State v. Carlson

934 P.2d 657, 312 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 22, 1997 WL 94158
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 6, 1997
DocketNo. 960135-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 934 P.2d 657 (State v. Carlson) 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. Carlson, 934 P.2d 657, 312 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 22, 1997 WL 94158 (Utah Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

BILLINGS, Judge:

Defendant Dwayne Marvin Carlson appeals his conviction for receiving a stolen vehicle, a second-degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 41-la-1316 (1993). He claims the trial court erred in submitting an instruction to the jury, and that the prosecutor made improper remarks during closing argument. We affirm.

FACTS

On July 22, 1995, Officer John Sheets saw a brown 1981 Mazda pickup truck driving southbound on Main Street in Salt Lake City. Because the truck was missing its front license plate, the officer decided to stop the truck. As he was turning around, the truck accelerated, cut through traffic, and turned onto a side street. The officer temporarily lost sight of the truck, but eventually found it parked in a nearby parking lot with defendant behind the wheel. The officer pulled up behind the truck, approached defendant, told him that he was missing a license plate, and asked for his driver’s license and registration. Defendant had neither.

Because defendant had no identification with him, the officer asked for his name, date of birth, and social security number. Defendant responded that his name was “Steven Carlson,” and gave both a date of birth and social security number. While the officer was writing down this information, defendant suddenly blurted out: “This vehicle is not stolen.” The officer testified that he was surprised by this outburst because he had never suspected the vehicle was stolen.

The officer called in defendant’s information and also asked for assistance, presumably because of defendant’s strange behavior. Another officer soon arrived and both officers learned from dispatch that the social security number defendant gave them did not match that of Steven Carlson. The officers then arrested defendant for providing them with a false identity.

[659]*659The officers then had dispatch check the license plate number of the truck. The officers discovered the plate number was registered to a Buick, not a Mazda pickup truck. When the officers cheeked the vehicle identification number, they discovered that the Mazda had been reported stolen from a Salt Lake City used car lot two days earlier. The officers proceeded to read defendant his Miranda rights. He waived his rights and told the police that he had “just picked up the vehicle from a friend” named Steve Johnson.

While one officer took defendant to jail, the other officer stayed with the car until the owner, Steve Clark, arrived to recover it. The owner testified that the truck was missing a camper shell and that an “after market ignition” had been installed in the dashboard, which fit the key defendant surrendered to the officers. The owner testified that such an ignition permits a car to be started without using the original ignition.

At trial defendant changed the story that he had originally told the police. He testified that he got the truck from a woman named Laura who had dated his friend, Steve Johnson, several years earlier. He claimed that he saw her trying to push-start the truck late at night and stopped to help her. When he was unable to get the truck started, he testified that he told her that she could use his car to run errands while he slept at a friend’s house. When he woke up, his friend told him that “Laura” had not returned with his car. Defendant then stated that he tried to locate “Laura” for a couple of days, and when he could not find her, he returned to where the truck was, hoping that she had fixed the truck and left his car behind. The truck was still there so defendant claimed he fixed it and then used it to try to locate his car. He also firmly stated there was only one ignition in the truck, i.e., there was no by-pass ignition in the truck while it was in his possession.

After a one-day trial, the jury convicted defendant of receiving a stolen vehicle, and he was sentenced to one-to-fifteen years in the Utah State Prison and a $10,000 fine. The trial court stayed his sentence and imposed thirty-six months probation, including twelve months in jail. Defendant now appeals, claiming an instruction the trial court gave to the jury was improper and that the prosecutor made improper remarks during closing argument.

ANALYSIS

Defendant claims the trial court submitted an instruction to the jury that created a presumption of guilt and improperly shifted the burden of proof concerning an element of the crime to defendant. As “the propriety of a jury instruction presents a question of law,” we review such instructions for correctness, affording no deference to the trial court. State v. Brooks, 833 P.2d 362, 363-64 (Utah.Ct.App.1992).

The instruction at issue in this case reads as follows 1:

Possession of property recently stolen, if not satisfactorily explained, is ordinarily a circumstance from which you may reasonably draw the inference and find, in light of the surrounding circumstances shown by the evidence in the case, that the person in possession of the stolen property stole the property and knew that the property was stolen.
Thus, if you find from the evidence and beyond a reasonable doubt (1) that the defendant was in possession of property, (2) that the property was stolen, (3) that such possession was not too remote in point of time from the theft, and (4) that no satisfactory explanation of such possession has been given or appears from the evidence, then you may infer from those facts and find that the defendant stole the property and knew the property was stolen.

Defendant first claims the instruction unconstitutionally shifted the burden of proof concerning his state of mind from the State to him. We disagree. Recently, in State v. Perez, 924 P.2d 1 (Utah.Ct.App.1996) (analyzing instruction given in theft-by-receiving [660]*660case), this court approved a nearly identical instruction.2 Id. at 5. Relying on State v. Smith, 726 P.2d 1232 (Utah 1986), and State v. Chambers, 709 P.2d 321 (Utah 1985), this court determined that because the instruction did not use the confusing “prima facie” term that was disapproved of in Chambers, and because it emphasized to the jury that it “may reasonably draw the inference” of guilty knowledge only if it found certain facts beyond a reasonable doubt, but was not required to, the “instruction did not improperly shift the burden of proof to defendant.” Perez, 924 P.2d at 4-5 (emphasis added); see also Barnes v. United States, 412 U.S. 837, 843-44, 93 S.Ct. 2357, 2362, 37 L.Ed.2d 380 (1973) (concluding instruction matching first paragraph of challenged instruction in this case was constitutional); State v. Johnson, 745 P.2d 452

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Bluebook (online)
934 P.2d 657, 312 Utah Adv. Rep. 21, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 22, 1997 WL 94158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carlson-utahctapp-1997.