PEOPLE OF MI V NICKOLA JUNCAJ
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STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
UNPUBLISHED
March 16, 2001
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v
No. 217570
Wayne Circuit Court
LC No. 98-002793
NICKOLA JUNCAJ and ANTON JUNCAJ,
Defendants-Appellees.
Before: O’Connell, P.J., and Kelly and Whitbeck, JJ.
PER CURIAM.
The prosecution appeals as of right orders dismissing the charges against defendant
Nickola Juncaj and defendant Anton Juncaj; Nickola Juncaj and Anton Juncaj are father and son.
Defendants were charged with first-degree premeditated murder,1 conspiracy to commit first
degree premeditated murder,2 and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony,3 all
relating to the killing of Allan Johnson. The case involves complex evidentiary issues, some of
which were decided in a previous order of this Court and others of which we decide in this
opinion. We affirm the decision of the circuit court to deny the stay requested by the prosecution
despite our determination that the circuit court erred with respect to several evidentiary issues.
I. Basic Facts
A. Overview
In mid-November 1995, Allan Johnson was shot to death as he was driving on the Lodge
Freeway. Skender Kajoshaj and Mike Paljuesvic testified under oath at an investigative
subpoena hearing regarding conversations that they had with Anton Juncaj concerning this
shooting. In their sworn statements, Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic alleged that Anton Juncaj told them
that he and another individual, Chris Palukaj, had shot Johnson while they were traveling on the
Lodge Freeway. Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic also alleged that Anton Juncaj told them that Nickola
Juncaj helped plan the shooting and provided the guns that were used in the shooting. According
1
MCL 750.316(1)(A); MSA 28.548(1)(A).
2
MCL 750.157(a); MSA 28.354(1); MCL 750.316(1)(A); MSA 28.548(1)(A).
3
MCL 750.227(b); MSA 28.424(2).
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to Paljuesvic, this killing was revenge for a fight Johnson had with Nickola Juncaj at their
workplace.
It is of critical importance, at the outset, to distinguish between the “statements” in this
case. The first set of statements consists of the sworn testimony Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic gave
during the investigative subpoena hearing; these statements consist of the words that Kajoshaj
and Paljuesvic spoke to the prosecution at that hearing. We refer to these statements as the
“Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements.”
Contained within the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements are the second set of statements: the
remarks that Anton Juncaj allegedly made to Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic which they repeated to the
prosecution. We refer to these statements as “Anton Juncaj’s statements.” To complicate
matters further, contained within Anton Juncaj’s statements were his remarks concerning his own
involvement in the crime and his father’s involvement. Thus, there are two subsets of statements
contained within Anton Juncaj’s statements. Without a clear distinction between the various
statements, this case becomes something of a hall of mirrors.
Fortunately, the substance of these statements is easier to understand than their
relationship to each other. Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic revealed that Anton Juncaj told them without
questioning or prompting that he, Anton Juncaj, and another individual, Chris Palukaj, had shot
and killed Johnson by chasing him on the Lodge Freeway. According to Kajoshaj and
Paljuesvic, Anton Juncaj told them that Johnson was in one car while Palukaj and Anton Juncaj
were in another car. Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic also stated that Anton Juncaj told them that his
father, Nickola Juncaj, helped plan the shooting and provided the guns that they used to kill
Johnson. According to Paljuesvic, this killing was revenge for a fight Johnson had with Nickola
Juncaj at their workplace.
B. Procedural History
Despite swearing at the investigative subpoena hearing that the statements that they made
to the prosecutor were true, Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic recanted these statements at the preliminary
examination after they were granted immunity from prosecution for any perjury they might have
committed. They explained this sudden change by claiming that their sworn statements were
untrue and only the result of police coercion.4 The prosecution impeached Kajoshaj and
4
Kajoshaj alleged that, while he was imprisoned for an unrelated offense, the police approached
him at least three times to ask him to report that defendants were involved in Johnson’s murder.
He claimed that only after the police allegedly locked him in a cell under deplorable conditions
for four days and promised that he would be transferred to another facility if he cooperated did he
give the prosecution false information about defendants.
Paljuesvic said that the police told him that someone wanted to speak with him for an
hour, but that he was not under arrest. Paljuesvic claimed that the police put him in a police car
and drove him to a police station in Detroit, where he was questioned under oath from about 1:00
p.m. until 1:30 a.m.; according to Paljuesvic, he made the statement incriminating defendants
after approximately four hours of questioning. Paljuesvic alleged that, despite his requests to call
his family so that they could find an attorney for him, the police did not allow him to make
contact with anyone during this time. Paljuesvic further testified that he felt threatened during
this interrogation, that the police were attempting to connect him to this crime, and that he would
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Paljuesvic by using the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements; thus, portions of the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic
statements are in the transcript of the preliminary examination. The district court concluded that
there was probable cause to find that defendants committed the crimes and bound them over for
trial.
Defendants brought a motion to quash the information in the circuit court. At the May
1998 hearing on that motion, defendants’ attorneys argued that the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic
statements would not be admissible at trial because both Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic were available
to testify, rather than being “unavailable” as that term is defined in MRE 804(a). Accordingly,
defendants’ attorneys contended, the prosecution lacked sufficient evidence to proceed to trial
without the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements.
The prosecution contended that the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements were made under oath
and were admissible under MRE 801(d)(1)(A), the prior inconsistent statement rule. MRE
801(d)(1)(A) provides that a statement otherwise inadmissible as hearsay may be admitted if
[t]he declarant testifies at the trial or hearing and is subject to cross-examination
concerning the statement, and the statement is (A) inconsistent with the declarant's
testimony, and was given under oath subject to the penalty of perjury at a trial,
hearing, or other proceeding, or in a deposition, or (B) consistent with the
declarant's testimony and is offered to rebut an express or implied charge against
the declarant of recent fabrication or improper influence or motive, or (C) one of
identification of a person made after perceiving the person[.]
Specifically, the prosecution contended that an investigative subpoena hearing fits the definition
of a “proceeding” under the prior inconsistent statement rule.
However, the circuit court first considered whether the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements
were admissible under MRE 804(b)(3), the statement against interest rule. MRE 804(b)(3)
makes a statement admissible if it
was at the time of its making so far contrary to the declarant's pecuniary or
proprietary interest, or so far tended to subject the declarant to civil or criminal
liability, or to render invalid a claim by the declarant against another, that a
reasonable person in the declarant's position would not have made the statement
unless believing it to be true. A statement tending to expose the declarant to
criminal liability and offered to exculpate the accused is not admissible unless
corroborating circumstances clearly indicate the trustworthiness of the statement.
The circuit court determined that Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic did make their sworn statements, but
that the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements were not admissible pursuant to People v Poole5 because
(1) the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements were not against the pecuniary or penal interests of
have done “anything to get out of there, anything.”
5
People v Poole, 444 Mich 151, 165; 506 NW2d 505 (1993). Additionally, in People v Beasley,
239 Mich App 548, 556; 609 NW2d 581 (2000), this Court reaffirmed its commitment to the
Poole analysis.
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Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic, (2) the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements were not made
“contemporaneously with” the shooting, and (3) Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic made the statements to
the police while in custody, rather than to their usual confidantes. The circuit court determined
that, at the time of the hearing, Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic were available to testify at trial,
precluding admissibility under MRE 804(b)(3).
However, the circuit court also concluded that, in order to determine if the
Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic sworn statements were admissible under MRE 803(d)(1)(A), the prior
inconsistent statement rule, it had to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine whether
Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic made their statements voluntarily. Although the circuit court did not
distinguish between the two defendants in this case, the context of its ruling and its reference to
Poole suggests that it intended for its ruling under this rule of evidence to affect only Nickola
Juncaj. Poole dealt with the circumstances that make statements by a codefendant implicating
another person in a crime admissible against that other person at trial.6 The rule from Poole
would therefore apply to determining whether Anton Juncaj’s statements implicating Nickola
Juncaj, his father, in the shooting are admissible at trial; in the context of this case, codefendant
Nickola Juncaj would be the other person implicated by Anton Juncaj’s statements. Poole would
not be factually relevant to whether the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to his own
involvement in the crime would be admissible against him at trial.
As a result of its ruling, the circuit court ordered the parties to submit briefs discussing
whether the circumstances surrounding the sworn statements constituted a hearing or other
proceeding within the meaning of MRE 801(d)(1)(A), the prior inconsistent statement rule. The
circuit court scheduled a hearing to determine whether Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic made these
statements in accordance with the procedures set forth in the investigative subpoena statutes and
whether their statements were given voluntarily. Before the circuit court could hold the hearing,
the prosecution filed an interlocutory appeal with this Court, arguing that the circuit court erred
as matter of law in ordering an evidentiary hearing because defendants did not have standing to
challenge whether the sworn statements were voluntary.
In June 1998, this Court entered an order prohibiting the circuit court from conducting the
evidentiary hearing.7 The Court reasoned that “[t]he circuit court’s review of a defendant’s
motion to quash an information based on insufficient evidence is a narrow inquiry based on the
record before the examining magistrate. Accordingly, the circuit court may not conduct an
evidentiary hearing to expand the record.” Further, this Court questioned whether defendants’
arguments in the circuit court were akin to a motion to dismiss or a motion to suppress the sworn
statements as evidence. As a result, this Court held that defendants did not have standing to
move to suppress the sworn statements because they were not the result of extreme coercion.
Finally, the order simply stated that “we hold as a matter of law that the statements made at the
investigative subpoena hearing are excluded from the definition of hearsay under MRE
801(d)(1)(A). Therefore, the statements are admissible at defendants’ trial.”
6
Id. at 160-165.
7
Technically, this Court denied the application for leave to appeal and by order answered the
questions raised in the application. We refer to this part of the procedural history in this case as
an interlocutory appeal only for convenience.
-4
At a hearing in September 1998, which followed this Court’s disposition of the
interlocutory appeal, the prosecution asked the circuit court to enter orders permitting the
Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements to be used at trial. The circuit court refused to sign the
prosecution’s proposed orders, stating that they were too broad and it was unnecessary to enter
orders simply to admit evidence at trial.
In January 1999, on the day set for trial, the prosecution asked the circuit court to declare
that Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic were unavailable to testify, noting that they were not present in
court that day and had also failed to appear at a previous hearing. In light of its position that
Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic were unavailable, the prosecution moved the circuit court to enter an
order admitting the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements, as well as the testimony of Kajoshaj and
Paljuesvic at the preliminary examination in which portions of the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic
statements were used for impeachment, as substantive evidence. The prosecution also asked the
circuit court to stay trial for forty-eight hours so that he could appeal its ruling that the portion of
Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to Nickola Juncaj8 were not admissible against Nickola Juncaj
pursuant to MRE 804(b)(3), the statement against interest rule. While the prosecution did not
ask the circuit court to dismiss the charges against both defendants if it denied its motion, the
prosecution conceded that if it could not admit the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating
to Nickola Juncaj, there would be no case against Nickola Juncaj.
Both defense attorneys opposed the prosecution’s motion to admit the sworn statements
as substantive evidence. Nickola Juncaj’s attorney argued that the trial court had previously
ruled that the sworn statements were not admissible under MRE 804(b)(3). Anton Juncaj’s
attorney contended that admitting the sworn statements as substantive evidence was improper
because he did not have an opportunity to cross-examine Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic. Further,
according to Anton Juncaj’s attorney, admitting the sworn statements as substantive evidence
would deprive both defendants of their right to confront these two witnesses. Both defense
attorneys indicated that they were prepared to go to trial and, therefore, opposed delaying trial for
an additional interlocutory appeal.
In response to the prosecution’s motions, the circuit court stated it had ruled that it had
excluded the sworn statements under MRE 804 months before trial. According to the circuit
court, this gave the prosecution sufficient time to appeal the decision but the prosecution simply
failed to take advantage of that time. The circuit court denied the prosecution’s motion for a
stay, stating that any further delay would be unfair to defendants, defense counsel, and the court
itself. Because the prosecution was not ready to proceed, the trial court dismissed the charges
without prejudice.
8
Again, this is our interpretation of the meaning of the circuit court’s ruling on this point.
-5
On appeal, the prosecution contends that the circuit court erred in dismissing the charges
against both defendants by relying on that court’s May 1998 ruling barring the prosecution from
using the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to Nickola Juncaj at trial.9 We agree that
this evidentiary issue is connected to the circuit court’s order ultimately dismissing the charges in
this case. However, it is connected to this final order only through the prosecution’s decision to
ask the circuit court to delay trial further by granting a stay. Additionally, this evidentiary issue
revolves primarily around Anton Juncaj’s statements. Thus, to resolve the issue of whether the
circuit court erred when it dismissed the charges against both defendants, we must first address
the effect of this Court’s June 1998 order.
II. This Court’s June 1998 Order
This Court’s June 1998 order makes it clear that the testimony at the investigative
subpoena hearing is admissible as substantive evidence at trial. However, that order does not
distinguish between the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements as a whole and Anton Juncaj’s
statements. In its original interlocutory appeal to this Court, the prosecution did not ask this
Court to decide whether the circuit court erred when it determined that the portion of Anton
Juncaj’s statements relating to Nickola Juncaj were inadmissible against Nickola Juncaj.
Accordingly, we have no reason to believe that this Court’s June 1998 order decided, one way or
another, whether the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to Nickola Juncaj were
admissible against Nickola Juncaj at trial. Further, this Court did not determine whether the
circuit court erred when it analyzed the evidentiary issue under MRE 804(b)(3) and Poole. It is
these issues, among others, that are now before us.
This Court’s June 1998 order did, however, resolve part of the problem when it addressed
the classic hearsay-within-hearsay situation that would occur by permitting the
Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements to be used to repeat what Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic originally
claimed that Anton Juncaj said concerning his father’s involvement in the crime.10 This Court
implicitly concluded that an investigative hearing is the sort of hearing that MRE 801(d)(1)(a)
contemplates under the language referring to a prior inconsistent statement made at “a trial,
hearing, or other proceeding, or in a deposition . . . .” Further, as the record of the preliminary
examination in this case indicates, Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic both took oaths at the investigative
9
The issue presented in the prosecution’s brief states that, before the circuit court dismissed the
charges, it “had previously given explicit and implicit assurances that the evidence would be
admissible notwithstanding” the circuit court’s May 1998 order. We cannot find any point in the
record where the circuit court gave any sort of assurances, whether implicit or explicit, that it
would admit the evidence at trial, despite the prosecution’s repeated efforts to secure a written
order admitting the statements against Nickola Juncaj pursuant to MRE 804(b)(3). In fact, at its
later hearing, the circuit court explained at length that it ordinarily ruled on evidentiary issues as
they arose at trial rather than entering orders resolving every dispute in advance of trial.
Fortunately, the prosecutor who appeared at oral arguments in this appeal clarified this matter,
agreeing that there had been no such ruling by the circuit court.
10
As becomes relevant later in this opinion, we assume without deciding that hearsay-within
hearsay is admissible in a criminal trial if “each part of the combined statement . . . conform[s]
with an exception to the hearsay rule.” See Cooley v Ford Motor Co, 175 Mich App 199, 203;
437 NW2d 638 (1988).
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subpoena hearing that would subject them to the penalties for perjury. In fact, they each secured
an agreement immunizing them from prosecution for their statements at the investigative
subpoena hearing.
Almost certainly, Anton Juncaj will be unavailable11 to testify at his own trial because of
his constitutional right to silence.12 Therefore, we interpret this Court’s June 1998 order as
meaning that when Anton Juncaj made statements to Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic about his
involvement in the crime, these statements, as contained in the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements,
can be used against him as a statement against interest under MRE 804(b)(3). Alternatively,
regardless of whether Anton Juncaj decides to testify, the portion of his statements about his
involvement in the crime, as contained in the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements, would be
admissible against him as an admission of a party opponent under MRE 801(d)(2).13
However, this Court’s June 1998 order did not reverse, modify, rely on, or address the
circuit court’s apparent ruling that the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to his
father’s involvement in the crime could not be admitted against Nickola Juncaj at trial.
Therefore, this Court’s June 1998 order does not bind our decision on this evidentiary issue in
any respect14 and it is to this issue that we now turn.
III. Anton Juncaj’s Statements Implicating Nickola Juncaj
A. Standard Of Review
We review evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion.15 However, the Michigan
Supreme Court has also recognized that
decisions regarding the admission of evidence frequently involve preliminary
questions of law, e.g., whether a rule of evidence or statute precludes admissibility
of the evidence. This Court reviews questions of law de novo. Accordingly,
when such preliminary questions of law are at issue, it must be borne in mind that
it is an abuse of discretion to admit evidence that is inadmissible as a matter of
law.[16]
B. Legal Standard
In Poole, supra, the Michigan Supreme Court addressed “whether a declarant’s
noncustodial, out-of-court, unsworn-to statement, voluntarily made at the declarant’s initiation to
11
MRE 804(a).
12
US Const, Am V; Const 1963, art 1, § 17.
13
See, generally, People v Milton, 186 Mich App 574, 576; 465 NW2d 371 (1990).
14
See City of Marysville v Pate, Hirn, & Bogue, Inc, 196 Mich App 32, 34; 492 NW2d 481
(1992) (discussing the law of the case doctrine).
15
People v Starr, 457 Mich 490, 494; 577 NW2d 673 (1998).
16
People v Lukity, 460 Mich 484, 488; 596 NW2d 607 (1999) (citations omitted).
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someone other than a law enforcement officer, inculpating the declarant and an accomplice in
criminal activity, can be introduced as substantive evidence at trial pursuant to MRE 804(b)(3)”
as a statement against interest.17 In other words, the Court was considering whether “carry over”
statements, meaning statements that incriminate someone other than the declarant, made
spontaneously in a noninvestigative atmosphere could be used against the accomplice at trial.18
The Court concluded that
the declarant’s inculpation of an accomplice is made in the context of a narrative
of events, at the declarant’s initiative without any prompting or inquiry, that as a
whole is clearly against the declarant’s penal and interest and as such is reliable,
the whole statement – including portions that inculpate another – is admissible as
substantive evidence at trial pursuant to MRE 804(b)(3).[19]
Further, the Poole Court noted, introducing the declarant’s statement against the accomplice does
not violate the accomplice’s rights under the Confrontation Clause20 “if the prosecutor can
establish that [the declarant] is unavailable as a witness and his statement bears adequate indicia
of reliability or falls within a firmly rooted hearsay exception.”21 What constitutes indicia of
reliability must be determined on a case-by-case basis.22 However, this indicia “must exist by
virtue of the inherent trustworthiness of the statement” and may include evidence that the
inculpatory statement was made (1) voluntarily, (2) contemporaneously with the events identified
in the statement, (3) to “family, friends, colleagues, or confederations – that is, to someone to
whom the declarant would likely speak the truth,” and (4) “spontaneously at the initiation of the
declarant and without prompting or inquiry by the listener.” However, a statement is ordinarily
inadmissible if the inculpatory statement was made (1) “to law enforcement officers or at the
prompting or inquiry of the listener, (2) minimizes the role or responsibility of the declarant or
shifts blame to the accomplice, (3) was made to avenge the declarant or to curry favor,” or
(4) “the declarant had a motive to lie or distort the truth.”23 These factors are neither an
exhaustive list nor dispositive of whether the inculpatory statement is admissible.24 Rather,
courts must view the circumstances surrounding the statement as a whole in order to determine if
the “totality of the circumstances” suggest that the statement is reliable.25
17
Id. at 153-154.
18
Id. at 159-160.
19
Id. 161.
20
US Const, Am VI; Const 1963, art 1, § 20.
21
Poole, supra at 163.
22
Id. at 163.
23
Id. at 165.
24
Id.
25
Id.
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C. MRE 804(b)(3)
We therefore consider the circumstances surrounding Anton Juncaj when he allegedly
made his statements incriminating his accomplice, his father Nickola Juncaj, to Kajoshaj and
Paljuesvic. According to the fragments of the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic sworn statements read into the
record at the preliminary examination, Anton Juncaj initiated conversations with Kajoshaj and
Paljuesvic at separate times. While we are not certain how close in time to the crime Anton
Juncaj made these statements, he evidently spoke with Kajoshaj while they were socializing and
with Paljuesvic while they were driving in a car. During each of these conversations, Anton
Juncaj essentially told a story of the shooting, including the motivation for that shooting. Part of
this story included references to Nickola Juncaj’s role in securing the weapons used to shoot
Johnson and Nickola Juncaj’s help planning the crime.
As a whole, Anton Juncaj incriminated himself in premeditated murder while talking to
Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic, making these declarations classic statements against his penal interest.
Mentioning his father’s role in the crime was only a natural part of this narrative. Anton Juncaj
had no apparent motive to lie when incriminating his father. In fact, the statements suggested
that Anton Juncaj tended to act to protect his father. These statements were made without
prompting to individuals with whom Anton Juncaj had a friendly relationship. None of these
statements were made to the police or in situations that might be inherently coercive, as might be
the case with a police station. We conclude that these factors all would make Anton Juncaj’s
statements admissible against Nickola Juncaj under Poole and MRE 804(b)(3) unless admitting
them would violate Nickola Juncaj’s right to confrontation.26
D. Right To Confrontation
Poole held that a statement that is inherently reliable or falls under a well-established
exception to the rule against hearsay is admissible as substantive evidence against a person who
did not make the statement, but is implicated in a crime because of it. In this case, the factors
that we have identified that made the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements relating to Nickola
Juncaj’s involvement in the crime admissible under MRE 804(b)(3) also indicate that they are
inherently trustworthy. The statements were made without a motivation to lie, were made
spontaneously, did not tend to incriminate Nickola Juncaj while exculpating Anton Juncaj, and
were not aimed at seeking revenge or currying favor with the listener. The totality of the
circumstances surrounding each statement shows that they are inherently trustworthy. Further,
while Poole expands the concept of an admissible statement against interest, it has done so
within narrow confines and for 7 ½ years. This suggests that Poole describes a “firmly rooted”
exception to the rule against hearsay. Thus, we conclude that admitting the portion of Anton
Juncaj’s statements regarding Nickola Juncaj’s involvement in the crime would not violate
Nickola Juncaj’s constitutional right to confrontation.27
26
Id. 161.
27
Poole, supra at 163.
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E. The Circuit Court’s Reasoning
As a matter of law, we conclude that Anton Juncaj’s statements, as contained in the
Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements, are admissible, both regarding his own involvement in the crime
and his father’s involvement. What puzzles us, however, is the reasoning the circuit court used
to rule them inadmissible, at least regarding Nickola Juncaj. So that there will be no further
confusion, we think it appropriate to comment that the Poole analysis applies to the
circumstances surrounding the declarant at the time he made the statement. Here, Anton Juncaj
was the declarant. Therefore, the Poole analysis required the circuit court to examine the
circumstances surrounding Anton Juncaj’s discussions with Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic, not the
circumstances surrounding Kajoshaj’s and Paljuesvic’s repetition of Anton Juncaj’s statements
at the investigative subpoena hearing. Thus, the factors that the circuit court found troubling,
especially the role of police detention and questioning, were absolutely irrelevant to determining
whether the words Anton Juncaj spoke to Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic could be used at trial.
IV. Introducing The Evidence
Having determined that Anton Juncaj’s statements are admissible against both Anton
Juncaj and Nickola Juncaj, the next question is how the prosecution might be able to introduce
Anton Juncaj’s statements to a jury. As a practical matter, this will involve the use of the
Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements and we now turn to the question of their admissibility. Whether
the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements and the preliminary examination testimony of Kajoshaj and
Paljuesvic (in which the prosecution used portions of the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements for
impeachment purposes) are admissible depends entirely on whether Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic are
“available”28 at trial. On the basis of the record before us, we have no way of knowing whether
either Kajoshaj or Paljuesvic will be available at trial and therefore we cannot at this time resolve
whether the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements can be used against either defendant. Below, we
outline the situations that might arise in the future in which the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements
may or may not be admissible. Rather self-evidently, if the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements are
admissible under the circumstances we describe, then Anton Juncaj’s statements are, consistent
with our conclusions above, also admissible.
If Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic appear at trial and testify consistently with what they said at
the investigative subpoena hearing – and therefore contrary to what they said at the preliminary
examination – then the prosecution has no need to rely on the transcript of the investigative
subpoena hearing to admit the substance of their sworn statements and, contained within those
statements, Anton Juncaj’s statements regarding his own involvement and his father’s
involvement in the crime. By testifying at trial, Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic would remove one of
the layers of hearsay in this case. Further, the prosecution will have no need to impeach their
testimony through the use of the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements since they will be testifying
consistently with those statements.
28
See MRE 801(d)(1); MRE 804(a); see, generally, People v Malone, 445 Mich 369, 377; 518
NW2d 418 (1994).
-10
If Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic appear at trial and testify contrary to what they said at the
investigative subpoena hearing29 – and therefore consistently with what they said at the
preliminary examination – under this Court’s June 1998 order, the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic
statements in their entirety, including Anton Juncaj’s statements contained within them, can be
admitted as substantive evidence. The testimony at the preliminary examination also fits well
under this evidentiary rule. Therefore the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements about his
involvement in the crime, as contained in the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements or in the transcript
of the preliminary examination, can be used against him as a statement against interest under
MRE 804(b)(3) or as an admission of a party opponent under to MRE 801(d)(2). In this opinion,
we have above determined that the portion of Anton Juncaj’s statements, as they relate to
Nickola Juncaj’s involvement in the crime, are admissible against Nickola Juncaj under Poole
and MRE 804(b)(3) and that admitting them would not violate Nickola Juncaj’s right to
confrontation. The preliminary examination testimony of Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic is also
admissible under these circumstances.30
If Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic are not available to testify at trial, the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic
statements, including Anton Juncaj’s statements contained within them, are not admissible under
MRE 801(d)(1)(a).31 To admit the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements, when the defense lacked an
opportunity to cross-examine Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic as they were testifying at the investigative
subpoena hearing, would be a serious violation of the confrontation clause. Further, if Kajoshaj
and Paljuesvic are not available to testify at trial, the Kajoshaj/Paljuesvic statements are not
admissible as former testimony under MRE 804(b)(1) for the same reason. However, the
testimony of Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic at the preliminary examination would be admissible under
this former testimony rule because the defense was present at the preliminary examination and
had an opportunity to cross-examine both witnesses.
We hope that the following matrix makes the analysis of this issue easier to understand.
It applies separately to Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic:
Investigative Subpoena
Hearing Transcript
Preliminary Examination
Transcript
Witness
Available At Trial
Can be used only if trial
testimony is inconsistent. See
MRE 801(d)(1)(a).
Can be used only if trial
testimony is inconsistent. See
MRE 801(d)(1)(a).
Witness
Unavailable At Trial
Cannot be used. Unavailability
defined by case law. See People v
Chavies, 234 Mich App 274, 283
284; 593 NW2d 655 (1999).
Can be used. Unavailability
defined in MRE 804(a).
29
People v Chavies, 234 Mich App 274, 282-283; 593 NW2d 655 (1999) makes clear that the
sort of inconsistency meriting admission of a prior inconsistent statement is widely defined and
need not involve a direct statement by Kajoshaj and Paljuesvic that they reject their earlier
testimony.
30
See People v Morrow, 214 Mich App 158, 164; 542 NW2d 324 (1995).
31
See Chavies, supra at 283.
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V. The Stay And The Dismissal
A. Standard Of Review
This Court reviews a lower court’s decision regarding a motion to stay the proceedings
for an abuse of discretion.32 Similarly, this Court reviews a motion to dismiss for an abuse of
discretion.33
B. The Reasons To Deny The Stay
The prosecution contends, at least in its statement of the issue on appeal, that the circuit
court erred when it dismissed this case and, ultimately, we must decide whether the circuit court
abused its discretion in refusing to issue a stay and in dismissing the case without prejudice. As
we have explained at length above, the circuit court essentially put itself in the position of
making the decision to dismiss the charges against defendants because it had misapplied the law.
We might, therefore, be compelled to reverse under other circumstances. However, we see no
reason to infringe on the circuit court’s discretion here because the dismissal was without
prejudice and, with the evidentiary issues now corrected, the prosecution is free to refile charges
against defendants.
In this regard, we note that by January 5, 1999, defendants had been incarcerated for
approximately one year, they had demanded a speedy trial, and they were prepared to proceed.
Trial was delayed in May 1999 for the interlocutory appeal filed with this Court by the
prosecution, that appeal did not challenge the circuit court’s evidentiary ruling under Poole, and
trial was again delayed in September 1999 to accommodate the prosecution’s schedule. Despite
the three latest months of inactivity in the case, the prosecution did not move for a stay until the
day of trial while the potential jurors were waiting to be selected.34 The prosecution declined an
opportunity to sever the trials and proceed against Anton Juncaj while appealing the circuit
court’s ruling. The prosecution was the first, on the record at least, to suggest dismissing the
charges without a favorable evidentiary ruling. The circuit court also properly commented on the
prejudice it and the defense would suffer from additional delay.
We therefore conclude that there was no abuse of discretion in the refusal to grant a stay
and in the decision to dismiss without prejudice, especially in relation to the charges against
Anton Juncaj. We note that the prosecution could have tried Anton Juncaj separately.
Affirmed.
/s/ Peter D. O’Connell
/s/ William C. Whitbeck
Kelly, J. did not participate.
32
See, generally, People v Bailey, 169 Mich App 492, 499; 426 NW2d 755 (1988).
33
See People v Adams, 232 Mich App 128, 132; 591 NW2d 44 (1998).
34
See People v Dilling, 222 Mich App 44, 53; 564 NW2d 56 (1997) (trial court properly refused
to adjourn sentencing when defense counsel had adequate opportunity to prepare).
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