STATE of Utah, Plaintiff and Appellee, v. Marcus Alexander GARCIA, Defendant and Appellant.
No. 20081004-CA
Court of Appeals of Utah
July 15, 2010
2010 UT App 196 | 239 P.3d 550
Mark L. Shurtleff and Kenneth A. Bronston, Salt Lake City, for Appellee.
Before Judges DAVIS, McHUGH, and ORME.
OPINION
DAVIS, Presiding Judge:
¶1 Defendant Marcus Alexander Garcia appeals his conviction for burglary, a second degree felony, see
BACKGROUND
¶2 At approximately three o‘clock in the morning on July 14, 2007, the victim was sleeping in her basement bedroom at her parents’ home when she awoke to the sound of her bedroom door shutting. The victim,
¶3 Defendant then walked to the side of the victim‘s bed and said, “We are going to fuck.” When the victim replied that she was pregnant, Defendant responded, “I don‘t give a fuck.” The victim began to scream for her mother, and Defendant jumped on top of her, held her down, covered her mouth, and forced his fingers down her throat, cutting her lip. Defendant then put the victim‘s head into a pillow and pulled up her shirt. The victim attempted to defend herself by putting her fingers into Defendant‘s mouth, but Defendant bit her fingers.
¶4 The victim‘s parents, who had been sleeping on the upper floor of the home, were awakened by her screams. The victim‘s mother ran to the victim‘s bedroom door but found it locked. The victim‘s mother then heard her daughter scream, “Get him out of here,” and heard the bedroom window break. At that point, the victim was able to get to the bedroom door and unlock it. The victim‘s father, who had not made it all the way downstairs at the point when he heard the bedroom window break, changed course and ran out the front door after Defendant. The victim‘s father was ultimately unable to capture Defendant, who got in his car and drove away. After leaving to look for Defendant, the victim‘s father returned home and found that the police had arrived on the scene.
¶5 Defendant was subsequently charged by information with attempted rape, a first degree felony, see
¶6 The case proceeded to trial. During opening statements, counsel for Defendant characterized the felony underlying the burglary charge as follows: “We have burglary, based on a felony or assault, in particular the attempted rape.” (Emphasis added.) During the State‘s case-in-chief, the State argued a theory of burglary based on Defendant‘s unlawful entry into the victim‘s home to commit a rape. During the defense‘s case-in-chief, Defendant testified that he actually entered the victim‘s home to collect a debt from the victim‘s brother, who owed Defendant money for a quarter pound of marijuana Defendant had recently sold to him. Defendant further testified that he became frightened while in the home and entered a bedroom and locked the door to give himself time to leave the home. Defendant also testified that once in the bedroom, he was surprised to find the victim sleeping and that before he could explain, the victim started screaming. Defendant testified that he attempted to keep the victim quiet by putting his hand over her mouth and pushing her head down on the pillow. Defendant denied that he hit or attempted to rape the victim. Finally, Defendant testified that when the victim‘s mother tried to get in the bedroom, he broke the window to facilitate his escape.
¶7 In direct rebuttal to Defendant‘s testimony that he had entered the victim‘s home to collect money from a drug deal with her brother, the State recalled Detective Gregory Gray to the stand. Over Defendant‘s repeated objections, Detective Gray testified that it is illegal to sell marijuana and that a person selling a quarter pound of it would be charged with a third degree felony.
¶8 Before the parties presented closing arguments in the case, the trial court read the jury instructions to the jury. With regard to the burglary charge, Instruction No. 21 specifically instructed the jury that it could convict Defendant if it found that “[D]efendant entered or remained [in the victim‘s home] with the intent to commit a rape, an attempted rape, or an assault.” (Emphasis added.) Defendant did not object to the jury instruction.
¶9 During closing arguments, the State again advanced its theory of burglary—that
¶10 Subsequently, the jury acquitted Defendant of the attempted rape but convicted him of burglary, assault, and criminal mischief. The trial court sentenced Defendant to one to fifteen years on the burglary conviction, 365 days on the assault conviction, and 180 days on the criminal mischief conviction. Defendant now appeals the burglary conviction.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶11 Defendant contends that the assault conviction cannot support the burglary conviction for two reasons. First, Defendant argues that any assault occurred while he was fleeing the premises and, thus, he did not form the requisite intent to commit the assault while he “entered or remained” in the home as required by the burglary statute. “A matter of statutory interpretation [is] a question of law that we review on appeal for correctness.” MacFarlane v. Utah State Tax Comm‘n, 2006 UT 25, ¶ 13, 134 P.3d 1116 (alteration in original).1 Second, Defendant argues that because the State represented in its information as well as during its case-in-chief that the attempted rape was the underlying felony supporting the burglary charge, any subsequent change in the State‘s theory at trial denied Defendant his constitutional right to confront the charges against him. “[C]onstitutional questions . . . are questions of law and therefore reviewed for correctness,” without deference to the trial court‘s ruling. State v. Arellano, 1999 UT App 381, ¶ 5 n. 4, 993 P.2d 894 (omission in original) (internal quotation marks omitted).2
ANALYSIS
I. The Evidence Supports a Finding that Defendant Formed the Intent to Assault the Victim While He Remained Unlawfully in Her Home, Not While He Was Fleeing.
¶12 Defendant argues that “[u]nder the plain language of Utah‘s burglary statute and
¶13 Utah‘s burglary statute provides that “[a]n actor is guilty of burglary if he enters or remains unlawfully in a building or any portion of a building with intent to commit: (a) a felony; (b) theft; [or] (c) an assault on any person. . . .”
II. Defendant Had Sufficient Notice that the Assault Charge Could Serve as the Underlying Offense for the Burglary Charge.
¶14 Defendant also argues that because the State represented during its case-in-chief that attempted rape was the underlying felony supporting the burglary charge, any subsequent argument that assault could also form the basis for the burglary charge improperly allowed the State to “reinvent its charge” against Defendant, thus denying him his constitutional right to confront the charges against him. We disagree.
Article I, section 12 of the Utah Constitution provides that every criminal defendant has a right to know the nature and cause of the accusation against him. . . . This entitles the accused to be charged with a specific crime, so that he can know the particulars of the alleged wrongful conduct and can adequately prepare his defense. State v. Burnett, 712 P.2d 260, 262 (Utah 1985) (omission in original) (internal quotation marks omitted). However, “[a]s long as a defendant is sufficiently apprised of the State‘s evidence upon which the charge is based so that the defendant can prepare to meet that case, the constitutional requirement is fulfilled.” State v. Wilcox, 808 P.2d 1028, 1032 n. 1 (Utah 1991).
¶15 We conclude that Defendant had constitutionally sufficient notice that the State could prosecute the burglary charge based on the theory that Defendant remained unlawfully in the victim‘s home to commit an assault against her. First, Defendant was independently charged with assault. Second, as to the burglary charge, the information specifically stated, “[D]efendant . . . entered or remained unlawfully in the dwelling of [the victim] with the intent to commit an assault or a felony, to-wit: attempted rape.” (Emphasis added.) Finally, Instruction No. 21, to which Defendant never objected, explicitly informed the jury that it could base a conviction for burglary on either the intent to
CONCLUSION
¶16 In sum, there is ample evidence that Defendant formed the requisite intent to assault the victim while he remained unlawfully in her home, thus bringing him squarely within the plain language of the burglary statute. Furthermore, we conclude that Defendant had constitutionally sufficient notice that the assault could form the underlying basis for the burglary charge against him. Affirmed.
ORME, Judge (concurring in the result):
¶17 I reject Defendant‘s basic premise that because he was acquitted of attempted rape, his intent to rape the victim, when he entered or remained in the residence, could not support the burglary conviction. Just the opposite is true.
¶18 An attempt is committed when a defendant, intending to commit a particular crime, takes a substantial step toward its completion. See
¶19 This appeal readily turns on the realization that there is no disconnect between the jury‘s concluding that Defendant entered, or at least lingered, in the residence, intending to rape the victim—thus sustaining his burglary conviction—while at the same time concluding he did not take a substantial step toward actual commission of the crime of rape—thus necessitating his acquittal on the charge of attempted rape.3 As the lead opinion seems to recognize in its footnote 1, the jury‘s verdict is completely logical, given the evidence before it, and readily supports a burglary conviction. On this straightforward basis, alone, I would affirm. I see no need to wrestle with the more convoluted issues dealt with at length in the body of the lead opinion.
McHUGH, Associate Presiding Judge (concurring):
¶20 Because I conclude that the lead opinion and Judge Orme‘s concurring opinion both provide justification for affirming Defendant‘s conviction, I concur with both opinions.
