State v. Humphrey

793 P.2d 918, 135 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 96, 1990 WL 69054
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMay 23, 1990
Docket890333-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 793 P.2d 918 (State v. Humphrey) 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. Humphrey, 793 P.2d 918, 135 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 96, 1990 WL 69054 (Utah Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

GREENWOOD, Judge:

Defendant John E. Humphrey challenges his jury conviction of aggravated robbery, a first degree felony in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-302 (1978). We affirm the conviction, but remand for the purpose of correcting the sentence.

FACTS

At approximately 3:30 p.m., on October 21, 1987, a bearded man held Karakine Karmelian, the owner of a Salt Lake City jewelry store, and Stephen Church, a security guard, at gunpoint while he robbed the store of jewelry, diamonds, and cash, worth approximately $40,000. The robber pulled a sawed-off shotgun from a cloth bag and directed Karmelian to put the contents of the safe and display eases into the bag. The robber then directed Church to handcuff himself to Karmelian and toss him the key. Before leaving, the robber warned the two men not to try to follow him because “another guy” with a gun was waiting outside.

Later that day, Karmelian was brought to the police station where Detective Lo-max showed him a set of photographs in an attempt to identify the robber. The set did not include defendant’s picture. Karmelian was unable to identify the robber from these photographs.

Based on information provided by Britt Martindale, the police secured a warrant and, on November 4, 1987, arrested defendant, Charles Webb, and Webb’s girlfriend, Carolyn Gregersen, at Webb and Greger-sen’s apartment. The police seized, in part, a diamond watch from Gregersen’s purse, a ring from her jewelry box, and a shotgun from the bedroom in which Webb had been found. At the time of the arrest, defendant was living in the Martindale home, located several blocks away from Webb and Gregersen’s apartment.

Following the arrest, Karmelian was again brought to the police station. Detective Lomax showed him another set of photographs, which included both defendant’s and Webb’s photographs along with five or six others. Karmelian selected one photograph, indicating that it might possibly be the robber. At the time, Detective Lomax was not sure which photograph was defendant and which was Webb. The set of photographs was destroyed sometime before trial.

In mid-November, the police found an abandoned stolen car in a parking lot that Russell Martindale, Britt’s husband, told police was used in the robbery. A hat and coat found inside the car matched Karmeli-an and Church’s description of the clothing worn by the robber.

At their preliminary hearing in late November 1987, defendant and Webb were represented separately by two attorneys from the Salt Lake Legal Defenders Association (SLLDA). When Webb’s appointed counsel subsequently withdrew from representing him, Webb privately retained attorney Ray Stoddard to represent both him and Gregersen. Appointed counsel, Lisa Remal, continued to represent defendant. *921 In January 1988, Remal filed a motion, which Stoddard joined in on behalf of Webb, to sever defendant’s trial from Gre-gersen’s. The motion was granted.

In March 1988, Stoddard filed motions to withdraw as Webb’s counsel and to sever Webb’s trial from defendant’s on grounds that substantially more evidence would be' presented against defendant than Webb, thereby prejudicing the jury to find Webb guilty by association. Stoddard’s motion to withdraw as Webb’s counsel was granted, and another attorney from SLLDA, Brooke Wells, was appointed to represent Webb. Stoddard continued to represent Greger-sen. Webb’s severance motion was not pursued by Wells.

In April 1988, defendant filed a handwritten pro se motion, captioned “Motion for Conflict of Interest and Trial Separation.” The motion asserted, in part, that Webb 1 would be deprived of a fair trial if the robbery victims were allowed to identify defendant at trial since, according to defendant, their pretrial identification of him was unconstitutional. In May 1987, defendant filed another handwritten pro se motion, captioned “Motion to Suppress Evidence and Conflict of Interest,” which roughly claimed the same conflict of interest. Defendant also joined a motion in limine made by Webb to exclude evidence of any prior bad acts of the defendants. The motion was granted and renewed as a reminder at the start of trial. Just prior to trial, defendant filed a handwritten affidavit to disqualify Judge Sawaya from the case. Judge Sawaya referred the recusal matter to Judge Wilkinson, who denied the motion.

A joint trial for defendant and Webb was held in June 1988. At trial, Karmelian and Church described the robbery and identified defendant as the robber. Also testifying for the State were Britt Martindale and Russell Martindale, who was granted immunity for car theft in return for his testimony.

Britt testified that on October 21, 1987, at approximately 4:00 p.m., Webb backed a car, in which Gregersen was a front seat passenger, into her driveway. Webb went into the Martindale home, took a blanket off of Britt’s bed, and yelled to Britt to come outside with him and hold up one side of the blanket behind the trunk of the car. Webb instructed Britt to push the trunk release button inside the car. When the trunk opened, Britt saw defendant inside the trunk. Defendant climbed out of the trunk and went directly into the bathroom of the Martindale home and shaved off his beard. Webb retrieved a canvas bag and a sawed-off shotgun from the car, and Britt put the shotgun on a shelf in her pantry. Webb and Gregersen then sorted through jewelry taken from the bag. Defendant walked back and forth between the bathroom and the kitchen while shaving, explaining “how he put the shotgun in some guy’s face” and handcuffed a guard who arrived during the robbery. Webb exclaimed that “everything went great,” and that “the cops didn’t show up” for a while, and that he knew everything was okay when “all he saw was an old man coming over a fence.” Later that day, defendant, Webb, and Russell left for Las Vegas.

At trial, Britt also identified the shotgun seized from Webb’s bedroom as the shotgun that Webb pulled from the bag and she put in the pantry. She also identified the diamond watch seized from Gregersen’s purse as the watch she saw Webb give Gregersen from the bag.

Russell testified that he stole the abandoned car found by police, that was used in the robbery. Webb had promised him that he would pay the rent on Russell’s house if he would steal a car for him. He gave the car to Webb the day prior to the robbery. After the robbery, he travelled with defendant and Webb to Las Vegas. Webb told him that he knew someone in Las Vegas who could get rid of the items Webb and defendant had stolen. He signed a pawn slip in Las Vegas, but did not know what he was signing at the time. He travelled *922 with defendant and Webb for three to four days until he parted with them in Portland, Oregon.

Defendant and Webb both claimed at trial that they had been set up by the Martin-dales. Webb testified that he purchased the ring and watch from Britt at her home on November 2, 1987, and gave them to Gregersen for a birthday present. He stated that during the robbery, he was in Ely, Nevada, pursuing his occupation of selling gold, silver, and diamonds. He introduced into evidence a gas station receipt from Ely, dated October 21, 1987.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
793 P.2d 918, 135 Utah Adv. Rep. 50, 1990 Utah App. LEXIS 96, 1990 WL 69054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-humphrey-utahctapp-1990.