State v. Laine
This text of 618 P.2d 33 (State v. Laine) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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Defendant Norman Laine appeals his conviction by a jury of theft by deception in violation of Sections 76-6-405 and 76-6-412, Utah Code Ann., 1953, as amended.1 The errors assigned are in rulings on evidence and in instructions to the jury.
On May 30, 1979, defendant went to the University Lincoln-Mercury dealership in Provo and negotiated for the purchase of a new Lincoln automobile. The car and the price of $14,930 were agreed upon, and a contract was prepared and signed. Upon his representation that he needed the car to go directly to the bank in Springville, approximately five miles away, to get the money and return, the car was turned over to defendant. He never returned to the dealer, and the car was reported stolen two days later. On June 7,1979, defendant was arrested in Minnesota while in possession of the car and was returned to Utah to stand trial.
The defendant first attacks his conviction on the ground that the District Court erred in receiving the testimony of an employee of the car dealer in question who detailed defendant’s conduct from the time defendant first came into the showroom until the car was driven away. Defendant argues that since the contract relating to the “purchase” of the car is an integrated contract, parol evidence of his representations leading up to the execution of the contract was inadmissible.
The parol evidence rule is, of course, a rule of substantive law and not evidence. The rule presupposes an action involving an existing valid written contract, and is based on the premise that when the terms of an agreement have been reduced to a clear and unambiguous writing, that writing furnishes the best evidence of the understanding of the parties.2
In this case, the State is not a party to nor concerned with the enforcement of the terms of the written contract. Rather, the State is interested in the contract only to the extent that the contract evidences the commission of the crime charged. Therefore, the State is neither bound by the terms of the contract nor prohibited from showing that it was executed by the parties as one of the aspects of the situation upon [35]*35which the crime charged against defendant is based.3 Accordingly, the parol evidence rule cannot properly be invoked to prevent the State from showing the facts relating to the issue of whether the defendant intentionally deceived the victim in order to wrongfully obtain possession of the automobile in question.4 It follows that the District Court did not err in admitting the evidence explanatory of the circumstances under which the written contract was executed.
Defendant next maintains that the District Court committed reversible error by giving instruction no. 7 which purports to state the “essential elements” of the crime charged, but fails to expressly include the element that the defendant must be found to have intended to permanently deprive the owner of possession of the automobile.5
While it is true that the instructions must be viewed, and reviewed, as a whole,6 we cannot agree with the State that any defect in instruction no. 7 is cured by instruction no. 6.7
The general rule is:
An accurate instruction upon the basic elements of the offense charged is essential, and the failure to so instruct constitutes reversible error.8
In our view, the failure to include the intent element in the basic “elements” instruction is reversible error. That instruction informs the jury that the State must prove each of the elements listed there beyond a reasonable doubt. Instruction no. 6-the “Information” instruction-does refer to the intent required for commission of the crime, but does not inform the members of the jury that before returning a verdict of guilty, they must find beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant had the conscious objective to withhold the property (the automobile) permanently.
In holding the instructions here to be fatally defective, we do not mean to imply that all of the elements of the charged crime must necessarily be contained in one instruction, though the better practice is, we think, to do so. So long as the jury is informed what each element is and that each must be proved beyond a reasonable doubt, the instructions taken as a whole may be adequate even though the essential elements are found in more than one instruction.
Reversed and remanded for new trial.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
618 P.2d 33, 1980 Utah LEXIS 1013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-laine-utah-1980.