Cuyuch v. State

667 S.E.2d 85, 284 Ga. 290, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 2984, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 732
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 22, 2008
DocketS07G1789
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 667 S.E.2d 85 (Cuyuch v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuyuch v. State, 667 S.E.2d 85, 284 Ga. 290, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 2984, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 732 (Ga. 2008).

Opinion

SEARS, Chief Justice.

We granted certiorari in this case to consider whether the Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s admission into evidence of statements made to police officers by the victim and one of the victim’s friends. 1 Because the statements were inadmissible under Crawford v. Washington 2 and its progeny, we reverse the Court of Appeals’ judgment.

1. Officer Isin of the Canton Police Department testified that, on September 30, 2001, about 1:30 a.m., he was approached by 16-year-old Juan Pasqual, who was bleeding heavily from a cut on his left arm. Officer Isin asked Pasqual what had happened, and Pasqual told him that his roommate, later identified as the appellant, Leonardo Cuyuch, had cut him. Officer Isin asked Pasqual where he lived and if his roommate was still home. Pasqual told Isin that he lived at 280 Scott Mill Road and that his roommate was still home. Officer Isin testified that the address was only about 300 feet from where he first encountered Pasqual.

At that point, another officer, Sergeant Lummus of the Canton Police Department, arrived on the scene as backup. Officer Isin *291 testified that he stayed with Pasqual while Sergeant Lummus drove toward the address given by Pasqual to see if Cuyuch was still there. Officer Isin testified that, as a medical unit arrived and was treating Pasqual, Sergeant Lummus called Isin and told him that he (Lum-mus) had arrested Cuyuch. Officer Isin then drove Pasqual to his residence “to identify the person.” According to Isin, when they arrived, Cuyuch was handcuffed and sitting in the back of Sergeant Lummus’s car, and Pasqual identified Cuyuch as the person who had cut him.

Sergeant Lummus testified that, as he drove toward the address that Pasqual had given, he saw a man, Francisco Lorenzo, standing on the side of the road yelling that his friend needed help. Sergeant Lummus added that there was a language barrier and that he could not understand who needed help. Lummus then had Lorenzo get in his car and show him where he wanted to go. Lorenzo took him to 280 Scott Mill Road. Officer Lummus added that, when they arrived at the residence, “whatever happened had already happened prior to [his] arrival,” that Cuyuch was sitting on a sofa, that another person was sitting in a chair across from Cuyuch, and that the two of them were watching television. Officer Lummus also testified that, during his ensuing investigation, the person sitting across from Cuyuch did not appear to be afraid of Cuyuch and that Cuyuch never tried to leave the premises.

Once Sergeant Lummus and Lorenzo went into the house, Lorenzo repeated that his friend needed help and pointed to Cuyuch. Because Cuyuch did not appear to need help, Lummus contacted a translator in the hope of better understanding what Lorenzo was trying to communicate. Sergeant Lummus testified that he asked the translator to help Lorenzo explain who needed help. Sergeant Lummus added that, after the translator spoke to Lorenzo, the translator told Lummus that Lorenzo said that “his friend Pasqual” was the one who needed help, that “he had been badly cut,” and that “the person sitting on the couch [i.e., Cuyuch] was the person who had cut him.” The translator also told Sergeant Lummus that Lorenzo knew where the weapon was thrown, and Lummus had Lorenzo show him where the weapon was. Sergeant Lummus recovered the weapon, a carpenter’s knife, in the yard.

Pasqual and Lorenzo apparently could not be located at the time of trial and did not testify. Similarly, the translator did not testify. Based on the foregoing evidence, Cuyuch was convicted of aggravated battery. On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed.

2. Under Crawford v. Washington, “the admission of out-of-court statements that are testimonial in nature violates the Confrontation Clause unless the declarant is unavailable and the defendant *292 had a prior opportunity for cross-examination.” 3 Statements made by witnesses to police officers investigating a crime are testimonial in nature “when the primary purpose” of the statements is “to establish or prove past events potentially relevant to later criminal prosecution.” 4 Such testimonial statements may not be admitted into evidence unless the requirements of Crawford are satisfied. 5 On the other hand, however, statements made by witnesses to questions of investigating officers are nontestimonial when they are made primarily “to enable police assistance to meet an ongoing emergency.” 6 Such nontestimonial out-of-court statements are admissible if they meet one of this State’s hearsay exceptions. 7 Moreover, as the Supreme Court emphasized in Davis, when police questioning of a witness exists, “it is in the final analysis the declarant’s statements, not the interrogator’s questions, that the Confrontation Clause requires us to evaluate.” 8

An examination of the Supreme Court’s application of these principles to Davis and its companion case, Hammon v. Indiana, is useful to resolving the present case. In Davis, a woman, Michelle McCottry, called 911 and described an ongoing emergency to the 911 operator, telling the operator that “he” was hitting her and “jumpin’ on” her. In response to a question by the operator, the caller gave the operator the perpetrator’s name, Adrian Davis, and then told the operator that he had run out the door and left in a car. 9

In Hammon, the police responded to a report of domestic abuse and found Ms. Hammon on the front porch of her home. She told the officer that there was nothing wrong, but when the police entered the house (with Ms. Hammon’s permission), they saw broken glass on the floor and a damaged gas heating unit. Mr. Hammon, who was in the kitchen, told the officers that he and his wife had been in an argument but that he had not physically assaulted her. Upon questioning by one of the officers, however, Ms. Hammon stated that *293 Mr. Hammon had broken the furnace, hit her in the chest, and thrown her onto the broken glass. 10

In Davis, the Court concluded that the questions by the 911 operator had not produced testimonial statements. The Court reasoned that statements made during an interrogation that established “facts of a past crime, in order to identify (or provide evidence to convict) the perpetrator” would be testimonial. 11

The product of such interrogation, whether reduced to a writing signed by the declarant or embedded in the memory (and perhaps notes) of the interrogating officer, is testimonial. It is, in the terms of the 1828 American dictionary quoted in Crawford,

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Bluebook (online)
667 S.E.2d 85, 284 Ga. 290, 2008 Fulton County D. Rep. 2984, 2008 Ga. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuyuch-v-state-ga-2008.