State v. Stephen F. Scharf(074922)

139 A.3d 1154, 225 N.J. 547, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 696
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJuly 18, 2016
DocketA-46-14
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 139 A.3d 1154 (State v. Stephen F. Scharf(074922)) 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. Stephen F. Scharf(074922), 139 A.3d 1154, 225 N.J. 547, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 696 (N.J. 2016).

Opinion

Justice LaVECCHIA

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendant Stephen Scharf was convicted of first-degree purposeful and knowing murder of his wife Jody, who fell to her death off a cliff at the Palisades. Defendant put forward a defense of accident. During the trial, the court allowed the State to present, in rebuttal to the defense of accident, hearsay statements, under N.J.R.E. 803(e)(3) and (c)(4), from Jody’s friends and her therapist. The witnesses claimed that Jody repeatedly told them of her fear of defendant, particularly after she had served him with a divorce complaint, and told them that she had declined defendant’s request to go to the Palisades cliffs with him shortly before her death.

On appeal, the Appellate Division reversed the conviction because the reviewing court concluded that the trial court erred in admitting the hearsay statements. The case is before us on the State’s petition for certification. State v. Scharf, 221 N.J. 219, 110 A.3d 931 (2015). The appeal requires us to address whether it was error for the trial court to have admitted the evidence and, even if the evidence was admissible, whether the evidence, cumulatively, constituted an abuse of the trial court’s discretion that caused defendant’s trial to be unjust.

I.

A.

On September 20, 1992, Palisades Interstate Parkway police officers responded to a report that a person had fallen from the *554 Englewood cliffs. 1 First responder, Officer Paul Abbott, explained in his testimony that the cliffs provide a scenic lookout across the Hudson River. When Abbott arrived at the scene at approximately 8:12 p.m., it was already dark. Defendant approached Abbott in the parking area and told him that his wife had fallen from the cliff. Abbott drove defendant to the northern end of the cliffs — the area from which defendant said that his wife had fallen. Officer Lowell Tomayo, who responded to the scene with Abbott, followed in a second vehicle. Upon arriving at the northern end of the cliffs, defendant guided the officers on foot down an unmaintained and overgrown path into a wooded area.

. According to testimony from Abbott and Tomayo, the officers and defendant eventually reached the edge of the cliff, and defendant indicated the precise spot from where his wife had fallen, pointing to a flat rock that jutted out from the cliff. A fence separated the wooded area from the cliffs edge. The officers crossed the fence and called Jody’s name, but received no response. The officers saw a poeketbook lying approximately eight feet below the cliff; it was later identified as belonging to Jody. Jody’s body was recovered late that night. Forensic examination of her body established that, at the time of her death, she had a blood alcohol content of 0.12%.

Defendant was escorted to police headquarters, where he spoke with Detective Ronald Karnick and gave a written statement concerning what had happened that evening. In that statement, defendant told Karnick that he and his wife had planned to go into New York City to a comedy club that evening, that the lookout on the cliff had been “their spot,” and that they had been drinking in their car prior to walking to the lookout point. Defendant said that he and Jody walked down the trail, climbed through the fence, and sat on the flat rock that he had shown to the officers *555 earlier. According to defendant, he and Jody began engaging in amorous activities, at which point Jody indicated she was uncomfortable so he offered to retrieve a blanket and some wine from the car. Defendant said that he and Jody both stood up, and then Jody suddenly fell forward off the rock. Defendant said that he called her name but received no response.

Kamick obtained defendant’s permission to search his vehicle and found in it a cooler, a wine glass, two wine coolers (one full, one empty), a bottle of wine, a knife, a blanket, some bandages, two white towels, a candle, a receipt, a box of crackers, a jewelry box containing a cross and a “gold-type chain,” and a claw hammer.

As the investigation continued, subsequent questioning of defendant uncovered additional information. Defendant revealed that, two weeks prior to her death, Jody served defendant with a divorce complaint that alleged defendant was abusive and unfaithful. Defendant told investigators that Jody was a heavy drinker and that both he and she had dated other people as part of an open marriage. However, defendant told the investigators that he had ended his relationships with the other women and hoped that a “trip to the cliffs” would lead to his and Jody’s reconciliation.

In an interview a few days after Jody’s death, defendant stated that he and his wife had planned to go out to dinner and then to New York City on September 20, 1992, the evening of her death. Defendant told the officers that, the night before, he and Jody had dined out together with their son, but on the next evening, which was a Sunday, they arranged for someone to watch their son. They were on the way to New York City, from their home in Morris County, when, defendant claimed, he and Jody decided to make a detour to the cliffs.

At the time of law enforcement’s initial investigation into the circumstances of Jody’s death, interviews of Jody’s friends and acquaintances called into question several of defendant’s assertions, including Jody’s state of mind, her activities, and her interactions with defendant leading up to her death. Also, accord *556 ing to the testimony of the investigating officers, defendant’s responses to repeated questioning revealed inconsistencies, including differing versions of how the fall occurred, and some inculpato-ry indications. Nonetheless, the criminal investigation into the circumstances of Jody’s death did not lead initially to charges being filed against defendant. However, certain events that occurred after Jody’s death and before defendant’s indictment bear notice at this point.

At the time Jody died, the medical examiner concluded that the cause of death was “multiple fractures and injuries”; however, the examiner remained uncertain about the “manner of death” and listed it as “pending investigation” on the death certificate. The medical examiner amended the “manner of death” in 1993 to “could not be determined.”

The record also reveals that, during the year prior to her death, defendant obtained a life insurance policy on Jody in the amount of $500,000 — $300,000 as a basic amount of insurance and $200,000 as an accidental death benefit. After Jody’s death, defendant did not file a claim for the proceeds of that policy. After the proceeds had remained unclaimed for the lawfully required number of years, the insurer forwarded the monies to the State as unclaimed funds. See N.J.S.A. 46:30B-9, -22. In 2003, defendant claimed the money held by the State, which had grown to $770,650.83 with interest.

The Bergen County Prosecutor’s Office reevaluated the circumstances of Jody’s death in 2004, and for the first time, the medical examiner went to the location at the cliffs to view the area where Jody fell and where her body was recovered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 A.3d 1154, 225 N.J. 547, 2016 N.J. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-stephen-f-scharf074922-nj-2016.