State v. Terrazas

783 P.2d 803, 162 Ariz. 357, 40 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 34, 1989 Ariz. App. LEXIS 211
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedAugust 8, 1989
Docket1 CA-CR 12150
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 783 P.2d 803 (State v. Terrazas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Terrazas, 783 P.2d 803, 162 Ariz. 357, 40 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 34, 1989 Ariz. App. LEXIS 211 (Ark. Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

FIDEL, Presiding Judge.

Defendant, who speaks slight English, was interrogated by a police officer who speaks no Spanish. A second officer served as interpreter. Though the interpreting officer no longer recalls defendant’s statements, the interrogator recalls the interpreted version of those statements and was allowed to recount his recollection at trial. The question presented by this appeal is whether the interrogator’s recollection of the interpreter’s translation of defendant’s statements constituted inadmissible hearsay. More precisely, the question is whether the interrogator’s testimony, albeit hearsay, qualified for admission pursuant to Rule 803(24) of the Arizona Rules of Evidence, known as the “catch-all” exception to the hearsay rule.

I. FACTS

On the evening of May 14, 1984, as Alfredo Duran, then 83 years old, slept in his Prescott home, intruders broke in and beat him with a tire iron. The intruders stole his pants and wallet, which contained $1,000. Through their investigation, the police suspected that three men — Saoul Terrazas (the defendant), Rafael Uranga, and Cornelio Romero — had committed the crime. An arrest warrant was issued for the defendant, and nearly three years later he was apprehended in Phoenix.

Prescott Police Detective John Cometh had been assigned to the Duran investigation and was summoned to Phoenix to return the defendant to Prescott. Cometh conducted an interview at the Phoenix station house.

Because defendant primarily spoke Spanish and Cometh only English, a Phoenix police officer, Saoul Ayala, was called in to interpret. The interview lasted 15-30 minutes. Cometh took notes on a yellow pad, but the interview was otherwise unrecorded.

By the time of trial, Ayala, the interpreter, had essentially no substantive memory of the interrogation. Detective Cometh, however, testified, over defendant’s objection, to what he recalled of Ayala’s interpretation of defendant’s remarks. Cometh stated:

I asked [defendant] at that time if he had been involved where a person by the name of Mr. Duran had been beaten and had been robbed of some money, and he indicated that he had been at the house. I asked him who had been there with him ... and he stated that Rafael Uranga and Cornelio Romero had been there. I asked him to explain to me how the event took place, how they got there, and he stated that they had gone to Mr. Duran’s house in Mr. Uranga’s car.
I asked him if he could describe that car to me, and he described it as a light colored car, light yellow, I believe, that was a two-door. I asked him who had gone into the house and had originally attacked Mr. Duran, and he indicated that Rafael Uranga and Cornelio Romero had gone into the house and that he had stayed behind. He stated that approximately one hour later that the three of them went back to the house and entered the house. He stated that when they went back into the house that he saw Mr. Duran laying on the bed. And I asked him at that time what he thought about the condition of Mr. Duran, if he thought Mr. Duran was dead, and he stated, yes, that he did. I asked him what Mr. Uran-ga and Mr. Cornelio thought about Mr. Duran, if they thought he was dead, and he stated that he did not know what they thought.
I asked Mr. Terrazas where the tire iron came from, and he stated that it was in the front of the car, Mr. Uranga’s car. *359 I asked him about the tire iron and he stated that he took the tire iron back into the house when he went back there with Mr. Uranga and Mr. Romero, and he left the tire iron there at that time. I asked him at that time if he was telling me that Mr. Uranga and Mr. Romero had beaten Mr. Duran and then he had later gone back to the house with them. He advised me that was right, and then as we talked further he indicated that he and Cornelio Romero had gone into the house originally and that Cornelio Romero had beaten Mr. Duran with the tire iron. I asked him at that time if he had gotten any blood on him, and he — I believe I asked him where he had washed the blood off that he had gotten on him, and he stated that he did not get any blood on him. I then asked him how he could not have gotten any blood on him if he had been in that room at the time that Mr. Duran was beaten. Mr. Terrazas advised me again that he did not get any blood on him and stated that the only time that he touched the tire iron was when it was next to the door and that he just picked it up and then set it back down before they left the house.
I asked him what happened to the money that had been taken from Mr. Duran, and he stated that he did not know anything about the money, that he had just taken a pair of pants.

Defendant testified at trial and corroborated some of the statements attributed to him by Cometh. He admitted that he had gone to the victim’s house with Uranga and Romero, but denied that he had entered. Defendant claimed that Uranga and Romero told him they were stopping at the house to pick up Duran so that the four could go to a ranch in Chino Valley to get work. He remembered seeing a tire iron in Uranga’s car. According to defendant’s testimony, when the three arrived at the house, defendant waited in the back seat for five minutes or so, then went to the house, knocked on the door, and opened it. Uranga and Romero came out. Later, defendant noticed a pair of pants in the car. Defendant denied that he had either seen or heard anyone hit the victim with the tire iron, and he denied telling Cometh who had hit Duran with the tire iron.

The jury found the defendant guilty of armed robbery and aggravated assault. Defense counsel successfully argued to the court by post-trial motion that there were insufficient facts to support convictions for both counts as separate crimes. The court set aside the aggravated assault conviction and sentenced the defendant on the armed robbery conviction alone. Defendant was sentenced to serve 10.5 years in prison, a presumptive term.

II. DISCUSSION

The single issue on appeal is the propriety of admission of the hearsay testimony of Officer Cometh. Hearsay is “a statement, other than one made by the declarant while testifying at the trial or hearing, offered in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted.” Rule 801(c), 17A A.R.S. Arizona Rules of Evidence. 1 Officer Cometh’s testimony was compound hearsay. As an Oregon court said of comparable testimony:

The hearsay consists of two levels: (1) the interpreter’s translation to the officer of defendant’s statements; and (2) the officer’s testimony of the interpreter’s translation.

State v. Letterman, 47 Or.App. 1145, 616 P.2d 505, 507 (1980).

The defendant’s statements were offered by the prosecution as out-of-court admissions by a party opponent. As such, they could have been admitted as “[sjtatements which are not hearsay,” except that they were relayed to Officer Cometh through an interpreter who did not independently recall them. See Rule 801(d)(2). 2 If Officer

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Bluebook (online)
783 P.2d 803, 162 Ariz. 357, 40 Ariz. Adv. Rep. 34, 1989 Ariz. App. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-terrazas-arizctapp-1989.