LIZETT ALEXIS ALLEN v. STATE OF FLORIDA ( 2021 )


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  •        DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA
    FOURTH DISTRICT
    LIZETT ALEXIS ALLEN,
    Appellant,
    v.
    STATE OF FLORIDA,
    Appellee.
    No. 4D20-1553
    [April 21, 2021]
    Appeal from the Circuit Court for the Fifteenth Judicial Circuit, Palm
    Beach County; Caroline C. Shepherd, Judge; L.T. Case No. 50-2018-CF-
    006210-AXXX-MB.
    Carey Haughwout, Public Defender, Ross F. Berlin and Claire Victoria
    Madill, Assistant Public Defenders, West Palm Beach, for appellant.
    Ashley Moody, Attorney General, Tallahassee, and Luke R. Napodano,
    Assistant Attorney General, West Palm Beach, for appellee.
    FORST, J.
    Appellant Lizett Allen appeals from her conviction and sentence for
    grand theft over $20,000 following a jury trial. Appellant raises five issues
    on appeal, but we write only to address the third issue—that the trial court
    erred by prohibiting the introduction of relevant evidence. We agree with
    Appellant’s third contention and, as explained below, conclude that the
    evidence was relevant to the defense’s effort to establish a motive for the
    purported victim to fabricate her testimony against Appellant. The State
    has failed to establish that this error was harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt, and we thus reverse and remand for a new trial.
    Background
    The State charged Appellant with grand theft over $20,000, alleging
    that Appellant routinely overcharged the credit card of the purported
    victim, who was a client at Appellant’s hair salon. The primary evidence
    against Appellant consisted of the purported victim’s testimony, bank
    records showing excessive charges with the funds going into Appellant’s
    personal accounts, and a text message exchange between the purported
    victim and Appellant.
    The purported victim testified that she discovered the alleged
    fraudulent charges after checking her bank account statement in
    February 2017. After this discovery, she called Appellant to determine
    why her account had been overcharged by substantial amounts. Appellant
    told her that she had switched merchant accounts, and that the switch
    must have caused the errors. Appellant indicated that she would follow
    up with the purported victim and provide her with a case ID number from
    the help-desk ticket she would file. However, instead of providing the
    purported victim with a help-desk ticket number, Appellant texted her a
    message stating “I’m so sorry can I call you in the morning and we will
    talk.” The purported victim agreed, but she also asked if the merchants
    called back with an ID number. Appellant responded “no,” and then told
    the purported victim “I f****d up im so sorry my life went down the drain I
    will fix it can we talk when you come in at 3” and “I’m sorry I never thought
    it was that amount please let me fix it if you have to report it I understand.”
    The purported victim made a police report the next morning.
    The purported victim explained that she and Appellant were friends,
    but that she never authorized the excessive charges.         On cross-
    examination, defense counsel asked if she had ever purchased drugs from
    Appellant. The purported victim denied she had ever done so.
    Following up on this line of questioning, defense counsel called
    Appellant to the stand. Appellant testified that she never charged the
    purported victim’s credit card without her consent and that the charges
    were all authorized. She explained that, after the first year of knowing the
    purported victim, first as a client and then as both a client and a friend,
    Appellant would acquire drugs for her. The two agreed that the drug
    purchases would be covered by charges to the purported victim’s credit
    card, which was on file at the salon. This payment method was intended
    to conceal the charges from the purported victim’s husband.
    Appellant further explained that the text message conversation
    introduced into evidence was a plan to “smooth over the explanation” to
    the purported victim’s husband. The messages were intended to show him
    that the overcharges were attributable to Appellant, and thus conceal the
    purported victim’s drug purchases. In furtherance of her defense of
    consent, Appellant attempted to testify that concealment of the purported
    victim’s drug purchases and use was necessary, as this drug use created
    friction between the purported victim and her husband and ultimately
    caused the purported victim’s divorce. When the State objected, defense
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    counsel maintained that Appellant overheard arguments between the
    purported victim and her then-husband related to the purported victim’s
    drug purchases and that their “marriage troubles” were related to the
    wife’s drug use. Despite defense counsel’s argument that testimony
    regarding the impact that the purported victim’s drug purchases had on
    her marriage went “to motive as to why she would make up an allegation
    that this was fraud and not purchasing drugs[,]” the trial court sustained
    the State’s relevancy objection to questions concerning the purported
    victim’s marriage and divorce.
    Following Appellant’s testimony, the case proceeded to closing
    arguments and the jury returned a verdict of guilty. This appeal timely
    followed.
    Analysis
    “The standard of review for admissibility of evidence is abuse of
    discretion. However, a trial court’s discretion is limited by the rules of
    evidence.” Harris v. State, 
    289 So. 3d 962
    , 966 (Fla. 4th DCA 2020)
    (quoting Orton v. State, 
    212 So. 3d 377
    , 378 (Fla. 4th DCA 2017)).
    “A party is given wide latitude to develop motive or bias in a witness’s
    testimony.” Roman v. State, 
    165 So. 3d 723
    , 725 (Fla. 4th DCA 2015)
    (citing Mardis v. State, 
    122 So. 3d 950
    , 953 (Fla. 4th DCA 2013)). “The
    ability to expose an improper impetus for a witness’ testimony is an
    essential component of the right to a jury trial.” Jones v. State, 
    678 So. 2d 890
    , 892 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996). “Included in the types of matters that
    demonstrate bias are prejudice, interest in the outcome of a case, and any
    motivation for a witness to testify untruthfully.” 
    Id.
     As explained by this
    court in Elder v. State, 
    296 So. 3d 440
     (Fla. 4th DCA 2020):
    “[W]here evidence tends in any way, even indirectly, to
    establish a reasonable doubt of [the] defendant’s guilt, it is
    error to deny its admission.” Rivera v. State, 
    561 So. 2d 536
    ,
    539 (Fla. 1990). Put differently, “[i]f there is any possibility of
    a tendency of evidence to create a reasonable doubt, the rules
    of evidence are usually construed to allow for its
    admissibility.” Vannier v. State, 
    714 So. 2d 470
    , 472 (Fla. 4th
    DCA 1998).
    Id. at 446 (alterations in original).
    Here, Appellant sought to testify that the purported victim’s divorce was
    precipitated by substance abuse issues. Following the State’s relevancy
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    objection, defense counsel explained that the desired testimony was an
    important component of establishing a motive for the purported victim to
    testify untruthfully. Counsel explained that, during her deposition, the
    purported victim indicated “basically that she got divorced because of her
    drug use.” Additionally, defense counsel provided a proffer of the
    questions that were to be addressed to Appellant and her expected
    responses, with the plan being to elicit testimony that Appellant had first-
    hand knowledge that the purported victim and her husband argued about
    the former’s drug use and “how much money was being spent” on drugs,
    and that this was “a primary reason for [the couple’s] divorce.”
    We agree with Appellant that the above-noted desired testimony was
    relevant to Appellant’s defense that the purported victim fabricated the
    allegations against Appellant to hide the true nature of the charges from
    her husband. The testimony regarding the purported victim’s marriage
    and divorce was integral to Appellant’s defense strategy of explaining the
    purported victim’s motive to lie to her husband (and in turn to law
    enforcement and the jury)—to cover up her drug purchases. As such, the
    evidence was relevant and should not have been excluded by the trial
    court.
    As the evidence was relevant, the pertinent question now becomes
    whether the exclusion was harmless. A proper harmless error analysis
    involves more than a mere weighing of the evidence, the “harmless error
    analysis . . . requires appellate courts to first consider the nature of the
    error complained of and then the effect this error had on the triers of fact.”
    Daughtry v. State, 
    804 So. 2d 426
    , 428 (Fla. 4th DCA 2001) (alteration in
    original) (quoting Goodwin v. State, 
    751 So. 2d 537
    , 540 (Fla. 1999)). “The
    harmless error test . . . places the burden on the state, as the beneficiary
    of the error, to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the error complained
    of did not contribute to the verdict or, alternatively stated, that there is no
    reasonable possibility that the error contributed to the conviction.” State
    v. DiGuilio, 
    491 So. 2d 1129
    , 1135 (Fla. 1986).
    In the instant case, the State has not met this burden. One of the most
    incriminating pieces of evidence against Appellant, other than the direct
    testimony of the purported victim, was the text message exchange between
    Appellant and the purported victim where Appellant admits that she made
    a mistake and appears to confess to stealing the money. At trial, Appellant
    attempted to explain that the messages were fabricated to deceive the
    purported victim’s husband and that such an elaborate ruse was
    necessary because the purported victim’s marriage was at risk, resulting
    in Appellant hiding the drug purchases by falsifying salon purchases and
    then pretending to have “made a mistake.”
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    Additionally, the State implicitly recognized the importance of this
    evidence and argument for Appellant’s defense.            During closing
    arguments, counsel for the State ridiculed the defense theory, noting:
    All right. Let’s talk about facts not in evidence, right? She
    just got up here and said drugs caused the divorce of this
    marriage. That’s not a fact in evidence. It’s made up. You
    didn’t hear that from the stand. That’s made up. If she wants
    to talk about facts not in evidence, let’s start with that.
    Thus, the State first argued to the trial court that Appellant’s testimony
    that drug use caused the divorce should be excluded because it was not
    relevant, and then during closing it argued to the jury that this defense
    theory was not relevant because it was excluded. The fact that the State
    chose to respond to Appellant’s defense theory by noting “[y]ou didn’t hear
    that from the stand” underscores the relevance of the excluded testimony.
    Accordingly, we cannot say that the exclusion of Appellant’s testimony was
    harmless and are compelled to reverse and remand for a new trial.
    In so doing, we caution the prosecutor to exercise additional discretion
    when addressing the jury during closing arguments. Comments such as:
    “[w]ell, that’s a hot one, right?,” and “I think this case is obvious, I hope
    you think it is, too,” are inappropriate and do not assist the jury in
    analyzing, evaluating, or applying the evidence to the facts of the case. See
    Williamson v. State, 
    994 So. 2d 1000
    , 1012 (Fla. 2008). Rather, the first
    comment injected unnecessary sarcasm into the argument and the latter
    comment improperly apprised the jury of the prosecutor’s personal
    opinion. As we are reversing due to the improper exclusion of relevant
    evidence, we need not decide whether these remarks, in conjunction with
    other questionable comments, deprived Appellant of a fair trial and rose to
    the level of fundamental error.
    Conclusion
    Because Appellant’s testimony regarding the nature of the purported
    victim’s marriage as it related to the latter’s alleged drug purchases was
    improperly excluded and the error was not harmless, we reverse and
    remand for a new trial.
    Reversed and remanded for a new trial.
    WARNER and DAMOORGIAN, JJ., concur.
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    *        *        *
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
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