State v. Powell

2007 UT 9, 154 P.3d 788, 570 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Utah LEXIS 11, 2007 WL 148915
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 2007
Docket20050810
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 2007 UT 9 (State v. Powell) 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. Powell, 2007 UT 9, 154 P.3d 788, 570 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Utah LEXIS 11, 2007 WL 148915 (Utah 2007).

Opinion

DURRANT, Justice:

INTRODUCTION

11 In a jury trial, Thomas Powell was convicted of aggravated burglary, a first-degree felony, and attempted murder, a see-ond-degree felony. In this direct appeal, Powell presents three arguments for reversal: (1) the district court's jury instruction for attempted murder erroneously allowed for a conviction based on a "knowing" or "depraved indifference" mens rea; (2) the district court erroneously denied his request to instruct the jury on the lesser included offenses of assault and aggravated assault; and (8) cumulative error undermined confidence in the verdict.

{2 We reject each of Powell's arguments and affirm his convictions. Although the jury instruction regarding mens rea was erroneous, the error was harmless. Further, the district court correctly refused to grant Powell's request for a lesser included offense instruction because there was no rational basis in the evidence presented at trial for a verdict acquitting Powell of attempted murder and convicting him of assault or aggravated assault. Finally, Powell's cumulative error argument is without merit because the errors he asserts were not, in fact, errors.

BACKGROUND

13 On the morning of January 12, 2003, Roselynn Ellis was alone in a room at Zion's Hotel in Salt Lake City. According to Ellis, Thomas Powell entered her room at around eight o'clock and offered to sell her some women's clothes that he carried in a bag. After Ellis refused to buy the clothes, Powell put a gun to her head and said, "[MJove, bitch, and I'll kill you!" Ellis responded, "Do it," after which she heard the gun click and then felt a bullet land on her shoe. After the gun failed to fire, Powell beat Ellis with the gun multiple times, resulting in severe cuts to the back of her head. Ellis struggled with Powell and eventually forced him to flee the room. Ellis called a 9-1-1 dispatcher as she chased after Powell.

T4 Powell ran outside and got into the driver's seat of a black Cadillac. Tamara Ross, a woman with whom Powell and Ellis were acquainted, was in the passenger's seat. As Powell and Ross attempted to drive away, Ellis tried to stop them by grabbing onto the driver's side door. Ellis heard Ross say, "Kill the bitch." Powell responded with "kill her, I'm trying," or "kill her, I can't even knock her out. ..." While Ellis held onto the car, Powell pointed the gun at her head and pulled the trigger. Once again, the gun did not fire. As Ross and Powell sped away, Ellis was able to relay the Cadillac's license plate number to the 9-1-1 dispatcher. After returning to her room, Ellis noticed that her purse was gone.

15 Tamara Ross testified for the State as part of a plea agreement to avoid being charged with Powell. Ross testified that, while driving away, Powell saw, lying on the floor and loaded with bullets, the magazine clip belonging to the gun he used in the attack and stated, "That's why the mother £ didn't work!" According to Ross, Powell also told her that he pistol-whipped Ellis. She witnessed Powell remove items from Ellis's purse and throw the purse out of the car window.

T6 Ross and Powell drove to Ross's daughter's house, where Powell put his bloody clothes in a garbage bag and gave the gun and the bag to Ross's great-nephew, Geoffrey Taylor. Powell told Taylor to get rid of them. Taylor and his cousin, Justin Ford, took the gun and the bag in the Cad-illae and went to dispose of them.

17 When the police located and stopped the black Cadillac, Taylor told them that Powell had asked him to dispose of a gun and a bag of clothing. The police arrested Taylor and Ford and retrieved the gun from where Taylor had thrown it out of the car window. The police also discovered bloody handprints *793 on the window of the car. Police officers responding to Ellis's 9-1-1 call also inspected and photographed the disheveled hotel room. They collected the bullet from the floor and also gathered Ellis's bloody clothing. Later that day, the police arrested Powell at the home of Ross's daughter.

T8 At trial, the above-stated facts were undisputed by Powell, exeept for the testimony that he was Ellis's assailant. Powell's sole defense was that he had been misidentified. Powell admitted driving Ross to the hotel in the Cadillac the night before the attack on Ellis, but claimed he was at the home of Ross's daughter on the morning the attack occurred.

9 To cast doubt on Ellis's ability to identify him, Powell brought forth evidence to show that Ellis was not wearing contacts at the time of the attack and had used alcohol and cocaine the night before the attack. When the police showed Powell to Ellis the day of the attack, she was unable to identify him as her assailant until she was brought within arm's length, heard his voice, and he was instructed to put on a hat.

110 Powell was convicted of attempted murder and aggravated burglary. He was acquitted of aggravated robbery. Powell now appeals his conviction from the district court. We have jurisdiction pursuant to Utah Code section 78-2-2(8)(i).

STANDARDS OF REVIEW

$11 "Because jury instructions are statements of the law, we review challenges to jury instructions under a correctness standard." 1 Because Powell did not object to the attempted murder instruction at trial, however, we review it under the manifest injustice or plain error standard. 2

112 A trial court's refusal to grant a lesser included offense instruction is a question of law, which we review for correctness. 3

118 As part of his cumulative error claim, Powell alleges three separate errors: (1) that the district court erred in allowing the prosecutor to misstate the evidence during closing argument; (2) that the district court erred by not sua sponte excluding testimony relating to Powell's prior felony convietion; and (8) that the district court erred in allowing Detective Burningham to testify regarding Powell's alias without personal knowledge. Because Powell did not properly preserve his first and second claims of error with respect to his cumulative error claim at trial, we review them under the plain error standard. 4 Powell did preserve his claim of error regarding Detective Burningham's testimony. A trial court's "rulings on the admission of evidence ... generally entail a good deal of discretion." 5 Therefore, " '[we] will not reverse the trial court's ruling on evidentiary issues unless it is manifest that the trial court so abused its discretion that there is a likelihood that injustice resulted" » 6

ANALYSIS

114 Powell appeals his conviction for aggravated burglary and attempted murder, raising three claims of alleged error. First, he claims that his conviction for attempted murder should be reversed and his case remanded for a new trial because the jury instruction erroneously allowed for a convietion of attempted murder based on a "knowing" or "depraved indifference" mens rea. While the jury instruction was erroneous under our decision in State v. Casey, 7 we hold the resulting error was harmless.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 UT 9, 154 P.3d 788, 570 Utah Adv. Rep. 8, 2007 Utah LEXIS 11, 2007 WL 148915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-powell-utah-2007.