Brooke E. Rojas v. The People of the State of Colorado

2022 CO 8
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 21, 2022
Docket20SC399
StatusPublished
Cited by1,340 cases

This text of 2022 CO 8 (Brooke E. Rojas v. The People of the State of Colorado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brooke E. Rojas v. The People of the State of Colorado, 2022 CO 8 (Colo. 2022).

Opinion

Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Case No. 15CA126

Attorneys for Petitioner: Megan A. Ring, Public Defender Rachel K. Mercer, Deputy Public Defender.

Attorneys for Respondent: Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General Paul Koehler, Assistant Attorney General.

JUSTICE HOOD delivered the Opinion of the Court, in which JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ, JUSTICE GABRIEL, JUSTICE HART, and JUSTICE SAMOUR joined.

CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT, joined by JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER, concurred in the judgment only.

OPINION 3

HOOD, JUSTICE.

¶1 Today, we discard a troublesome relic from Colorado's common law of evidence: the res gestae doctrine.

¶2 Although it has morphed over time, the res gestae doctrine these days is often used as a shortcut for admitting character evidence about criminal defendants. While we seek to ensure that defendants are tried for the crimes with which they've been charged and not for seeming to have a propensity to engage in criminal conduct, "[c]riminal occurrences do not always take place on a sterile stage." People v. Lobato, 530 P.2d 493, 496 (Colo. 1975). So, res gestae evidence-septic though it sometimes may be-has been admitted because it is "linked in time and circumstances to the charged crime" or "is necessary to complete the story of the crime for the jury." Zapata v. People, 2018 CO 82, ¶ 58, 428 P.3d 517, 530 (quoting People v. Skufca, 176 P.3d 83, 86 (Colo. 2008)); People v. Quintana, 882 P.2d 1366, 1373 (Colo. 1994). In short, we have treated res gestae evidence, in various ways, as intrinsic to the charged offenses and therefore not subject to the rules limiting the admissibility of extrinsic, uncharged misconduct evidence. But because res gestae is so ill-defined, such uncharged misconduct evidence too often dodges the rules and slips into cases without the requisite scrutiny.

¶3 It is time for us to bury res gestae. This court's adoption of the Colorado Rules of Evidence more than four decades ago should have rendered the res gestae doctrine obsolete. Under the Rules, if evidence is probative of a material fact, then it is relevant and presumptively admissible. CRE 401, 402.

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Bluebook (online)
2022 CO 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brooke-e-rojas-v-the-people-of-the-state-of-colorado-colo-2022.