JAMES E. EVANS v. STATE OF FLORIDA , 248 So. 3d 155 ( 2018 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    JAMES E. EVANS,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D16-3790
    [June 6, 2018]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach  County;    Glenn     D.   Kelley,    Judge;   L.T.    Case    No.
    502014CF001788AXXXXMB.
    Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, and Erika Follmer, Assistant
    Public Defender, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
    Pamela Jo Bondi, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Don M. Rogers,
    Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
    WARNER, J.
    Appellant challenges his convictions for sexual battery and burglary
    with an assault. He contends that the court erred in multiple rulings. We
    affirm as to all issues, but address only two. First, the court admitted a
    911 call from the victim as an excited utterance. Appellant contends that
    the time between the incident and the call was sufficient to allow time for
    reflection, so that the court abused its discretion in admitting the call.
    Considering all the circumstances of the event, the trial court properly
    admitted the call. Second, appellant claims that the court erred in denying
    his motion for mistrial after an outburst by the victim. This too is a
    discretionary call by the court, and the court did not abuse that discretion.
    The State charged the defendant with several counts of sexual battery
    and burglary with an assault of a seventy-seven-year-old woman.
    Appellant contended that their contact was entirely consensual.
    At trial, the victim, testified that she lived alone in a senior citizens
    complex. On the night of the incident, she awoke to see the silhouette of
    a figure in her doorway. The person grabbed her and said, “[I]t’s going to
    be okay, don’t worry.” He pushed her back into her bedroom and she
    realized he was a stranger. He got on top of her on her bed. She was
    scared and thought she was going to die. The man told her he was a gentle
    man and would not hurt her. Trying to act calm, she asked him to have a
    glass of wine and talk, but he kept pushing her down. He then sexually
    assaulted her in multiple ways. She then asked for some water, and they
    both got up and went to the kitchen. She suggested that they sit in the
    living room and talk, because she wanted to gain his confidence. When
    they went in the living room, she could see his face and features. He also
    digitally penetrated her while in the living room. She told him she wasn’t
    angry with him. They talked for a while, and then she gave him her
    business card with her cell phone number on it. She was trying to connect
    with him on a human level, as she knew she couldn’t fight him.
    After a while, he thought she was tired, and he decided to leave. He
    started to get dressed and realized he left his cigarettes in her bedroom.
    They went back to find them. As she was searching, she stepped on
    something by her bed. It was a knife with a fancy handle in a sheath. The
    man said, “[T]hat’s for my protection.” Then he took the knife. They
    walked into the kitchen, and he hugged her. He said he liked her and
    wanted to get to know her better. He said he was sorry, that this wasn’t
    the way to start a relationship. She let him think she was ok with that.
    Then he left through the front door.
    She immediately locked the door. She stood there a few seconds or
    minutes, frozen, not believing what had just happened. Then she called
    her son and told him she had been raped. The son worked about three
    and a half miles away, and he was there within fifteen minutes. When he
    arrived, he called 911, and the victim reported the incident. Police came
    and interviewed her, collecting evidence.
    The next day a person, whom the victim recognized as her attacker,
    called her cell phone. He called himself “Thomas” and said he wanted to
    come over. She said “no,” but she recognized his voice. She told police
    about the call. That same person called her again. She also found a pack
    of Marlboro cigarettes in her apartment the next day. She identified
    appellant in court as her attacker.
    On cross-examination, defense counsel questioned the victim
    extensively about the incident, suggesting that she had invited appellant
    into her home and had initiated sexual contact. Defense counsel
    impeached her with statements she made to the police, including that she
    told the police right after the incident that she asked him to call her the
    2
    next day. Counsel questioned her on details, such as the knife and its
    fancy handle, noting that she had not mentioned the handle to the police
    or in her deposition. She also had not mentioned to the police that she
    had seen appellant sometime before the incident sitting on a bench near
    the victim’s apartment complex. Nor had she mentioned in any of her prior
    statements that appellant had said he was a gentle man or some other
    details that she revealed on direct examination. The victim grew more and
    more upset by the tenor of the questions, stating that counsel was making
    her feel like the guilty one. At one point, she told counsel, “[T]his is
    ridiculous. I am telling you the honest to God truth.” Counsel objected
    that the victim’s answers were non-responsive, at which point the court
    removed the jury and sought to calm things down, telling the victim that
    the court understood that she was very emotional. The victim claimed
    counsel was asking inconsequential questions and that she was trying to
    be very honest. The court then took a break.
    When court reconvened, cross-examination continued.             Defense
    counsel suggested to the victim that the reason that she had not given
    some information to the police was that she didn’t want to lie to them, as
    she had in fact invited appellant to her home earlier that day. Defense
    counsel asked whether she was the one who had initiated sexual contact,
    to which the victim asked why defense counsel was accusing her, as it was
    not true. Defense counsel then asked if, when she called her son, it was
    because she was embarrassed that someone might have seen the appellant
    in her apartment. The victim responded, “Oh no. I swear on my son’s soul
    that everything you are saying is a lie. . . . Unbelievable. Oh, my God.”
    Defense counsel moved to strike her response and then moved for a
    mistrial based upon the victim’s outbursts. The court denied the mistrial,
    but it did instruct the jury to disregard the victim’s comments.
    Several police officers testified as part of the State’s case. One, who
    arrived after the 911 call, found the victim in a state of shock or disbelief.
    She was shaking and crying on and off. A nurse testified to the victim’s
    sexual assault examination, and DNA evidence linked appellant to the
    crime.
    By matching the phone number of the person who called the victim the
    day after the assault, the police located appellant and created a photo line-
    up. The victim selected appellant’s picture as similar, although she
    thought he looked younger in the photo. Appellant was eventually arrested
    for the crimes.
    At the end of the State’s case, the 911 tape was played for the jury. In
    it the victim told the dispatcher that she had been raped about twenty
    3
    minutes earlier. She had called her son who had come over. She was
    concerned that the man may still be in the area. During the call, the victim
    can be heard crying. She said the man had a knife. She appeared to be
    in shock. After the 911 call was played, the State rested.
    In his defense, appellant admitted that he was in the victim’s home, but
    maintained that their encounter, including the sexual aspects, was
    consensual. The victim had flirted with him earlier and invited him to her
    residence. She initiated the sexual relations, and after it was over, she
    gave him her business card with her cell phone number on it. Until a
    police interview a few weeks later, he had no reason to believe that the
    encounter was not consensual.
    Appellant was convicted as charged of burglary of a structure with
    assault or battery, as well as three counts of sexual battery while carrying,
    displaying, threatening, or attempting to use a weapon, for each sexual
    battery charge. He was sentenced to concurrent terms of twenty-five years
    for each count. He now appeals.
    Appellant first claims that the court erred in admitting the 911 tape
    because it did not meet the excited utterance exception of section
    90.803(2), Florida Statutes (2013), which allows admission of “[a]
    statement or excited utterance relating to a startling event or condition
    made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement caused by
    the event or condition.” He argues that because the call was made twenty
    or thirty minutes after the offense, the victim had sufficient time to engage
    in reflective thought; thus, her statement could not qualify as an excited
    utterance.
    Stoll v. State, 
    762 So. 2d 870
    , 873 (Fla. 2000), announced that three
    requirements must be met before a court can admit an excited utterance:
    1) an event startling enough to cause nervous excitement; 2) the statement
    was made without time to contrive; 3) the statement was made while the
    person was still under the stress of the startling event. Appellant concedes
    that the incident would qualify as startling enough to cause nervous
    excitement; however, he contends that the interval between the event and
    the 911 call was long enough to allow time to contrive. As stated in Stoll,
    If “the time interval between the event and the statement is
    long enough to permit reflective thought, the statement will be
    excluded in the absence of some proof that the declarant did
    not in fact engage in a reflective thought process.” [citing State
    v. Jano, 
    524 So. 2d 660
    , 662 (Fla. 1988)] (quoting Edward W.
    4
    Clearly, McCormick on Evidence, § 297 at 856 (3d ed.1984)); .
    ...
    Id.    (alteration added).  However, there is no bright-line rule for
    determining whether too much time has passed for the exception to apply.
    Blandenburg v. State, 
    890 So. 2d 267
    , 270 (Fla. 1st DCA 2004).
    Blandenburg points out that the common thread running through the
    cases that find the statement fits within the exception, even though time
    passed between the event and the statement, “is that at the time of the
    statement, the declarants were either ‘hysterical,’ severely injured, or
    subject to some other extreme emotional state sufficient to prevent
    reflective thought.” 
    Id.
    In Akien v. State, 
    44 So. 3d 152
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2010), a case somewhat
    similar to this case, the State sought to admit, over a defense objection
    that it did not constitute an excited utterance, a 911 call from a victim.
    There, a seventeen-year-old victim had gone to bed and awakened to find
    a man with his hand around her neck. 
    Id. at 153
    . He threatened to kill
    her if she didn’t stop fighting. 
    Id.
     He covered her head with a blanket,
    took her clothes off, and raped her for thirty to forty-five minutes. 
    Id.
     He
    ordered her to take a shower, took a nude photo of her, and ordered her
    to write a note stating that the sex was consensual. 
    Id.
     He removed the
    bed sheets, taking the victim’s keys and asking for her cell phone number
    before he left. Five minutes after he left, she called her mother, who
    convinced her to call the police. 
    Id.
     At trial, the defendant argued that too
    much time had passed between the assault and the 911 call, so that the
    victim could have had reflective thought. 
    Id. at 154
    . The trial court ruled
    the victim’s 911 call qualified as an excited utterance because the call was
    still made under the stress of the event. 
    Id.
     This court agreed. The
    recording of the 911 call did not refute the contention that the victim was
    still under the stress of the rape. 
    Id. at 155
    .
    Similarly, in this case, the victim was an elderly woman. Although she
    called her son first, and waited until he arrived in order to call the police,
    the 911 call was made only about twenty minutes after the appellant left
    her apartment. During the call, she was crying and in shock. Further, an
    officer who came to the scene also described the victim as in shock. The
    victim sounded stunned and extremely concerned that she was still in
    danger. The court acted within its discretion in admitting the tape. 1
    1  Moreover, it appears that the 911 call could have been admissible as non-
    hearsay under section 90.801(2)(b), Florida Statues, as the victim/declarant
    testified at the trial and was subject to cross-examination regarding her
    statements. The 911 call was consistent with her testimony and “offered to rebut
    5
    As a second ground for reversal, appellant argues that the court erred
    in denying his motion for mistrial after the outburst by the victim. A ruling
    on a motion for mistrial is within the trial court’s discretion. “A mistrial is
    appropriate only where the error is so prejudicial as to vitiate the entire
    trial.” Hamilton v. State, 
    703 So. 2d 1038
    , 1041 (Fla. 1997).
    When the appellate court “cannot glean from the record how intense a
    witness’s outburst was[,]” it should defer to the trial court’s judgments and
    rulings. See Thomas v. State, 
    748 So. 2d 970
    , 980 (Fla. 1999). In Thomas,
    the defendant was charged with first-degree murder along with his co-
    defendant. The State asked the murder victim’s companion to identify the
    defendants at trial by standing next to them. 
    Id.
     At that point she suffered
    an emotional breakdown. 
    Id.
     The Florida Supreme Court ruled that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying a mistrial. 
    Id.
     The court
    noted that an appellate court should defer to the trial court’s judgment
    when it cannot tell from the record how intense the witness’s outburst
    was. In Thomas, after the breakdown, the judge stopped the trial, removed
    the jury, and did not resume until the companion had gathered herself
    completely. 
    Id.
    Unlike Thomas, appellant contends that the victim’s emotional
    outburst is apparent on the record. He relies on Colon v. State, 
    191 So. 3d 985
    , 986 (Fla. 2d DCA 2016). There, in a capital sexual battery case,
    the mother of a four-year-old child who had been sexually battered was
    testifying. When the mother was shown a picture of the child’s vaginal
    injuries, she stated that she needed to throw up, and then vomited into a
    trash can. 
    Id.
     The mother was visibly upset and cried throughout her
    testimony. 
    Id.
     The trial court denied a motion for mistrial. The appellate
    court reversed because the record clearly showed the severity and intensity
    of the mother’s reaction to the photograph. 
    Id.
     Further, the defense had
    sought to have the photo admitted through a physician, in order to avoid
    triggering the mother to have an emotional reaction, as had occurred when
    she viewed the photo at her deposition. 
    Id.
     The appellate court reversed
    because of the lack of justification for the state’s chosen trial tactic of
    having the mother identify the photo. The mother’s response had been a
    “visceral” response, not simply an emotional response, and the court was
    on notice that it was probable that the mother would have an emotional
    outburst if the court allowed the state to show her the picture. 
    Id.
     at 986-
    87.
    an express or implied charge against the declarant of improper influence, motive,
    or recent fabrication,” as defense counsel suggested quite pointedly that the
    victim was lying about the encounter.
    6
    Colon is unlike the present case, where the victim chastised the defense
    attorney for suggesting that she was lying and for asking questions which
    were irrelevant. The record in the present case does not indicate as
    extreme a response as in Colon. The victim merely said things such as
    “Oh my God” and “unbelievable” to indicate that she didn’t understand
    why the defense would suggest that she was lying. To the contrary, it
    appears that after the court ordered a recess, the victim calmed herself,
    but after the recess ended, defense counsel commenced even more pointed
    questioning, challenging the victim. Unlike either Colon or Thomas, the
    victim’s emotional outburst appears to have been directed at her
    indignation at being accused of lying. While the defense should be entitled
    to question the victim’s credibility, it is not surprising that she reacted
    with an emotional outburst. We cannot gauge the intensity of the
    outburst, as it appears that it was limited to a few words. On this record,
    we must defer to the trial court’s superior vantage point at trial, and we
    hold that the court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for
    mistrial. See Thomas, 
    748 So. 2d at 980
    .
    We affirm, without further comment the remaining issues raised
    because they do not present any error or abuse of discretion and because
    all of them are harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.
    For the foregoing reasons, we affirm appellant’s convictions and
    sentences.
    Affirmed.
    CIKLIN and KLINGENSMITH, JJ., concur.
    *         *        *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    7