State v. House

1999 NMSC 014, 978 P.2d 967, 127 N.M. 151
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1999
Docket24861
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 1999 NMSC 014 (State v. House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. House, 1999 NMSC 014, 978 P.2d 967, 127 N.M. 151 (N.M. 1999).

Opinion

OPINION

FRANCHINI, Justice.

{1} Gordon House was convicted of vehicular homicide and various other charges after two hung juries in Taos County and a change of venue to Doña Ana County for the third trial. The Court of Appeals reversed his conviction, holding that the trial court abused its discretion in changing the venue from Taos County to Doña Ana County. The State appealed. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that a fair trial could not be guaranteed in Taos County and that Doña Ana County was more likely to be free from exception. We reverse the Court of Appeals and affirm the trial court.

I. FACTS

{2} This case, arising from a fatal traffic accident, was so transformed by publicity that all those involved were compelled to evaluate how the defendant could receive a fair trial. So frenetic was the media attention that the prosecution eventually claimed that even the State was having difficulty receiving a fair adjudication of this case.

{3} On Christmas Day 1992, the citizens of New Mexico awoke to news reports concerning a tragic traffic accident that had occurred the night before.1 Through the constant media coverage, the details of the accident were widely available. The following facts were adduced from the record of the proceedings in the trial court. The incidental endnotes are intended to illustrate the extent and nature of the media coverage surrounding each event in this case.

{4} On that Christmas eve, Paul Cravens, his wife Melanie, and her three daughters, five-year-old Kaycee, seven-year-old Erin, and nine-year-old Kandyce, set off in their Oldsmobile to enjoy the Christmas Lights in Albuquerque. They drove westward on Interstate Highway 40 toward “Nine Mile Hill” which provided a vantage from which they could see the city’s lights.2

{5} Gordon House, an enrolled member of the Navajo nation, is married and the father of two young children, and was employed as executive director of House of Hope, a halfway home for troubled adolescents in Gallup, New Mexico.3 That Christmas Eve, he was driving his Ford pickup from Albuquerque to his home in Thoreau, New Mexico. House admitted that, during that evening, over a period of several hours, he had consumed seven-and-one-half beers.4 House claimed that, shortly after beginning his journey, he became ill with the precursor symptoms of a migraine headache.5 He asserted that his migraine symptoms grew so severe that he was partially blinded.6 He became disoriented and inadvertently entered Interstate Highway 40 going the wrong direction. Thus, at the same time Cravens and his family were driving west in the westbound lane, House was driving east in the same lane.

{6} Several other vehicles were forced to take evasive actions to avoid colliding with House as he drove eastward in the westbound lane of the Interstate.7 A state policeman paced House from the proper eastbound lane, attempting to get his attention with red lights, a siren, and a spotlight directed at House’s truck. At one point House looked at the policeman and accelerated to speeds exceeding 85 miles per hour.8 House hit the Cravens’ car head-on. Melanie Cravens and her three young daughters were killed instantly. Paul Cravens suffered severe injures.

{7} House was seriously injured. The prosecution offered evidence that, shortly after House arrived at a hospital in Albuquerque, his blood-alcohol concentration was measured at .18% and, about five hours later, was measured at .10%.® House asserted that a severe familial hemiplegic migraine, rather than alcohol, was the proximate cause of his driving the wrong way on the freeway and the resultant accident.10 It was later revealed that he had a single prior conviction of driving while intoxicated from magistrate court in McKinley County, New Mexico, in December 1987.11

{8} The accident and all its consequences became one of the most widely publicized cases in New Mexico history. Within days of the accident, newspapers reported that many members of the public reacted, with outrage and demanded tougher DWI laws.12 The accident, and the defendant himself, became figureheads for those who were urging more punitive DWI laws in New Mexico.13 Statements by members of the victims’ families were frequently reported by the media.14 Nadine Milford, Melanie Craven’s mother, was the subject of a feature on national television.15

{9} House’s family, members of the Navajo nation, and others publicly decried the news coverage and prosecutorial tactics as racist and one sided.16 The advocacy of attorneys for both the prosecution and the defense made for colorful reportage.17

{10} Editorialists heatedly expostulated about the case.18 Newspaper readers frequently expressed their opinions in letters to the editor.19 Talk show listeners expressed their feelings.20 Human interest portraits were published about almost anyone who had any relationship with any of the people involved in the accident.21 The evening TV news and front-page news stories covered even minor developments in the case22 As reported by the news media, the court, on more than one occasion, felt compelled to issue gag orders to the parties in the case, forbidding them from making statements to the news media.23 Even these orders provoked litigation which itself became newsworthy.24 Inevitably, the media coverage itself became an inextricable part of the story.25

{11} The Criminal Complaint was filed on July 13, 1993. In addition to charges of vehicular homicide, great bodily injury by vehicle, driving while intoxicated, reckless driving, and eluding an officer, the prosecution brought charges of first-degree depraved-mind murder. On September 22, 1993, House submitted to this Court a Verified Petition for Extraordinary Writ, asking that we order the State to proceed no further in the first-degree-murder prosecution. We denied the writ.26 The trial court held a preliminary hearing on the matter.27 Upon hearing the evidence, Honorable Frank H. Allen Jr. dismissed the depraved-mind-murder charges on October 27, 1993. Public reactions of outrage and relief were duly reported.28

{12} Both the prosecution and the defense became concerned that House could not receive a fair trial in Bernalillo County because of the extensive pretrial publicity. House made a motion, unopposed by the State, for a venue change. On March 28, 1994, Judge Allen changed the venue of the trial to Taos County.29

{13} Amid extensive print and broadcast coverage, the first of the Taos trials began on June 6, 1994.30 On June 21, 1994, the jury convicted House on the misdemeanor charge of driving while intoxicated but declared that it was deadlocked nine to three in favor of conviction on all the remaining counts including the vehicular homicide counts. News of the hung jury incited a furious round of media attention.31 The court entered an Order declaring a mistrial on the remaining six counts on June 28,1994.

{14} The prosecution made a public avowal to seek a retrial and, on July 29,1994, filed a Motion for Change of Venue in which the District Attorney stated that it was impossible for the State to receive a fair trial in Taos County. This motion was opposed by House.32 The motion to change venue was denied on August 23, 1994. State v. House, CR-93-1693, slip op.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1999 NMSC 014, 978 P.2d 967, 127 N.M. 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-house-nm-1999.