J.A13035/14


NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37


LOUTFI ARABATLIAN, AS                       :     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF              :          PENNSYLVANIA
ZWART ARABATLIAN, DEC’D                     :
AND LOUTFI ARABATLIAN, AS                   :
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF              :
KEVORK ARABATLIAN, DEC’D,                   :
                                            :
                          Appellant         :
                                            :
                    v.                      :
                                            :
                                            :
LAURA PLATT,                                :
                                            :
                          Appellee          :     No. 2541 EDA 2013


               Appeal from the Judgment Entered October 3, 2013
                In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
                         Civil Division No(s).: 08-11584

BEFORE: ALLEN, MUNDY, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.:                     FILED DECEMBER 29, 2014

        Appellant/plaintiff, Loutfi Arabatlian, as the administrator of the

estates of his late parents, Zwart Arabatlian and Kevork Arabatlian, appeals

from the judgment entered in the Chester County Court of Common Pleas in

favor of Appellee/defendant, Laura Platt. In this wrongful death/car accident

case,1 a jury found Appellee was not negligent. The sole issues on appeal



*
    Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
1
    The wrongful death action pertained to Zwart Arabatlian.
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are whether the trial court erred in not admitting hearsay testimony under

the excited utterance and present sense impression exceptions. We affirm.

      This case arises from a two-car accident on the “rainy, misty”2 night of

October 19, 2006.      Kevork Arabatlian was driving one car; his wife, the

decedent in this case, Zwart Arabatlian, was his passenger. Mr. Arabatlian

was seventy-eight years old at the time and his first language was

Armenian. Trial Ct. Op., 10/3/13, at 2-3. The trial court stated, “It is a fair

inference from the evidence in this case that Mr. Arabatlian was not fluent in

the English language, or at least, spoke with a pronounced Armenian

accent.”   Id. at 3.   Appellee was the driver of the other vehicle and was

sixteen years old at the time of the accident. N.T. Trial, 4/10/13, at 6.

      Ms. Arabatlian subsequently died.3        On October 17, 2008, Mr.

Arabatlian and his son, Appellant, acting as administrator of Ms. Arabatlian’s

estate, commenced the instant suit by filing a praecipe to issue a writ of

summons. Their third amended complaint, filed October 6, 2009, set forth

four counts: wrongful death, negligence, intentional infliction of emotional

distress, and a survival action. On April 8, 2013, Appellant filed notice that

2
  See N.T. Trial, 4/9/13, at 7 (direct examination testimony of Police
Sergeant David Leahy).
3
  Appellee asserts on appeal that the issues of Ms. Arabatlian’s “injuries and
cause of death were hotly contested at trial.” Appellee’s Brief at 6 n.1.
Nevertheless, because the jury found Appellee was not negligent, it did not
reach the second question on the verdict slip: whether Appellee’s negligence
“was the cause of or at least a substantial factor in bringing about loss and
damage to” Appellant. Verdict Slip, 4/12/13.



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Mr. Arabatlian had died, and Appellant, as administrator of Mr. Arabatlian’s

estate, was substituted as a party.

      On the night of the accident, Appellee was driving south on Route 352.

Mr. Arabatlian was stopped at a stop sign on Carmac Street, at a “T-

intersection,” waiting to turn left and northbound onto Route 352. See N.T.,

4/9/13, at 36.    Mr. Arabtlian’s car hit the right side of Appellee’s vehicle.

See id. at 49. Appellant’s theory of the case was that Mr. Arabatlian waited

for two cars to pass, did not see Appellee’s car because its headlights were

off, turned, and the two cars collided.      Appellee’s defense was that her

headlights were on and Mr. Arabatlian failed to yield the right-of-way. See

Appellee’s Brief at 7.

      On February 8, 2012, Appellee filed pre-trial motions in limine to

exclude, inter alia, as inadmissible hearsay post-accident statements, made

by both Mr. and Mrs. Arabatlian, that Appellee’s headlights were not on.

According to Appellee, the trial court granted the motion in part and denied

it in part: the court precluded responding police officer Sergeant David

Leahy from testifying about Mr. Arabatlian’s statements, but allowed two

neighbors to testify about statements made by both Mr. and Mrs.

Arabatlian.4 Appellee’s Brief at 9.


4
  Appellee states that “[i]t appears that the trial court’s pre-trial ruling did
not become a part of the record.” Appellee’s Brief at 10 n.3. However,
Appellee notes that the court’s evidentiary rulings at trial, which we discuss
infra, were consistent with its purported pre-trial rulings. On appeal,



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         The case proceeded to a jury trial on April 8, 2013, almost six-and-a-

half years after the accident. We review in detail the testimony of Sergeant

Leahy and the two neighbors, as well as Appellee’s hearsay objections and

the court’s rulings.

         Appellant’s first witness was Sergeant Leahy, who testified to the

following.    He arrived at the scene within two minutes of receiving a call

about the accident.     Id. at 10.   Upon questioning by the court, Sergeant

Leahy clarified that he did not know what time the accident occurred. Id. at

11.       The sergeant “viewed the area,” “assess[ed] the scene,” and

approached Mr. Arabatlian, who was standing outside his vehicle. Id. at 11-

12. Ms. Arabatlian was still in the passenger seat and “appeared to be in

pain.”     Id. at 15-16.    The first objection to testimony about what Mr.

Arabatlian said transpired as follows:

              [Appellant’s counsel, to Sergeant Leahy:] When you
           approached [Mr. Arabatlian,] what is the first response or
           the first thing that he said to you?

              [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

              [Appellant’s counsel:] I withdraw the question. That’s
           a very poor question. I withdraw the question.

              THE COURT: All right, it’s withdrawn. Next question.

Id. at 12.

         Next, Appellant’s counsel asked Sergeant Leahy to describe Mr.

Appellant makes no mention of Appellee’s motions in limine or the trial
court’s ruling on them.



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Arabatlian’s demeanor. Sergeant Leahy responded that Mr. Arabatlian was

“emotionally distraught[,] very panicked[,] just very upset about the whole

incident[.]” Id. at 12-13. The next objection came as follows:

           [Appellant’s counsel:] What is the first thing you recall
        saying when you approached [Mr. Arabatlian]?

          [Sergeant Leahy:] I asked him what had happened.
        He advised me that—.

           [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

           THE COURT: Sustained.

          [Appellant’s counsel:] When you saw [Mr. Arabatlian,]
        when you said that, did he make any type of a gesture or
        make any sounds to you?

           [Sergeant Leahy:] Yes. He stated that—

           [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

            [Appellant’s counsel:] No, not what he said. Right now
        I just want to get into what his demeanor was and how he
        responded to you without getting into—

          [Sergeant Leahy:]     He responded in a very panicked
        manner.

                                *    *    *

          [H]e was emotionally distraught. He was shaking, he
        was visibly shaken, visibly upset.

Id. at 13. In response to the next several questions, Sergeant Leahy stated

Mr. Arabatlian was speaking in a “very shaken [and] panicked” way, his

voice was panicked and emotional and “not at a level of normal speaking,”

and he “immediately responded to [the sergeant’s] questions.”     Id. at 14.



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The third objection arose:

              [Appellant’s counsel:] What, in terms of the tone of
           voice and the emotion and the panic, how did he—what did
           he tell you?

             [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

             THE COURT: Sustained.

Id. at 14.

      Appellant’s counsel then asked Sergeant Leahy about his observations

of Ms. Arabatlian during this time, as well as the sergeant’s usual procedure

of asking certain questions when arriving at the scene of accident where

people were still in their cars.   Id. at 15-17. The final objection arose as

follows:

              [Appellant’s counsel: W]hen you would have [asked Mr.
           Arabatlian if he was] okay, did Mr. Arabatlian blurt
           something out?

             [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection—withdrawn. . . .

             THE COURT: It’s just a yes or no.

             [Sergeant Leahy:] Yes.

               [Appellant’s counsel:] What’s the first thing—when he
           blurted something out, was he responding to whether
           everyone is okay or was he blurting out something totally
           different?

             [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

             THE COURT: Sustained.

              [Appellant’s counsel:] Judge, can we see you at
           sidebar?



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            THE COURT: No. Next question, please.

Id. at 17-18.

      In its opinion, the court also considered the testimony of Appellant’s

witnesses, husband-and-wife Mark Crupi and Anne Jordan. See Trial Ct. Op.

at 7-8. Crupi testified to the following. On the night of the accident, he and

Jordan were on their back porch, which faced Carmac Street. N.T., 4/9/13,

at 69-70. They heard a loud crash, ran to the intersection, and “were there

within two minutes.” Id. at 70-71. They arrived there before police. Id. at

77.

      Crupi and his wife approached the Arabatlians’ car. Mr. Arabatlian was

attempting to get out of the car and “was in a panic.”      Id. at 72.   Crupi

testified, “He was, I guess, going into shock, screaming ‘no lights, no lights,

no lights, no lights.’   . . .   Two cars passed and no lights.”    Id. at 73.

Appellee objected, but the court overruled the objection. Id. Crupi testified

that as Mr. Arabatlian was saying this, he pointed to the car in the middle of

the street, which was not occupied, had one door open, and had no lights on

“except the dome light.” Id. at 73-75. Crupi walked over to the car, saw

that engine was still running, and that the headlights and taillights were not

on, turned off the ignition, and returned to the Arabatlians.    Id. at 75-76.

Crupi was scared when he saw Ms. Arabatlian; she “was turning white right

in front of” them and Crupi “thought she was going to die.” Id. at 77.

      Anne Jordan testified as well, corroborating her husband’s testimony



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that they were on their back porch, heard a crash, and went outside to

investigate.     Id. at 98.   Mr. and Mrs. Arabatlian were in their car and

appeared “really upset” and confused.        Id. at 100.   Mr. Arabatlian “was

trying to get out of the car,” and Crupi helped him.       Id.   The court then

sustained an objection to Jordan’s testimony about what Mr. Arabatlian said:

            [Appellant’s counsel]: Before anyone said anything to
         the elderly couple[,] did you hear the elderly man do
         anything?

               [Jordan:] Yes, yes.

               Q. What?

               A. They were upset that there was no lights.

               [Appellee’s counsel:] Objection.

               THE COURT: Sustained.

Id. at 101. Jordan further testified that Appellee’s car’s engine was running

but its headlights and taillights were off. Id. at 102.

      When asked about Ms. Arabatlian’s demeanor, Jordan was permitted

to testify about what Ms. Arabatlian said: “She scared me.         She was so

upset. She was holding her chest. She kept repeating the same thing, ‘no

lights, no lights.’” Id. at 102. Appellee objected on hearsay grounds, but

the court overruled the objection. Id. at 102-03.

      On April 12, 2013, the jury returned a verdict, finding Appellee was

not negligent. On April 22nd, Appellant filed a motion for post-trial relief,

arguing, inter alia, that the trial court erred in precluding Sergeant Leahy



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from testifying about Mr. Arabatlian’s excited utterance.5     Appellant filed a

supporting brief which further claimed that Mr. Arabatlian’s statement should

have been admitted as a present sense impression. The trial court held oral

argument on July 19th and denied the motion on August 14th.

      Appellant filed a notice of appeal on September 3rd, and judgment in

favor of Appellee was entered on September 24th.6 Appellant presents two

issues for our review: whether the trial court erred in not allowing, under the

excited utterance and present sense impression hearsay exceptions,

Sergeant Leahy to testify about Mr. Arabatlian’s statement to him.

      At this juncture, we summarize the trial court’s opinion as follows.

Appellant “never established the exact words of [Mr.] Arabatlian to which

Sergeant   Leahy    would   have   testified[,]   nor   that   Sergeant   Leahy

remembered [Mr.] Arabalitan’s exact words.” Trial Ct. Op. at 2.

         In his post-trial motion, [Appellant] states “[T]he excited
         utterance was that [Mr.] Arabatlian was traveling on
         Carmac Street and brought his vehicle to a stop at the stop
         sign at [Route 352] at which time he let two vehicles pass
         who were traveling southbound and then proceeded to

5
  Appellant also argued that the jury verdict was against the weight of the
evidence and the court erred in charging the jury that Appellee’s negligence
had to have caused the accident. They do not pursue these issues in the
instant appeal.
6
  Although Appellant purported to appeal from the order denying his post-
trial motion, we deem the appeal is filed from the judgment subsequently
entered. See Pa.R.A.P. 905(a)(5) (providing notice of appeal filed after
announcement of determination but before entry of appealable order shall
be treated as filed after such entry and on day thereof); Jenkins v. Wolf,
911 A.2d 568, 569 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2006).



                                     -9-
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            attempt to turn left when he was struck by the vehicle
            operated by [Appellee] with [Mr.] Arabatlian uttering
            [Appellee’s] vehicle did not have its lights on at the time of
            the crash.”       In his brief in support of the motion,
            [Appellant] states “[I]t was anticipated that Sergeant
            Leahy would have testified with respect to the excited
            utterance of [Mr.] Arabatlian, that [Mr.] Arabatlian blurted
            out that he was stopped at the stop sign and let two cars
            heading southbound on [Route 352] pass before entering
            onto [Route 352], and [Mr.] Arabatlian blurted out that
            [Appellee’s] vehicle did not have its headlights on at the
            time of the crash.” Quite a “blurt out” and, in any event,
            clearly not [Mr.] Arabatlian’s actual statement [sic]. The
            police report is clearly in the language of Sergeant Leahy
            and is not a quotation of any statement made by [Mr.]
            Arabatlian. . . .

Id. at 3-4 (quoting Appellant’s Brief in Support of Mot. for Post-Trial Relief,

7/1/13, at 7; Appellant’s Mot. for Post-Trial Relief, 4/22/13, at 2). The court

reasoned Appellant’s

            position depends upon Mr. Arabatlian being upset, shaken,
            panicked and emotionally distraught at the time of his
            conversation with Sergeant Leahy.            Under that
            circumstance, what could be deemed an excited utterance
            is what Mr. Arabatlian said and not Sergeant Leahy’s
            interpretation of what Mr. Arabatlian meant.

Id. at 3.

      As stated above, on appeal Appellant first avers the trial court erred in

precluding Sergeant Leahy from testifying about Mr. Arabatlian’s purported

excited utterance.      He repeatedly avers throughout his brief that in the

accident, Ms. Arabatlian “suffered severe painful and debilitating injuries

including numerous fractured ribs[ and] a lacerated liver[ and that]

eyewitnesses testif[ied] she was in pain[ and] turning white and that they



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were fearful she” would die.     See Appellant’s Brief at 5, 6, 14, 18, 23.

Appellant also repeatedly asserts that Mr. Arabatlian was upset, distraught,

panicked, and shaking, and that within minutes of the accident, he “blurted

out” a statement to Sergeant Leahy, “which was memoralized by the

[sergeant] contemporaneously when it was made.”          Id. at 23, 24.    With

respect to the trial court’s opinion that he “never established” Mr.

Arabatlian’s “exact words,” Appellant maintains “that Sergeant Leahy was

the very first witness called at trial with the Trial Court not knowing what, if

anything, any of the other witnesses may say.” Id. at 25. Appellant avers

his “counsel immediately and timely asked for a sidebar . . . to make an

offer of proof and, if necessary, invite the Trial Court to have an in camera

inquiry of Sergeant Leahy as [to whether he had] a specific recollection as to

what was ‘blurted out.’” Id. at 24-25. However, Appellant states, the trial

court denied the request for a sidebar discussion. We find no relief is due.

      We note the relevant standard of review:

         The admission or exclusion of evidence is within the sound
         discretion of the trial court, and in reviewing a challenge to
         the admissibility of evidence, we will only reverse a ruling
         by the trial court upon a showing that it abused its
         discretion or committed an error of law. Thus our standard
         of review is very narrow . . . . To constitute reversible
         error, an evidentiary ruling must not only be erroneous,
         but also harmful or prejudicial to the complaining party.

Croyle v. Smith, 918 A.2d 142, 146 (Pa. Super. 2007) (citation omitted).

      Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803(2) provides that an excited

utterance is not excluded by the rule against hearsay. Pa.R.E. 803(2). It


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defines an “excited utterance” as “[a] statement relating to a startling event

or condition, made while the declarant was under the stress of excitement

that it caused.” Id. This Court has stated:

         For a statement to be considered an excited utterance, it
         must be made spontaneously:

            [A] spontaneous declaration by a person whose mind
            has been suddenly made subject to an overpowering
            emotion caused by some unexpected and shocking
            occurrence, which that person has just participated
            in or closely witnessed, and made in reference to
            some phase of that occurrence which he perceived,
            and this declaration must be made so near the
            occurrence both in time and place as to exclude the
            likelihood of its having emanated in whole or in part
            from his reflective faculties . . . .

         Additionally, when determining whether a statement is an
         excited utterance, the following factors must be
         considered: “whether the statement was in narrative
         form, the elapsed time between the startling event and
         the declaration, whether the declarant had an
         opportunity to speak with others and whether, in
         fact, she did so.” There is no bright line rule as to the
         amount of time which has elapsed between the accident
         and the witness’s statement, rather “[t]he crucial question,
         regardless of time lapse, is whether, at the time the
         statement is made, the nervous excitement continues to
         dominate while the reflective processes remain in
         abeyance.”

Croyle, 918 A.2d at 149 (citations omitted) (emphases added).

      In Croyle, the plaintiff and defendant were in a vehicular collision. Id.

at 145. At trial, the parties presented competing versions of the accident.

Id.   Another driver, Dunbar, had witnessed the collision and provided

testimony that supported the defendant’s position.         Id.    The plaintiff



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attempted to present testimony of a responding police officer, to whom

Dunbar “gave a narrative statement” approximately ten minutes after the

accident. Id. at 145, 149. This statement was allegedly different from what

Dunbar said in a deposition.      Id. at 149.   The trial court did not allow

Dunbar’s statement to the officer into evidence. Id. at 145.

      On appeal to this Court, the plaintiff contended that Dunbar’s

statement to the officer was admissible “under either the present sense

impression or excited utterance exceptions to the hearsay rule.”        Id.   The

plaintiff argued that Dunbar “was ‘upset’ when making the statement[ ] as

he had just seen the startling event of an accident and [the plaintiff’s]

injury.” Id. at 149-50. This Court noted the plaintiff did not indicate what

Dunbar said, but “only state[d] that Dunbar provided [the officer] with a

narrative account of what occurred prior to the accident.” Id. at 149. This

Court opined:

         [U]pon consideration of the [excited utterance] factors, we
         do not find that the trial court abused its discretion in
         omitting Dunbar’s statements. First, Dunbar had spoken
         to [the plaintiff and another motorcyclist] and checked to
         make sure [the defendant] was okay prior to making the
         statement. Second, Dunbar’s statement was in response
         to a question posed by [the officer]. Third, according to
         [the officer’s] testimony, Dunbar’s statement was in a
         narrative form, not a single reaction to the accident. While
         none of these factors alone would be dispositive, we
         conclude that taken as a whole, Dunbar’s statement to
         [the officer] lost “the conditions of being made ‘under the
         stress of excitement caused by the [accident].’”

Id. at 150 (citations omitted).



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      Pursuant to the discussion in Croyle, we affirm the decision of the trial

court to preclude Sergeant Leahy’s testimony as to what Mr. Arabatlian

purportedly told him.   A careful review of Appellant’s brief reveals that he

does not articulate Mr. Arabatlian’s exact statement to the sergeant.

Instead, Appellant only refers to “the statement at issue,” “the excited

utterance which was memorialized by the officer contemporaneously when it

was made,” “what was ‘blurted out,’” “this essential evidence.” Appellant’s

Brief at 19, 24, 25, 26; see also id. at 23 (stating Mr. “Arabatlian ‘blurted

out’ a response which has become . . . the issue of this post-trial motion

[sic]”). Such abstract references contrast with the testimony of Crupi and

Jordan that was allowed: Mr. Arabatlian and Ms. Arabatlian both said “no

lights, no lights.” See N.T., 4/9/13, at 73, 102-03. Thus, Appellant has not

dissuaded this Court from the trial court’s opinion that what he sought to

introduce was not Mr. Arabatlian’s exact words but instead Sergeant Leahy’s

narrative as to what Mr. Arabatlian said.

      We note Appellant’s argument “that a statement may be admissible

even though it is made in response to a question.” Appellant’s Brief at 17

(emphasis added) (citing Commonwealth v. Edwards, 244 A.2d 683, 685

(Pa. 1968); Commonwealth v. Stokes, 186 A.2d 5, 7-8 (Pa. 1962)).

However, as stated in Croyle, whether the hearsay statement is made in

response to a question is but one factor to consider among several.       See

Croyle, 918 A.2d at 149. Additionally, although Appellant emphasizes that



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Mr. Arabatlian was the first person to whom Sergeant Leahy spoke,

Appellant ignores the trial court’s observation that the converse is not true.

Sergeant Leahy was not the first person to whom Mr. Arabatlian spoke;

instead, he spoke first to Crupi.   As stated above, Crupi was permitted to

testify that Mr. Arabatlian said to him, “[N]o lights, no lights, no lights, no

lights,” and “Two cars passed and no lights.” See N.T., 4/9/13, at 73.

      With respect to Appellant’s contention that the court denied him the

opportunity to make an offer of proof and that the court could not have

known what subsequent witnesses would have testified, Appellant ignores

the fact that Appellee raised this issue in a pre-trial motion in limine.

Appellant further ignores the trial court’s ruling on this motion: to exclude

the testimony from Sergeant Leahy but admit Crupi’s and Jordan’s testimony

that the Arabatlians said Appellee’s car did not have headlights on.

      Finally, Appellant has not established he suffered prejudice as a result

of the trial court’s ruling. See Croyle, 918 A.2d at 146. As stated above,

both Crupi and Jordan, who were the first people to whom Mr. and Ms.

Arabatlian spoke, both testified that the Arabatlians said “no lights, no

lights.” See N.T., 4/9/13, at 73, 102-03. These statements establish what

Appellant purportedly sought to show with Sergeant Leahy’s testimony: that

the Arabatlians exclaimed or blurted that Appellee’s car did not have its

headlights on.   In light of all the foregoing, we do not disturb the court’s

ruling that the statement was not admissible under the excited utterance



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exception.

      Appellant’s second claim on appeal is that the court erred in not

admitting the statement under the present sense exception to the hearsay

rule. After citing relevant legal authority, his sole argument is: (1) “there is

no question that the statements which [Mr.] Arabatlian had made to

Sergeant Leahy describing or explaining the events or conditions were made

immediately after those events occurred;” (2) the evidence showed “that it

was most unlikely that [Mr.] Arabatlian[ ] had the opportunity to form the

purpose of misstating his observation.” Appellant’s Brief at 27.

      This Court has explained,

         Pennsylvania Rule of Evidence 803(1) allows for the
         admission of a present sense impression where “[a]
         statement describing or explaining an event or condition
         made while the declarant was perceiving the event or
         condition, or immediately thereafter.”      Pa.R.E. 803(1).
         “This exception permits testimony of declarations
         concerning conditions or events observed by the declarant
         regardless of whether the event was exciting.” “[T]he
         trustworthiness of the statements depends upon the timing
         of the statement.” “The observation must be made at the
         time of the event or so shortly thereafter that it is unlikely
         that the declarant had the opportunity to form the purpose
         of misstating his observation.”

Croyle, 918 A.2d at 150 (citations omitted).

      We incorporate our discussion of Appellant’s excited utterance issue

above, and we agree with the trial court that, with respect to his present

sense impression claim, what Appellant wanted to present “was a new

statement made by way of explanation to Sergeant Leahy.”           See Trial Ct.



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Op. at 10.   Furthermore, Appellant likewise does not establish he suffered

prejudice, where Crupi and Jordan testified that Mr. and Ms. Arabatlian said

“no lights, no lights.” N.T., 4/9/13, at 73, 102-03.

      Finding no basis for relief, we affirm the judgment entered in favor of

Appellee.

      Judgment affirmed.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 12/29/2014




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