State v. a House & 1.37 Acres of Real Property Located at 392 South 600 East

886 P.2d 534, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 1994 Utah LEXIS 88, 1994 WL 694370
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1994
Docket930481
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 886 P.2d 534 (State v. a House & 1.37 Acres of Real Property Located at 392 South 600 East) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. a House & 1.37 Acres of Real Property Located at 392 South 600 East, 886 P.2d 534, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 1994 Utah LEXIS 88, 1994 WL 694370 (Utah 1994).

Opinion

ZIMMERMAN, Chief Justice:

The State appeals a district court order denying the State’s petition, filed pursuant to the Utah Controlled Substances Act, 1 for the forfeiture of a certain house and real property located in Juab County (“the Residence”). The State asserts that in denying forfeiture, the district court made two critical interpre-tory errors: (i) It concluded that the Residence was not a “housing, warehousing, or storage facility” within the meaning of section 58-37-13(1)® of the Code; and (ii) it construed section 58-37-13(1)® to require the State to prove, as a predicate to any forfeiture order, that the Residence was used in furtherance of “significant” or “substantial” drug dealing. We reverse the district court’s interpretation of section 58-37-13(1)® but affirm on other grounds.

We reverse a trial court’s findings of fact only if they are “ ‘against the clear weight of the evidence,’ thus making them ‘clearly erroneous.’ ” In re Estate of Bartell, 776 P.2d 885, 886 (Utah 1989) (quoting State v. Walker, 743 P.2d 191, 193 (Utah 1987)). In making such a determination, we view the evidence in a light most favorable to the trial court’s findings. We recite the facts in accordance with that standard. Van Dyke v. Chappell, 818 P.2d 1023, 1024 (Utah 1991); Lake Philgas Serv. v. Valley Bank & Trust Co., 845 P.2d 951, 953 n. 1. (Utah Ct.App.1993).

On November 13, 1992, Utah Highway Patrol officer Paul Mangelson stopped Ned Shepherd on Interstate 15 in Juab County. During a search of Shepherd’s vehicle, Man-gelson found fifteen pounds of marijuana. After Mangelson placed Shepherd under arrest, he contacted officers in the Juab County Sheriffs office and asked if they would like to interview Shepherd. The officers indicated that they would and asked Mangelson to bring Shepherd to the sheriffs office.

During a search of Shepherd’s personal effects, the officers found a list of names and telephone numbers. Although most of the individuals on the list were Shepherd’s friends and co-workers, the list also included the names of people to whom Shepherd had planned to deliver marijuana. One of the officers noticed that “Kim,” the first name on the list, had a Nephi telephone number. The officer believed that the phone number belonged to the respondent in this case, Kim Beddoes; he later confirmed his suspicion by *536 looking in the phone book. Apparently, the officers in Juab County were familiar with Beddoes because they told Shepherd “that [Beddoes] was a public nuisance.” After some prodding, Shepherd informed the officers that he had known Beddoes for approximately twenty years and that “for all those 20 years they had been dealing in drugs together, using drugs, that sort of thing.” 2

After the interview, the officers asked Shepherd if he was willing to make a controlled delivery to Beddoes. The officers informed Shepherd that he had two choices. If he agreed to make the controlled delivery, they would agree to charge him only with a class B misdemeanor. If he refused to cooperate, however, they would charge him with four felony drug offenses and seek an order forfeiting his house to the State. Shepherd ultimately agreed to make a controlled delivery of marijuana to Beddoes.

After agreeing to make the controlled delivery, Shepherd called Beddoes and said: “Kim, stay there. I’ll be over in a second.” Shepherd then entered into a discussion with the officers about the proper amount of marijuana to deliver to Beddoes. Although he had not sold Beddoes more than a quarter of a pound “within the last couple years,” Shepherd indicated to the officers that “at this time I was going to deliver a pound to him so he didn’t have to keep coming back to Utah County.” Because it was getting late and the officers did not want to execute the search warrant after dark, they used a prepackaged twenty-three-ounce brick of marijuana from another criminal case. 3

Once they decided that Shepherd would deliver the prepackaged twenty-three-ounce brick of marijuana, the officers placed an electronic listening device on Shepherd. Shepherd then drove to Beddoes’ home and met him in the garage area of the house. After reminding Beddoes that Beddoes still owed him $450 from a prior transaction, Shepherd handed Beddoes the package containing the marijuana. Before he left, Shepherd indicated that Beddoes owed him $1600 for the latest delivery and again reminded him about the $450 due from a previous transaction. The entire meeting lasted approximately one minute.

After the delivery, an officer followed Shepherd back to the Juab County Sheriffs office and obtained a warrant to search the Residence. Officers from the Nephi City Police Department and the Juab and Utah County Sheriffs’ offices executed the warrant shortly thereafter. At least three officers entered the Residence through a basement door on the southwest side of the house. The officers saw a shadow of what appeared to be a person on a wall in the basement. They moved toward the shadow and advised whoever “was in there to come out with their hands up.” Beddoes walked out of a bathroom and toward the officers with his hands up. The officers then entered the bathroom and found an overflowing toilet that had been stuffed full of marijuana.

At the same time the officers were entering the Residence through the basement door, several officers entered through the front door. They found Annette Beddoes in the kitchen. An officer read Annette her Miranda warnings and asked her if she would like to speak with him. According to the officer, Annette informed him that the scales, pipes, and narcotics were kept downstairs at the bar. The officer also testified that Annette confirmed that Beddoes was in the narcotics dealing business and that he conducted his narcotics transactions in the downstairs bar area of the Residence. The *537 district court evidently did not find the officer’s testimony' credible.

The officers then searched the Residence. During this search, they found a pipe containing marijuana residue, electronic scales, Baggies, and a metal tray containing marijuana seeds. All of these materials were located on or around the bar in the basement of the home. After the search, the officers arrested Beddoes and transported him to the Nephi jail. The Juab County Attorney initiated this forfeiture proceeding against the Residence sometime thereafter.

After a bench trial, the Fourth District Court denied the forfeiture and ordered the county to return the Residence to the Bed-does.

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886 P.2d 534, 253 Utah Adv. Rep. 30, 1994 Utah LEXIS 88, 1994 WL 694370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-a-house-137-acres-of-real-property-located-at-392-south-600-utah-1994.