State v. Adams

2011 UT App 163, 257 P.3d 470, 682 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 164, 2011 WL 1900117
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 19, 2011
Docket20090793-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2011 UT App 163 (State v. Adams) 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
State v. Adams, 2011 UT App 163, 257 P.3d 470, 682 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 164, 2011 WL 1900117 (Utah Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

ROTH, Judge:

11 Verbery Adams appeals his conviction following a bench trial for attempted murder, a first degree felony. Adams contends that the trial court erroneously admitted into evidence a fourteen-year-old conviction for murder in violation of Utah Rule of Evidence 404(b)'s notice and noncharacter purpose requirements. See Utah R. Evid. 404(b). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 On October 4, 2008, Adams attended a party at an apartment complex where he and Allan Saena got into a fight. Allan, who was very intoxicated, punched Adams because Adams was talking to "one of [Allan's] girls." Others joined the brawl until approximately five men were engaged in beating Adams. Eventually, the fight broke up and Adams ran to his car, an SUV. As Adams was driving past the apartment building, Allan's cousin, Gary Saena, and Gary's fiancée, Jennifer Tafi, walked across the street. Adams hit Gary with his vehicle, clipping his left hip and causing him to roll over the hood of the car. Gary managed to land on his feet, and he and a couple others chased Adams on foot. Allan, who had witnessed Adams hit his cousin, ran in front of Adams's car and began pounding the hood in an effort to make Adams stop. Instead, Adams drove over Allan with the car.

13 Gary ran to Allan and lifted his head and upper body off the street. Adams circled the building and drove by the party again a "minute or two" later for the purpose, according to him, of picking up his girlfriend who had been left behind. When Gary heard Tafi screaming, however, he looked up to see Adams's car coming at him and Allan at approximately thirty to forty miles per hour. Gary then tried to "drag [Allan] out of the way so he wouldn't get hit, but thle carl ... caught [Allan's] legs a second time," driving over them at about the knees.

T4 A security officer for the apartment complex was driving behind Adams when he came around the building for a second time. He testified that he did not witness Adams's vehicle strike anyone nor did he see anyone lying in the road. Adams continued driving but stopped some distance past the group that had gathered around Allan. The security officer parked his car in front of Adams's and got out to speak with him. When Adams reported that he had been assaulted, the security officer instructed him to wait in his car while the security officer went back to speak with other witnesses. After the security officer departed, Adams left the scene in his vehicle. The other witnesses told the security officer that Adams had struck Allan with his car, and at that point, the security officer observed an injured male lying in the grass. Allan was treated at the hospital for injuries consistent with his being run over by a vehicle at least once and not inconsistent with being struck twice. His most severe injuries included a broken pelvis, a broken right femur, several fractures to the verte-brace, two broken ribs, a broken left collarbone, and a lung contusion. Allan was released from the hospital in a wheelchair two- and-a-half weeks later. He spent three months in the wheelchair and another two months using a walker.

15 Adams was charged with two counts of attempted murder: a first degree felony charge for intentionally or knowingly at *472 tempting to kill Allan, see Utah Code Ann. § 76-4-101(1) (2008) (setting forth the elements of attempt); id. § 76-5-208(2)(a) (Supp. 2010) (listing elements of first degree murder as intentionally or knowingly causing the death of another); id. § 76-4-102(1)(c)(f) (2008) (classifying attempted murder under sections 76-4-101(1) and 76-5-208(2)(a) as a first degree felony), and a second degree felony charge for his actions against Gary, see id. § 76-4-101(1) (getting forth the elements of attempt); id. § 76-5-208(2)(b) (defining as murder the commission of "an act clearly dangerous to human life," with the intent to cause serious bodily injury, that causes the death of another); id. §§ 76-4-102(1)(b)-(c), 76-5-208(a) (classifying attempted murder under sections 76-4-101(1) and 76-5-203(2)(b) as a second degree felony).

1 6 Approximately five months before trial, the State notified defense counsel that it intended to "introduce [Adams]'s 1995 Murder conviction [for killing someone with his vehicle] in the State of Illinois ... to establish knowledge, intent, and absence of mistake or accident in the event that [Adams] testifield] at the trial and put[] his knowledge or intent at issue." On the morning of the bench trial, the State moved to admit a certified copy of Adams's conviction under rule 404(b) of the Utah Rules of Evidence. Over the defense's objection, the trial court determined that the conviction was admissible, observing that if the case were before a jury, the court "probably wouldn't allow it" but that admission "would [not] be prejudicial in terms of [the court] being the [factfin-der] in this case." The court then cautioned the parties that it was concerned with "what transpired on October 4, 2008," not fourteen years earlier.

17 During trial, an investigating officer testified that in the course of an interview with Adams following the October 4 incident, Adams had mentioned an incident in Chicago in 1995 in which he had hit a person with his vehicle. Defense counsel objected to this testimony, arguing that it was "hearsay" and that "the State has other methods of introducing this." At that point, the State offered a certified copy of a statement of conviction for murder in Ilinois in 1995; the court overruled Adams's objection to the officer's testimony, stating that it had "already told [the prosecutor] that [it] w[ould] allow" the conviction in evidence. The defense raised no objection to the certified copy of the statement of conviction itself, either as to its admissibility in general or as to the fact that the State had offered it in its case-in-chief rather than, as its notice had stated, in rebuttal in the event that Adams testified and raised the issue of his intent. The court admitted the statement of conviction "to the extent it may or may not be helpful." Once the 1995 conviction was admitted, the State indicated, "[Wle're not going to talk about that Chicago incident," and did not question the officer further regarding the conviction. The only other mention of the prior conviction occurred during the State's closing argument when the prosecutor stated that, based on the cireumstances of this case and his prior conviction for murder with a vehicle, a "car is just [Adams's] preferred weapon."

1[ 8 In a detailed ruling from the bench, the trial court convicted Adams of first degree attempted murder but acquitted him of the second degree attempted murder charge. The court did not mention the prior conviection in its ruling. Adams now appeals the trial court's decision to admit the fourteen-year-old conviction for murder in Illinois.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

19 Adams contends that the trial court erred in admitting the prior conviction both because the State failed to give reasonable notice of its intent to introduce bad acts evidence and because it was presented to show propensity rather than for a noncharae-ter purpose. See generally Utah R. Evid. 404(b) (allowing prior convictions to be admitted for noncharacter purposes provided that the State give the defense notice of its intention to introduce such evidence). We review a trial court's evidentiary rulings under rule 404(b) for abuse of discretion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 UT App 163, 257 P.3d 470, 682 Utah Adv. Rep. 5, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 164, 2011 WL 1900117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-adams-utahctapp-2011.