of conviction on which it may have been based must be set
    aside.
    State v. Nichols, 111 Hawaiʻi 327, 334, 
    141 P.3d 974
    , 981 (2006)
    (cleaned up).
    IV.   Discussion
    A.     The family court erred in ruling Feliciano “opened the
    door” to the chair incident
    Feliciano argues the ICA erred in concluding he “opened the
    door” to the chair incident evidence.
    “This court has stated that the ‘opening the door’ doctrine
    is essentially a rule of expanded relevancy.”              State v. Miranda,
    147 Hawaiʻi 171, 183, 
    465 P.3d 618
    , 630 (2020) (citing State v.
    Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi 409, 422, 
    453 P.3d 229
    , 242 (2019)).                  Under
    the general formulation of this doctrine, “when one party
    presents inadmissible evidence to the jury, the opposing party
    is permitted to adduce pertinent evidence that would otherwise
    be inadmissible in order to rebut the improperly introduced
    evidence.”       
    Id.
     (citing Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at 422, 453 P.3d at
    242).      “The extent of this doctrine is limited, and it does not
    allow a party to adduce inadmissible evidence for the purpose of
    rebutting inferences raised by the introduction of admissible
    evidence.”       Id. (citing Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at 422-23, 453 P.3d
    at 242-43).
    This court has not yet adopted the “opening the door”
    doctrine.       See State v. Salavea, 147 Hawaiʻi 564, 577, 
    465 P.3d 17
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    1011, 1024 (2020).     In this case, the “opening the door”
    doctrine would in any event not have allowed admission of the
    chair incident evidence because Feliciano’s testimony regarding
    the CW’s marijuana use was admissible.          See State v. Calara, 132
    Hawaiʻi 391, 402, 
    322 P.3d 931
    , 942 (2014) (“[A] defendant is
    entitled to cross-examine a witness concerning the witness’s
    drug use and addiction at or near the time of the incident to
    the extent that it affected the witness’s perception or
    recollection of the alleged event[.]” (cleaned up)).            Thus,
    under the doctrine’s general formulation, Feliciano’s testimony
    regarding the CW’s marijuana use was admissible and not properly
    countered by the chair incident evidence.
    As noted by Judge Leonard in her dissent, however, the
    State does not even argue on appeal that Feliciano introduced
    inadmissible evidence and therefore opened the door to the
    State’s introduction of inadmissible evidence.           Feliciano, mem.
    op. at 24 (Leonard, J., dissenting).         Instead, the ICA majority
    adopted the State’s argument that Feliciano offered evidence
    that could be shown to be false or misleading in isolation, as
    Feliciano’s testimony “created at least the strong impression
    that the CW’s marijuana usage had led to the deterioration of
    the couple’s relationship and their temporary separation.”
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 13-14.        The ICA majority cited to Lavoie,
    which recognized “authority from other jurisdictions for the
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    proposition that the door may also be opened to inadmissible
    evidence when a party offers admissible evidence that is false
    or misleading if considered in isolation.”             Feliciano, mem. op.
    at 12 (quoting Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at 424, 453 P.3d at 244).10
    The ICA majority concluded the chair incident evidence
    admissible under this iteration of the doctrine “to place
    Feliciano’s testimony in its proper context and to correct the
    allegedly false impression created by that testimony.”
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 14.          According to the ICA majority,
    Feliciano presented evidence “false or misleading if considered
    in isolation” that portrayed the CW “as an unfaithful, drug-
    abusing spouse who was responsible for the couple’s prior
    separation, as well as for Feliciano’s conduct on the night he
    struck her.”       Feliciano, mem. op. at 13.        It opined the chair
    incident evidence challenged Feliciano’s account of the reason
    for the couple’s separation; this evidence in turn “shed light
    on the purportedly true nature of the couple’s relationship.”
    Id.
    But as Judge Leonard noted in her dissent, this court may
    have implicitly rejected this alternative formulation of the
    “opening the door” doctrine.          See Feliciano, mem. op. at 24 n.1
    10    This court concluded that “such a rule would not apply here even if
    this court were to adopt it because no aspect of [the witness’s] testimony
    was shown to be false or misleading.” Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at 424, 453 P.3d at
    244.
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    (Leonard, J., dissenting).11          We need not decide whether we have
    done so, however, as application of this formulation of the
    doctrine is limited “to situations in which the originally
    submitted evidence creates ‘significant prejudice.’”               State v.
    Fukusaku, 85 Hawaiʻi 462, 497, 
    946 P.2d 32
    , 67 (1997).
    Feliciano’s testimony did not create “significant prejudice.”
    Whether Feliciano and the CW’s marriage was “rocky” and, if so,
    whether the CW’s marijuana use contributed to the decline of
    their marriage was barely relevant, if at all, to whether
    Feliciano had committed abuse in the early morning hours of
    January 14, 2017.        Any alleged lack of fidelity was also
    unrelated to the elements of the offense.
    All in all, the ICA majority erred in concluding the chair
    incident evidence was admissible under the “opening the door”
    doctrine.       An “expanded rule of relevancy” cannot become a
    vehicle for admitting otherwise clearly inadmissible and
    11     In State v. Fukusaku, we stated:
    We also disagree with the Prosecution’s contention
    that defense counsel “opened the door” to admission of the
    [luminol and phenolphthalein] test results. Although the
    Prosecution cites no authority, its argument appears to be
    based on the doctrine of “curative admissibility,” also
    known as “opening the door” or “fighting fire with fire.”
    Under this doctrine, when one party introduces inadmissible
    evidence, the opposing party may respond by introducing
    [their] own inadmissible evidence on the same issue. We
    note that this doctrine is subject to abuse and that most
    jurisdictions have limited its use to situations in which
    the originally submitted evidence creates significant
    prejudice.
    85 Hawaiʻi 462, 497, 
    946 P.2d 32
    , 67 (1997) (cleaned up).
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    prejudicial evidence.         As the “opening the door” doctrine is
    inapplicable, the admissibility of the chair incident evidence
    must be evaluated on its own merit.            See Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at
    425, 453 P.3d at 245.         The ICA majority also erred in this
    regard.
    B.     The chair incident evidence was not admissible under HRE
    Rule 404(b)
    1.     General principles regarding the admission of evidence
    under HRE Rule 404(b)
    Feliciano also argues the ICA majority erred by concluding
    the chair incident evidence independently passes muster under
    HRE Rule 404(b).        HRE Rule 404(b) provides in relevant part:
    (b) Other crimes, wrongs, or acts. Evidence of other
    crimes, wrongs, or acts is not admissible to prove the
    character of a person in order to show action in conformity
    therewith. It may, however, be admissible where such
    evidence is probative of another fact that is of
    consequence to the determination of the action, such as
    proof of motive, opportunity, intent, preparation, plan,
    knowledge, identity, modus operandi, or absence of mistake
    or accident.
    “The list of permissible purposes in Rule 404(b) is not intended
    to be exhaustive ‘for the range of relevancy outside the ban is
    almost indefinite.’”         State v. Behrendt, 124 Hawaiʻi 90, 103, 
    237 P.3d 1156
    , 1169 (2010).
    Rule 404(b) was intended not to define the set of
    permissible purposes for which bad-acts evidence may be
    admitted but rather to define the one impermissible purpose
    for such evidence: a person who commits a crime probably
    has a defect of character; a person with a defect of
    character is more likely than people generally to have
    committed the act in question.
    
    Id.
     (cleaned up).
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    “When evidence is offered for substantive reasons rather
    than propensity, a trial court must additionally weigh the
    potential prejudicial effects of the evidence against its
    probative value under HRE Rule 403.”            
    Id.
       HRE Rule 403 provides
    that relevant evidence12 “may be excluded if its probative value
    is substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by
    considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless
    presentation of cumulative evidence.”
    Thus, this court must determine (1) if the chair incident
    evidence was probative of any fact of consequence other than
    character and propensity; and, if so, (2) whether the probative
    value of the evidence was substantially outweighed by the danger
    of unfair prejudice to Feliciano.
    2.     The chair incident evidence was inadmissible under HRE
    Rule 404(b)
    In its limiting instruction to the jury, the family court
    instructed the jury it was to consider the chair incident
    evidence “on the issue of the relationship of the parties” to
    purportedly provide context about Feliciano and the CW’s
    relationship and “that the inference also was left that [the CW]
    moved out for different reasons.”            In its closing instructions
    12    “Relevant evidence” is defined broadly as “evidence having any tendency
    to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination
    of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the
    evidence.” HRE Rule 401.
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    to the jury, the family court then indicated it had admitted
    Feliciano’s prior bad act to be considered by the jury “only on
    the issue of defendant’s motive to commit the offense charged.”
    This court has upheld the admissibility of prior instances
    of domestic abuse to prove particular issues that arise in
    domestic abuse cases.      In State v. Clark, this court affirmed
    the defendant’s conviction for the attempted second degree
    murder of his wife.      83 Hawaiʻi 289, 307, 
    926 P.2d 194
    , 212
    (1996).   During the jury trial, the wife recanted the charge,
    although she had admitted to having told a detective and others
    that the defendant had stabbed her.          83 Hawaiʻi at 292-93, 
    926 P.2d at 197-98
    .     The wife stated that her original story was “a
    total lie[,]” thereby completely exculpating the defendant.               83
    Hawaiʻi at 293, 
    926 P.2d at 198
    .          The State introduced into
    evidence the wife’s original statements to impeach her
    recantation, and the State was allowed to question the wife
    regarding two police investigations of abuse between herself and
    the defendant, during both of which the wife initially
    exculpated the defendant, but later stated he was violent.               
    Id.
    This court concluded the trial court properly admitted
    evidence of the two police investigations.          83 Hawaiʻi at 302,
    
    926 P.2d at 207
    .     With respect to relevance, this court held:
    [W]e hold that, where a victim recants allegations of
    abuse, evidence of prior incidents of violence between the
    victim and the defendant are relevant to show the trier of
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    fact the context of the relationship between the victim and
    the defendant, where, as here, that relationship is offered
    as a possible explanation for the victim’s recantation.
    Id.13
    Clark, however, is clearly distinguishable.            Clark was
    limited to admitting prior incidents of domestic violence to
    show the context of the relationship between the defendant and
    the victim to explain the victim’s recantation.              Unlike Clark,
    the context of the relationship between the CW and Feliciano was
    not offered as a possible explanation for the victim’s
    recantation, “a central fact of consequence.”              In this case, the
    CW’s reason for moving out of their home eleven months before
    the alleged incident underlying the abuse charge was not a
    “central fact of consequence” as to whether Feliciano committed
    the charged offense.         The chair incident evidence was not
    admissible under HRE Rule 404(b) to show the context of the
    relationship between Feliciano and the CW.
    The ICA majority also opined, however, that the full
    context of Feliciano and the CW’s relationship bore on
    Feliciano’s self-defense justification.             Feliciano was charged
    with intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causing physical
    13    We also held the probative value of the prior acts outweighed prejudice
    where the relationship between the defendant and the wife was offered to
    explain a central fact of consequence –- the wife’s recantation. 83 Hawaiʻi
    at 303, 
    926 P.2d at 208
    ; see also State v. Asuncion, 110 Hawaiʻi 154, 165-66,
    
    129 P.3d 1182
    , 1193-94 (App. 2006) (concluding evidence of prior acts of
    domestic violence was admissible where defendant’s girlfriend recanted a
    portion of the statement she gave to police regarding abuse by the
    defendant).
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    abuse of a family or household member in violation of
    HRS § 709-906(1).14        Feliciano’s asserted self-defense
    justification placed his state of mind in dispute.15               The ICA
    majority ruled the context of the couple’s relationship,
    including Feliciano’s alleged prior abuse of the CW, probative
    of whether he reasonably believed that striking the CW was
    immediately necessary for the purpose of protecting himself
    against the CW’s alleged use of unlawful force against him.
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 15.
    We have difficulty understanding the logic of how a
    defendant’s prior acts of domestic abuse against a complaining
    witness would be so probative; it appears that the ICA
    majority’s reasoning would effectively vitiate HRE Rule 404(b)’s
    general preclusion of a defendant’s prior bad acts in domestic
    violence cases.        Admission of the chair incident evidence on
    these grounds would show propensity towards physical abuse, the
    very inference HRE Rule 404(b) prohibits.             Thus, the chair
    14    Because HRS § 709-906 does not specify the state of mind required,
    HRS § 702-204 (2014) provides the default state of mind. HRS § 702-204
    states in relevant part: “When the state of mind required to establish an
    element of an offense is not specified by the law, that element is
    established if, with respect thereto, a person acts intentionally, knowingly,
    or recklessly.”
    15    See HRS 703-304 (2014) (“the use of force upon or toward another person
    is justifiable when the actor believes that such force is immediately
    necessary for the purpose of protecting himself against the use of unlawful
    force by the other person on the present occasion.”); see also State v.
    Arakawa, 101 Hawaiʻi 26, 32-33, 
    61 P.3d 537
    , 543-44 (App. 2002) (“Defense
    counsel claimed Arakawa was justified in that he acted in self-defense,
    thereby putting in dispute what Arakawa’s state of mind was at the time he
    struck Carmichael.” (cleaned up)).
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    incident evidence was not admissible under HRE Rule 404(b) on
    these grounds to rebut Feliciano’s self-defense justification.16
    C.     The chair incident evidence should have been excluded by
    HRE Rule 403
    Even if the chair incident evidence had been admissible
    under the “opening the door” expanded relevancy doctrine or
    under HRE Rule 404(b), it should in any event have been
    precluded under HRE Rule 403.           Under HRE Rule 403, relevant
    16    The chair incident evidence was also not admissible under HRE Rule
    404(b) for the other bases stated by the ICA majority.
    The ICA majority also concluded that the chair incident evidence was
    admissible to test Feliciano’s credibility after he testified that the CW’s
    marijuana use led to the couple’s previous separation eleven months earlier.
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 14-15. It also ruled the CW’s rebuttal testimony
    admissible to impeach Feliciano’s credibility on the grounds he had denied
    the CW had moved out because of the chair incident. Feliciano, mem. op. at
    15.
    HRE Rule 404(b) also provides that evidence of a witness’s character is
    admissible as provided in HRE Rule 608. HRE Rule 608(b) (1993) states in
    relevant part: “(b) Specific instances of conduct. Specific instances of a
    witness, for the purpose of attacking the witness’ credibility, if probative
    of untruthfulness, may be inquired into on cross-examination of the witness
    and, in the discretion of the court, may be proved by extrinsic evidence.”
    The commentary to HRE Rule 608 states that subsection (b) “allows cross-
    examination of the witness relative to specific collateral conduct to the
    extent that such conduct is relevant to veracity. Such conduct may not be
    independently proved even if the witness expressly denies it.”
    Feliciano, however, did not testify that the CW moved out due to her
    marijuana use or deny that the CW moved out because of the chair incident;
    rather, he maintained he did not know why the CW had moved out of the home.
    Despite Feliciano’s testimony, a fact-finder could infer that the chair
    incident played a part in the CW moving out. Any possible relevance of
    whether Feliciano was truthful regarding what led to CW moving out eleven
    months earlier was so tangential, however, that, in any event, it should have
    been precluded by HRE Rule 403 as discussed below.
    Finally, the ICA majority also ruled the chair incident admissible to
    rehabilitate the CW’s character and credibility, which Feliciano had sought
    to undermine through his testimony. Feliciano, mem. op. at 15. However, the
    CW’s marijuana usage and Feliciano seeing the CW sleeping next to his friend
    had been raised in the State’s direct examination of the CW. The CW’s reason
    for moving out does not rehabilitate her character and credibility; the CW
    did not testify as to why she had moved out.
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    evidence “may be excluded if its probative value is
    substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice,
    confusion of the issues, or misleading the jury, or by
    considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless
    presentation of cumulative evidence.”
    This court has set forth a variety of factors a trial court
    must consider when weighing probative value versus prejudicial
    effect, which include
    [(1)] the strength of the evidence as to the commission of
    the other crime, [(2)] the similarities between the crimes,
    [(3)] the interval of time that has elapsed between the
    crimes, [(4)] the need for the evidence, [(5)] the efficacy
    of alternative proof, and [(6)] the degree to which the
    evidence probably will rouse the jury to overmastering
    hostility.
    Gallagher, 146 Hawaiʻi at 470, 463 P.3d at 1127.           This court
    stated that
    [w]hile these factors provide guidance as to the elements
    to consider, the court’s underlying HRE Rule 403 evaluation
    remains whether the probative value of the evidence of
    prior acts is substantially outweighed by its potential for
    unfair prejudice. Each factor must therefore be considered
    in light of the purpose for which the evidence was
    offered[.]
    Id.
    Here, even if the chair incident evidence had any probative
    value, its probative value was substantially outweighed by its
    potential for unfair prejudice.        The jury could have inferred
    that Feliciano had physically abused the CW in the past by
    pushing her out of a chair and acted in the same manner when he
    struck the CW in the face in the charged offense.            “[G]iven the
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    justifiable stigma attached to domestic abusers in the eyes of
    the public, evidence that [Feliciano] had committed domestic
    abuse was highly likely to ‘rouse the jury to overmastering
    hostility’ towards him.”          Lavoie, 145 Hawaiʻi at 426, 453 P.3d at
    246.
    The potential for unfair prejudice substantially outweighed
    the probative value of the chair incident and, therefore, the
    chair incident evidence should in any event have been excluded
    under HRE Rule 403.         See Clark, 83 Hawaiʻi at 303, 
    926 P.2d at 208
    .
    D.     The family court’s limiting instructions did not mitigate
    the prejudice resulting from the erroneous admission of the
    chair incident evidence
    “A jury is presumed to follow the court’s instructions.”
    State v. Webster, 94 Hawaiʻi 241, 248, 
    11 P.3d 466
    , 473 (2000).
    “However, the ability to cure potential misuse of the evidence
    with a limiting instruction presupposes that the court correctly
    instructed the jury as to the evidence’s proper use.”
    Gallagher, 146 Hawaiʻi at 475, 463 P.3d at 1132.              The family
    court’s first limiting instruction, given before the CW’s
    rebuttal testimony, instructed the jury that the chair incident
    evidence could be considered only on the issue of the
    relationship of the parties.          As the ICA dissent opined,
    however, that instruction was prejudicially insufficient as it
    did not prevent the jury from, for example, concluding that the
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    couple’s relationship was an abusive one and therefore Feliciano
    was more likely to have committed the charged offense.
    Feliciano, mem. op. at 34 (Leonard, J., dissenting).
    The family court then instructed the jury that the chair
    incident evidence could be only considered on the issue of the
    Feliciano’s motive to commit the charged offense.             “[E]vidence
    of motive is admissible to prove the state of mind that prompts
    a person to act in a particular way; an incentive for certain
    volitional activity.       Thus, proof of motive may be relevant in
    tending to refute or support the presumption of innocence.”
    State v. Fetelee, 117 Hawaiʻi 53, 84, 
    175 P.3d 709
    , 740 (2008)
    (cleaned up).
    Here, the alleged “volitional activity” was the alleged
    punch.    The ICA majority did not specify how the chair incident
    led to Feliciano’s motivation for the alleged volitional
    activity.     The issue for the jury was whether Feliciano
    intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly caused physical abuse to
    CW in the early morning hours of January 14, 2017, in violation
    of HRS § 709-906(1), not Feliciano’s underlying motivation for
    doing so.
    “It was incumbent upon the court to issue a limiting
    instruction that properly instructed the jury as to the
    legitimate uses of the prior incident[] after the court admitted
    the misconduct evidence, particularly in light of its great
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    potential for misapplication by the jury.”             Gallagher, 146
    Hawaiʻi at 476, 463 P.3d at 1133.            The family court and the ICA
    majority therefore also erred in allowing the jury to consider
    the chair incident evidence for motive.
    D.     The family court’s error in admitting the chair incident
    evidence was not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt
    Finally, we agree with Feliciano that the improper
    admission of the chair incident evidence was not harmless beyond
    a reasonable doubt.         “In applying the harmless beyond a
    reasonable doubt standard, the court is required to examine the
    record and determine whether there is a reasonable possibility
    that the error complained of might have contributed to the
    conviction.”       146 Hawaiʻi at 481, 463 P.3d at 1138 (cleaned up).
    There was a reasonable possibility that the improper
    admission of the evidence could have contributed to Feliciano’s
    conviction.       The critical issue at trial was whether Feliciano’s
    act in striking the CW in the face was abuse or in self-defense.
    As noted, this case was largely a credibility contest; this was
    not a case “[w]here there is a wealth of overwhelming and
    compelling evidence tending to show the defendant guilty beyond
    a reasonable doubt[.]”         State v. Toyomura, 80 Hawaiʻi 8, 27, 
    904 P.2d 893
    , 912 (1995).         Admission of the evidence could have
    contributed to the conviction and was therefore not harmless
    beyond a reasonable doubt.
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    V.    Conclusion
    Based upon the reasons stated, we vacate the ICA’s
    September 28, 2020 judgment on appeal and the family court’s
    June 2, 2017 judgment, and we remand to the family court for
    further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    William H. Jameson, Jr.,                  /s/ Mark E. Recktenwald
    for petitioner
    /s/ Paula A. Nakayama
    Charles E. Murray III,
    for respondent                            /s/ Sabrina S. McKenna
    /s/ Michael D. Wilson
    /s/ Todd W. Eddins
    31