State v. Clark

2015 UT App 289, 363 P.3d 544, 801 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 306, 2015 WL 7708408
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 27, 2015
Docket20140262-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2015 UT App 289 (State v. Clark) 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. Clark, 2015 UT App 289, 363 P.3d 544, 801 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 306, 2015 WL 7708408 (Utah Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Judge JOHN A, PEARCE

authored this Opinion,

in which Judges JAMES Z, DAVIS and KATE A, TOOMEY concurred. 1

Opinion

PEARCE, Judge:

¶ 1 Debbrah Jo Clark appeals her convietion on one count of theft by receiving stolen property, a third degree felony. See Utah Code Ann. §§ 76-6-408,-412 (LexisNexis Supp. 2015). The State charged Clark after a police officer recovered a stolen driver Heense from the passenger seat of a truck in which Clark had been riding. Clark appeals, arguing there was insufficient evidence to connect her to the stolen license and that the district court erred in denying her motion to suppress evidence. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2 Christian Hale, an associate of Clark's, took Clark to a grocery store. Hale drove his single-cab pickup truck, while Clark sat on the passenger side of the truck's bench seat, They parked, entered the store, and placed several packages of diapers in a grocery cart. Clark returned to the truck, while *546 Hale took the unpurchased diapers to the store's service desk and attempted to return them for a refund.

¶13 Because Hale lacked a receipt for the diapers, store personnel alerted Bobbie Davis, the store's loss prevention specialist. Davis reviewed security footage of the couple walking through the store and observed them placing the diapers in the cart. Davis also recognized Clark from a prior occasion when Clark had used “somebody else's identification" at the store. Davis called the police to report the attempted refund fraud 'and stopped Hale as he was leaving the store. Two police officers responded and took Hale into custody.

¶ 4 Davis told the officers that Clark was also involved in the refund fraud and that because Clark had previously used another person's identification, Davis was unsure of Clark's real name. The officers asked Davis _to go to the parking lot and have Clark return.to the store. By this time, Clark had moved Hale's truck across the parking lof and was lying down on the truck's bench seat, apparently sleeping with her head on the driver's side. Davis woke Clark, and the two returned to the front of the store, where Clark accurately identified herself to one of the responding officers, Officer Brower. The officers arrested Clark on outstanding warrants.

¶ 5 At this point, Hale remained in the back of a patrol car. Brower asked Hale what he wanted done with his truck.. Hale gave Brower the keys with instryetions to release the truck to one of Hale's friends. Brower used Hale's phone to locate someone willing to pick up the truck, Brower then waited by the truck for Hale's friend to arrive. - As he waited, Brower looked through the passenger side window of the truck and saw a driver license lying face down on the passenger seat. Remembering that there might be some question about Clark's identity and thinking she would need her identification in light of her arrest, Brow-er opened the passenger door and rétrieved the license. The Heense was not Clark's but instead belonged to another woman (Victim). The license had been sitting atop a recent paystub bearing Victim's name and address. A court document addressed to Clark was under the paystub. The stack of documents and the license were on the passenger side of the truck. Brower also observed an open purse on the passenger side floor of the truck, with items spilling out of it.

¶ 6 Brower contacted Victim, who stated that her purse had been stolen about a month earlier and that her driver licenge had been in the purse. Victim did not know Clark and had not authorized Clark or any other person to possess or use her driver license. Victim also indicated that she had never worked for the company that had issued the paystub in her name. Based on this information, the State charged Clark with theft by receiving Victim's stolen driver license. "

¶ 7 Before trial, Clark filed a motion to suppress the evidence of the stolen driver license and paystub, arguing that Brower violated the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution when he retrieved the license from Hale's truck, The district court held an evidentiary hearing on Clark's suppression motion. Because Brower was unable to attend, Davis, the grocery store's loss prevention specialist, was the State's only witness at the hearing.

¶ 8 At the hearing, Davis testified about the events leading up to the discovery, of Victim's driver license. Over Clark's hearsay objection, the district court allowed Davis to describe the exchange between Hale and Brower regarding Hale's truck. Davis testified that she had overheard the conversation and that officers had -

asked [Hale] what about his truck outside, what he wanted done with it. He said, My keys are in my pocket and they said is there anything in it we should be concerned about? He said no and they said, Do you mind if we take a look? He said no and he gave them the keys and that's-that was that.

The district court overruled Clark's hearsay objection, reasoning that reliable hearsay may be considered at suppression hearings. The district court then allowed further argument on whether the consent evidence should Af-nevertheless be excluded as unreliable. *547 ter further hearings, the district court found that Davis's testimony was reliable, The court then denied Clark's motion to suppress, relying on Davis's testimony to find that Hale had consented to the search of his truck. 2

¶ 9 Davis, Brower, and Victim were the only witnesses at Clark's jury trial, The State's only physical trial exhibits were the recovered license and paystub. Davis and Brower described the events surrounding Brower's discovery of the lHceense. Victim described the theft of her purse and reiterated that Clark did not have her permission to possess her license. At the close of the State's case, Clark asked the district court for a directed verdict, arguing that the State had produced insufficient evidence to link her to the stolen Heense. nied the motion. The district court de-,

¶ 10 The district court instructed the jury that it could find that Clark constructively possessed Victim's driver license if the jury found "a sufficient nexus between the defendant and the item to permit a factual inference that the defendant had the power and the intent to exercise control over the item." The district court also instructed the jury that it could consider the evidence that Clark had previously used "another person's identification" to evaluate Clark's intent but not as evidence of a criminal propensity. The jury convicted Clark on the single count of theft by receiving stolen property. Clark appeéls."

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

111 Clark argues that the State presented insufficient evidence to prove that she constructively possessed the stolen dmvél license found in Hale's truck. " [Wie review the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, and do not overturn a jury's verdict of criminal conviction unless reasonable minds could not rationally have arrived at a verdict of guilty beyond a reasonable doubt based on the law and on the evidence presented. " State v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 UT App 289, 363 P.3d 544, 801 Utah Adv. Rep. 11, 2015 Utah App. LEXIS 306, 2015 WL 7708408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-clark-utahctapp-2015.