State v. Branch

865 A.2d 673, 182 N.J. 338, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 1, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by157 cases

This text of 865 A.2d 673 (State v. Branch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Branch, 865 A.2d 673, 182 N.J. 338, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 14 (N.J. 2005).

Opinion

Justice ALBIN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The right of a party to confront witnesses in court is one of the principal values protected by the hearsay rule. The rule generally shields a party from damning out-of-court statements, which are offered for their truth but are not subject to the truth-testing rigors of cross-examination. Our evidentiary rules and case law recognize many exceptions to the hearsay rule that promote both the efficiency and the fact-finding integrity of trials. This appeal explores whether hearsay used by the State to convict defendant of burglary and robbery fell within legitimate exceptions to the hearsay rule.

In this case, a police detective testified that he included defendant’s picture in a photographic array because he had developed defendant as a suspect “based on information received.” The same detective also testified to the out-of-court descriptions of the burglar given by two non-testifying child victims. Defendant claims that the detective’s testimony was inadmissible and highly prejudicial hearsay that denied him a fair trial. The Appellate Division affirmed defendant’s convictions, finding that the detective followed the command of State v. Bankston, 63 N.J. 263, 307 A.2d 65 (1973), when he testified about the photographic array, and finding that the children’s descriptions of the burglar were excited utterances admissible under N.J.R.E. 803(c)(2). We disagree and now reverse.

We hold that the detective’s testimony that he developed a suspect based on information received from an unknown source was inadmissible hearsay that violated defendant’s right of confrontation. We also hold that the one out-of-court description of the burglar that is truly in issue did not meet the definition of an excited utterance because the child-declarant had an “opportunity to deliberate” before making her statement.

I.

Defendant Alexander Branch was charged in a Union County indictment with second-degree burglary (N.J.S.A. 2C:18-2) and *343 second-degree robbery (N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1). During a three-day trial, the jury heard the following evidence. On April 22,1998, at approximately 8:30 p.m., Kathleen O’Nieal was talking -with a family friend, Joseph Gannon, in the television room of her Plainfield home when she heard screams coming from the upstairs bedroom of her seven-year-old twins, John and Juliana. Within moments, a light-skinned black man of medium build wearing a hooded sweatshirt and sucking on a lollipop appeared downstairs. O’Nieal and Gannon, both startled, shouted at the intruder and chased him into the kitchen. Once there, the intruder tried but was unable to open the back door. He turned and punched Gannon above the left eye, causing a gash, then managed to open the door, and fled.

During the tumult, the children raced downstairs, and John quickly called 911. Within minutes, City of Plainfield Police Officer Daniel Kollmar arrived at the house and interviewed Gannon, O’Nieal, and the children. Police officers, with the assistance of a K-9 unit, also canvassed the immediate neighborhood but were unable to apprehend the intruder. Juliana told Officer Kollmar that she was asleep in her bedroom when she awoke to the sight of an intruder in the hallway. She screamed, prompting the intruder to enter her bedroom and place his hand over her mouth. At that point, her brother John awoke and the burglar moved towards him, slapping the side of his face, which left a reddish mark. Juliana and John observed the intruder touching the hallway walls, a stocking, and a purse hanging on the doorknob.

Before Officer Kollmar’s arrival, Juliana had told much the same story to her mother. Juliana mentioned to her mother that the intruder had touched her piggy bank and asked where he could find her mother’s purse. After covering her mouth, the intruder smacked John in the face when he began to scream. Both children ran towards the stairs, but were passed by the intruder.

*344 Approximately ten minutes after the police first received the 911 call, Detective Jean Calvin arrived at the house, where he spoke with Officer Kollmar, O’Nieal, Gannon, and the children. Detective Calvin testified that the children told him that they saw a “tall black male” in their bedroom and that Juliana asked the intruder, “ “Who are you?’ ” The intruder responded by placing his hand over her mouth and telling her to “keep quiet.” According to Calvin, “[a]t that time John said he started screaming and the tall black male smacked him in the face and told him to keep quiet.” The children told Calvin that the intruder had touched a ceramic piggy bank and a small purse, and that he had run his hands across the hallway wall. Juliana informed the detective that the intruder had “a gap between his teeth” and dirty hands. The children’s statements to O’Nieal, Kollmar, and Calvin were admitted as “excited utterances” pursuant to N.J.R.E. 803(c)(2). The children were not called as witnesses because, as their mother testified, they had “been through enough.”

In his trial testimony, Gannon described the intruder as a light-skinned black man of medium build in his thirties with short-cropped hair and “little to no facial hair.” Gannon estimated that the intruder, who was wearing sneakers, blue jeans and a dark sweatshirt, was five feet ten inches tall or “a little taller.” Shortly after the burglary, however, Gannon told the police that the intruder was in his mid-twenties. O’Nieal, in her testimony, gave a similar physical description of the intruder. She stated that the man was “about five-ten or -eleven” and “could have been anywhere from late twenties to mid-thirties, late thirties.” O’Nieal said that she did not “really notice any facial hair,” but if there was any, “it was light.” A week after the burglary, in a sworn statement, O’Nieal told the police that the intruder had “no facial hair.”

On the night of the burglary, every part of O’Nieal’s house where the intruder may have had contact was dusted for fingerprints. The next day, detectives returned to the house and dusted for more fingerprints. Not one identifiable fingerprint lifted from *345 the house matched any of defendant’s. The next day, Gannon met with a State Police artist who produced a sketch based on Gannon’s description. A week later, Detective Francis Wilson displayed separately for Gannon and O’Nieal a photographic array of six black men without facial hair. Neither could identify the intruder from any of the photographs.

The next day, May 1, 1998, Detective Calvin separately showed Gannon and O’Nieal another photographic array, this time of six black men with facial hair. Both Gannon and O’Nieal independently selected defendant’s photograph as that of the intruder. At trial, both identified defendant in court as the man who had broken into O’Nieal’s home.

That day, the police arrested defendant, a forty-year-old medium-to-dark complexioned black man who had an afro-style hairdo, a beard, and a thick, full mustache and who stood approximately six feet four inches or six feet five inches tall. 1

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Bluebook (online)
865 A.2d 673, 182 N.J. 338, 2005 N.J. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-branch-nj-2005.