State v. White

2009 UT App 81, 206 P.3d 646, 626 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 2009 Utah App. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 780453
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedMarch 26, 2009
Docket20071008-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2009 UT App 81 (State v. White) 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. White, 2009 UT App 81, 206 P.3d 646, 626 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 2009 Utah App. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 780453 (Utah Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

BENCH, Judge:

1 1 In this interlocutory appeal, Defendant Brenda Christine White challenges the denial of her motion in limine to include a jury instruction regarding the affirmative defense of extreme emotional distress. Contrary to Defendant's argument, the trial court did not err in evaluating the proffered evidence through an objective viewpoint. Nor did the trial court err in its conclusion that a highly provocative, contemporaneous trigger is required for Defendant's reaction to qualify as extreme emotional distress. As the triggering factors proffered by Defendant do not reach this level, the trial court correctly determined that she was not entitled to a jury instruction on this affirmative defense. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

T2 Defendant and the victim, Jon White, were married for eleven years before Mr. White left the marital home and initiated divorcee proceedings. According to Defendant, Mr. White had caused stress for her during the marriage due to his infidelity, his use of pornography, and his pressuring her to participate in a sexual "three-some." The couple's separation in November 2005 had caused additional stress to Defendant due to Mr. White's subsequent failure to provide financial support, his withdrawal from contact with their children, and his cancellation of Defendant's health insurance coverage at a time when she needed medication for anxiety, depression, and sleep. The mediation of the couple's property settlement had also, in Defendant's eyes, produced an unfair result and burdened her with financial obligations that she struggled to meet during the time between entering into the settlement agreement and the finalization of the divorce.

3 In an attempt to address her mounting financial difficulties, Defendant sought to refinance the home that she had received as part of the property settlement. When she learned that she could not obtain refinancing without Mr. White's assistance, she requested his help. According to Defendant, Mr. White agreed to help but subsequently vacillated between cooperating and refusing to cooperate in the refinancing process.

14 On April 26, 2006, shortly after noon, Defendant went to Mr. White's workplace to speak with him regarding the refinancing of the home. Mr. White approached Defendant, explained that she needed to leave because she had "harassed employees [there before," and accompanied her to the elevator and out of the building. Once outside, Defendant and Mr. White discussed the terms of the property settlement and the refinane-ing of the home. Mr. White refused to sign a quitclaim deed as requested by Defendant until Defendant took his name off the two mortgages encumbering the home. While they stood outside Mr. White's workplace, Defendant had Mr. White speak to the bank officer on her cell phone where he reiterated his position.

4 5 Mr. White concluded the phone call and walked Defendant back to her car where they continued to discuss the issue of the quitclaim deed and refinancing. The conversation escalated in intensity, and Defendant raised her voice and impugned Mr. White. Defendant began repeatedly playing a song on her car stereo called "Angry Johnny," in which the lyrics state, "Johnny, Johnny, angry Johnny.... I want to kill you; I want to blow you away." Each time the singer sang the words "I want to blow you away," Defendant lip-synced the words, formed her hands in the shape of a gun, and pointed them at Mr. White's head. She did this over thirty times. Defendant also stated, "Isn't this great how songs can just motivate people? Wouldn't this be great if it was a true song?" Defendant also mentioned that her father took her "out shooting guns a lot" and that "[elvery time he teaches [her] how to shoot a *649 gun, [she] thinks [she's] shooting [Mr. White]."

16 Defendant eventually stopped playing the song and told Mr. White that she needed money for daycare. Mr. White agreed to pay, but Defendant would not tell him where the children were attending daycare. Defendant withdrew her request for daycare money and told Mr. White she wanted to terminate his parental rights. The conversation ended and Mr. White returned to work. As they parted, Defendant stated, "You are a parasite on this earth and I'm going to wipe you off this earth."

T7 Approximately four hours later, Defendant returned to Mr. White's workplace. As she waited in the parking area in her Ford Explorer, Defendant saw Mr. White exit the building and walk toward his car while talking on a cell phone. According to Defendant, Mr. White had repeatedly denied owning a cell phone and had used this purported lack of a cell phone as an excuse for his lack of communication with the children and the difficulties in arranging visitation schedules for them. Defendant would later proffer that seeing Mr. White talking on the cell phone caused all the accumulated stress from the marriage and separation to overwhelm her, which in turn caused a sudden burst of anger, agitation, loss, grief, and disappointment.

T8 As she watched Mr. White talking on his cell phone, Defendant drove her vehicle toward him, accelerating quickly. When Mr. White heard tires squealing, he jumped between two parked cars and then over a three-foot cement wall at the end of the covered parking structure. Mr. White ran back through the visitor parking lot and toward the building. As he approached the east entrance of the building, Defendant sped through the visitor parking lot in Mr. White's direction and turned the vehicle toward the building. Mr. White ran through the first set of doors, and Defendant drove the vehicle through the building's glass doors. Defendant struck Mr. White with the vehicle, throwing him back approximately ten feet. Mr. White arose from the ground and ran down a corridor to the west lobby on the opposite side of the building. Defendant followed Mr. White down the hallway and hit him with her vehicle a second time. After this second strike, Mr. White flew over the hood of the vehicle and landed on the ground, injuring his left leg. While Mr. White hobbled down a small hallway and hid in a service closet, Defendant drove her vehicle through the glass windows of the west lobby, reversed the vehicle back through the lobby, briefly pulled forward again, and finally stopped.

1 9 Defendant was charged with attempted murder, see Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-203(2) (Supp.2008), and criminal mischief, see Utah Code Ann. $ 76-6-106 (Supp.2002). She subsequently filed a motion in limine seeking a "pre-trial order authorizing the defense of Extreme Emotional Distress to be presented as a question of fact to the jury." Defendant argued that, on the date of the incident, she had lost self-control due to stressors that had accumulated over time and that she was therefore entitled to present a jury instruction for the affirmative defense of extreme emotional distress. Defendant proffered evidence regarding the dissolution of her relationship with Mr. White and the financial difficulties arising after their separation. Additionally, she proffered facts regarding the unexpected death of her therapist three weeks before the incident. 1

10 In response to Defendant's motion in limine, the prosecution proffered additional evidence. Shortly after the attack, while still seated in her vehicle, Defendant had called Mr. White's sister and told her that she thought she had just killed Mr.

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Related

State v. White
2011 UT 21 (Utah Supreme Court, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 UT App 81, 206 P.3d 646, 626 Utah Adv. Rep. 24, 2009 Utah App. LEXIS 81, 2009 WL 780453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-white-utahctapp-2009.