State v. Butts

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedJune 8, 2018
Docket117883
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
State v. Butts, (kanctapp 2018).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 117,883

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

STATE OF KANSAS, Appellee,

v.

ETHAN MARK BUTTS, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Riley District Court; MERYL D. WILSON, judge. Opinion filed June 8, 2018. Affirmed.

David A. Vinduska and Andy Vinduska, of Manhattan, for appellant.

James W. Garrison, assistant county attorney, Barry Wilkerson, county attorney, and Derek Schmidt, attorney general, for appellee.

Before ARNOLD-BURGER, C.J., HILL and BUSER, JJ.

PER CURIAM: Ethan Mark Butts appeals his vehicular homicide conviction. Butts contends there was insufficient evidence to support the necessary element of "a material deviation from the standard of care which a reasonable person would observe under the same circumstances" which is required for a conviction of vehicular homicide under K.S.A. 2015 Supp. 21-5406(a). Upon our review, we find sufficient evidence in support of the conviction and, therefore, affirm the jury's verdict.

1 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On February 13, 2016, Butts failed to stop at red traffic lights protecting a highway intersection and struck a vehicle driven by 30-year-old Jenna Lindsten. Lindsten died as a result of the collision. Butts was charged with vehicular homicide, and a jury trial was held on May 10, 2017.

During trial, Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper Wilmer Baquero, Jr. testified that on February 13, 2016, about 11:05 a.m., he was dispatched to a collision at the intersection of Tuttle Creek Boulevard and Marlatt Avenue. When he arrived at the scene, Trooper Baquero observed a semitrailer truck with heavy front end damage. Butts had been operating the semitrailer truck and was traveling southbound on Tuttle Creek Boulevard. The trooper also saw a white SUV with heavy driver's side damage. Lindsten had been driving the white SUV eastbound on Marlatt Avenue when Butts struck her vehicle broadside at the intersection.

Tuttle Creek Boulevard is also known as U.S. Highway 24. It is a major, four-lane divided highway running in a north/south direction. The highway has turn lanes to allow a motorist to travel to the east or west on Marlatt Avenue. The speed limit for Tuttle Creek Boulevard is 55 mph. As Butts traveled southbound approaching Marlatt Avenue, there were five traffic signals protecting the intersection. One overhead traffic signal controlled vehicles turning eastbound onto Marlatt Avenue. Three other overhead traffic signals regulated two lanes of southbound traffic. One traffic signal, attached to a light pole, appears to have also regulated southbound traffic turning westbound onto Marlatt Avenue.

As Butts traveled southbound towards the intersection, the highway was straight and he would have had a view of the intersection from about a mile away. A semitrailer

2 truck driver traveling southbound would have had a continuous unobstructed view of the overhead traffic signals at the intersection. There were two sets of signs on each side of the highway that warned southbound motorists that traffic signals were one half mile ahead. Another set of signs was located .3 miles north of the intersection and warned southbound drivers to "BE PREPARED TO STOP."

Marlatt Avenue is a road running in an east/west direction. At the intersection with Tuttle Creek Boulevard, there are three lanes for eastbound traffic. The road has two turn lanes to allow a motorist to travel either to the north or south at the intersection with Tuttle Creek Boulevard. A third lane runs between the two turn lanes for traffic continuing to travel eastbound or westbound. As Lindsten traveled eastbound in the middle lane, approaching Tuttle Creek Boulevard, there were four traffic signals protecting the intersection. One overhead traffic signal controlled vehicles turning north onto the highway. Two other overhead traffic signals regulated one lane of eastbound traffic. One traffic signal, attached to a light pole, appears to have also regulated eastbound traffic turning south onto Tuttle Creek Boulevard.

On the day of the collision, it was a clear, cold day with an overcast sky and dry roadways. Trooper Baquero's investigation revealed that Butts was traveling southbound in one of the two through lanes which was closest to the median, had failed to stop at the red traffic signals protecting the intersection, veered to the left at or near the point of impact, and struck the driver's side of Lindsten's vehicle. The trooper opined that upon entering the intersection Butts was traveling "at least 55" miles per hour.

Upon impact, Lindsten's vehicle began spinning and hit a pickup truck owned by Quinton Huncovsky. Trooper Baquero determined that the only evidence of any braking by Butts was when he applied "some brakes" while already in the intersection. The semitrailer truck Butts was driving weighed over 78,000 pounds. Trooper Baquero

3 opined that the stopping distance for a semitrailer truck of that weight traveling 55 miles per hour is typically between 250 to 350 feet, or "almost the length of a football field."

Trooper Baquero testified that Butts was required to do a pre-trip inspection of his semitrailer truck, and that Butts told the trooper that he had, in fact, done the inspection. After the collision, an inspection of the semitrailer truck revealed that three of the brakes on the trailer were out of adjustment. According to Trooper Baquero, "If [Butts] would have checked them [sic] brakes correctly he would have realized that the brakes on the trailer were out of adjustment." Trooper Baquero advised that if Butts' semitrailer truck had been inspected prior to the accident by the Kansas Highway Patrol "that truck would have been put out of service to begin with."

Trooper Baquero interviewed Butts after the collision. Butts advised that he drove the semitrailer truck as a commercial motor vehicle for Nelson Poultry Farms. He also advised that he didn't remember his speed upon approaching the intersection, but that he was following another Nelson Poultry Farms semitrailer truck. According to the trooper, Butts related that, "he wasn't trying to keep up with the vehicle, but he was trying to stay on the vehicle." Butts informed Trooper Baquero that he was familiar with the intersection and he had "to screech tires at that intersection before." In clarifying that remark, the trooper testified that Butts said he previously had come to an abrupt stop at the intersection.

Butts told Trooper Baquero that he did not believe he was at fault for causing the collision. Butts said that he thought he had the green light and did not see Lindsten's vehicle until the last second. When asked what he would have done differently to avoid the collision, Butts told Trooper Baquero that he probably would have slowed down and been more attentive.

4 Trooper Baquero's investigation revealed that Lindsten was traveling about 30 miles per hour upon her approach to the intersection. According to the trooper, "she would have been slightly west of the intersection coming toward the intersection when the light turned green, and she just continued through."

At trial, Huncovsky testified that he was driving his pickup truck northbound on Tuttle Creek Boulevard towards the Marlatt intersection when the traffic signals turned yellow. Huncovsky stopped at the intersection, looked down at his vehicle's radio, and was manipulating the tuner. After a couple seconds, Huncovsky heard the collision. He then looked up and saw Lindsten's vehicle coming towards him.

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State v. Butts, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-butts-kanctapp-2018.