State of Iowa v. Ellis Earl Houk

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedMarch 19, 2025
Docket23-1691
StatusPublished

This text of State of Iowa v. Ellis Earl Houk (State of Iowa v. Ellis Earl Houk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State of Iowa v. Ellis Earl Houk, (iowactapp 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1691 Filed March 19, 2025

STATE OF IOWA, Plaintiff-Appellee,

vs.

ELLIS EARL HOUK, Defendant-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Taylor County,

Patrick W. Greenwood, Judge.

A defendant convicted for setting fire to his ex-wife’s house challenges the

denial of his motion to strike two jurors for cause and the admission of cell tower

evidence linking him to the scene of the fire. AFFIRMED.

R. Tim Jeffrey of McGinn, Springer & Noethe PLC, Council Bluffs, for

appellant.

Brenna Bird, Attorney General, and Nicholas E. Siefert, Assistant Attorney

General, for appellee.

Considered by Schumacher, P.J., Chicchelly, J., and Telleen, S.J.*

*Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2025). 2

TELLEEN, Senior Judge.

Taylor County was the fourth least populous county in Iowa as of the 2020

census, with a population of just 5896. As one prospective juror put it, “people

know people.” It is therefore no surprise that empaneling a jury for Ellis Houk’s

trial was a difficult task. But after circulating written questionnaires, conducting two

days of voir dire, and sustaining more than two dozen strikes for cause, the district

court was satisfied with the panel of prospective jurors left for the parties to pick.

Houk was not.

In this appeal, Houk challenges the denial of his motion to strike two young

prospective jurors for cause after they admitted in voir dire that they would defer

to the majority view of other jurors, even if not personally convinced of Houk’s guilt

beyond a reasonable doubt. He also contests the district court’s admission of cell

tower evidence that linked him to the scene of the fire. Because we find Houk

cannot show the necessary prejudice to secure a new trial on his jury-selection

claim, and because he failed to preserve his evidentiary objection, we affirm his

conviction and sentence.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

On November 14, 2022, Houk’s forty-four-year marriage came to an end.

Following a contested dissolution trial, the district court entered a decree dividing

millions of dollars in marital assets between Houk and his ex-wife, Gayle. But

conflict continued to fester. On November 19, Gayle retrieved from Houk’s

residence a toolchest that had belonged to her son. Houk believed she took the

wrong tools. That evening, he made multiple calls to the Taylor County Sheriff’s

office, insisting that Gayle be charged for theft. He also drove to the sheriff’s office 3

to plead his case in person. Houk was turned away fuming. The deputy on shift

saw Houk leave in a new, gray, mid-sized SUV.

Later that night, sometime between 2:00 and 3:00 a.m., Gayle awoke to the

sound of breaking glass. She got out of bed to find her front window shattered and

her curtains in flame. Gayle watched as a person “built like the shape of” her ex-

husband broke a second window and threw a yellow five-gallon bucket into the

house. When the bucket struck the ground, fire engulfed the room. Gayle escaped

with serious burns. She was transported by helicopter to a Nebraska hospital,

where she would spend months recovering from her injuries. Almost immediately,

police recovered surveillance images showing a gray, mid-sized SUV parked

outside Gayle’s home at 2:43 a.m., its rear hatch ajar. The deputy who met with

Houk earlier in the evening identified the vehicle as the “exact same SUV” that

Houk had driven to the sheriff’s office.

Police began looking for Houk. Using tower data provided by his cell phone

carrier, they learned he was headed south. Authorities in Hartley County, Texas

intercepted Houk driving a gray SUV without license plates. He told them he was

headed to Port Isabel, Texas for medical treatment, although his explanations

shifted. Houk would later allege he was on his way to Mexico. A search of Houk’s

vehicle turned up sleeping bags, work gloves, a handgun, and a copy of Houk’s

divorce decree. No passport, luggage, or toiletries were found inside.

The State charged Houk with first-degree arson, attempted murder, willful

injury, first-degree burglary, and criminal mischief. Trial commenced in July 2023.

From the outset, both parties acknowledged that picking a jury would be difficult.

Jury questionnaires suggested—and voir dire quickly confirmed—that many 4

members of the venire were already familiar with the case. The court and counsel

conducted private interviews with each panel member who claimed prior

knowledge of Houk, Gayle, or the facts surrounding the fire. Over the course of a

two-day selection process, more than two dozen prospective jurors were excused

for cause.

On the second day of jury selection, the parties resumed their general voir

dire. Among other questions, Houk’s attorney asked the panel members how they

would respond to the pressure of deliberations if picked to serve on Houk’s jury—

specifically, whether they would follow the view of their fellow jurors or “hold firm

in [their] conviction” if not persuaded of Houk’s guilt. Two prospective jurors,

S.R.B. and B.H., acknowledged they would defer to a majority view. According to

S.R.B.:

S.R.B.: [T]o me, majority always rules. That’s how I was— that’s how I was brought up, and so I feel like that’s how it was in school. And obviously I’m just getting out of high school, so that’s kind of what I’m used to, so whenever I’m in a group of 12 people and I’m the one person that either thinks something is one way or the other and the other people think the opposite, especially, I mean, in the age range looking around the room, I don’t think that I would—I don’t think I would be able to top somebody or me personally just being by myself look at someone and say—look at 11 people and say, “No. I think that this is how it’s supposed to be.” ... Defense counsel: [T]his case requires a unanimous verdict, the 12 persons all convinced beyond a reasonable doubt. If I’m understanding you right, it sounds like you’re saying you don’t necessarily need to be unanimously convinced if you’re on the jury if the majority is convinced. Is that your position? S.R.B.: Correct.

Eighteen-year-old B.H. shared a similar perspective:

B.H.: [B]eing younger than everyone else[,] I feel like it would be harder to say my opinion and not knowing maybe more than they do or understanding more than they do. Maybe they understood 5

some phrase or something that was said, they understood it more than I did and I’m—I don’t know. I don’t know. ... Defense counsel: If it’s 11 people that are convinced beyond a reasonable doubt and you are not and you just go with the majority, that means that you weren’t convinced beyond a reasonable doubt. So are you willing to require to be convinced on reasonable doubt, or are you just going to agree with the rest of the panel if that’s what happens? B.H.: Just agree with them.

Houk moved to strike S.R.B. and B.H. for cause. In response, the district court

informed the panel that “the verdict has to be unanimous, 12 vote guilty, 12 vote

not guilty.” It then asked, “If I instruct you that that’s the law you have to follow, will

you follow that law?” S.R.B. and B.H. succinctly responded, “Yes.” The court

denied Houk’s challenge for cause.

After voir dire concluded, but before the parties exercised their peremptory

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