PER CURIAM.
This is an interlocutory appeal from a pre-trial order in a criminal prosecution for official misconduct. The indictment charges employees of the New Jersey Department of Treasury (Treasury) and OSI Collection Services, Inc. (OSI), which provided a variety of tax-collection services through various contracts with Treasury between 1995 and 2007. The prosecution is based on allegations that some of Treasury's employees accepted personal benefits — such as meals, drinks and entertainment — from OSI employees and improperly performed their official duties related to the award, extension and administration of OSI's contracts.
Defendant Harold E. Fox, formerly the deputy director of Treasury's Division of Taxation, and David M. Gavin, the assistant director of Taxation's compliance activity are charged together in one remaining count.
On this appeal, the State challenges an order precluding the use of hearsay statements made by Gavin in the May 7 e-mail as proof of Fox's guilt. The State contends that the statements are not excluded because they fall within
Treasury's Division of Taxation collects taxes, and to accomplish that Taxation uses and oversees OSI's tax-collection services. As noted above, Gavin and Fox were employed in Taxation. Although Fox and Gavin were subordinate to the Director of Taxation, Robert K. Thompson, Fox was Gavin's superior and rated his performance. As the assistant director of compliance activity in Taxation, Gavin and employees assigned to compliance were expected to supervise and work with OSI employees. Between 1995 and 2004, OSI or its predecessor collected delinquent taxes pursuant to contracts with the State.
The State acknowledges that it has no direct evidence that Fox ever accepted a personal benefit from OSI, and relies on evidence indicating that Gavin and others in Taxation did. Because OSI's contract to recover delinquent taxes would expire in July 2004, toward the end of 2003 employees in two divisions of Treasury began the steps to award a new three-year contract for delinquent tax-collection services.
Treasury's Division of Purchase and Property oversees the award of State contracts for services. Because of the cost and nature of the contract, the Director of the Division of Purchase and Property would award it to the "responsible bidder whose [conforming] bid . . . will be most advantageous to the State, price and other factors considered."
As explained in documents submitted to the trial court, the first step for the State in the process of procuring contracts for services is preparation of a request for proposal (RFP) used to solicit bids. RFPs are developed by the Purchase Bureau in the Division of Purchase and Property and the State agency or agencies using the service, in this case Taxation. David Kern, a senior buyer in Treasury's Bureau of Purchase in the Division of Purchase and Property, was assigned as the Purchase Bureau's senior buyer for this contract.
In December 2003, Gavin was working on a RFP for the delinquent tax contract. He sent a revised version of the RFP to Linda Eagleton and Steven Itell, employees in the compliance section that reported to Gavin and worked with OSI, and asked for their suggestions. Gavin copied Fox on that e-mail, and on January 6, 2004, Gavin sent Fox a draft RFP. In the e-mail, Gavin pointed to a provision of the RFP addressing start-up time and observed that it favored OSI because OSI would not need any start-up time. Gavin invited Fox's "comments, edits etc." There is no direct evidence of a response from Fox on that draft. Gavin sent another e-mail to Fox on February 5, providing him with a copy of a RFP that he had "just sent" to the Purchase Bureau.
On February 17, 2004, Kern, as the senior buyer for the Purchase Bureau, sent Gavin a timeline that called for delivery of the RFP that day. Kern asked Gavin to review the Purchase Bureau's report on Taxation's RFP and reply with comments. Later that day, Gavin forwarded Kern's e-mail to Fox, noted that there were "no real changes" and said he intended to write Kern to clarify that the contract was for an hourly not a contingent fee. Fox responded, reminding Gavin of a conversation they had with their director, Thompson, about a penalty provision to apply if the contractor failed to meet performance levels for minimum guaranteed collections. Fox noted that the provision in the draft RFP was not an adequate penalty.
On February 20, 2004, Fox asked counsel for Taxation to meet with him and Thompson to discuss use of an hourly rather than a contingency fee. Fox did not copy Gavin on that e-mail. The attorney agreed to meet, and on March 3 she sent a revised provision on liquidated damages to Fox and Thompson. Fox approved the draft, and on March 4 the attorney sent it to an acting chief in the Division of Purchase and Property, inviting the chief's comments. The attorney copied Gavin on that e-mail.
Between March 4 and April 13, 2004, Gavin communicated with Kern, the acting chief, and Taxation's counsel. Fox was not a recipient of any of those e-mails.
On April 14, 2004, Gavin e-mailed Kern and advised the RFP had been reviewed and revised to state "guaranteed minimum amounts . . . to further protect [the] State's interest." Gavin copied Fox on that e-mail. Kern returned the RFP to Gavin with marginal comments on May 4 and sought his reaction. Gavin sent the marked-up copy to Fox, bringing Fox's attention to comments Gavin had highlighted and saying he would "refrain from comment until" Fox looked at the provisions. The employees from the Department of Purchase and Property questioned the justification for the high guaranteed minimums stated in the RFP.
On May 5, 2004, Kern wrote to the acting chief of Purchase and Property. Kern advised the chief that he had told Gavin the RFP "was weighted to[o] much in the favor of the incumbent." He also reported that Gavin had asked for a meeting to discuss the issue with the acting chief. Kern asked the chief to schedule one, and she suggested a meeting the next day. Although no one from Taxation was copied on either of those e-mails, the chief has notes indicating a May 6 meeting with Gavin and Fox on a contract for tax-collection services.
On the morning of May 7, 2004, Kern e-mailed Gavin and asked him to "decide on four (4) members to participate on the committee" that would evaluate the bids returned on delinquent tax recovery RFP. Fox was not copied.
The record includes the following description of a bid evaluation committee and its role in the process of awarding a contract. Prior to receipt of bid proposals, the Director of the Division of Purchase and Property decides whether to appoint an evaluation committee to review bids and make a recommendation on award of the contract. If an evaluation committee is used, the director may accept or reject its recommendation in making the final decision. The committee members are "generally State employees." Ordinarily, there are five members: one from the Purchase Bureau, who serves as the committee chair; one or more from the agency or agencies that will use the service and have pertinent expertise, one of whom will draft the committee report; and one or more State employees "from an agency not directly affiliated with the [u]sing [a]gency," to "provide an objective outlook . . . or an area of expertise not directly available within a using agency."
As the senior buyer, Kern was to serve as the member from the Purchase Bureau. After receiving Kern's e-mail, Gavin sent the May 7, 2004 e-mail at issue on this appeal to four employees who were later appointed to complete its membership. The four employees were: two — Eagleton and Itell — who worked for Gavin in the compliance section of the Division of Taxation, the using agency, and had worked with OSI under the prior contract; the other two — Marguerite Desantis and Maria Salamandra — worked in Treasury's Division of Revenue, which manages the State's receipts and accounts receivable. There is no evidence indicating that Desantis or Salamandra worked directly with employees in Taxation or OSI's employees.
Gavin wrote:
Gavin copied Fox on this e-mail.
Salamandra forwarded a copy of Gavin's e-mail to her deputy director, James Fruscione. But Fruscione has no recollection of a conversation with Fox on the issue.
Long before this e-mail, in January 2003, Gavin had written to Fox asking whether it would "be better" for neither of them to get involved in the "OSI delinquency" when it comes up. Fox agreed that they could not be "part of the evaluation team for the delinquency contract[s]."
The State acknowledges that it has no direct evidence that Fox ever accepted a personal benefit from OSI. A State investigator who interviewed Fox testified at a preliminary hearing and indicated that he said he had received a gift basket that he returned. She also "believed" he said that he had beers with OSI employees, sometimes they picked up the tab and sometimes he did. Fox also said he attended a conference, or "maybe more than one," where he had dinners paid for by OSI.
There is evidence indicating that Gavin accepted meals, drinks and a golf outing paid for by OSI. Eagleton and Itell told an investigator that Gavin encouraged them to have dinner and lunch with OSI employees, which they did on occasion and reluctantly. They reported that Gavin, but not Fox, attended.
The State seeks leave to use this e-mail to establish Fox's conduct in connection with the appointment of members of the valuation committee: Fox "discussed the evaluation committee selections" with Gavin; Fox agreed with Gavin that the recipients "would be excellent representatives based on [their] overall knowledge and expertise with contracts"; and Fox contacted "Revenue Deputy Jim Fruscione" to pave the way for that deputy's subordinates, Desantis and Salamandra, to serve as members. Because the State offers the e-mail to prove the truth of the facts Gavin asserted at a time when he was not testifying, it is hearsay.
As the proponent of Gavin's May 7 e-mail, the State relies on the provisions of
The standard for our review is clear. "In reviewing a trial court's evidential ruling, an appellate court is limited to examining the decision for abuse of discretion."
To admit the hearsay, the trial court must be satisfied that the conditions of admissibility are established by a fair preponderance of the evidence and reasonable inferences.
The trial court's inquiry as to the existence of conditions permitting admission of hearsay is factual in that it requires an evaluation of the evidence relevant to the requisite conditions. Assuming that the trial court properly understood the prerequisite conditions, a reviewing court does not "substitute its own judgment for that of the trial court, unless the trial court's ruling was so wide of the mark that a manifest denial of justice resulted."
The State argues that we should review the matter de novo because the trial court, contrary to the law, did not consider the content of the e-mail along with the other evidence in determining whether the conditions for admission were established. That argument does not require extensive comment, because the trial court's written opinion demonstrates consideration of the content of the statements. While the court did not draw the inferences the State urged as to the law, the court accurately set forth and applied the rules stated in
To the extent the State argues that the conditions for admission of hearsay statements may be established with reference to the statement at issue alone, the State is mistaken.
The question for us is whether in light of the evidence in addition to the hearsay statement, the trial court was clearly mistaken in concluding that the State failed to establish the conditions for admission. Having resolved the common questions, we consider the trial court's rulings on the three exceptions at issue separately below.
We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court's decision to preclude admission of the e-mail on the ground that Gavin was not "authorized by Fox to make a statement concerning the recipients' appointment to the evaluation committee.
The court's determination was not wide of the mark or clearly mistaken. The court focused on the condition critical to the application of this exception to the hearsay rule — evidence that Gavin was "authorized by" Fox "to make a statement concerning the subject."
At best, the hearsay in the e-mail suggests that Gavin conferred with Fox and that Fox acted to clear the way for two employees from the Division of Revenue to participate. Authorization to speak on the subject, not agreement and cooperation, is critical to application of this exception to the hearsay rule. There is no factual basis apart from the e-mail from which one could infer that Gavin sought authorization from Fox.
The State contends that the content of Gavin's e-mail and the fact that it is copied to Fox compels the inference that Gavin thought he had Fox's authorization. Even if we were to agree that the inference the State suggests reasonably could be drawn based on assumptions about the natural behavior of employees in a bureaucratic setting, it is not one so compelled by logic and common sense that its rejection would amount to a clear mistake. Because the trial court makes the finding,
More important, the authorization is evaluated from the perspective of the authorizer, not the speaker. For example, in
In relying on
The State also relies on
These decisions of other courts are distinguishable. They do not provide a reason for us to disturb the trial court's determination.
In our view, the trial court did not err in determining that the State failed to establish the conditions for admission of Gavin's e-mail pursuant to
The State does not cite, and we have not found, a decision of a court in this State extending the hearsay exception applicable to agents or employees to permit admission of the evidence against a co-worker who is a superior of the declarant. The State relies on decisions applying the parallel federal rule,
Stated generally these federal cases involve businesses owned and operated by the defendant against whom the statements were admitted and statements that were made by a person who reported directly to that owner-operator. In
One case the State cites involves a high-ranking officer in a company who was not an owner of the business.
In
Important to our consideration of
The State acknowledges that this e-mail is the only evidence of Fox's participation in selection of the committee members. But agency law includes the "concept that an agent's statement cannot be used
In any event, the content of the e-mail is not helpful on the issue of agency. At best, the content indicates Fox's agreement that the employees are qualified and his communication with a fellow deputy director about selection of employees from his Division. That conduct is consistent with Fox lending a hand to Gavin in an inter-division matter outside Fox's authority, not Gavin acting as Fox's agent. Gavin's e-mail is not reasonably read as conveying information on Fox's behalf or at his direction. Gavin's use of the first person plural does not suggest action done at the behest or command of another. Nor is there anything telling in the identity of the four employee recipients — two from the using agency and two from a different agency with Treasury, which is in accordance with the directions on committee composition that Kern gave Gavin.
Consideration of the other evidence apart from the content does not warrant a different conclusion on agency. Neither the e-mails showing Fox's involvement in drafting the RFP nor Fox's semi-annual ratings of Gavin's performance shed light on the selection of the committee members. The trial court's decision is based on Kern's role as the representative of the Director of the Division of Purchase and Property, who was responsible for making appointments to a bid evaluation committee. In the absence of any evidence that Fox assigned Gavin or suggested that Kern assign him to select the committee members, the trial court's decision is not clearly mistaken.
In our view, the arguments of the State, taken as a whole, suggest an agency with respect to the May 7 e-mail that is based on participation in a common plan to do wrong. Where that is the theory of agency, an overly broad reading of the agency exception risks creation of a loophole circumventing the exception for statements made in furtherance of a conspiracy, which in our view would undermine
We further conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that the State failed to establish the conditions essential to admission of the May 7 e-mail as a statement Gavin made in furtherance of a plan to commit a crime or civil wrong in which Gavin and Fox were participating.
The trial court concluded that this exception was inapplicable because there was no independent evidence of Fox's participation in a plan to select the committee members. Although the trial court accurately described the only charge against Fox, complicity in appointing members of the committee for the purpose of benefiting State employees or OSI, the State correctly contends that the court took too narrow a view of the criminal plan it alleges. As we understand it, the State's allegation is a common plan to have the contract awarded to OSI that had two steps — 1) the drafting of an RFP that favored OSI and 2) the appointment of committee members with a bias in OSI's favor.
We affirm on a different basis. To prevail on the motion, the State had to show that Fox and Gavin were involved "in a plan to commit" a crime or civil wrong and that the e-mail was written in furtherance of that plan. The "first" condition is that "the statement must have been made in furtherance of the conspiracy."
It is not the role of the court to search for a link between the appointment of these committee members and the possible success of the plan. The State must articulate an argument as to how Gavin's e-mail is a statement in furtherance of a plan and support it with evidence and reasonable inferences, not conjecture. Without that link, there is no basis for concluding that this e-mail relating to the appointment is a statement made in furtherance of plan to wrongfully secure a benefit for OSI or the State employees.
For that reason, we affirm the trial court's determination that the statements are not admissible pursuant to
Affirmed.