State v. Argueta

2020 UT 41, 469 P.3d 938
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 2020
DocketCase No. 20180814
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2020 UT 41 (State v. Argueta) 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. Argueta, 2020 UT 41, 469 P.3d 938 (Utah 2020).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final publication in the Pacific Reporter

2020 UT 41

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

THE STATE OF UTAH, Respondent, v. CARLOS WALTER ARGUETA, Petitioner.

No. 20180814 Heard November 13, 2019 Filed July 2, 2020

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

Third District, Salt Lake The Honorable Mark S. Kouris No. 151906605

Attorneys: Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., Christopher D. Ballard, Asst. Solic. Gen., Sandi Johnson, Salt Lake City, for respondent Teresa L. Welch, Nathalie S. Skibine, Salt Lake City, for petitioner

JUSTICE HIMONAS authored the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT and JUSTICE PEARCE joined. ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE LEE filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgement, in which JUSTICE PETERSEN joined.

JUSTICE HIMONAS, opinion of the Court: INTRODUCTION ¶1 Carlos Walter Argueta was caught in the middle of the night in A.C.’s apartment. At the scene, she complained to a police officer that Argueta had inappropriately touched her. That night, also at the scene, and after invoking his Miranda rights, Argueta refuted the allegation and offered a short, innocent explanation of STATE v. ARGUETA Opinion of the Court what had occurred. He was later charged with burglary and forcible sexual abuse. At trial, he elaborated upon his prior explanation, while A.C. and other witnesses offered testimony to the contrary. During the trial, the State introduced two prior bad acts that Argueta committed in an attempt to rebut his innocent explanation. At the end of a two-day trial, a jury convicted Argueta on both counts. ¶2 Argueta argues that the prosecutor’s comments at trial about the differences between his initial statement at the scene and his trial testimony were a violation of his constitutional right to remain silent. He also argues against the admission of the two prior acts, claiming their admission prejudiced him. ¶3 We hold that any error found or assumed in this case was not prejudicial and, as a result, not reversible. In addition, we only address the issues that are preserved for appeal, and Argueta failed to preserve his argument that A.C.’s eyewitness testimony regarding an earlier encounter between them was so unreliable as to be inadmissible. We therefore affirm the judgment of the court of appeals and the conviction underlying it. BACKGROUND ¶4 On the night of June 6, 2015, A.C., her boyfriend (J.W.) and several of their neighbors were drinking and socializing in their next-door neighbors’ backyard.1 At some point between midnight and 2:00 a.m., A.C. decided to go to bed. She left the backyard by herself and went into her apartment. J.W. stayed outside a while longer. ¶5 A.C. and J.W. lived in a studio apartment in a house that had been converted into four separate units. Upon returning to her apartment, A.C. closed the apartment door. Because the apartment door locked automatically, she left her key in the door’s lock, so J.W.—who did not have a key—could enter the apartment without waking her. She then undressed and got into her bed and under the covers. With the television on, she drifted into sleep. While she was “on the verge of getting to sleep,” in “that place between deep sleep and still aware,” A.C. felt someone “stroking” her vagina and __________________________________________________________ 1 “When reviewing a jury verdict, we examine the evidence and

all reasonable inferences in a light most favorable to the verdict, reciting the facts accordingly. We present conflicting evidence only when necessary to understand issues raised on appeal.” State v. Griffin, 2016 UT 33, ¶ 2 n.2, 384 P.3d 186 (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks omitted). 2 Cite as: 2020 UT 41 Opinion of the Court “rubbing” her buttocks. A.C. was facing a wall and her eyes were closed, so she could not see who touched her. She figured that it was J.W. It was not. ¶6 Some short but unknown time after A.C. went inside, J.W. decided to retire to bed too. He came back to the apartment and saw the door slightly ajar, with the key still in the lock. Once he looked inside, he saw A.C. asleep, but not covered, which was unusual for her. While he was still standing at the doorway, a man came running towards him from inside the apartment. Startled, J.W. stopped the man, and managed to hold him up against a dresser while he repeatedly shouted, looking for an explanation for the man’s presence in the apartment. ¶7 The shouting awoke A.C. She saw that J.W. was holding a man, who turned out to be Argueta. At that time, she could not see his face clearly. She told J.W. that the man had touched her. J.W. told her to call the neighbors and wrestled the man into the house’s hallway. A.C. followed them, finally saw Argueta, and punched him before running out to find the neighbors and call the police. Argueta kept apologizing and tried to escape. After he managed to get out of J.W.’s grip, two other neighbors arrived and helped J.W. pin him down on the house’s front lawn until the police arrived and arrested him. ¶8 After a police officer read Argueta his Miranda rights and he invoked them, Argueta overheard A.C. telling the officer that Argueta had touched her. Argueta retorted that A.C. was “a liar, that he [had] met her at a bar, . . . that the keys [had been] left in the door, and that he had left the keys in the house.”2 The State charged Argueta with burglary and forcible sexual abuse. ¶9 At trial, Argueta presented a more elaborate version of the events of that night. He testified that he had met A.C. and J.H., her boyfriend at the time, at a bar close to A.C.’s apartment a year to a year-and-a-half before the incident.3 They had talked and drunk until late. Before the bar closed, Argueta had offered J.H. a shot, __________________________________________________________ 2 There is some discrepancy in the record about whether

Argueta made his statements before or after the police officer read him his Miranda rights. But the State and Argueta stipulated on appeal that Argueta made the statement after invoking Miranda. State v. Argueta, 2018 UT App 142, ¶ 8 n.2, 429 P.3d 764. We follow that stipulation here. 3 In all relevant times to this case, A.C. lived in the same apartment. 3 STATE v. ARGUETA Opinion of the Court which he had accepted and drunk. The couple had then asked Argueta to give them a ride home. He had agreed, and when they had gotten to their apartment, A.C. and J.H. had invited him in. J.H. had asked Argueta if he could borrow twenty dollars, and Argueta had given him the money. J.H. had told him, “[w]henever you want to come, I owe you $20.” ¶10 Argueta testified that he had gone by the apartment “[f]ive or six times” to get the money back, usually in the early morning hours. But before the night of the charged act, he had “never attempted to enter the home because there were people in front, but [A.C. and J.H.] were not there.”4 On the night of the charged act, Argueta decided to enter the house, where he saw the apartment door open and the keys in the lock. He decided to enter the house and put the keys in the apartment as “a good deed.” According to his testimony, as he put the keys onto the dresser and turned to leave, J.W. came into the apartment. ¶11 Before trial, the State sought to admit evidence of several prior bad acts allegedly committed by Argueta, under rule 404(b) of the Utah Rules of Evidence. After a hearing, the trial court found two of the prior bad acts admissible, but only to rebut any testimony by Argueta “as to his intent with regard to his entry, if any, into the [apartment].” The two prior bad acts were a 2010 incident in which Argueta was found trespassing near another woman’s house and entered a plea in abeyance5 (the trespassing incident) and a 2014 incident in which A.C.

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2020 UT 41, 469 P.3d 938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-argueta-utah-2020.