Cedar City v. McCraw

2025 UT App 123
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedAugust 14, 2025
DocketCase No. 20230747-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 UT App 123 (Cedar City v. McCraw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cedar City v. McCraw, 2025 UT App 123 (Utah Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

2025 UT App 123

THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS

CEDAR CITY, Appellee, v. JENNIFER LYNN MCCRAW, Appellant.

Opinion No. 20230747-CA Filed August 14, 2025

Fifth District Court, Cedar City Department The Honorable Matthew L. Bell No. 221500477

Dylan T. Carlson, Debra M. Nelson, Benjamin Miller, and Wendy M. Brown, Attorneys for Appellant Randall K. McUne, Attorney for Appellee

JUDGE MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER authored this Opinion, in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and DAVID N. MORTENSEN concurred.

CHRISTIANSEN FORSTER, Judge:

¶1 After a ten-minute bench trial held in her absence, Jennifer Lynn McCraw was found guilty of criminal mischief and domestic violence in the presence of a child. On appeal, McCraw contends that her trial counsel (Counsel) rendered constitutionally ineffective assistance in several respects. One claim is dispositive. Because Cedar City (the City) presented no evidence that McCraw damaged or destroyed the property of another—an essential element of criminal mischief, which was also the predicate offense for the domestic violence charge— Counsel’s failure to move for a directed verdict was deficient and prejudicial. We therefore vacate McCraw’s convictions and remand this matter for a new trial. Cedar City v. McCraw

BACKGROUND 1

¶2 In October 2021, McCraw and her girlfriend, Victoria, 2 argued inside their shared residence located in Cedar City, Utah. The dispute escalated to the point that McCraw threw and shattered plates on the floor in front of Victoria’s young child. The City charged McCraw in the Iron County Justice Court with criminal mischief and domestic violence in the presence of a child; the case was later transferred to the Fifth District Court.

¶3 The bench trial was continued once and reset. When the trial was finally convened, McCraw did not appear. Counsel briefly left the courtroom to try to contact her client, returned, and reported that McCraw was unavailable. Counsel explained that McCraw was experiencing homelessness and had relocated out of state to find shelter. Counsel did not argue that McCraw’s absence was involuntary or seek to continue the trial, and the trial proceeded without her.

¶4 Before any witnesses were called, Counsel agreed the City could proceed entirely by proffer 3 and indicated that she did not intend to cross-examine any of the City’s witnesses, even though

1. Following a bench trial, “we recite the facts from the record in the light most favorable to the findings of the trial court and present conflicting evidence only as necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Cowlishaw, 2017 UT App 181, ¶ 2, 405 P.3d 885 (quotation simplified).

2. A pseudonym.

3. “When evidence is going to be received substantively by proffer, the proffering party states what the witness would testify to if called . . . , and if the opposing party consents, a court can accept the proffer.” Krajeski v. Krajeski, 2025 UT App 19, ¶ 47 n.8, 565 P.3d 544, cert. denied, July 2, 2025 (No. 20250403).

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the witnesses were present. The prosecutor proffered the testimony of Victoria and two police officers. The City’s proffers established that McCraw broke and damaged plates during an argument, that Victoria’s minor child witnessed this altercation, and that McCraw confessed to arguing with Victoria and breaking the plates. No proffer established to whom the plates belonged. After the City rested, the trial court asked Counsel, “[D]o you have anything to offer”? She replied, “No, Judge.” Counsel called no witnesses and made no closing argument. The court found McCraw guilty on both counts, and McCraw timely appealed.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶5 McCraw raises several claims of ineffective assistance of counsel, and we address the merits of only one. McCraw contends that Counsel performed deficiently by failing to move for a directed verdict after the City rested its case without proving the damaged plates were owned by someone other than McCraw, an essential element of the criminal mischief charge. McCraw further alleges that Counsel’s failure prejudiced her. “An ineffective assistance of counsel claim raised for the first time on appeal presents a question of law.” State v. Wall, 2020 UT App 168, ¶ 13, 479 P.3d 355 (quotation simplified).

ANALYSIS

¶6 McCraw argues that Counsel’s complete failure at trial to make any motions, pursue any defensive tactics, or otherwise test the prosecution’s case in any meaningful way violated her Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel. Specifically, McCraw argues that Counsel performed deficiently in failing to argue that McCraw’s absence from the trial was involuntary and to request a continuance of the trial, in failing to subject the City’s case to any meaningful adversarial testing, in failing to move for a directed verdict, and in failing to challenge the constitutionality

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of the criminal mischief statute. We are persuaded that Counsel’s failure to move for a directed verdict on the criminal mischief charge provides a basis to vacate McCraw’s convictions and grant her a new trial, and we therefore do not address the merits of her other ineffective assistance of counsel claims. 4

¶7 Applying the test set forth in Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), to prevail on a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, McCraw must show (1) that Counsel performed deficiently and (2) that she was prejudiced as a result. See id. at 687. To show deficient performance, McCraw must overcome the presumption that Counsel’s actions fell “within the wide range of reasonable professional assistance.” Id. at 689. “The court gives trial counsel wide latitude in making tactical decisions and will not question such decisions unless there is no reasonable basis supporting them.” State v. Clark, 2004 UT 25, ¶ 6, 89 P.3d 162 (quotation simplified). Moreover, “the question of deficient

4. Though there is no claim of trial court error here, we would be remiss if we did not note that because a defendant charged with a crime has a constitutional and statutory right to be present at trial, it is incumbent upon the trial court to ensure that a non-appearing defendant has voluntarily absented herself from the trial. See State v. Wanosik, 2003 UT 46, ¶ 13, 79 P.3d 937 (“The right to appear and defend in person is a constitutional one, but may be waived under certain circumstances if the defendant voluntarily absents himself from the trial. However, that voluntariness may not be presumed by the trial court.” (quotation simplified)). “It is impermissible to apply an automatic presumption of voluntariness based on nothing more than non-appearance at a hearing of which a defendant had notice.” State v. Marshall, 2025 UT App 79, ¶ 19, 571 P.3d 824 (quotation simplified). Moreover, “[n]o one denies the general principle” that “the onus is on the [prosecution] to show voluntariness of absence and lack of consent to a trial in absentia.” State v. Ross, 655 P.2d 641, 642 (Utah 1982) (per curiam), cited in Marshall, 2025 UT App 79, ¶ 19.

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performance is not whether some strategy other than the one that counsel employed looks superior given the actual results of trial. It is whether a reasonable, competent lawyer could have chosen the strategy that was employed in the real-time context of trial.” State v. Nelson, 2015 UT 62, ¶ 14, 355 P.3d 1031 (quotation simplified).

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2025 UT App 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cedar-city-v-mccraw-utahctapp-2025.