OPINION
T1 Dеfendant Lester Gonzales (Lester) appeals from a conviction of manslaughter, a second degree felony, in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 765-205 (1999). We affirm.
BACKGROUND
12 At approximately 1:00 a.m. on July 24, 1999, Martin Baz (Martin) and Rolando La-gunas left a party where they had been drinking. As Martin and Rolando left the party, Lester and his brother Edwin Gonzales (Edwin) apрroached Martin and Rolando. Lester and Edwin had also been drinking. After a short conversation, Martin left to retrieve his bicycle, which had been stored in a nearby stairwell. Edwin approached Martin, and they began speaking again. While they spoke, Lester returned to the conversation. Martin insulted Lester, calling him a erude name.
T3 An argument then ensued, during which Martin criticized Lester's ability to speak English Lester punched Martin in the face, knocking him to the ground. Edwin and Lester began kicking Martin, until Rolando pulled Edwin from the fight. Edwin struggled with Rolando while Lester continued kicking Martin in the head "with all of his strength" several times. Two witnesses saw Lester kicking Martin until Martin's eyes rolled back in his head and his breathing bеcame labored.
T4 Officer Chad Carpenter of the Logan City Police Department responded to an emergency call and found Martin lying in a *971 driveway. Shortly thereafter, Martin died. He had a blood-alcohol level of .23. The medical examiner found multiple bruises and abrasions on Martin's body, especially around the heаd and face, caused by Lester's forceful blows. The blows, combined with Martin's intoxication, caused his death.
T5 Edwin pleaded guilty to manslaughter, under an accomplice liability theory. Lester was charged with first-degree murder and pleaded not guilty. After the State rested its case at trial, it requested an instruction allowing the jury to consider finding Lester guilty as an accomplice to murder. The court denied this request because the State had offered no evidence warranting such an instruction. However, the court stated that it might consider an accomplice liability instruction if Lester introduced enough evidence supporting accomplice liability during the presentation of his defense. Lester had hoped to introduce testimony of Edwin's primary responsibility for the crime, thus exculpating himself under a theory of mistaken identity. However, Lester chose not to introduce that evidence because he believed it would provide the necessary foundation for an accomplice liability instruction. At oral argument, Lester's counsel characterized the threat of an accomplice liability instruction as a sort of "Hobson's choice," forcing him to choose between presenting his theory of mistaken identity and exposing himself to accomplice liability on the one hand, and foregoing the mistaken identity defense and exposing himself to principal liability on the other hand.
T6 Lester ultimately chose not to introduce evidence supporting a mistaken identity theory, hoping to avoid the threat of accomplice liability altogether. When the trial court instructed the jury, however, it issued a causation instruction that stated:
In considering whether the Defendant "caused" another's death, you need not find that the Defendant's conduct was the sole factor in producing the death. A Defendant causes the death of another if he or she was a substantial factor in bringing about the death even if it can be shown that some other factor also contributed in a substаntial degree to the death. However, in order for the Defendant to be found guilty, the other factors also contributing to the death must have been foreseeable.
Lester's counsel objected to this instruction, arguing that it amounted to a disguised accomplice liability instruction, and that Lester had no notice in the information of possible exposure to accomplice liability. The trial court overruled the objection, and the jury ultimately convicted Lester of manslaughter, a lesser included offense.
ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
T7 Lester challenges the trial court's rejection of his claim that due process required the State to provide notice in the information of its intent to pursue accomplice liability. "Whether an information provides sufficient notice is a question of law. Accordingly, we review this question for correctness." State v. Preece,
ANALYSIS
I. Sufficiency of the Information
18 First, we address Lester's challenge to the trial court's denial of his claim that due process required the State to provide notice in the information of the State's intention to pursue an accomplice lability theory at trial. Lester argues on appeal that the State's failure to include notice in the information of its intention to pursue accom *972 plice liability prejudiced his ability to properly present his planned defense of mistaken identity, and thus violated his due process rights.
T9 We conclude that no error occurred when accomplice liability was not mentioned in the State's information. Further, Lester had adequate notice of the charges against him. Lester was tried and convicted as a principal. The State did not pursue accomplice liability at trial nor in the jury instructions. When the State asked for a jury instruction regarding accomplice liability, the court denied the request because the State had not presentеd any evidence warranting one. Contrary to Lester's challenge, however, the court ruled in Lester's favor on this issue because the State did not vary from the charges contained in the information. In essence, Lester seeks relief based on lack of notice of a prosecution theory that was never brought to the jury's аttention. We find it unreasonable to require the State to give notice, at a stage as early as the filing of an information, of all possible theories that might arise, including those that do not become part of the State's case. See State v. Davis,
[ 10 Rule 4(b) of the Utah Rules of Criminal Procedure requires only that an information "charge the offense for which the defendant is being prosecuted by using the name given to the offense by common law or by statute or by stating in concise terms the definition of the оffense sufficient to give the defendant notice of the charge." Utah R.Crim. P. 4(b). Our supreme court has stated that an information is "legally sufficient even if it consists of nothing more than an extremely summary statement of the charge." State v. Bell,
{11 Herе, the information provided to Lester contained the charge of murder, the name of the victim, the date and place of the crime, and the relevant text of the homicide statute, Utah Code Ann. § 76-5-205. Thus, we conclude the information satisfied the constitutional requirements for adequate notice of the charges against him and that no error occurred. See Utah Const. art. I, § 12 ("In criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the right ... to demand the nature and cause of the accusation against him [and] to have a copy thereof. . . ."). 2
112 At oral argument, Lester presented for the first time the contention that an accomplice liability instructiоn would be unfair because it represents a charge completely separate from principal liability for murder. We do not agree that accomplice Tiability is a separate offense from principal liability such that it would require specific notice. It is well settled that accomplices incur the sаme lability as principals. See Utah Code Ann. § 76-2-202 (1999) (stating that an accomplice "shall be criminally liable as a party for such conduct"); State v. Comish,
113 Next, we address Lester's argument that he was prejudiced by lack of notice of the possibility of accomplice liability being introduced at trial. The State never altered its theory of principal liability. If the State had changed its theory of the case, applicable precedent protects Lester by providing for a continuance when necessary to tailor a defense to meet the State's amended theory.
[Djefendant did not request a continuance in order to remedy the alleged prejudice and, therefore, waived his right to complain on appeal. "[Wlhenever the prosecution changes its positiоn, a defendant may seek a continuance ... [but] the fallure of a defendant to seek a continuance negates any claim of surprise and amounts to a waiver of any claim of variance [in the State's theory)." Defendant's failure to request a continuance is fatal to his claim, and accordingly, we affirm the trial court's decision.
State v. Wilson,
(14 Lester did not request a continuance. At oral argument, Lester's counsel stated that he did not request a continuance because he did not need more time to prepare his defense. Instead, he asserted thаt the alleged change of position by the State thwarted his ability to present his desired defense of mistaken identity. The right to adequate notice in the information does not implicate a defendant's right to present a desired defense. Rather, it protects a defendant's ability to "prepare to meet the proseсution's changed position." State v. Fulton,
II. The Causation Instruction
T15 Finally, we address Lester's claim that he was prejudiced by the issuance of the causation instruction to the jury. The instruction allowed the jury to convict Lester even if "some other factor also contributed in a substantial degree to the death." Lester аrgues that he was unfairly prejudiced by this instruction because "it allowed the State to argue accomplice liability without having given defendant notice of its intention to do so prior to trial."
116 Generally, when an instruction correctly states the law and does not unfairly prejudice the defendant, there is no error. See State v. Hаnsen,
T17 Lester's entire argument regarding the causation instruction rests on his claim of prejudice. He asserts that the instruction enabled the State to argue accomplice Hability, even though the information did not allege accomplice liability, the court refused the State's request for an accomplice liability instruction, and Lester himself refrained from introducing evidence that would prompt the court to revisit that ruling.
T18 Lester's argument does not persuade us. The State did not mention any connection between Lester's participation in Martin's death and this instruction. Rather, it connected Martin's intoxication to his death when explaining the meaning of the instruction. Further, Lester's own counsel referred to Martin's intoxicatiоn as "something that contributed to [Martin's] death." (Emphasis added.)
{19 Finally, Lester argues that the instruction "allowed the State to argue accomplice liability," but he fails to point us to any argument actually made by the State that *974 suggested accomplice liability to the jury. Significantly, the court removed from the original proposed сausation instruction language specifically addressing another human actor.
1 20 In sum, as the State points out,
the jury had no knowledge of any issue relating to accomplice liability.... [Alny mention of that theory occurred outside the jury's presence. Consequently, even if the instruction could be read by counsel as relating to an accomplice lаbility theory, it could not have been interpreted that way by the jury in this case. ...
We agree. Lester offers us no basis on which to conclude that the instruction unfairly prejudiced him by confusing the jury or giving them an improper alternative to principal liability. He wants us to assume prejudice, but all he proposes is a speculative and isоlated hypothetical interpretation of the instruction. See generally State v. Kirkwood,
121 Moreover, the causation instruction was a correct statement of the law. A defendant's acts may be found to be the proximate cause of the victim's death еven if the victim "actually died as a result of the combination of [the defendant's acts] plus some other contributing factor." State v. Hamblin,
CONCLUSION
1 22 Lester received sufficient notice of the charges against him when the information charged him as a principal to murder. He has not demonstrated error or unfair prejudice arising from the causation instruction. Accordingly, we affirm his conviction.
23 WE CONCUR: PAMELA T. GREENWOOD and GREGORY K. ORME, Judges.
Notes
. Lester originally raised a third issue regarding the trial court's refusal to take judicial notice of Edwin's guilty plea to manslaughter. Before oral argument, however, Lester filed a waiver of the issue, and thus we do not address it.
. In his brief, Lester rested his main argument of law on a line of cases from Nevada, which requires accomplice liability to appear in the information. See State v. Eighth Judicial Dist. Ct.,
