State v. Gonzales-Bejarano

2018 UT App 60, 427 P.3d 251
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedApril 12, 2018
Docket20160271-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2018 UT App 60 (State v. Gonzales-Bejarano) 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. Gonzales-Bejarano, 2018 UT App 60, 427 P.3d 251 (Utah Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

CHRISTIANSEN, Judge:

¶1 Defendant Enrique Valentin Gonzales-Bejarano appeals from his convictions: two second-degree felonies, four third-degree felonies, and a class A misdemeanor. Specifically, he argues that he did not receive his constitutionally guaranteed right to the effective assistance of counsel because his counsel had a conflict of interest, failed to object to certain testimony, and failed to move for a directed verdict with regard to two of the charges. We conclude that Defendant has not demonstrated any prejudice resulting from the alleged conflict of interest or hearsay testimony. But we agree that Defendant received ineffective assistance of counsel when his counsel failed to move for a directed verdict on two of the seven charges. We therefore vacate his convictions for those two charges but affirm in all other respects.

BACKGROUND

¶2 A police officer (Officer), responding to a report of a suspicious vehicle, discovered Defendant and Defendant's fiancée (Fiancée) in the back seat of the vehicle. Officer asked Defendant for his identification, and Defendant handed over a California driver license with the name Victor Payan. Officer also asked Defendant for the vehicle's registration, and Defendant stated that he could not find the registration and that the vehicle belonged to a friend. A check of the vehicle's license plate showed that the vehicle had been reported stolen nine days earlier. Officer then arrested Defendant and Fiancée and began an inventory search of the vehicle. Later, while being booked at the jail, Defendant admitted that he was not Victor Payan.

¶3 After night fell, the vehicle was taken to the sheriff's building's garage to be impounded, and several officers finished the inventory search that had been started earlier. In the course of the search, the police found "a small white bindle container, plastic container, sitting on the passenger seat between where [Defendant and Fiancée] were located." The police also found a binder containing "several birth certificates," utility bills, and immunization records bearing the names of people who were not present. And the police found Defendant's wallet, from which he had taken the California driver license; the wallet also contained a Utah driver license with the name Victor Payan and two debit cards with other names. The police noticed holes in the vehicle's headliner fabric but apparently did not search that area.

¶4 The police returned the vehicle to its owner. Several days later, the vehicle's owner discovered a package containing nearly one pound of methamphetamine inside the headliner and reported the find to the police. The package's street value was estimated at $100,000.

¶5 A few days later, staff at the jail where Defendant was held searched the belongings of another inmate as part of the normal release procedures. In his belongings, staff found a jail request form with Defendant's signature on the front. The back of the form contained a note:

Her name is Janet, Enrique's sister, tell her I got arrested and to go [to] my room and look for my address book. And download the What's Up app, [ 1 ] and call my conecta, [ 2 ] his name is Marcos and let him know I and my girlfriend got arrested with a stolen motor vehicle. Cops didn't find the dope and when car was released to the owners, they found out the dope, one and a half pounds of crystal in which they raise my bail to $50,000.

Jail staff then reviewed surveillance tapes and reported finding a segment showing Defendant writing the note and giving it to the inmate being released. However, the staff failed to preserve the tape and instead recorded over it. In lieu of introducing the tape into evidence, the staff who watched the tape testified at trial.

¶6 The State eventually charged Defendant with possession of a stolen motor vehicle, a second-degree felony, Utah Code Ann. § 41 -1a-1316 (LexisNexis 2014) ; possession of a controlled substance with intent to distribute, a second-degree felony, id. § 58-37-8 (LexisNexis 2016); two counts of forgery, third-degree felonies, id. § 76-6-501(2)(a) (LexisNexis 2012); two counts of unlawful possession of a financial transaction card, third-degree felonies, id. § 76-6-506.3(1); and unlawful possession of another's identification documents, a class A misdemeanor, id. § 76-6-1105(2)(a)(i).

¶7 At trial, the State sought to show that Defendant knew that he was not entitled to possess the identification documents in the binder. To this end, the State elicited testimony from Officer that he had contacted the individuals to whom the documents belonged and that those individuals had denied giving Defendant permission to have the documents. Defense counsel did not object to this testimony on either Confrontation Clause or hearsay grounds.

¶8 The State also sought to show that Defendant had been in possession of the methamphetamine package. The State elicited testimony from the officer (Sergeant) who had retrieved the package from the vehicle's owner. Sergeant testified that he responded to a call about the package the owner found in the vehicle and recounted several things the vehicle's owner told him about how her son had discovered the package. Again, defense counsel did not object on either Confrontation Clause or hearsay grounds.

¶9 Defense counsel also represented Fiancée, who was not tried at the same time as Defendant. Nevertheless, defense counsel argued that Fiancée was responsible for the identification documents in the binder and therefore there was at least a reasonable doubt that Defendant had possessed them.

¶10 With the exception of the second forgery count (count four), which was dismissed at trial, the jury convicted Defendant of all charges, and he timely appealed.

ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶11 Defendant first contends that his counsel had a conflict of interest as a result of also representing Fiancée and that this conflict prejudiced Defendant. He raises this contention as a matter of ineffective assistance of counsel. Defendant also contends that he received constitutionally ineffective assistance of counsel when his counsel failed to object to Officer's and Sergeant's testimony on either Confrontation Clause or hearsay grounds. Finally, Defendant contends that defense counsel provided ineffective assistance by failing to move for a directed verdict as to two of the charges.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 UT App 60, 427 P.3d 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-gonzales-bejarano-utahctapp-2018.