State v. Scales

946 P.2d 377, 326 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 108, 1997 WL 575862
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedSeptember 18, 1997
Docket960745-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 946 P.2d 377 (State v. Scales) 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. Scales, 946 P.2d 377, 326 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 108, 1997 WL 575862 (Utah Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

WILKINS, Associate Presiding Judge:

Defendant Carl William Scales appeals from a final judgment entered after a jury trial in which the jury found him guilty of one count of murder, a first degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-203 (1995), and five counts of theft, a second degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-404 (1995). We affirm.

BACKGROUND

“In reviewing a jury verdict, we view the evidence and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in a light most favorable to the verdict,” and recite the facts of this ease accordingly. State v. Dunn, 850 P.2d 1201, 1205-06 (Utah 1993).

In May 1995, defendant and Kayleen Jones were married in Arizona. The next month, they moved into a trailer owned by Kayleen’s brother, Wade Jones, on a ranch in Upton, Utah. Wade had left three firearms, two .22 caliber rifles and a 30-06, in a hidden compartment in the trader.

On Sunday, August 6, 1995, Wade was working at a water well near the trailer. Defendant told Wade he was going to clean out a storage tank that contained a rat he wanted to shoot. To enable defendant to kill the rat, Wade loaned him a .22 Ruger automatic rifle and a loaded clip.

That night, Kayleen’s mother, who lived in a house near the trailer, was working outside in her yard. While she was out working, around 9:30 p.m., she heard defendant and Kayleen yelling at each other in the trailer. After about five minutes, the yelling stopped. Kayleen’s mother did not see or hear Kay-leen or defendant the rest of the evening.

The next morning, défendant visited Kay-leen’s grandmother, who also lived on the ranch. Defendant told her that he was having problems with his car and that he was supposed to be in South Fork, which was approximately six or seven miles away, in thirty minutes. He said Kayleen had told him her grandmother might be willing to let him borrow her car so he could get to South Fork on time. Kayleen’s grandmother told him her car, a Monte Carlo, was unlicensed and did not have very much gasoline in it. Defendant told her he had gasoline. Kay-leen’s grandmother then gave him the keys and told him not to drive the car farther than South Fork.

Defendant then went back to the trailer and loaded Wade’s four weapons — the two .22 rifles, the 30-06, and the Ruger .22 — into *380 the Monte Carlo’s trunk. After leaving the trailer, where he left his wallet, defendant drove west on Interstate 80. On the way, defendant picked up two hitchhikers. Defendant did not appear to the hitchhikers to be purposely driving toward any particular destination. When asked by the hitchhikers where he was going, defendant gave a vague response. Defendant told the hitchhikers that “he had a little trouble at home,” and that he “just wanted to get away for a while.”

Defendant also told the hitchhikers he had some guns he wanted to sell because he was short on money. Defendant sold the 30-06 to a man in a bar in Wells, Nevada for $100 and two beers. He also sold the Ruger .22 for $26 at a gas station in Yalmy, Nevada.

That evening, Kayleen’s mother walked over to the trailer to talk to Kayleen, but found all three exterior doors to the trailer locked. Concerned, Kayleen’s mother called Wade, who came over. Wade unlocked and entered the trailer. He found Kayleen’s dead body on the bed in the master bedroom. One pillow covered her head and was saturated with blood. Another pillow was next to her head. Spent .22 casings were strewn about the room. It was later determined that the spent casings had been fired from the Ruger .22 Wade had loaned to defendant to kill the rat in the storage tank. The trailer contained no signs of either a struggle or a forced entry. In addition, no defensive wounds were found on Kayleen’s body. On the floor at the entrance to the master bedroom was a necklace. Inside on the bedroom floor was Kayleen and defendant’s marriage certificate, which had been torn into pieces. It was later determined that Kayleen had been killed by being shot with the Ruger .22 five or six times in the head through the two pillows.

Defendant, who was still driving the borrowed Monte Carlo, was apprehended the next day in Reno, Nevada. Wade’s two .22 rifles were found in the car’s trunk.

Defendant was charged in a single information with one count of murder and five counts of theft. 1 He was appointed an attorney, Glen Cook, and pleaded not guilty to all counts. ■

In October 1995, following his arraignment, defendant filed a pro se motion to have Cook removed as his counsel. The record contains no minute entry or order regarding this motion; however, the trial court’s docket entry indicates that a motion hearing was held and that the trial court struck defendant’s motion because “the problem ha[d] been resolved.”

In January 1996, defendant filed a second pro se motion to have Cook removed as his counsel. Defendant’s motion alleged several grievances regarding his relationship with Cook, including that “numerous face to face conversations [between defendant and Cook] have resulted in total polarity. There appears to be no attempt to understand the requests and questions that the undersigned asks to the extent that several jailers have expressed concern regarding the relationship.” After holding another hearing, the trial court granted this second motion. The court then appointed Joseph C. Fratto, Jr. to represent defendant.

In February 1996, upon learning that his former wife had just died of cancer, defendant began a fast. Defendant refused to eat solid foods, stating that he wanted to experience the suffering his former wife experienced while she was dying of cancer. Forty-one days into the fast, the State filed both a Petition for Inquiry into Mental Condition of Defendant and a Petition to Force-Feed Defendant. In response to these motions, the trial court ordered that defendant be committed to the Utah State Hospital for thirty days for observation and treatment. After defendant’s condition was assessed, the trial court held another hearing. The trial court concluded defendant was competent to stand trial.

In April 1996, defendant, through Fratto, moved to sever the murder count from the theft counts on the ground that “the substance of these offenses do not constitute a single criminal episode.” After a hearing, *381 the trial court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law and denied the severance motion.

Also in April 1996, defendant, independently of Fratto, sent the Utah State Bar a letter requesting both a change of venue and that Fratto be dismissed as his counsel. In the letter, defendant alleged that his confidence in Fratto was shaken, that Fratto’s investigator had failed to follow up with defendant as promised, that Fratto had initiated and arranged with the prosecuting attorney to transfer defendant to the Utah State Hospital, and that Fratto ignored defendant’s social worker’s request to have legal materials sent to the hospital.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
946 P.2d 377, 326 Utah Adv. Rep. 15, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 108, 1997 WL 575862, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-scales-utahctapp-1997.