Garcia v. State, 73075

Decision Date14 June 1990
Docket NumberNo. 73075,73075
Citation564 So.2d 124
Parties15 Fla. L. Weekly S344 Henry GARCIA, Appellant, v. STATE of Florida, Appellee.
CourtFlorida Supreme Court

Michael Zelman of Michael Zelman, P.A., Coral Gables, for appellant.

Robert A. Butterworth, Atty. Gen., and Ivy R. Ginsberg, Asst. Atty. Gen., Miami, for appellee.

BARKETT, Justice.

Henry Garcia appeals his convictions of two counts of first-degree murder, one count each of sexual battery and armed burglary, and two sentences of death. We reverse the convictions, vacate the sentences of death, and remand for a new trial. 1

On Monday, January 17, 1983, neighbors discovered the bodies of Julia Ballentine, 90, and her sister, Mabel Avery, 86, in the victims' home in Leisure City, Dade County, Florida. A medical examiner testified that both women had been stabbed to death with multiple stab wounds, and Ballentine had been sexually assaulted.

Evidence showed that the victims' home probably had been broken into Saturday night or Sunday morning. The rear patio screen door had been slashed and a jalousie window had been broken. One witness said she heard the glass break at 6 a.m. Sunday. When the bodies were discovered the next day, investigators were unable to find the victims' purses, wallets, or other personal items of identification. Authorities lifted seven latent fingerprints from the house, and they photographed a partial impression of a footprint made by the heel of a shoe. However, that evidence proved inconclusive or could not be linked to Garcia. Hair samples also had been taken from the bodies and the crime scene. Those samples either were not similar to hair samples taken from Garcia, or the hair comparison analysis proved inconclusive. There was no physical evidence to link Garcia to the crime.

Elizabeth Feliciano and her son, Feliciano Aguayo, testified that at about 7 a.m. Sunday, Garcia showed up at their residence with blood splattered on his shirt, pants, and shoes. The Aguayo home was about one-half mile from the victims' home. Aguayo testified that Garcia told him he had been assaulted by two men and a woman alongside the road as he walked home from a bar where he had been drinking. He said they attacked him with a tire iron, and he defended himself by stabbing them with his knife, after which he fled to an adjacent corn field. Garcia showed Aguayo his pocket knife: it had a bent tip and had blood on it, and the blade was at least four inches long. Aguayo said Garcia kept repeating, "I told them not to make me mad, that I had an animal inside of me." Aguayo said he and others visited the corn field area later that day, but they found no sign of a bloody struggle. The only injury he saw on Garcia was a scratch around his eye.

Rufina Perez testified that she was a migrant farm worker picking crops for Lupe Trevino in January 1983 at the same time Garcia worked there. She said she overheard Garcia say to fellow workers, "I got in a fight, I got in trouble with these ladies ... but I don't have to worry about it because they already in hell." She said Garcia told the others, "I went to the back door, I ripped out the screen door." She said Garcia stopped talking when he realized that she had been listening. She could not identify the men with whom Garcia spoke that day.

Garcia attempted to impeach Perez's testimony by introducing payroll records to show that it could not have been Garcia whom Perez overheard that day because the records reflect that Garcia was no longer employed with Perez when the murders occurred. The payroll record under the name "Rufina Peres" indicates, in relevant part, that she was paid wages during at least portions of each week in January and February 1983. The payroll record under the name "Enrique Juares," which Garcia claims to be one of his aliases, indicates that he was paid wages during the week that ended January 7, 1983, but that he was paid no wages thereafter. Garcia argued that the jury should be allowed to infer from the absence of any notation of wages paid after January 7 that he did not work for Trevino with Perez during or after the period when the murders were committed and the bodies were discovered, January 15-17. Thus, Perez must have heard somebody else make the incriminating statement.

The payroll records were brought to court by Trevino's daughter, Aida Paz, who said she and her sister, Irma, recorded the data in the regular course of business as each employee worked. Paz said she was a custodian of the records, and that the records were kept in her home. However, the trial court barred the admission of the "Enrique Juares" payroll record, ruling that it had not been sufficiently authenticated, it was untrustworthy, unreliable, and irrelevant.

Garcia did not testify in either the guilt or penalty phases. The jury convicted him of two counts of first-degree murder, and one count each of armed burglary and sexual battery. He received two sentences of death consistent with unanimous jury recommendations.

We deal here with Garcia's contentions that the trial court abused its discretion by excluding the payroll record as impeachment evidence, and that the state erroneously argued to the jury that police searched for but were unable to find any exculpatory records because none existed. The state's argument boils down to an attack on the relevancy of the payroll record. Specifically, the state relies on the hearsay exception for regularly kept business records, section 90.803(6) of the Florida Statutes (1981), and argues that (a) the payroll record was inherently unreliable and untrustworthy and did not comply with state and federal statutory requirements for migrant farm labor records; and (b) the payroll record was not relevant because the evidence failed to connect the "Enrique Juares" record to the defendant, Henry Garcia, and it was not exculpatory. We agree with Garcia, reject the state's argument, and find reversible error.

Section 90.608(1)(e) of the Florida Statutes (1981), provides a party the right to impeach by offering "[p]roof by other witnesses that material facts are not as testified to by the witness being impeached." Thus, Garcia had the right to have Paz produce the payroll record for the jury to cast some doubt on the credibility of Perez's identification of Garcia as the man she said she heard make an inculpatory statement, provided that the evidence was relevant impeachment evidence.

As with all evidence, relevancy must be established as a condition precedent to admissibility. §§ 90.401-.402, Fla.Stat. (1981). Relevancy is a broad, malleable concept that may involve many different inquiries to determine whether evidence tends to prove or disprove a material fact. One such inquiry is authenticity. See, e.g., 6C Fla.Stat.Ann. § 90.901 p. 376 (West 1979) (Law Revision Council Note--1976) ("Authentication and identification are implicit in the concept of relevancy."); C. Ehrhardt, Florida Evidence § 901.1, at 570 (2d ed. 1984) (authentication is a "specific application[ ] of the general requirement of relevancy"); McCormick on Evidence § 218, at 543 (2d ed. 1972). Authentication is a judicial determination that a document may be the genuine document that the offering party claims it to be.

Evidence is authenticated when prima facie evidence is introduced to prove that the proffered evidence is authentic. The finding of authenticity does not mean that the trial judge makes a finding that the proffered evidence is genuine. He only determines whether prima facie evidence of its genuineness exists. Once the matter has been admitted the opposing party may challenge its genuineness. The jury then determines as a matter of fact whether the proffered evidence is genuine.

Ehrhardt, supra, § 901.1, at 570-71. See also, e.g., 6C Fla.Stat.Ann. § 90.901, at 376-81 (West 1979) (Law Revision Council Note--1976); McCormick, supra, § 227; VII Wigmore on Evidence § 2128 (J. Chadbourne ed. 1978).

It is clear that Garcia authenticated the record with Paz's testimony. Paz testified that she was custodian of the payroll records for her father's business. She said either she or her sister recorded the data contemporaneous to the work being performed, that they kept the payroll records in the regular course of business, and that they had maintained the records at home since they made them in 1983. The trial court abused its discretion by finding that the evidence was not properly authenticated. Cf. Holley v. State, 328 So.2d 224, 225 (Fla. 2d DCA 1976) (Grimes, J.) (machine-stamped motel registration card presented by custodian was authenticated to satisfy hearsay exception for regularly kept business records).

We also reject the state's contentions that the record is inherently unreliable and untrustworthy because the payroll record spelled the alias as "Juares" instead of "Juarez"; it contained inadequate information; it was not in the handwriting of the custodian who testified; and it was unsupported by other documentation. First, we note that the state did not contest the identity of Rufina Perez's payroll record even though that record misspelled her name as "Rufina Peres." Second, evidence shows that migrant farm laborers often do not produce much identifying information for their employers. The assertion that the payroll record failed to satisfy federal and state recordkeeping requirements for employers of migrant farm labor is totally inapposite. Whether the record satisfied statutory standards for recordkeeping has no bearing whatsoever on the question of whether the records contained otherwise relevant information. Finally, nothing in Florida law requires a document to be in the custodian's own handwriting or to be supported by other documentation as a general prerequisite to admissibility of business records.

The state next argues that the payroll record was irrelevant because there was no proof to link the "Enrique Juares" named in the payroll...

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16 cases
  • Pace v. State
    • United States
    • Florida Supreme Court
    • May 22, 2003
    ...on appeal, Pace has failed to demonstrate that his appellate counsel performed deficiently by not raising this issue. In Garcia v. State, 564 So.2d 124 (Fla.1990), this Court Evidence is authenticated when prima facie evidence is introduced to prove that the proffered evidence is authentic.......
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    • Florida Supreme Court
    • November 9, 2006
    ...the fields ended more than a week before the murders, and thus before the conversation that Perez allegedly overheard. See Garcia v. State, 564 So.2d 124 (Fla.1990). We explained that "Perez's testimony provided a crucial link between Garcia and the crimes." Id. at At the retrial, Garcia in......
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    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • October 20, 1993
    ...further, that the trial court abused its discretion when it decided, post-trial, to exclude the business records. See Garcia v. State, 564 So.2d 124 (Fla.1990); Holley v. State, 328 So.2d 224 (Fla. 2d DCA We would be constrained to reverse the judgment notwithstanding the verdict entered in......
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    • Florida District Court of Appeals
    • December 9, 1992
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1 books & journal articles
  • Hearsay exceptions: declarant available
    • United States
    • James Publishing Practical Law Books Florida Family Law Trial Notebook
    • April 30, 2022
    ...name on the record that defendant was no longer employed at a certain company on a certain date, was admissible. Garcia v. State , 564 So.2d 124 (Fla. 1990). Garcia v. State Where defendant claimed that two men and a woman had attacked him, and that he had stabbed the woman, there was no er......

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