State v. Carter

776 P.2d 886, 108 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1989 Utah LEXIS 43, 1989 WL 55367
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1989
Docket860063
StatusPublished
Cited by271 cases

This text of 776 P.2d 886 (State v. Carter) 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. Carter, 776 P.2d 886, 108 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1989 Utah LEXIS 43, 1989 WL 55367 (Utah 1989).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice:

On February 27, 1985, Eva Oleson was found dead in her home. Following an investigation, defendant was arrested in Nashville, Tennessee, and charged with the murder. After confessing to officers that he committed the crime, defendant was extradited to Provo, Utah, where he was tried and convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to death.

Defendant's original appellate counsel filed two briefs on appeal. After defendant filed a pro se motion with this Court, replacement counsel was appointed to brief additional issues defendant raised. • Also, the American Civil Liberties Union was permitted to file an amicus brief in this case.

In reaching the issues on appeal, we reiterate that

[t]his Court will review errors raised and briefed on appeal in death penalty cases, even though no proper. objection was made at trial, but will reverse a conviction based upon such errors only if they meet the manifest and prejudicial error standard. In addition, this Court has the power to notice manifest (“palpable”) error apparent in the record and correct a conviction based upon the same if the error is prejudicial, even though such error is not objected to at trial or assigned on appeal. 1

In addition to correctly reflecting this Court’s responsibility and approach in reviewing death penalty cases, this rule also impliedly recognizes another established principle generally applicable to all civil and criminal cases, namely, that this Court need not analyze and address in writing each and every argument, issue, or claim raised and properly before us on appeal. Rather, it is a maxim of appellate review that the nature and extent of an opinion rendered by an appellate court is largely discretionary with that court. 2

This was essentially the view of the North Carolina Supreme Court in stating:

It is our duty to decide all cases brought before us, but whether a written opinion shall be filed is entirely within our discretion. A failure to do so is in no sense a reflection upon counsel, nor is it any *889 criterion as to the ability or learning with which the case may have been argued. It simply means that we do not think it necessary.... If the essential principles upon which a case depends have been already settled, we can add but little, if anything, to what has already been said; while the discussion of questions not essential to its determination, even if argued by counsel, may well be omitted in the interest of time and space. 3

Similarly, in holding that California’s constitution did not require its appellate courts to “set forth and dispose of, seri-atim, each and every item which appellant’s counsel chooses to characterize as an ‘issue’ in the case,” the California Court of Appeals eloquently stated:

Our statement that these other contentions ‘did not merit discussion’ is an indication that we necessarily and carefully analyzed the contentions in order to reach that conclusion....
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In an era in which there is concern that the quality of justice is being diminished by appellate backlog with its attendant delay, which in turn contributes to a lack of finality of judgment, it behooves us as an appellate court to “get to the heart” of cases presented and dispose of them expeditiously. Unnecessary verbiage and redundant literary exercises are counter-productive. 4

In applying this principle to cases before us, we have, after fully considering the substance of particular claims raised on appeal, summarily (and often without written analysis) dismissed the same as merit-less or of no effect. 5 Use of this rule in capital punishment and other cases continues to be appropriate and important in acknowledging established principles while enabling this Court, after fair and comprehensive review, to expeditiously focus judicial resources and energy on those critical or outcome-determinative issues which may be raised in any given case and/or which have not in substance been previously urged upon this Court and rejected. 6 Accordingly, after fully reviewing every claim raised in the instant case, we discuss at length only those issues critical to this appeal. 7

Defendant claims that the trial court erred by not suppressing his confession. Several months after the murder occurred, Tennessee police officers received information from an anonymous source that defendant was at a female friend’s Nashville residence. After confirming that defendant was wanted in connection with the case, officers proceeded to the friend’s residence and there arrested defendant.

At the hearing on defendant’s motion to suppress, a Nashville police officer testified that he gave defendant a Miranda warning *890 after arresting him. At the police station later that day, he again advised defendant of his Miranda rights and obtained a written waiver of those rights from him. The officer then questioned defendant for several hours over the next two days; during those times, defendant was allowed to smoke, drink water, and use restroom facilities.

The officer testified that he did not threaten defendant. He also denied that he used the friend’s situation or that of her children in any manner to intimidate defendant into confessing, stating that he offered information about her status only in response to defendant’s frequent questions regarding her.

A police officer from the Provo police department was sent to Tennessee to extradite defendant. At the suppression hearing, the Provo officer testified that when he interviewed defendant in Tennessee, he advised defendant of his Miranda rights and soon obtained a confession from him. Thereafter, the officer apparently dictated the confession, stopping after every few lines to ask defendant whether what was dictated was accurate. The confession was then reduced to writing and signed. Although acknowledging at the suppression hearing that he had interviewed defendant’s friend prior to questioning defendant, the officer denied making any threats or promises to defendant concerning her.

In contrast, defendant testified that he never received Miranda warnings from the Nashville or the Provo officer and that he could not recall signing written waivers of his constitutional rights. Defendant did acknowledge, however, that his signature appeared to be on documents waiving those rights. On appeal, he reiterates his claim that the officers repeatedly threatened that his friend would be charged with a felony, go to prison, and be separated from her children unless he confessed.

In State v. Bishop, 8

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Bluebook (online)
776 P.2d 886, 108 Utah Adv. Rep. 12, 1989 Utah LEXIS 43, 1989 WL 55367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-carter-utah-1989.