Jones v. Currens

289 S.W.3d 506, 104 Ark. App. 187, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 860
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 17, 2008
DocketCA 08-136
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 S.W.3d 506 (Jones v. Currens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Currens, 289 S.W.3d 506, 104 Ark. App. 187, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 860 (Ark. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

D.P. Marshall Jr., Judge.

This case stems from an accident involving a tractor-trailer driven by Jeffery Currens and a pick-up truck driven by Michael Jones. The wreck occurred in a curve of State Highway 165 near Dumas around 8:00 one morning. Jones was killed. The administrator of his estate brought this case against Currens and M.G. Littlejohn, who owned the tractor-trailer and employed Currens.

How the accident happened was much disputed. As the circuit court put it, the case “boils down to who was on the proper side of the road.” The physical evidence, everyone agreed, established the vehicles’ point of impact on the shoulder of Jones’s lane. Jones’s theory of the case was that Currens, impaired after a night of partying and drugs, mishandled the curve and caused the collision. Currens and Littlejohn’s theory was that Jones’s inattention, caused in part by drug use, led to the wreck. They argued that Jones’s vehicle strayed into Currens’s lane in the curve, and then both vehicles moved into Jones’s lane trying to avoid one another and collided. Accident reconstruction experts testified for both sides. After two days of trial, the jury returned a nine-person verdict for Currens and Littlejohn. The signing jurors wrote “fifty/fifty shared liability” on the verdict form. Jones appeals, seeking a new trial. He contends that the circuit court abused its discretion on four evidentiary issues. Currens and Littlejohn filed, but abandoned, a cross-appeal.

We are persuaded by Jones’s argument that the circuit court abused its discretion, and prejudiced Jones’s case, by admitting hearsay testimony from State Trooper Kelvin Fells about Currens’s statements to him at the accident scene. The precise legal issue is whether an adequate foundation existed for the court’s allowing this hearsay under the excited-utterance exception. It did not.

I.

Trooper Fells investigated the collision. After brief testimony from Jones’s employer, Jones called Fells as his second witness in his case-in-chief. Fells arrived at the scene approximately twenty minutes after the wreck. He testified that he spoke with Currens as soon as he got there. He also gave Currens a blank statement to fill out. Fells spent about ninety minutes at the scene studying the physical evidence and gathering information. He continued his investigation by interviewing some witnesses later.

In his written statement at the scene to Trooper Fells, Currens wrote:

I was proceeding south on 165 when north bound lane driver came in to my lane in curve. The driver looked up and pulled to the left to avoid hitting me and I pulled to the left to avoid hitting him and head on collision happen.

The time on the copy of Currens’s statement in the record is not entirely legible. Jones reads it as “9:[5]0.” Currens and Litdejohn take issue with that reading in passing, but the statement’s particular time was not developed below.

Fells is certified in accident reconstruction. And he prepared a diagram showing Jones’s vehicle straying into Currens’s lane and then recrossing the center line into his (Jones’s) own lane to the point of impact. Neither the diagram nor Currens’s statement about what happened were mentioned during Jones’s direct examination of Trooper Fells.

During cross-examination, Currens sought to introduce the Trooper’s diagram. Jones objected. Before trial, he had attacked the diagram’s hearsay basis in Currens’s statement. The circuit court sustained the objection. The court then admitted a redacted version of the diagram, which does not show Jones’s vehicle ever leaving his own lane. Jones argues now that the court abused its discretion by admitting the diagram because of its hearsay roots in Currens’s statement. We disagree. The circuit court ruled forjones on this issue, thus the redacted version of the Trooper’s diagram. No abuse of discretion occurred in admitting that version of the diagram, which was silent about Jones’s possible lane change and thus worked no prejudice. Turner v. N. W. Ark. Neurosurgery Clinic, P.A., 84 Ark. App. 93, 100-04, 133 S.W.3d 417, 421-23 (2003).

When it came to Currens’s statement to Trooper Fells at the scene, however, the circuit court handled the evidentiary issue differently. Currens sought to explore this issue on cross-examination too. Jones objected, citing the hearsay nature of Currens’s statement. Currens responded that it was admissible under the excited-utterance exception. Another witness had testified on deposition that Currens was “distraught” immediately after the accident. (This witness gave the same testimony later in the trial.) Currens knew Jones. And Currens’s statement was made at the accident scene, in the presence of the wrecked vehicles and Jones’s body.

Trooper Fells’s testimony about Currens’s mental and emotional state was mixed. We quote this testimony in detail. Cur-rens’s lawyer has the Trooper on cross-examination.

Q. When you saw Mr. Currens at the scene and you got the statement from him, was he excited? What was his state of mind?
A. Shock. Like he was in shock. I mean he was sad about the situation.
Q. Was he distraught, hysterical?
A. No, he was — Fie talked to me calm. It was his facial expression. Several times he stated to me that “that was my friend.” Fie was sad at the situation.
Q. Did he seem like he was at least under the influence of
[Jones’s Counsel]: I object, Your Honor.
The Court: On what basis, Mr. Gibson?
[Jones’s Counsel]: He’s already testified about alcohol and further stated he wasn’t qualified to detect drug intoxication.
The Court: Well, he’s asking a broader question. I’m going to let him go. He’s got him on cross. He wants to know if he appeared under the influence of anything.
[Currens’s Counsel]: Right. Thank you.
Q. Did he seem to be excited or under the influence of emotion, I guess is my question?
A. No, sir.
Q. Was he calm, sedate or —
A. I believe, like I said, he wasn’t — He was calm and talked to me but, you know, he was just sad. He was sad and kind of a bit nervous. He was nervous.
Q. I believe you said earlier that he was stunned, I believe is what you said, or not?
A. He was shaken up.

When did Currens make his statement to Trooper Fells about Jones being in the wrong lane? The record before the circuit court, and us, is murky on this point. Currens could have told the Trooper what happened when Fells arrived and they spoke, some twenty minutes after the accident.

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Related

Hensley v. State
560 S.W.3d 834 (Court of Appeals of Arkansas, 2018)

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Bluebook (online)
289 S.W.3d 506, 104 Ark. App. 187, 2008 Ark. App. LEXIS 860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-currens-arkctapp-2008.