State v. Hawkins

2016 UT App 9, 366 P.3d 884, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 12, 2016 WL 299087
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 22, 2016
Docket20130468-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 2016 UT App 9 (State v. Hawkins) 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. Hawkins, 2016 UT App 9, 366 P.3d 884, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 12, 2016 WL 299087 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

VOROS, Judge:

T 1 This appeal arises from a fraud scheme related to real property near Park City, Utah. Appellant Clair, Rulon Hawkins was originally charged as one of the perpetrators of the scheme with three counts of communications fraud and one count of engaging in a pattern of unlawful activity, Sandra Chapple and Kimberly Bowen were also charged in relation to the scheme, Hawkms was ultimately tried separately on two counts of communications fraud, both second degree felonies. A jury acqultted Hawking on the first count of, commumcatlons fraud but convicted him on the second count. Hawkins appeals. We affirm.

BACKGROUND 2

¥2 Empire Custom Homes (Empire Homes) was a Hmited liability company, registered in October 2006. It was managed by another Utah company, of which Bowen and Chapple served as directors and as president and vice pres1dent In addition to the Empire entities, Bowen and Chapple operated several related companies. 3 Hawkins began working for Empire Homes in November 2007.

quitted : Hawkins of this charge. T3 The State charged Hawkins with two alleged fraudulent schemes. The first promised a return of $300,000 on an investor's refundable deposit- of $40,000. The jury ac The facts underlying the second scheme, discussed below, formed the basis for the second count of communications fraud, of Whlch Hawkins was convicted. :

14 In April 2008, Empire Homes entered into an agreement to purchase lots in the Deer Canyon Development from a development company called DPC, DPC owned 87 lots in the Deer Canyon Development. However, DPC lacked the funds to complete the utility infrastructure for the lots, such as natural gas, power, and a booster station for water delivery. Thus, the agreement provided that for every lot Empire Homes re-sold, DPC would recéive $50,000 from the sale proceeds to complete the infrastructure, But DPC needed more than sporadic $50,000 payments; it needed a total of at least $650,000. Thus, closing on 18 lots within the given time frame would give DPC enough money to complete the infrastructure in that phase of the development. - Accordingly, Empire Homes agreed, among other things, to close on 18 of the 87 lots by June 12, 2008, to raise enough money to complete the infrastructure in that phase of the development.

15 Desplte this agreement, Empire Homes did not close on any lots. 'To assuage DPC, Chapple put DPC into contact with Hawkins, whom she represented would handle all financing necessary to close on the lots. Hawkins represented to DPC that he had access to $70 to $80 million held in a private trust that would provide funding for *889 the project. However, none of the promised funding materialized. Consequently, Empire Homes and DPC failed to close on enough lots, DPC defaulted on its loan on the properties it owned in the Deer Canyon Development, and DPC's lenders foreclosed. But before the foreclosure, Emplre Homes closed on lots 89 and 41. Both were purchased by the victim in this case.

T6 The victim had owned a business in Colorado. He sold the business, realizing almost $1 million in profit. He intended to invest some or all of this money in a real property purchase known as a "1031 exchange." 4 The victim's brother-in-law, a realtor licensed in Colorado, found Empire Homes through its website.

T7 In March 2008, the victim contacted Empire Homes. His first contact with Empire Homes occurred when he spoke with Chapple over the phone, The victim and Chapple set a date for him to come to Utah. Onee in Utah, the victim and his brothér-in-law met with Chapple and Hawkins at Empire Homes' office. Then the victim, his brother-in-law, Chapple, and Hawkins all went to look at the Deer Canyon Development. The victim toured seven or eight mul-ti-million dollar homes that another developer had built in Deer Canyon. The victim expressed interest in purchasing one of these existing homes, But Chapple and Hawkins told him that the existing homes were worth $2.5 to $8 million and. had "to be paid for right then and there," and the victim did not have enough money to do that. While touring the development, the victim's brother-in-law asked Hawkins "about utilities, [he] asked him about water and all those kinds of services and if utilities and water . [were] available to all the properties." Hawkins affirmatively represented that "utilities were not a problem and ... that water was not a problem."

18 The victim testxfied that no one from Empire Homes pitched the $40,000 investment opportunity to him, because "they. knew [he] was coming in with- a lot more money." Rather, Chapple and Hawkins presented the victim with various other options related to his potential investment in the Deer Canyon Development. The option the victim chose required him "to purchase the land and then they would pay [him] a monthly stipend to build a home." The victim understood that each of the homes built would cost $2.5 million "but would sell for $8.5 million."

19 Based on the representations made to him, the victim believed that he and Empire Homes "would work together in building" the homes, and "were going to split the profits." He was also led to believe that Chapple and Hawkins "were going to take care of all of the things that needed to be done." The victim described Hawkins as Chapple's part: ner and a promoter of the scheme:

Well, it's just that he was a partner with [Chapple] or a friend you know, I took it that they were partners because why else would he be there other than to promote or be a part of this whole thing? ... [He was a promoter. [He said things like,] "She's done a great job before; I've * worked with her before; she's on top of this, she's a great general contractor; it's all going to work out so good; they've got such a good game plan, the way we build our houses is like no other,"

The victim also understood, from what he had been told about how Empire Homes built houses, that "everything would be set up from the digging to the teams coming in with the concrete ... everythmg, the plumbers, the electnmans, [Chapple] knew lots and lots of people that would come in and they would put these houses up and they would get this whole project done." -

{[ 10 In- addition, the victim was told that Empire Homes was "going to pay [him] $8,300 a month [to lease the property] so they could start building and [the victim and Empire Homes] could, work together as a team to build a house that would go into a rental pool or be sold and [they] would split *890 the profits" And Chapple represented to the victim that "if the house didn't sell for what they said it was worth," that they had an "insurance policy [that] would make up the difference." The victim's brother-in-law testified that Hawkins made the same representation about an insurance policy to him. The document describing the supposed "insurance policy" proclaimed, "Imagine something so great, it makes all the 'what if's' go away!" 5 ,

{11 The victim decided to purchase two lots in the development-lots 89 and 41-and executed a real estate purchase contract for each.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 UT App 9, 366 P.3d 884, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 12, 2016 WL 299087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hawkins-utahctapp-2016.