State v. C.D.L.

2011 UT App 55, 250 P.3d 69, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 57
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 25, 2011
DocketNo. 20090474-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 2011 UT App 55 (State v. C.D.L.) 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. C.D.L., 2011 UT App 55, 250 P.3d 69, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 57 (Utah Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

ROTH, Judge:

T1 Defendant C.D.L.1 (Husband) appeals his conviction of four counts of aggravated assault, see Utah Code Ann. $ 76-5-103 (2008), alleging that he received ineffective assistance from his trial counsel. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 2

12 While driving through traffic in Salt Lake City, Utah, near the intersection of 300 East and Williams Avenue at around 6:00 pm. on a weekday, Husband ran his green Dodge Shadow two times into a red Ford Escort driven by his wife (Wife), who was accompanied by a passenger (Friend). In the first collision, Husband's vehicle struck Wife's vehicle with an audible crash, jolting her vehicle forward. Then, with little dis[73]*73tance left between the two vehicles, Husband accelerated to approximately fifteen miles per hour before striking Wife's vehicle a second time. The impacts left only a few faint seratches on each vehicle, the airbags did not deploy, and Husband, Wife, and Friend did not report any injuries.

T3 After the second collision, Wife drove toward the red traffic light at 800 East and 900 South and, in an attempt to evade Husband, maneuvered around another car already stopped at the light and ran through the red signal. Husband followed Wife for several blocks until both stopped at another red light by Liberty Park at the intersection of 700 East and 1800 South. While stopped at this light, Husband, visibly angry and yelling, got out of his vehicle and started toward Wife's vehicle on foot. Before Husband reached her vehicle, Wife sped around the other cars stopped at the red light, ran that red light, and drove away. Husband returned to his vehicle but ceased following Wife.

{4 From another vehicle, two adult eyewitnesses (the Witnesses) had observed this "rolling domestic" as it unfolded. The Witnesses were stopped at the intersection of 300 East and Williams Avenue where, just ten feet in front of them, they watched Husband repeatedly run into Wife's car. They called 911 after witnessing the second impact. With authorities on the phone and fearful for Wife's and Friend's safety, the Witnesses followed Husband and Wife during the subsequent car chase and observed the entire course of events. At the intersection of 700 East and 1800 South where Husband got out of his car, one of the Witnesses began exiting his own vehicle intending to intervene, but Wife sped away and Husband's pursuit ended.

5 The Witnesses' 911 call provided police officers with a description of both vehicles, Husband's lHeense plate number, and a report of the collisions and subsequent chase. From the Dodge Shadow's license plate number, police obtained the address and name of Wife, as both the Dodge Shadow driven by Husband and the Ford Escort she drove were registered under her name. Police convened at Wife's address and found the Dodge Shadow parked in the front lot and only Husband inside the residence. Husband admitted to police that he chased Wife in an attempt "to sort out some of the problems that they had." Husband also told police his vehicle unintentionally collided with Wife's during the chase. Wife arrived at that address in the Ford Escort later in the evening and briefly met with police officers.

T6 Husband was subsequently charged with four counts of aggravated assault. The State's theory of the case was that Husband's vehicle constituted a dangerous weapon when used to repeatedly hit Wife's vehicle Husband's defense was that the collisions were accidental. In so arguing, Husband relied on the testimony of Friend, who described the entire incident as a "funny" misunderstanding that was not particularly startling. Friend testified that the first collision occurred because Wife stopped short and the second occurred when Wife rolled backwards into Husband because she improperly engaged the vehicle's clutch.

T7 In response, the State relied primarily on testimony from the Witnesses and the two responding police officers. Wife did not testify at trial, and the State implied that her absence was illustrative of a broader cycle of domestic violence between her and Husband. Despite Wife's absence from trial, the Witnesses were able to testify that Wife's brake lights did not turn on and that she did not induce the first accident by stopping short, nor did she cause the second impact by rolling backwards into Husband. Rather, the Witnesses described both impacts as "ram-mings" resulting from deliberate actions taken by Husband to "terrorize" Wife in what they perceived to be more than a standard car accident.

T8 The State also submitted a recording and the transcript of a 911 call placed by a woman who identified herself as Wife. Amidst a flurry of curses and yelling, the caller described her pursuer as her husband. She also described the location of both collisions, the subsequent chase, and the makes and models of the two vehicles involved. The caller's entire description of the events matched that provided by the Witnesses during their testimonies; and the caller's de-[74]*74seriptions of the vehicles involved also corresponded with the vehicles described by the Witnesses as well as the vehicles police eventually found at Husband and Wife's home registered under Wife's name. Friend did not deny that this 911 call was placed by Wife and was unable to explain why, in light of Friend's own testimony that the situation was not startling, Wife would call 911.

19 Prior to trial, Husband's trial counsel objected to the admission of the recording and transcript of the 911 call on the grounds that they "lacked foundation, could not be properly authenticated, was hearsay, and was highly prejudicial," specifically noting that there was no direct evidence that the caller, in fact, was Wife. The trial court overruled the hearsay and unfair prejudice objections, ruling that the 911 call constituted an excited utterance and was not unfairly prejudicial. The trial court, however, reserved ruling on the authentication objection in order to see what evidence on the issue was presented at trial. In this regard, the 911 dispatcher who answered the 911 call testified at trial, confirming that it was his voice on the recording and that the contents of both the recording and transeript accurately reflected the call as he remembered it. The State then moved to admit both the recording and transcript into evidence. At that time, the trial court asked whether Husband's trial counsel had any objections, and he declined to renew his authentication objection.

T 10 The jury found Husband guilty of four counts of aggravated assault. After trial and before sentencing, Wife submitted a Victim Impact Statement and an unsworn letter addressed to the trial court (collectively, the VIS), in which she admitted that she made the 911 call but described it as a fabrication intended to harm Husband. She further de-seribed the 911 call itself and her description of the collisions in the call as the premeditated product of her jealousy and anger originating from unspecified domestic problems. Wife also attributed the seratches on her Ford Escort to an earlier, unrelated car accident. She wrote of her desire to tell her story at trial but stated eryptically that she had been unable to testify because of her "legal situation." Husband now appeals.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2011 UT App 55, 250 P.3d 69, 676 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2011 Utah App. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-cdl-utahctapp-2011.