State v. Houle

940 A.2d 836, 105 Conn. App. 813, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 62
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedFebruary 19, 2008
DocketAC 27403
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 940 A.2d 836 (State v. Houle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Houle, 940 A.2d 836, 105 Conn. App. 813, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 62 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

PETERS, J.

In this criminal appeal from the defendant’s conviction of a number of crimes arising out of the defendant’s unauthorized entry into a building that subsequently was damaged by fire, the principal issue is the sufficiency of the evidence at trial to establish that the defendant set the fire intentionally. The defendant also raises a number of claims of prosecutorial impropriety, particularly challenging the prosecutor’s downplaying of the role of intoxication in criminal intent. We conclude that the defendant cannot prevail on the merits of these claims, even though his conviction on two charges must be set aside for a retrial on the ground of legal inconsistency. We therefore affirm the judgment in part and reverse it in part.

In a four count information filed on October 19, 2005, the state charged the defendant, Scott Gregory Houle, with arson in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-lll (a) (4), burglary in the third degree *816 in violation of General Statutes § 53a-103 (a), criminal mischief in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-115 (a) (l) 1 and larceny in the sixth degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-125b. In addition, the following day, the state filed a second information charging the defendant, in two counts, with being a persistent serious felony offender in violation of General Statutes § 53a-40 (c) and a persistent felony offender in violation of General Statutes § 53a-40 (f). After a trial to a jury, the defendant was convicted as charged, except that on the charge of arson in the first degree, the jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense of arson in the third degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-113. 2 The defendant has appealed from the judgment of the trial court sentencing him to a total effective term of twelve years imprisonment and four years of special parole.

The jury reasonably could have found the following facts, which are largely undisputed. In the early morning of April 24, 2004, the defendant, who was inebriated, made his way to a building located at 141 Providence Street in Putnam. Shattering the glass of the front entrance door with a rock, the defendant entered the building and, with his lighter, started a fire in a closet in a first floor accounting office. The defendant then took a box of pens, a laptop bag and some stamps from the office before leaving the burning building. As a result of a telephone call by an observant neighbor, a *817 Putnam police officer apprehended the defendant as he was trying to climb a fence behind the building.

The police escorted the defendant to the Putnam police station, where they read him his Miranda rights 3 before questioning him about what had transpired. Although initially he misidentified himself and wrongly accused two other men of having started the fire, eventually he signed a statement stating: “The building was in my path of walking. The door was opened and I walked in, I looked around, I went to the closet, the fire was lit with matches and my lighter. But I am not saying I lit it. The fire was lit in the closet. I don’t think it was intentional. It was like a f_around thing. I didn’t think it would go anywhere. It was the thing to do.”

Because the fire progressed rapidly, it caused more than $300,000 of damage to the building. After inspecting both the interior and the exterior portions of the building, a detective from the state fire marshal’s office testified that the fire had originated in the closet of the accounting office and had been set intentionally by human hands.

The defendant’s appeal requires us to address three issues. He maintains that (1) his conviction of arson in the third degree must be set aside and an order of acquittal entered for that charge because the state failed to introduce sufficient evidence to prove that the fire was incendiary in nature, (2) he is entitled to a new trial because the trial court misinstructed the jury on consciousness of guilt and (3) he is entitled to a new trial because of prosecutorial improprieties during the prosecutor’s closing argument to the jury. We are unpersuaded by those claims. Because the state concedes, however, and we agree, that the defendant’s conviction *818 of criminal mischief in the first degree cannot be reconciled with his conviction of arson in the third degree because the conviction of each crime depends on proof of irreconcilably inconsistent states of mind, the judgment must be reversed as to those crimes and the case remanded for a new trial. Accord State v. King, 216 Conn. 585, 593-95, 583 A.2d 896 (1990) (“the statutory definitions of ‘intentionally’ and ‘recklessly’ are mutually exclusive and inconsistent”), on appeal after remand, 218 Conn. 747, 591 A.2d 813 (1991).

I

The defendant’s first claim of error challenges the sufficiency of the evidence adduced by the state to prove that he violated General Statutes § 53a-113 (a), which provides in relevant part that “[a] person is guilty of arson in the third degree when he recklessly causes destruction or damage to a building ... by intentionally starting a fire . . . .’’In the defendant’s view, although concededly he lit matches and flicked his lighter in the closet, he did not start the fire deliberately. According to the defendant, the fire resulted from an accident attributable to his inebriated carelessness and not from intentional misconduct. He claims, therefore, that neither his statement to the police nor the testimony of the detective from the state fire marshal’s office provide sufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the fire was incendiary in origin. 4 We disagree.

A well established standard of review governs our consideration of claims of evidentiary sufficiency. As *819 stated by our Supreme Court: “In reviewing a sufficiency of the evidence claim, we apply a two-part test. First, we construe the evidence in the light most favorable to sustaining the verdict. Second, we determine whether upon the facts so construed and the inferences reasonably drawn therefrom the jury reasonably could have concluded that the cumulative force of the evidence established guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. ... In evaluating evidence, the trier of fact is not required to accept as dispositive those inferences that are consistent with the defendant’s innocence. . . . The trier may draw whatever inferences from the evidence or facts established by the evidence it deems to be reasonable and logical. . . . This does not require that each subordinate conclusion established by or inferred from the evidence, or even from other inferences, be proved beyond a reasonable doubt . . . because this court has held that a jury’s factual inferences that support a guilty verdict need only be reasonable. . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
940 A.2d 836, 105 Conn. App. 813, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-houle-connappct-2008.