State v. DeHart

2001 UT App 12, 17 P.3d 1171, 412 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 6, 2001 WL 25429
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 11, 2001
Docket990793-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2001 UT App 12 (State v. DeHart) 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. DeHart, 2001 UT App 12, 17 P.3d 1171, 412 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 6, 2001 WL 25429 (Utah Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge:

T1 Barbara DeHart (defendant) appeals her conviction of obstruction of justice, a second degree felony. Defendant contends the trial court erred by allowing the jury to hear certain statements she made without first requiring the State to establish the corpus delicti by independent evidence. Defendant also contends there was insufficient evidence to convict her of obstructing justice. We affirm.

FACTS

12 On appeal from a jury verdict, "we examine the evidence and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in a light most favorable to the verdict, and we recite the facts accordingly." State v. Kruger, 2000 UT 60, 12, 6 P.3d 1116.

T3 In September 1998, in Cataldo, Idaho, defendant left her husband of twenty-six years and moved in to the house of her neighbor, John Pinder (Pinder). Defendant and Pinder traveled to Utah from Idaho several times in late September and October 1998 to move some of Pinder's belongings *1173 from Pinder's ranch in Duchesne, Utah, and his parents' home in Park City, Utah, to Idaho. Defendant and Pinder returned to the ranch in Duchesne on October 28.

{4 On October 26, defendant made two telephone calls to her daughter in Cataldo, Idaho. During the first conversation, defendant told her daughter she was upset because Pinder and his ranch hand, Filo Ruiz, had been out all night and she suspected Pinder was cheating on her. Defendant ended the conversation with her daughter when Pinder drove up in his truck. In the second conversation, which took place about one half hour later, defendant sounded upset. She said things were in "a big mess" in Utah, that she could not tell her daughter about it over the telephone, but that it was "just horrible." She said she wanted to return home to Idaho.

{5 Defendant also called her husband in Idaho on October 26. During that conversation, she said that "things had happened." She was upset, distressed, and sounded scared.

T6 On October 30 and 31, 1998, Du-chesne County sheriff's deputies found the remains of body parts of Rex Tanner, an employee of Pinder, and Tanner's girlfriend, on the Pinder ranch. The medical examiner determined that Tanner had died from gunshot wounds and that both bodies had been blown up with explosives after death.

17 Defendant and Pinder arrived in Idaho in Pinder's pickup truck on the morning of October 31. Because defendant's husband was away for the weekend, Pinder and defendant stayed in the DeHarts' house in Catal-do. Defendant told her daughter that a murder had been committed at Pinder's ranch, that Filo Ruiz had been arrested, and that she and Pinder might be required to return to Utah for questioning.

18 The next morning, November 1, defendant told her daughter that "John [Pin-der] had told her everything, that he admitted to the murders of the people on the ranch." In front of her daughter's husband, defendant told her daughter that Pinder had admitted to killing his ranch hand and the ranch hand's girlfriend. Defendant commented to her daughter, "Well, I guess your soon-to-be step-daddy is a murderer." She also said, "Well, I guess your mother is a criminal and we're just like Bonnie and Clyde, always on the run."

19 Defendant also telephoned her father on November 1. She told him Pinder had killed two people by shooting them, then blowing up the bodies, and that she would be implicated in the murders because she had helped him dispose of evidence.

110 Later that afternoon, defendant told her daughter that she and Pinder were going to drive back to Utah that day in defendant's white Toyota 4-Runner, rather than Pinder's pickup truck, so they would not be recognized and stopped by police as they traveled. When they left Idaho that evening, Pinder and defendant left a maroon gym bag containing letters, identification, a bag of human hair, and a blood-spattered T-shirt, as well as some rifles, in the spare bedroom closet in the DeHarts' house.

{11 Pinder and defendant returned to Utah, staying in a motel in Ogden until November 4. During this time, Pinder and defendant met once with Pinder's criminal attorneys in Salt Lake City, and Pinder spoke to them several times a day on the telephone.

12 Defendant called her husband on November 3. She asked him if police had come to his house in Idaho, where she and Pinder had stayed the previous weekend, and what the police had taken away. When her husband told defendant the police had taken the maroon gym bag, he heard Pinder shout in the background, "Thanks, Kurt. Thanks a lot. You just signed my ... death warrant."

T13 Late in the evening on November 4, Pinder and defendant went to the studios of KSL Television in Salt Lake City. Pinder gave an interview to a reporter, during which defendant sat next to Pinder. During the interview, defendant displayed knowledge that the murders had occurred on the night of October 25, although police had not released the date of the murders. After the conclusion of the interview, the reporter and cameraman followed Pinder and defendant down to the parking garage, where Pinder was filmed driving away in defendant's white *1174 4-Runner with defendant in the passenger seat.

T 14 Pinder and defendant drove to Mesquite, Nevada, checking in to a motel early on the morning of November 5. While checking in at the motel, defendant registered for two guests and wrote down a false license plate number for her 4-Runner.

115 On November 7, defendant arrived back in Cataldo, Idaho, where officers investigating the murders were waiting to question her. Defendant told them she had been . driving Pinder around, that she had dropped him off in Las Vegas, and that she had given him her handgun.

116 Defendant was thereafter charged with one count of obstructing justice. At trial, she moved to dismiss the charge following the State's evidence, arguing the State had presented insufficient evidence to prove the corpus delicti independent of her post-crime statements. The trial court denied the motion, finding sufficient evidence had been adduced to prove the corpus delicti The jury convicted defendant, finding in its special verdict that she "harbored or concealed the offender" and that she "provided the offender with a weapon, transportation, disguise, or other means for avoiding discovery or apprehension." 1 This appeal followed.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

{$17 Defendant first argues the State failed to establish a corpus delicti allowing admission of her out-of-court statements as a basis for her conviction. "[We note that the trial court's ruling that the corpus delicti rule does not bar admission of the statements is a question of law, and accordingly, our standard of review is correctness." State v. Johnson, 821 P.2d 1150, 1161 (Utah 1991). "However, the trial court's underlying findings of fact regarding the corpus delicti will be overturned ouly if clearly erroneous." State v. Nguyen, 878 P.2d 1183, 1186 (Utah Ct.App.1994).

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pinder v. Crowther
Tenth Circuit, 2020
Pinder v. State
2015 UT 56 (Utah Supreme Court, 2015)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 UT App 12, 17 P.3d 1171, 412 Utah Adv. Rep. 32, 2001 Utah App. LEXIS 6, 2001 WL 25429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-dehart-utahctapp-2001.