State v. Basta

966 P.2d 260, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1998 WL 634875
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 17, 1998
Docket961507-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 966 P.2d 260 (State v. Basta) 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. Basta, 966 P.2d 260, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1998 WL 634875 (Utah Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINS, Associate Presiding Judge:

Defendant Betty Basta appeals from jury convictions of aggravated arson, a first degree felony in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-103 (1995), and insurance fraud, a second degree felony in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-521 (1995). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

“In reviewing a jury verdict, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in a light most favorable to the verdict,” State v. Dunn, 850 P.2d 1201, 1205-06 (Utah 1993), and recite the facts of this case accordingly. We “present conflicting evidence only to the extent necessary to un *262 derstand the issues raised on appeal.” Id. at 1206.

On February 6, 1995, defendant, who handled her family’s finances, applied for full coverage insurance on the house in which they lived on Peachblossom Drive in Sandy, Utah. 1 Defendant’s family had been enduring substantial financial hardships for several years, and just ten days before defendant applied for insurance, defendant’s family was served with a three-day eviction notice.

The Peachblossom Drive home was a split-level home. On Friday, February 10, 1995, around 2:30 p.m., defendant’s husband discovered a small fire in a closet on the home’s lower level under the stairs. Defendant’s husband extinguished the fire himself by spraying the fire with water through a garden hose he attached to a fire hydrant. Defendant’s husband then moved the items that had been damaged by the fire out of the closet and into the backyard. He did not call the fire department.

The next morning, at 9:37 a.m., a fire crew was dispatched to fight an active fire in the Peachblossom Drive home. Before they arrived at the .home, firefighters could see a heavy plume of smoke caused by fire blowing out of the home’s front windows. Two crews went through the front doors with hoses. One crew headed upstairs. The other crew, led by their battalion chief, David Durrant, went downstairs to the home’s lower level.

Durrant manned the nozzle of his crew’s hose. He and his crew faced flames and blinding smoke. Durrant reached the bottom of the stairs, shooting bursts of water in front of him in order to see the next few steps. Upon reaching the bottom level, he discovered that the bulk of flame was to his left. Durrant saw fire burning in a closet under the stairs, so he turned his hose on that area only to find that the closet fire was a quick, hot fire which was instantly knocked down when Durrant hit it with some water. Durrant discovered that the fire’s heart was four to eight feet into the family room, which shared a common wall with the closet.

Unlike the fire in the closet, the family room fire took twenty to thirty minutes of hard fighting before the firefighters could claim any kind of control over it. In the family room, the crew put out fire that was burning on several cardboard boxes on the floor in the middle of the room. Durrant also noted numerous other cardboard boxes around the room’s perimeter. Defendant’s husband later explained that the family room was full of boxes because it had been used as a storage room.

Once the fire was extinguished, Durrant took time to examine the scene, primarily for safety reasons. Among his observations, Durrant noted that the studs in the closet had started scorching but “were not really far involved,” and that the stairs which formed the closet ceiling “were very solid” and had not been structurally undermined by the closet fire. Based on his experience with the fire and his observations following it, Durrant determined that the fire burned from the family room toward the closet and stairwell.

Around 10:30 a.m. Sandy City Fire Marshal Dave Meldrum arrived on the scene to investigate the fire’s cause and origin. In doing so, Meldrum was trained to assume that the fire was accidental by examining all possible accidental causes. Meldrum noted that most of the fire damage was in the downstairs family room. However, one-half hour into his investigation, he was told of the fire that had occurred in the downstairs closet the previous afternoon.

With this information in mind, Meldrum concentrated on the closet, thinking that the Friday closet fire had rekindled to cause the Saturday fire. He looked at the items burned in the Friday fire and determined that the fire had been small. He examined the closet carefully, noting that there were still items in the closet that were unburned *263 which would likely have been totally consumed if the Saturday fire had started in. the closet. Meldrum also noted that the stairwell was not as damaged as he would have expected had the Saturday fire started in the closet.

Meldrum also examined the electrical system that had been affected by the fire. As part of this examination, Meldrum removed part of the wiring from the common wall between the closet and family room to more closely examine it. However, Meldrum ultimately eliminated electricity as the fire’s cause, in part because he found the wiring to be pliable instead of brittle, as it would have been had it caused the fire, and because he saw nothing in the wiring to be inconsistent with having simply been exposed to the heat and flames which burned around it.

Ultimately, Meldrum eliminated all possible accidental causes and concluded that the fire was intentionally set. He determined the fire originated between three and five feet from the wall the family room shared with the closet. Meldrum concluded the fire was probably caused by a flame intentionally applied to items stored in the family room. He determined that the fire traveled, in part, from its area of origin in the family room through the family room door into the hallway, and then it attacked the closet door.

After Meldrum’s investigation, the wiring Meldrum had removed from the closet for examination disappeared. As a result, no other investigators were able to examine the wiring. However, later investigators were able to examine over a dozen pictures of the wiring that Meldrum had taken during his investigation.

A second investigator, Jerry Thompson, sent by United States Fidelity and Guaranty Insurance, arrived to investigate the fire scene on February 14, 1995. Thompson admitted that his job was difficult because time had passed, windows had been boarded up, and the fire department had completed its work on the site. However, Thompson said these obstacles did not make his job impossible.. In Thompson’s opinion, significant evidence still existed, which he examined over several days. Thompson concluded the fire had been intentionally set and had started near the front of the downstairs family room. He also concluded that the fire in the downstairs closet had been small, noting that there was very little burn in the closet, except at the top. Thompson completed his own review of the fire scene before he talked to Meldrum or any of the fire department personnel.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
966 P.2d 260, 352 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1998 WL 634875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-basta-utahctapp-1998.