State v. Paule

2024 UT 2
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 1, 2024
DocketCase No. 20220039
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2024 UT 2 (State v. Paule) 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.

Bluebook
State v. Paule, 2024 UT 2 (Utah 2024).

Opinion

This opinion is subject to revision before final Publication in the Pacific Recorder

2024 UT 2

IN THE

SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF UTAH

STATE OF UTAH, Respondent, v. ELBERT JOHN PAULE, Petitioner.

No. 20220039 Heard: March 6, 2023 Filed February 1, 2024

On Certiorari to the Utah Court of Appeals

Fourth District, Provo The Honorable Lynn W. Davis No. 191400658

Attorneys: Sean D. Reyes, Att’y Gen., David A. Simpson, Asst. Solic. Gen., Salt Lake City, for respondent Douglas J. Thompson, Jennifer L. Foresta, Provo, for petitioner

CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT authored the opinion of the Court, in which ASSOCIATE CHIEF JUSTICE PEARCE, JUSTICE PETERSEN, JUSTICE HAGEN, and JUSTICE POHLMAN joined.

CHIEF JUSTICE DURRANT, opinion of the Court: Introduction ¶1 Elbert Paule argued over the phone with his friend (Friend). As the argument escalated, Friend said he intended to go to Paule’s apartment to “take him out.” Friend also said that if he did go to Paule’s apartment, things would not end well for Paule. Although Paule told Friend not to come to his apartment, Friend came anyway. ¶2 When Friend arrived at Paule’s apartment and tried to open the door, Paule retrieved and loaded his shotgun. Friend then used the STATE v. PAULE Cite as 2024 UT 2

door code to open the apartment door, at which time Paule shot and killed Friend. Paule ran from his apartment to another friend’s house and soon thereafter traveled by shuttle bus to Las Vegas and then to San Diego, where his grandmother lives. ¶3 The State charged Paule with murder, obstruction of justice, reckless endangerment, and assault, and he underwent a jury trial. The jury acquitted him on all charges except obstruction of justice. ¶4 Paule moved to arrest the judgment on the ground that the obstruction of justice conviction was legally inconsistent with the jury’s determination that he was not guilty of the other charged crimes. 1 The trial court denied Paule’s motion. ¶5 Paule appealed his conviction to the court of appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in denying his motion to arrest judgment and that his counsel rendered ineffective assistance. The court of appeals affirmed Paule’s conviction, and we granted certiorari to review two of the court of appeals’ determinations: (1) that Paule’s conviction for obstruction of justice was not legally inconsistent with his acquittal on the other charges, and (2) that Paule could not demonstrate his trial counsel was ineffective in failing to seek a more detailed unanimity jury instruction. We affirm. Background ¶6 Paule and Friend knew each other for a few months, during which time they hung out and played video games together. Their friendship began to deteriorate when another of Paule’s friends rebuffed Friend’s romantic advances and Paule intervened. ¶7 On the day of Friend’s death, Paule and Friend argued over the phone. Friend told Paule he planned to come to Paule’s apartment to “take him out.” Paule responded to Friend, “Do not come over.” Fearing that Friend would come to his apartment, Paule and one of

_____________________________________________________________ 1 An “arrest of judgment” means “[t]he staying of a judgment after

its entry; esp., a court’s refusal to render or enforce a judgment because of a defect apparent from the record.” Arrest of judgment, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019). At any time before sentencing, a district court may, sua sponte or upon motion of a defendant, “arrest judgment if the facts proved or admitted do not constitute a public offense, . . . or there is other good cause for the arrest of judgment.” UTAH R. CRIM. P. 23.

2 STATE v. PAULE Cite as 2024 UT 2

his roommates established a special knock to identify who was at the apartment door. ¶8 Friend came to Paule’s apartment, bringing along Friend’s fiancée and infant child. Upon arriving at Paule’s apartment, Friend knocked on the door. Recognizing that the knock was not the identifiable one he and his roommate had established, Paule did not answer. Instead, he waited and hoped whoever was at the door would leave. When the person at the door had not left after five minutes, Paule went to his bedroom, retrieved his shotgun, loaded it, and returned to the apartment entryway—standing four or five feet from the door. According to Paule’s testimony, Friend—using the code to Paule’s apartment door, which was saved on his phone—opened the door holding a knife, the two made eye contact, Friend stepped into the doorway, and Paule fired the shotgun at Friend. ¶9 At that point, one of Paule’s roommates came out of his bedroom to see what had happened. Paule ran from his apartment, crossed the property, and jumped over a fence. He went to a friend’s house, then left Utah on a shuttle bus, traveling first to Las Vegas and then to San Diego. After Paule shot Friend, but before law enforcement officers arrived at the scene, the shotgun Paule used to shoot Friend ended up in the grass below Paule’s apartment balcony. In addition, sometime after Paule left his apartment, his phone went missing and was never found. ¶10 Eventually, Paule turned himself in to law enforcement. The State charged him with four crimes—(1) murder, a first-degree felony; (2) obstruction of justice; a second-degree felony (due to the first- degree felony nature of the murder charge); (3) reckless endangerment, a class-A misdemeanor; and (4) assault, a class-B misdemeanor—and the case went to trial. ¶11 In the State’s opening statement, it identified the obstruction of justice charge as follows: “Number two is obstruction of justice, when, after he shot [Friend], he took that shotgun [and] threw it off the balcony in order to hinder, delay, or prevent the investigation.” At trial, competing evidence was presented. Paule testified that he shot Friend in self-defense. He stated that immediately after he shot Friend, his roommate took the shotgun from him. Paule further testified that he believed his phone had accidentally dropped out of his pocket when he jumped over the fence near his apartment complex. And, when asked why he left Utah and went to California, he testified that he had wanted to explain to his family what had happened.

3 STATE v. PAULE Cite as 2024 UT 2

¶12 The responding and investigating officers also testified at trial. The officer who arrived at the apartment immediately after the shooting testified that he found a knife just outside the apartment door and a spent shotgun shell inside the apartment. Another officer testified that he found the shotgun—loaded and ready to fire with the same brand of shell as the empty shell found in Paule’s apartment— in the grass below Paule’s apartment balcony. Forensic evidence established that the five identifiable prints on the shotgun (four fingerprints and one palmprint) all matched Paule. ¶13 Paule moved for a directed verdict on the obstruction of justice charge. Outside the jury’s presence, his counsel argued that no evidence showed that Paule had obstructed justice, explaining that although the shotgun was found in the grass outside, there was no evidence that Paule was the one who threw or dropped it from the balcony. In response, the State argued there was enough circumstantial evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that Paule had obstructed justice by throwing the shotgun from the balcony. The court agreed with the State and determined that the jurors could “make their conclusion as it relates ultimately to [whether] they believe that . . . [Paule] discarded the shotgun and attempted to obstruct justice.” Accordingly, the court denied Paule’s motion for a directed verdict. ¶14 In its closing argument, the State maintained that Paule committed obstruction of justice by throwing the shotgun from the balcony, saying: Count 2 is obstruction of justice. That is when [Paule] threw the gun over the balcony. The statute says that .

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2024 UT 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-paule-utah-2024.