State v. Souza

846 P.2d 1313, 205 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 18, 1993 WL 27499
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedFebruary 3, 1993
Docket910588-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 846 P.2d 1313 (State v. Souza) 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. Souza, 846 P.2d 1313, 205 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 18, 1993 WL 27499 (Utah Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

GREENWOOD, Judge:

Defendant Kenneth Dwayne Souza appeals the jury verdict finding him guilty of supplying alcohol to minors in violation of Utah Code Annotated section 32A-12-203 (1991). On appeal, defendant claims that his conviction should be reversed because the State did not present sufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt each element of the offense charged. We affirm defendant’s conviction.

BACKGROUND

The charges against defendant resulted from an incident on August 14, 1990, when he, accompanied in his mini van by coworker, Richard Foster 1 , picked up two minor girls and allegedly “supplied” them with alcoholic beverages. Defendant and Foster, both construction workers, had chatted with the girls, Mandy Reyes, aged fifteen, and Mandy Morris, aged fourteen, in the Three Legged Dog Bar in Myton, Utah. The girls told the men that they intended to be at Mandy Reyes’s house about ten minutes after leaving the bar. The girls went to the Reyes home and checked in with Mandy’s mother before leaving for a short walk to “ghost town,” an abandoned convenience store. While the girls were walking, defendant and Foster pulled alongside them and followed them. When the girls stopped and spoke with the men, Foster grabbed each girl in turn by the left hand and pulled them into the back seat of the van. The girls claimed to have resisted, but expressed no real concern at that time because they “didn’t know if it was like a major thing to be worried about at that point.”

Once they were inside the van, the girls described feeling that they had lost control of the encounter. They claimed to have responded to the men with a mixture of resistance and compliance. While defendant drove the van around Duchesne County, the girls said that Foster kept his hand on the lock and told the girls that they could only leave the van by jumping out.

The girls both testified that defendant and Foster had two cases of beer between the front seats of the van which they offered to the girls several times. Both girls stated that they originally refused the *1316 beer, eventually drank one, and later hid the beer offered to them in the seats. Mandy Reyes testified that each man handed a beer to one of them; Mandy Morris testified that Foster handed the beer to them and that defendant “appear[ed] to be going along with that.”

During the course of the incident, defendant and Foster allowed the girls to drive the van, insisting that they follow the men’s directions. They went both to defendant’s house and the trailer where Foster intended to live. The girls followed the men into both places and, in fact, carried the beer into defendant’s home. The girls alleged that the men made sexual advances throughout the incident, which they managed to repel. After leaving the trailer, the girls insisted they needed to go home because no one knew where they were. Eventually, they were able to escape by running to a school yard and hiding there before returning to the Reyes’ home.

As a result of the incident, defendant was charged with supplying alcoholic beverages to minors, a misdemeanor. The State also prosecuted defendant for forcible sexual abuse and kidnapping, second degree felonies. After the evidence had been submitted for jury deliberation, the jury sent a note to the trial court requesting clarification of the instruction relating to the supplying alcohol to minors charge. Their request read: “Instruction number 9. Need clarification on issue number 1. What is the definition of ‘furnish or supply’? If it’s in the vehicle, does that mean it’s supplied?” After discussion with counsel for both parties, the court elected not to respond to the portion of the question about the vehicle but to submit to the jury both Black’s Law Dictionary and Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary with the questioned words marked in each volume. Defendant’s counsel objected to the trial court’s submission of the legal dictionary, because its definition of “furnish” included a reference to liquor laws stating: “As used in the liquor laws, furnish means to provide in any way.”

The jury accepted the dictionaries and asked for no further clarification before returning a guilty verdict only for the misdemeanor of supplying alcohol to minors. The court then fined defendant $250 and sentenced him to one year in jail, suspended on the condition that he successfully complete twelve months of probation. Defendant appeals his conviction.

ANALYSIS

Defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence upon which the jury convicted him of supplying alcohol to a minor in violation of Utah Code Annotated section 32A-12-203 (1991). At the time of his conviction, the controlling language of that statute read: “A person may not sell, offer to sell, or otherwise furnish or supply any alcoholic beverage or product to any person under the age of 21 years.” Id. at 32A-12-203(1) (emphasis added). By claiming that his actions did not constitute “furnishing or supplying,” defendant focuses his appeal on the meaning of that phrase, the same phrase which generated the jury’s questions. Therefore, once we resolve the threshold issue of the statutory meaning of “furnish or supply,” we can evaluate both the adequacy of the trial court’s response to the jury’s request for a definition of these words and the sufficiency of the evidence to support a conviction for the defined activity.

Definition of Supply or Furnish

Defendant argues that, contrary to instructions provided to the jury, a conviction for “furnishing or supplying” alcohol to minors in violation of the Utah statute, requires the physical act of giving liquor to a minor. Because Mandy Morris testified defendant did not hand a beer to the girls, the jury could, according to defendant, have acquitted defendant if they had been properly instructed and believed only Mandy Morris and not Mandy Reyes. Defendant’s appeal, therefore, turns on the meaning of the statutory phrase “other *1317 wise furnish or supply”. Because interpretation of statutory language is a question of law, we review the definition provided in the jury instruction, as supplemented by the offered dictionaries 2 , for correction of error without affording deference to the decision of the trial court. State v. James, 819 P.2d 781, 796 (Utah 1991). In interpreting the critical words, we follow basic principles of statutory construction. First, terms of related code provisions should be construed in a harmonious fashion. Grayson Roper Ltd. Partnership v. Finlinson, 782 P.2d 467, 471-72 (Utah 1989). Second, statutory terms should be interpreted and applied according to their commonly accepted meaning unless the ordinary meaning of the term results in an application that is either “unreasonably confused, inoperable, [ ]or in blatant contradiction of the express purpose of the statute.” Morton Int’l., Inc. v. Auditing Div. of the Utah State Tax Comm’n,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
846 P.2d 1313, 205 Utah Adv. Rep. 35, 1993 Utah App. LEXIS 18, 1993 WL 27499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-souza-utahctapp-1993.