State v. Lamb , 725 Utah Adv. Rep. 15 ( 2013 )


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    2013 UT App 5
    _________________________________________________________
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    JEFF LAMB,
    Defendant and Appellant.
    Memorandum Decision
    No. 20111071‐CA
    Filed January 10, 2013
    Sixth District, Manti Department
    The Honorable Wallace A. Lee
    No. 101600091
    Douglas L. Neeley, Attorney for Appellant
    John E. Swallow and John J. Nielsen, Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE CAROLYN B. MCHUGH authored this
    Memorandum Decision,
    in which JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and
    MICHELE M. CHRISTIANSEN concurred.
    McHUGH, Judge:
    ¶1      Jeff Lamb appeals from his conviction for cattle rustling,
    specifically three counts of theft of lost property, third degree
    felonies. See Utah Code Ann. § 76‐6‐407 (LexisNexis 2012) (ele‐
    ments); id. § 76‐6‐412(b) (2012) (penalties). Lamb claims that the
    trial court erred in denying his motion to sever the charges and in
    denying his motion to suppress evidence obtained during a search
    of his property. We affirm.
    State v. Lamb
    ¶2     In late March 2010, a Utah Department of Agriculture Theft
    Inspector was notified of potential cattle rustling in Ephraim,
    Utah.1 As a result, the Theft Inspector and a State Brand Inspector
    went to investigate. After arriving at a neighbor’s property, the
    Brand Inspector used a pair of binoculars to view cattle that were
    on Lamb’s field.2 The Brand Inspector determined that one of the
    calves in the field did not have Lamb’s ownership markings but
    instead bore those of another cattle rancher.
    ¶3     The inspectors then entered Lamb’s field and confirmed that
    the calf did not belong to Lamb. At that time, the inspectors
    discovered two other cows with ownership markings indicating
    that they belonged to a second cattle rancher. Several weeks later,
    the Theft Inspector discovered that an additional lost cow bearing
    the brand of yet another rancher was in Lamb’s herd and that
    Lamb had put his own ear tag on the cow.
    ¶4     On several occasions, the Theft Inspector spoke with Lamb
    and inquired as to how the cattle ended up on his property. Lamb
    gave the Theft Inspector several inconsistent reasons why the cattle
    from three separate owners were on his property but conceded that
    they belonged to other owners. Though Lamb told one of the other
    1. “We state the facts in a light most favorable to the trial court’s
    ruling denying [a] motion to suppress.” State v. Marquez, 
    2007 UT App 170
    , ¶ 2, 
    163 P.3d 687
     (alteration in original) (citation and
    internal quotation marks omitted).
    2. Lamb argues that the trial court made an erroneous finding of
    fact when it accepted the Theft Inspector’s claim that he viewed the
    cattle through binoculars from a neighbor’s property. Because we
    determine that a physical intrusion onto an open field is of no
    Fourth Amendment significance, see infra ¶¶16–17, any dispute as
    to whether the Theft Inspector actually entered the field to confirm
    that the cattle did not belong to Lamb has no bearing on whether
    the State violated his Fourth Amendment rights.
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    State v. Lamb
    owners that he knew nothing about where the owner’s lost cattle
    were, he later admitted to the Theft Inspector that he knew some
    of that owner’s cattle were in his herd.
    ¶5      The State charged Lamb with three counts of theft of lost
    property. Lamb filed a motion to sever the counts and a motion to
    suppress the discovery of the stolen cattle by the inspectors’ search
    of his field. After hearing arguments, the trial court denied both
    motions, ruling that the counts were properly joined because there
    was a common plan or scheme and Lamb would not be prejudiced
    by joinder, and because the field that the inspectors searched was
    an open field undeserving of Fourth Amendment protection. Lamb
    subsequently pled guilty on condition that he could appeal the trial
    court’s suppression and severance rulings. See generally State v.
    Sery, 
    758 P.2d 935
    , 938 (Utah Ct. App. 1988). Lamb filed a timely
    notice of appeal.
    ¶6      First, we review Lamb’s argument that the trial court abused
    its discretion when it denied Lamb’s motion to sever the counts
    against him.
    [T]he grant or denial of severance is a
    matter within the discretion of the trial
    judge, so we reverse [a denial] only if
    the trial judge’s refusal to sever
    charges is a clear abuse of discretion in
    that it sacrifices the defendant’s right
    to a fundamentally fair trial. Under
    [the abuse of discretion] standard, we
    will not reverse . . . unless the decision
    exceeds the limits of reasonability.
    State v. Balfour, 
    2008 UT App 410
    , ¶ 10, 
    198 P.3d 471
     (alterations
    and omission in original) (citations and internal quotation marks
    omitted). We analyze a severance claim in two steps. “We must
    first determine whether the offenses were properly joined. We
    must then determine whether the offenses should nonetheless have
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    State v. Lamb
    been severed due to any prejudice that may have resulted by their
    joinder.” State v. Burke, 
    2011 UT App 168
    , ¶ 19, 
    256 P.3d 1102
    .
    ¶7     Joinder of offenses is permitted if certain criteria are met.
    Specifically,
    (1) Two or more felonies . . . may be
    charged in the same indictment or
    information if each offense is a sepa‐
    rate count and if the offenses charged
    are:
    (a) based on the same conduct
    or are otherwise connected [to‐
    gether3] in their commission; or
    (b) alleged to have been part of
    a common scheme or plan.
    ....
    (4)(a) If the court finds a defendant or
    the prosecution is prejudiced by a
    joinder of offenses . . . the court shall
    order an election of separate trials of
    separate counts, grant a severance of
    defendants, or provide other relief as
    justice requires.
    3. The previous publication of the Utah Code contains the word
    “together” as indicated in the quoted language. See Utah Code
    Ann. § 77‐8a‐1 (LexisNexis 2008). Although this word is not
    included in the most recent publication of the Utah Code, see id.
    (2012), this omission appears to be inadvertent because the statute
    has not been amended since the previous publication, see id.
    history.
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    State v. Lamb
    Utah Code Ann. § 77‐8a‐1 (LexisNexis 2012). “The purpose of [Utah
    Code section 77‐8a‐1] is to allow joinder of offenses and thus
    eliminate multiple prosecutions in the interest of efficiency and
    economy of time and effort when the interests of justice can best be
    served thereby.” Balfour, 
    2008 UT App 410
    , ¶ 31 (alteration in
    original) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). “[T]o be
    classified as a common plan or scheme it is not necessary for the
    crimes to have been perpetrated in an absolutely identical manner,
    so long as the court perceives a visual connection between the two
    crimes.” 
    Id. ¶ 20
     (alteration in original) (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted). “This court has interpreted the phrase
    ‘common scheme or plan’ to apply when the crimes involve a
    similar fact pattern and proximity in time.” 
    Id.
     (quoting State v. Lee,
    
    831 P.2d 114
    , 117–18 (Utah Ct. App. 1992)). Additionally, “the facts
    and the timing of the incidents should be considered in their
    totality, that is, factual similarities should be viewed in light of
    their temporal proximity to one another.” State v. Hildreth, 
    2010 UT App 209
    , ¶ 34, 
    238 P.3d 444
    ; accord Lee, 
    831 P.2d at 118
     (“The
    striking similarities . . . in each incident, coupled with the proximity
    in time of the offenses, supplied a sufficient basis for the trial court
    to conclude that the crimes were alleged to have been part of a
    common scheme or plan . . . .” (citation and internal quotation
    marks omitted)).
    ¶8      First, the amended information charged Lamb with three
    separate counts of theft of lost property. “Therefore, the initial
    inquiry of section 77‐8a‐1(1), requiring that each offense constitute
    a separate count,” is met. See Balfour, 
    2008 UT App 410
    , ¶ 19 (citing
    Utah Code Ann. § 77‐8a‐1(1) (LexisNexis 2003) (current version at
    id. (2012)).
    ¶9      In considering whether there was a common scheme or plan,
    the trial court recognized that “there were differences between the
    different Counts such as different owners, different kinds of
    [cattle], different days when the animals came to be in Mr. Lamb’s
    possession,” and that “the [cattle] were taken from different
    locations.” However, the trial court also found “a lot of similari‐
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    State v. Lamb
    ties,” including “that the cattle ended up in Mr. Lamb’s possession
    . . . either because they became part of his herd as he was driving
    them from summer range to winter areas, or [because] they were
    hauled down from the summer range to the winter range”; that
    “they were kept in his possession, all of them, for . . . an unusually
    long period of time”; “that the cattle were all there when they were
    discovered by the Brand Inspector”; “that Mr. Lamb apparently
    [came] up with two different stories to explain why the cattle were
    there in almost every case”; and “that the cattle were branded by
    someone else’s brand in every case.” Additionally, the trial court
    found that Lamb “had the cattle in his possession for in some cases
    over a year—all of the cattle for several months, without taking
    reasonable measures to return them to their owner[s], which he
    obviously knew were not his.” Based on that finding, the trial court
    determined “that the crime was committed in this case when Mr.
    Lamb retained the cattle for an unreasonable amount of time
    without taking reasonable measures to return the cattle to their
    owners.”4 Thus, the trial court ultimately ruled that “the charges
    are sufficiently similar to conclude that there was a common plan
    or scheme.”
    ¶10 Although Lamb’s acts of cattle rustling were not “perpe‐
    trated in an absolutely identical manner,” the trial court clearly
    “perceive[d] a visual connection between the [three] crimes.”
    Balfour, 
    2008 UT App 410
    , ¶ 20 (citations and internal quotation
    marks omitted). The offenses all involved stray cattle, which were
    all taken from other cattlemen during seasonal cattle drives or
    round‐ups, and which were all found in Lamb’s possession after a
    long period of time and without him having taken any reasonable
    measures to return them to their owners. Because the trial court did
    not “exceed[] the limits of reasonability,” it did not exceed its
    4. Lamb does not challenge the trial court’s interpretation of Utah
    Code section 76‐6‐407 in determining when Lamb actually
    committed the crime of theft of lost property. See generally Utah
    Code Ann. § 76‐6‐407 (LexisNexis 2012).
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    State v. Lamb
    discretion in determining that the separate charges were part of a
    common scheme or plan. See 
    id. ¶ 10
     (citation and internal quota‐
    tion marks omitted).
    ¶11 Lamb also argues that he was prejudiced by the joinder
    because, in separate trials, the evidence of the “other acts” allega‐
    tions of cattle rustling would have been inadmissible because the
    probative value would have been outweighed by the danger of
    unfair prejudice. The State argues that Lamb has failed to ade‐
    quately brief the prejudice prong of his severance claim. “It is well
    established that a reviewing court will not address arguments that
    are not adequately briefed.” State v. Thomas, 
    961 P.2d 299
    , 304 (Utah
    1998). The Utah Rules of Appellate Procedure specify that briefs
    must contain “the contentions and reasons of the appellant with
    respect to the issues presented . . . with citations to the authorities,
    statutes, and parts of the record relied on.” Utah R. App. P.
    24(a)(9). “‘An issue is inadequately briefed when the overall
    analysis of the issue is so lacking as to shift the burden of research
    and argument to the reviewing court.’” State v. Turner, 
    2012 UT App 189
    , ¶ 29, 
    283 P.3d 527
     (quoting Smith v. Smith, 
    1999 UT App 370
    , ¶ 8, 
    995 P.2d 14
    ).
    ¶12 Here, Lamb’s argument provides only a single case citation,
    offers only conclusory statements, and does not provide any
    analysis of rule 404(b) or the Shickles factors that are utilized in
    evaluating the evidence’s potential unfair prejudice under the rule.
    See generally Utah R. Evid. 403; 
    id.
     R. 404(b); State v. Balfour, 
    2008 UT App 410
    , ¶ 25, 
    198 P.3d 471
     (citing State v. Shickles, 
    760 P.2d 291
    ,
    295–96 (Utah 1988)). Because we determine that Lamb has inade‐
    quately briefed the prejudice prong of the severance analysis, we
    do not consider it. See Allen v. Friel, 
    2008 UT 56
    , ¶ 9, 
    194 P.3d 903
    (“An appellate court is not a depository in which [a party] may
    dump the burden of argument and research.” (alteration in
    original) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)).
    ¶13 Next, we consider whether the trial court’s denial of Lamb’s
    motion to suppress was proper and whether factual findings made
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    State v. Lamb
    during the suppression hearing were clearly erroneous. See State v.
    Earl, 
    2004 UT App 163
    , ¶ 8, 
    92 P.3d 167
     (“When reviewing a trial
    court’s suppression order, we review its factual findings for clear
    error, and its legal conclusions for correctness.”).
    ¶14 Lamb first contends that Utah Code section 4‐24‐28, the
    statute under which the evidence was obtained, violates Fourth
    Amendment restrictions on warrantless administrative searches.
    See Utah Code Ann. § 4‐24‐28 (LexisNexis 2006) (allowing inspec‐
    tors to stop livestock vehicles and to enter premises where livestock
    are kept to inspect brands). Lamb also argues that the trial court
    made erroneous findings of fact by accepting the Theft Inspector’s
    testimony indicating that he first saw the cattle when using
    binoculars while on a neighbor’s property. Lamb’s arguments are
    premised on the assumption that the Theft Inspector entered his
    field without a warrant to determine that the cattle were stolen. He
    contends that this entry onto his property was an illegal search
    prohibited by the Fourth Amendment, which protects “[t]he right
    of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and
    effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures.” U.S. Const.
    amend. IV.5
    ¶15 The State does not directly address these arguments, instead
    contending that, regardless of the statutory authority for an
    administrative search and any dispute over where the Theft
    Inspector was when he first saw a cow bearing the identification of
    another owner, the Fourth Amendment does not apply to the open
    field where the cattle were found.
    ¶16 We agree that the Fourth Amendment does not protect
    “open fields.” See Hester v. United States, 
    265 U.S. 57
    , 59 (1924)
    (“[T]he special protection accorded by the Fourth Amendment to
    5. The Fourth Amendment is applicable to the states pursuant to
    the Fourteenth Amendment. See generally In re A.R., 
    937 P.2d 1037
    ,
    1040 (Utah Ct. App. 1997).
    20111071‐CA                      8                   
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    State v. Lamb
    the people in their ‘persons, houses, papers, and effects,’ is not
    extended to the open fields.”); see also Braden v. County of Lake, No.
    00‐15529, 25 Fed. App’x 513, 514 (9th Cir. Nov. 21, 2001) (holding
    that property surrounded by barbed wire fence “to keep out
    trespassers or control cattle” was an open field and not part of
    curtilage); United States v. Caldwell, No. 99‐6031, 
    2000 WL 1888682
    ,
    at *7 (6th Cir. Dec. 19, 2000) (holding that a fenced cattle pasture
    thirty to sixty yards from a house was an open field and not part of
    the curtilage); Schroeder v. Kochanowski, 
    311 F. Supp. 2d 1241
    , 1253
    (D. Kan. 2004) (ruling that a cattle pasture was an open field); State
    v. Shreve, 
    667 P.2d 590
    , 591 (Utah 1983) (per curiam) (determining
    that the defendant had no reasonable expectation of privacy when
    growing marijuana in an open field in a rural area with no houses
    nearby); Westfall v. State, 
    10 S.W.3d 85
    , 90 (Tex. App. 1999) (holding
    that a fenced cattle field and barn on which no residence is
    maintained is an open field for Fourth Amendment purposes). An
    “open field” need not actually even be “open” or a “field.” See
    Oliver v. United States, 
    466 U.S. 170
    , 180 n.11 (1984). So long as it is
    not part of the curtilage of a home, an “open field” can be a
    secluded field surrounded by woods, fences, chicken wire, or
    embankments, and entirely out of public view or access, see 
    id. at 174, 180 n.11, 182 & n.12
    ; it can even be a cave, a still, a shed, a
    small concrete building, a chicken coop, a hog pen, a goose pen, see
    United States ex rel. Saiken v. Bensinger, 
    546 F.2d 1292
    , 1296–97 (7th
    Cir. 1976), or an open and shared parking area adjacent to or
    behind an apartment building, see State v. Atwood, 
    831 P.2d 1056
    ,
    1059 (Utah Ct. App. 1992). As the State persuasively argues in its
    brief, “[w]hatever ‘open field’ means, the phrase surely applies to
    a field that is out in the open.”
    ¶17 Even if it constituted a trespass, the State’s physical intru‐
    sion on an open field is of no Fourth Amendment significance. See
    United States v. Jones, 
    132 S. Ct. 945
    , 953 (2012) (“Quite simply, an
    open field, unlike the curtilage of a home, is not one of those
    protected areas enumerated in the Fourth Amendment.” (citation
    omitted)); see also Casey v. State, 
    488 P.2d 546
    , 547–48 (Nev. 1971)
    (citing cases demonstrating that open fields remain unprotected
    20111071‐CA                        9                   
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    State v. Lamb
    under the Fourth Amendment, even when fenced, or posted with
    “no trespassing” signs, and regardless of plain view). Accordingly,
    any authorization that section 4‐24‐28 gives to search an open field
    does not raise constitutional concerns.
    ¶18 Lamb does not argue that the property where the stolen
    cattle were found was something other than an open field. As a
    result, the trial court correctly concluded that “there was not a
    search in this case proscribed by the Fourth Amendment because
    . . . the acts of the brand inspectors occurred in an open field where
    [Lamb] had no reasonable expectation of privacy.” Thus, the trial
    court properly denied Lamb’s motion to suppress.
    ¶19    Affirmed.
    ____________________
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