State v. Biel

2021 UT 8, 484 P.3d 1172
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 2021
DocketCase No. 20191055
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2021 UT 8 (State v. Biel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Biel, 2021 UT 8, 484 P.3d 1172 (Utah 2021).

Opinion

2021 UT 8

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

STATE OF UTAH, Petitioner, v. KOAK PAL BIEL Respondent.

No. 20191055 Heard November 9, 2020 Filed April 1, 2021

On Appeal of Interlocutory Order

Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable James T. Blanch No. 181908113

Attorneys: Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., John J. Nielsen, Asst. Solic. Gen., Salt Lake City, for petitioner Sarah J. Carlquist, Salt Lake City, for respondent

JUSTICE PEARCE authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE, JUSTICE HIMONAS, and JUSTICE PETERSEN joined.

JUSTICE PEARCE, opinion of the Court:

INTRODUCTION ¶1 One night while watching television in her home, Jawnie Wey was struck and killed by a bullet meant for her nephew. A gunman sitting in a Mercedes outside of her home fired the fatal shot. Four people were in the Mercedes that night. When questioned, two of them identified Koak Biel as the gunman. Both witnesses later recanted. The State wanted to call the two recanting witnesses to testify. If they stuck with the revised versions of their accounts, the State planned to impeach them with the first version of their story: Biel pulled the trigger. STATE v. BIEL Opinion of the Court ¶2 Biel objected. He argued that the Utah Rules of Evidence do not permit the State to call a witness for the purpose of eliciting testimony harmful to the State’s case with the hope of then impeaching that witness with inconsistent, unsworn statements. The district court agreed with Biel and entered an order preventing the State from calling the witnesses. The State seeks interlocutory review of that order. We reverse the district court. BACKGROUND ¶3 The night she was killed, Jawnie Wey was watching television in her Taylorsville home, her back to a bay window.1 Wey’s thirteen- year-old daughter was seated next to her. Seven shots were fired at her home. One shot struck Wey in the back of her head. Wey’s daughter held a towel to her mother’s head to stop the bleeding, but Wey died a few days later. The bullet that took Wey’s life was intended for her nephew, Luis Cruz. ¶4 The police soon arrived on the scene. Witnesses reported that a Mercedes had circled the neighborhood, stopped, and that shots had been fired from the car. The police eventually identified the car’s four occupants: Euziel De La Torre, Giek Kuajian,2 Simon Mina,3 and Koak Biel. Officers interviewed each of them. ¶5 When questioned, De La Torre admitted he drove to the house with the others. He said Kuajian was in the front passenger seat. Mina sat behind Kuajian in the passenger-side rear seat. And Biel was in the driver-side rear seat behind De La Torre. De La Torre said that the shots fired at the house came from behind him. When the police spoke with Kuajian and Mina, they corroborated De La Torre’s story.

1 We recite these facts to explain the district court’s ruling. But we emphasize that no trial has occurred, and these allegations remain allegations. 2 This last name is spelled differently in different parts of the record. Biel spelled it “Kuajeian” during a police interview, and one of the prosecutors once spelled it “Kuajiane.” We use the spelling that is most common in the record and the one the parties used in their briefs. 3 Mina is sometimes spelled “Mena” in the record. We use “Mina” because that is the spelling used on the witness statement signed by Simon Mina. This is also the spelling the parties use in the briefing.

2 Cite as: 2021 UT 8 Opinion of the Court ¶6 The police then questioned Biel. Biel confirmed that he had been sitting behind the driver. But Biel denied firing the shots. Biel claimed that De La Torre stopped the car and shot the gun himself. At the end of the interview, the officers took Biel into custody. ¶7 Several months later, the police asked Mina to sign a witness statement. Mina demurred. He was willing to confirm that he was with De La Torre, Kuajian, and Biel. He was also willing to confirm that they were in a black Mercedes. But he refused to initial two lines of the pre-prepared statement: the lines that said Biel fired the shots that killed Wey. He wrote on the back of the form, “[Biel] had nothing to do with it,” and initialed that instead. ¶8 Kuajian signed a witness statement implicating Biel as the gunman. But Kuajian later recanted. In a conversation with defense counsel, Kuajian said De La Torre was the shooter. He said that he initially implicated Biel under the duress of De La Torre’s threats. ¶9 At a pretrial hearing, the State conceded it could not proceed against Biel unless it could admit Kuajian’s and Mina’s initial statements. The State lodged a motion in limine to admit the unsworn statements Kuajian and Mina made to officers shortly after the shooting in which they identified Biel as the person who fired the shots. ¶10 The district court ruled from the bench. In the course of denying the motion in limine, the district court described the inquiry: The question now is, given, sort of, what we know about what the witnesses are now saying, whether or not the State can call the witnesses, even though there is reason to believe that they will get on the stand and offer testimony that is harmful to the State’s case against Mr. Biel in order to question them with the statements that they previously made to the police, these prior inconsistent statements. And the district court identified two rules of evidence that it believed answered that question: rule 607 and rule 801(d)(1)(A). ¶11 Utah Rule of Evidence 607 states: “Any party, including the party that called the witness, may attack the witness’s credibility.”4

4 Rule 607, which is identical to its federal counterpart, repealed the common-law voucher rule. R. COLLIN MANGRUM & DEE BENSON, MANGRUM & BENSON ON UTAH EVIDENCE, 1 UTAH PRAC. Rule 607, Westlaw (updated Nov. 2020). Under the voucher rule, a party could (continued . . .) 3 STATE v. BIEL Opinion of the Court UTAH R. EVID. 607. Applying the rule, the State argued that Kuajian and Mina “have changed their story.” Therefore, the State argued, “[i]t is unknown what [Kuajian and Mina] will say when they take the witness stand and swear to tell the truth,” but “[i]f they take the stand and testify contrary to their original statements, the plain language of rule 607 allows the State to impeach them with their prior inconsistent statements.” ¶12 The State also argued that “the plain language of rule 801(d)(1)(A) allows [Kuajian’s and Mina’s] prior inconsistent statements to come in, not only as impeachment evidence, but also as substantive evidence as well.” Rule 801 defines and regulates hearsay.5 The rule provides that a witness’s prior inconsistent statement does not constitute hearsay when the witness “testifies and is subject to cross-examination about [that] prior statement.” UTAH R. EVID. 801(d)(1)(A).6 Our caselaw and the plain text of rule 801(d)(1)(A) confirm that prior inconsistent statements are not hearsay but rather are admissible as substantive evidence. See State v. Stricklan, 2020 UT 65, ¶ 69 n.10, 477 P.3d 1251; see also State v. Ramsey, 782 P.2d 480, 484 (Utah 1989) (“Utah Rule of Evidence 801(d)(1)(A) acts more broadly to admit out-of-court statements or substantive evidence than its federal counterpart because the Utah rule does not require the out-of-court statement to be under oath.”).

not impeach its own witness except under special circumstances, such as when a witness “unexpectedly and without explanation contradicts his or her prior testimony.” Id. Rule 607 eliminates this “obligation to explain surprise or establish the hostility of a witness prior to impeaching that witness.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2021 UT 8, 484 P.3d 1172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-biel-utah-2021.