State v. Quiles

900 A.2d 73, 96 Conn. App. 354, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 312
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJuly 4, 2006
DocketAC 25513
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 900 A.2d 73 (State v. Quiles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Quiles, 900 A.2d 73, 96 Conn. App. 354, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 312 (Colo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion

PETERS, J.

This criminal appeal involves an elderly man who sustained severe bodily injuries in his home. Alleging that the victim’s injuries resulted from an altercation with his son, the state charged the son with assault and unlawful restraint. The son claimed, however, that the victim’s injuries resulted from a slip and fall in the bathroom where he was found. The principal issue is whether the trial court improperly prevented [356]*356the son from offering impeachment evidence through the testimony of a Spanish speaking investigator about an exculpatory conversation with the victim. The jury found the defendant guilty as charged, and the court rendered judgment in accordance with the verdict. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The state charged the defendant, German M. Quiles, Jr., with having committed assault of a victim sixty years of age or older in the second degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-60b (a) (1) and unlawful restraint in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-95. The alleged victim was his sixty-seven year old father, German M. Quiles, Sr., in whose household the defendant was living. The state claimed that the defendant intentionally had caused physical injury to his father by grabbing him and throwing him on the floor and unlawfully had restrained him by holding him in a manner exposing him to a substantial risk of physical injury. The jury found the defendant guilty as charged, and the court sentenced him to eight years of imprisonment concurrent with a sentence that he already was serving.

The jury reasonably could have found that, on the evening of June 25, 2003, the father berated the defendant for excessive use of the father’s telephone. Early the following morning, when the defendant was still on the telephone, the parties fought about the telephone. Before the father could return to his bed, the defendant grabbed him, picked him up, threw him on a tile floor and then threw him back on his bed. After sleeping for a few hours, the father made his way to his nearby bathroom, where he collapsed. Sometime later that morning, paramedics were summoned to take the father to the emergency room at Yale-New Haven Hospital. There, various tests revealed that the father had sustained a pelvic bone fracture, internal bleeding and multiple bruises.

[357]*357In his appeal from the judgment convicting him as charged, the defendant has raised two issues in support of his contention that the victim, confused and possibly under the influence of alcohol, simply fell on his way to the bathroom. He maintains that the trial court improperly interfered with his presentation of this defense by (1) preventing him from introducing the testimony of a Spanish speaking investigator to contradict the victim’s account of what had occurred and (2) refusing to disclose to him the victim’s mental health records from an earlier hospitalization. We are not persuaded.

I

The defendant’s principal claim is that the trial court improperly prevented him from challenging the credibility of the testimony that his father gave at trial about how he came to be seriously injured. He maintains that the trial court should have permitted him to impeach his father’s testimony not only on cross-examination but also by the testimony of a Spanish speaking investigator with whom the father had had a conversation before the trial.

Our review of this claim of evidentiaiy error is limited to the question of whether the trial court’s ruling was a clear abuse of its discretion. “We will make every reasonable presumption in favor of upholding the trial court’s ruling . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Gonzalez, 272 Conn. 515, 542, 864 A.2d 847 (2005).

During the state’s case-in-chief, the father, speaking through an interpreter because he did not speak English, recounted the events that led to his injury. An underlying thread in the defendant’s appeal is the implied representation that linguistic confusion on the part of the father contributed to the defendant’s conviction. The record does not bear out this contention.

[358]*358In his cross-examination of his father, the defendant attempted to challenge the accuracy of his father’s recall in a number of respects. Although the trial court limited some of the questioning, the defendant was permitted to ask his father whether he had been drinking that night, which he denied. The defendant also was able to elicit the fact that his father had spoken with Daniel Rodriguez, a Spanish speaking investigator, and to question him about the contents of that conversation. His father, however, vigorously resisted the suggestion that he had told the investigator that he had no recollection of that evening and that spirits had told him what had happened.1

The defendant then sought to introduce into evidence the testimony of Rodriguez himself “to impeach the credibility of the alleged victim in this case.” Referring the court to § 6-4 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence, the defendant proposed “to ask Mr. Rodriguez to discuss his interview in depth with regard to Mr. Quiles, Sr.” That testimony was necessary, he asserted, because his father’s statements to the investigator were “wildly different from his testimony yesterday.” After the trial court sustained the state’s objection, the defendant decided not to call the investigator to testify. The trial court sustained the state’s objection that this evidence was inadmissible as an inconsistent statement because it was hearsay. The state no longer relies on that ground.

The state now maintains that the court’s ruling, nonetheless, was not an abuse of its discretion because, [359]*359in the absence of direct testimony by Rodriguez, the defendant did not provide a proper foundation for this testimony. We agree with the state that it was not enough to elicit the father’s generic disagreement with what he allegedly had told the investigator. See State v. Daniels, 83 Conn. App. 210, 214, 848 A.2d 1235, cert. denied, 270 Conn. 913, 853 A.2d 528 (2004). We uphold the court’s evidentiary ruling on this alternate ground, which is supported in the trial court record. State v. Vines, 71 Conn. App. 359, 366-67, 801 A.2d 918, cert. denied, 261 Conn. 939, 808 A.2d 1134 (2002); see also Favorite v. Miller, 176 Conn. 310, 317, 407 A.2d 974 (1978) (where court “reaches a correct decision but on mistaken grounds, [our Supreme Court] has repeatedly sustained the trial court’s action if proper grounds exist to support it”).

Anticipating the possibility that he cannot prevail on this claim as an evidentiary error, the defendant further argues that the trial court’s ruling was so central to the case that he was deprived of his constitutional right to present a defense. The record does not substantiate this claim. We do not know why the defendant chose not to call his investigator to testify. The court cannot, however, be faulted 1'or that decision.2 The record discloses that the defendant was able to cross-examine the father at length.

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Related

State v. Quiles
908 A.2d 541 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
900 A.2d 73, 96 Conn. App. 354, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-quiles-connappct-2006.