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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA
September 2000 Term
___________
No. 27771
___________
STATE OF WEST VIRGINIA
Plaintiff below, Appellee,
v.
JAMES ALLEN BAYLOR,
Defendant below, Appellant.
________________________________________________________
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Preston County
Hon. Lawrance S. Miller, Jr., Judge
Case No. 98-F-15
AFFIRMED
________________________________________________________
Submitted: October 31, 2000
Filed: December 1, 2000
Melvin C. Snyder, III, Esq.
James B. Zimarowski, Esq.
Preston County Prosecuting Attorney
Law Office of Franklin D. Cleckley
Kingwood, West Virginia
Morgantown, West Virginia
Attorney for Appellee
Attorney for Appellant
The Opinion of the Court was delivered PER CURIAM.
SYLLABUS
The burden [in a Confrontation Clause analysis] is squarely upon the
prosecution to establish the challenged evidence is so trustworthy that adversarial testing
would add little to its reliability. Furthermore, unless an affirmative reason arising from the
circumstances in which the statement was made provides a basis for rebutting the
presumption that a hearsay statement is not worthy of reliance at trial, the Confrontation
Clause requires exclusion of the out-of-court statement. Syllabus Point 13, In Interest of
Anthony Ray Mc., 200 W.Va. 312, 489 S.E.2d 289 (1997) (citation omitted).
Per Curiam:
I.
In the instant case, James Allen Baylor appeals his conviction of malicious
assault, a violation of W.Va. Code, 61-2-9 [1978]. A jury convicted Mr. Baylor of this
offense based on evidence that Mr. Baylor had kicked Jason Trickett in the face and head.
The kicking occurred at the house of a neighbor of Mr. Baylor. Mr. Trickett
and a friend had sneaked into Mr. Baylor's neighbor's house for a secret, early-morning
rendezvous with the neighbor's daughter and her girlfriend. After the neighbor caught the
night visitors, Mr. Baylor and others came to the scene. A series of events then occurred --
events about which there was conflicting testimony. These events left Mr. Trickett badly
injured.
As a result of these events, the state filed a raft of criminal charges (including
kidnaping) against Mr. Baylor, his neighbor, and others. All of these charges -- except the
one charge of malicious assault against Mr. Baylor -- were either dropped, dismissed by the
trial court, or found by a jury to be not proven.
Mr. Baylor argues that his conviction should be overturned and that he should
be awarded a new trial because the trial court admitted into evidence, over Mr. Baylor's
timely objection, two pages of medical records arising from the post-incident hospital
treatment of Mr. Trickett.
Specifically, the medical records contained a written statement by an
emergency room physician to the effect that Mr. Trickett had suffered a broken nose. The
physician who made the statement was not available at Mr. Baylor's trial to be cross-
examined, although he had been listed as a State's witness and the State had tried to
subpoena him. Mr. Baylor's counsel contends (and the State does not dispute this) that he,
counsel, had been surprised by the physician's non-appearance as a witness, and that counsel
could not himself obtain the in-person trial testimony of the physician.
Mr. Baylor objected to the admission of these medical records as (1)
containing inadmissible hearsay, under the West Virginia Rules of Evidence; and (2) as
evidence that violated Mr. Baylor's constitutional right to confront the witnesses against him.
The circuit court apparently allowed the medical records to come into evidence
and to go to the jury on the grounds that the records met the business records exception to
the hearsay rule -- West Virginia Rules of Evidence, Rule 803 (6) -- that states:
The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule, even
though the declarant is available as a witness:
***
(6) Records of Regularly Conducted Activity. A
memorandum, report, record, or data compilation, in any form,
of acts, events, conditions, opinions, or diagnoses, made at or
near the time by, or from information transmitted by, a person
with knowledge, if kept in the course of a regularly conducted
business activity, and if it was the regular practice of that
business activity to make the memorandum, report, record, or
data compilation, all as shown by the testimony of the custodian
or other qualified witness, unless the source of information or
the method or circumstances of preparation indicate lack of
trustworthiness. The term business as used in this paragraph
includes business, institution, association, profession,
occupation, and calling of every kind, whether or not conducted
for profit.
II.
The State argues that the medical records in question fit into the language of
the foregoing-quoted business records exception to the evidentiary rule against hearsay --
and that therefore the physician's statement in the records was not inadmissible hearsay.
However, the existence of a hearsay exception -- and we do not intimate in any
way by our discussion that we find that the physician statement did fit within this exception --
does not end the admissibility inquiry in a criminal case. The admissibility of the records is
also governed by the constitutional protection that is explicitly provided by Article III,
Section 14 of the West Virginia Constitution: In all such trials, the accused shall be fully
and plainly informed of the character and cause of the accusation, and be confronted with the
witness against him . . . -- also known as the Confrontation Clause.
As we recently stated in In Interest of Anthony Ray Mc., 200 W.Va. 312, 318
489 S.E.2d 289, 295 (1997) (emphasis added):
When one examines the relationship between the hearsay rules
and the constitutional right of confrontation, the similarity of
their underpinnings is evident. The hearsay rule operates to
preserve the ability of a party to confront the witnesses against
him in open court. The Confrontation Clause does the same for
an accused in a criminal case. While similar, this Court has
carefully guarded their distinct functions. In State v. James
Edward S., 184 W.Va. 408, 400 S.E.2d 843 (1990), Justice
Miller cautioned that merely because a hearsay exception allows
the introduction of evidence, the Confrontation Clause question
is not necessarily resolved. The court stated:
Although we have recognized that hearsay rules
and the Confrontation Clause are generally
designed to protect similar values, we have also
been careful not to equate the Confrontation
Clause's prohibitions with the general rule
prohibiting the admission of hearsay statements....
The Confrontation Clause, in other words, bars
the admission of some evidence that would
otherwise be admissible under an exception to the
hearsay rule. (Internal quotations and citations
omitted.)
James Edward S., 184 W.Va. at 414, 400 S.E.2d at 849.
We also stated, in Syllabus Point 13 of In Interest of Anthony Ray Mc., supra:
The burden [in a Confrontation Clause analysis] is squarely
upon the prosecution to establish the challenged evidence is so
trustworthy that adversarial testing would add little to its
reliability. Furthermore, unless an affirmative reason arising
from the circumstances in which the statement was made
provides a basis for rebutting the presumption that a hearsay
statement is not worthy of reliance at trial, the Confrontation
Clause requires exclusion of the out-of-court statement.
(Citation omitted.)
The State further argues that we need not address the hearsay exception and
Confrontation Clause issues. The State contends that even assuming arguendo that the
physician's statement was inadmissible hearsay or violative of Mr. Baylor's Confrontation
Clause rights, the effect on Mr. Baylor's conviction of the statement was negligible.
In response to this argument, Mr. Baylor contends that a key issue in the trial
was whether Mr. Baylor's alleged attack on Mr. Trickett was malicious. Mr. Baylor argues
that the statement that Mr. Trickett had suffered a broken nose could have weighed heavily
in the jury's deliberations on this issue -- and that Mr. Baylor's counsel's inability to cross-
examine the doctor on the statement might have made a difference at trial.
However, upon a full review of the trial record, Mr. Baylor's argument on this
point is not persuasive.
At trial, Mr. Baylor denied that he had attacked or injured Mr. Trickett at all.
Mr. Baylor suggested that Mr. Trickett might have been injured during a scuffle with other
people at the scene. The jury -- as was their right -- disbelieved Mr. Baylor's version of
events. They found, on the basis of eyewitness testimony, that Mr. Baylor had attacked Mr.
Trickett and had caused his injuries.
Additionally, there was significant evidence -- far more probative than the brief
physician's statement in the medical records -- tending to show the actual severity of Mr.
Trickett's injuries. Color photographs were taken of Mr. Trickett after the incident, showing
substantial bruising, swelling, and disfigurement of Mr. Trickett's face. Several witnesses
testified that blood covered Mr. Trickett's face and head after he was attacked -- and also
testified about the suffering that Mr. Trickett experienced as a result of his injuries.
When compared to the other evidence at trial that tended to prove the severity
of Mr. Trickett's injuries -- evidence that inferentially tended to prove Mr. Baylor's malice
in causing the injuries, see State v. Scotchel, 168 W.Va. 545, 554-55, 285 S.E.2d 384, 390
(1981) -- the physician's brief statement in the medical records, noting that Mr. Trickett had
a broken nose, was at the most a minor blip on the jury's evidentiary radar screen.
If our review of the record suggested that the physician's statement in the
medical records in question had arguably made a material contribution to Mr. Baylor's
conviction of malicious assault, we would need to conduct a more detailed analysis of the
trial court's ruling on the records' admissibility. See, e.g., Naum v. Halbritter, 172 W.Va.
610, 309 S.E.2d 109 (1983) (out-of-court statements by deceased prostitute that she had
sexual relations with prosecuting attorney were not admissible in prosecution of prosecutor
for false swearing, because of Confrontation Clause).
However, despite the well-presented arguments of Mr. Baylor's counsel to the
contrary, there is simply no reason to believe that the physician's statement in the medical
records constituted anything but de minimis surplusage in the State's case against Mr. Baylor.
No further analysis is therefore necessary. It is clear to us that the circuit court did not
commit reversible error in admitting the medical records in question.
III.
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.