Ryan v. State

899 P.2d 1371, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1995 WL 414011
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedJuly 14, 1995
DocketA-5181, A-5251
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 899 P.2d 1371 (Ryan v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ryan v. State, 899 P.2d 1371, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1995 WL 414011 (Ala. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

John F. Ryan and Jerome Trigg, III, appeal their convictions for second-degree sexual assault, AS 11.41.420(a). The victim of the assault, M.K., committed suicide a few hours before she was scheduled to testify at grand jury. The State nevertheless secured indictments against Ryan and Trigg, in large measure through the testimony of Nome Police Officer Kevin Michels. Officer Michels described the accounts of the assault that M.K. had given him in two separate interviews.

Before trial, Ryan and Trigg challenged the admissibility of this hearsay evidence; they argued that their indictments should be thrown out, and they asked the superior court to preclude the State from presenting this evidence at trial. However, Superior Court Judge Michael I. Jeffery ruled that M.K.’s statements to the police were admissible under Alaska Evidence Rule 804(b)(5), one of Alaska’s two “residual” hearsay exceptions.

Following Judge Jeffery’s decision that M.K.’s police interviews were admissible against the defendants, Ryan entered a Co-oksey plea to the sexual assault charge, preserving this evidentiary issue for appeal. Cooksey v. State, 524 P.2d 1251, 1255-57 (Alaska 1974). As part of the plea bargain, Ryan agreed to testify against Trigg. Trigg went to trial and was convicted.

Now, Ryan and Trigg renew their challenges to the admission of M.K.’s statements to the police. As will be explained below, we dismiss Ryan’s appeal for lack of jurisdiction. However, in Trigg’s appeal, we hold that M.K.’s statements were inadmissible hearsay.

The Hearsay Rule and the Role of the Residual Exceptions Codified in Alaska Evidence Rules 803(23) and 804(b)(5)

The hearsay rule prohibits a witness from testifying about statements made by someone else if this testimony is being offered to prove that what the other person asserted is true. See Alaska Evidence Rule 801(a)-(c). In the present case, a police officer was permitted to testify that (1) M.K. said she had been sexually assaulted by two men and (2) later, in a line-up, M.K. identified these men as Ryan and Trigg. This testimony was hearsay. Unless the testimony fell within an exception to the hearsay rule, it could not be used against Ryan or Trigg (over their objection).

“The theory of the hearsay rule is that the many possible deficiencies, suppressions, [and other] sources of error and untrustwor-thiness[ ] which lie underneath the ... untested assertion of a witness [ ] may be best brought to light and exposed by the test of cross-examination.” John H. Wigmore, Evidence (Ch adbourn rev’n 1974), § 1362, Vol. 5, p. 3. Or, as stated by Chief Judge Kent in Coleman v. Southwick, 9 Johns. 45, 50 (N.Y.1812),

Hearsay testimony is from the very nature of it attended with ... doubts and diffieulties[J A person who relates a hearsay [account] is not obliged to enter into any particulars, to answer any questions, to solve any difficulties, to reconcile any contradictions, to explain any obscurities, [or] to remove any ambiguities; he entrenches himself in the simple assertion that he was told so, and leaves the burden [of explanation] entirely on his dead or absent author.

(Quoted in Wigmore, § 1362, Vol. 5, pp. 6-7.)

By definition, when hearsay testimony is introduced, the person who actually made the hearsay statements is not subjected to adverse questioning — questioning that might reveal potential inaccuracies in the speaker’s perception of the events being described, or that might reveal the speaker’s potential motives to misrepresent or color his or her description of what happened. For this reason, the law distrusts hearsay, allowing it only when the circumstances of the utterance and/or the motivation of the speaker affirmatively demonstrate good reason to credit the out-of-court statement.

*1374 Various exceptions to the hearsay rule are codified in Alaska Evidence Rules 801(d), 803, and 804. 1 For the most part, these codified exceptions either come directly from the common law or are variations on the exceptions recognized at common law. As the Alaska Supreme Court has observed,

The traditional exceptions to the hearsay rule form two general classes: (1) those statements which are so inherently rehable that cross-examination is thought unnecessary (Rule 803); and (2) those statements which are sufficiently rehable to be admitted in hght of their great evidentiary value when the declarant is unavailable (Rule 804).

Matter of A.S.W., 834 P.2d 801, 804 (Alaska 1992).

In addition to these traditional exceptions, both Evidence Rule 803 and Evidence Rule 804(b) contain “residual” clauses that authorize courts to allow hearsay testimony even when it does not conform to any other hsted exception. These two residual clauses, Evidence Rules 803(23) and 804(b)(5), are founded on the recognition

that there are certain exceptional circumstances where evidence which is found by a court to have guarantees of trustworthiness equivalent to or exceeding the guarantees reflected by the presently limited exceptions, and to have a high degree of probativeness and necessity could properly be admissible.

Commentary to Alaska Evidence Rule 803(23), first paragraph (quoting the report issued by the United States Senate Committee on the Judiciary concerning the corresponding provisions of the Federal Rules of Evidence). However, even though the Alaska Supreme Court included these residual clauses in Evidence Rules 803 and 804(b), the court has cautioned trial judges that the residual exceptions to the hearsay rule “are to be used only on rare occasions”. A.S.W., 834 P.2d at 804. Accord, Brandon v. State, 778 P.2d 221, 227 (Alaska App.1989) (“From the commentary, it appears that it was anticipated that the residual exceptions were to be used rarely.”)

The residual hearsay exception at issue in this case, Evidence Rule 804(b)(5), reads (in pertinent part):

(b) Hearsay Exceptions. The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule if the declarant is unavailable as a witness:
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(5) Other Exceptions. A statement not specifically covered by any of the foregoing exceptions but having equivalent circumstantial guarantees of trustworthiness, if the court determines that (A) the statement is offered as evidence of a material fact; (B) the statement is more probative on the point for which it is offered than any other evidence which the proponent can procure through reasonable efforts; and (C) the general purposes of these rules and the interests of justice will best be served by admission of the statement into evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
899 P.2d 1371, 1995 Alas. App. LEXIS 32, 1995 WL 414011, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ryan-v-state-alaskactapp-1995.