State v. Hunt ( 2018 )


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    2018 UT App 222
    THE UTAH COURT OF APPEALS
    STATE OF UTAH,
    Appellee,
    v.
    MARVIN JAY HUNT,
    Appellant.
    Opinion
    No. 20160963-CA
    Filed November 29, 2018
    Fifth District Court, Cedar City Department
    The Honorable Keith C. Barnes
    No. 131500547
    Willard R. Bishop and Todd Macfarlane,
    Attorneys for Appellant
    Sean D. Reyes and Jeffrey S. Gray,
    Attorneys for Appellee
    JUDGE RYAN M. HARRIS authored this Opinion, in which
    JUDGES GREGORY K. ORME and KATE A. TOOMEY concurred.
    HARRIS, Judge:
    ¶1      After a free-range stallion known as Confetti Magic
    aggressively charged him, rancher Marvin Jay Hunt
    corralled the horse and castrated him, along with several other
    stallions. One of Hunt’s neighbors (Neighbor) claimed to
    own two of the stallions Hunt castrated that day, including
    Confetti Magic, and complained to local law enforcement.
    Hunt was charged with wanton destruction of livestock, and a
    jury found him guilty. Hunt now appeals his conviction, arguing
    that the statutory definition of “wanton destruction of livestock”
    is unconstitutionally vague, that the trial court erred by refusing
    to give a self-defense instruction, and that the jury’s
    State v. Hunt
    determination of Confetti Magic’s value was unsupported. We
    affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2      Hunt is a rancher based in western Iron County, Utah,
    who raises cattle and horses, largely on property he leases.
    Several years ago, he drilled a well on the leased property and
    created a “water point” for animals to use. Most of the property
    Hunt uses is unfenced, including the area containing the water
    point, 1 and animals are able to freely roam across the landscape.
    Indeed, many of the farmers and ranchers in the area—including
    Hunt—often turn their animals loose to graze freely on the land;
    in addition, the area is home to various herds of wild,
    abandoned, and runaway horses. As a result, many animals
    have access to Hunt’s water point, including animals owned by
    other ranchers, and wild unowned horses.
    ¶3    Neighbor is one of the other residents of the area. When
    Neighbor first relocated to the area, he tended only small
    animals, such as dogs and chickens. At first, Hunt got along well
    with Neighbor and considered him to be a “good neighbor”;
    indeed, Hunt allowed Neighbor to use Hunt’s water point for
    his small animals. The relationship began to sour, however, after
    Neighbor decided to keep horses. Hunt testified at trial that, for
    a while, Neighbor hauled hay in for his horses, which at that
    time were exclusively mares, and kept them in a small fenced
    enclosure. But at some point, Neighbor “opened the gate” and
    began allowing his horses to graze freely. Neighbor also
    informed Hunt that he had purchased a pinto Fox Trotter
    1. Hunt testified that he built fences that could restrict access to
    the water point, but stated that he rarely closed the fences
    because he wanted his cattle to be able to freely access the water.
    20160963-CA                     2                
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    State v. Hunt
    stallion—Confetti Magic—for $2,500, and that he intended to
    begin free-grazing that horse as well.
    ¶4     This news bothered Hunt, who had several mares of his
    own free-grazing in the area. Hunt told Neighbor he did not
    want any colts by those mares, and therefore he “really [didn’t]
    want any studs turned loose” in the area. Neighbor began free-
    grazing Confetti Magic anyway, but subsequently agreed to find
    buyers for any colts produced by the union of Confetti Magic
    and any of Hunt’s mares. For a period of time, Confetti Magic
    and Neighbor’s other free-grazing horses would occasionally
    drink at Hunt’s water point, while Hunt’s free-grazing cattle
    would occasionally drink at a water tank on Neighbor’s
    property. But Hunt perceived that Neighbor’s water tank was
    less cared for or useful to the livestock than Hunt’s water point,
    and Hunt began to be “irritated” because he had never given
    Neighbor permission to water his horses at Hunt’s water point.
    ¶5      Confetti Magic’s temperament further worsened the
    relationship between Neighbor and Hunt. While initially Hunt
    found Confetti Magic to be a “pretty decent young stud to be
    around” during the days when he was “pony size,” as the
    stallion grew he began to get “real aggressive” and would
    “challenge” humans by “[coming] around with his ears back and
    his teeth bared and ready to get after you.” Confetti Magic and
    the other horses also sometimes drove Hunt’s cattle away from
    his water point and ate the feed Hunt put out for his cattle. Hunt
    eventually became so upset with these developments that he
    began catching and corralling Neighbor’s horses whenever he
    needed to work with his cattle, and gave Neighbor a letter
    informing him that none of Neighbor’s animals were welcome
    on Hunt’s property or at Hunt’s water point. But Hunt did not
    fence his land or close off his water point, and both Hunt and
    Neighbor continued free-grazing their animals. Neighbor’s
    horses also continued to visit Hunt’s water point.
    20160963-CA                     3              
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    State v. Hunt
    ¶6      Inevitably, Confetti Magic began siring colts with
    Hunt’s and Neighbor’s mares, and this upset Hunt still further.
    Among the colts produced by Confetti Magic was a “yellow
    Pinto stud that was also very “wild,” in Hunt’s estimation.
    Despite Neighbor’s promise to find buyers for the unwanted
    colts, Hunt perceived that Neighbor was not making good faith
    efforts to do so, which resulted in “young studs” sired by
    Confetti Magic swelling the ranks of the horses free-grazing in
    the area.2 At this point, Hunt began filing complaints with the
    sheriff’s office, but believed those complaints were being
    ignored.
    ¶7      Subsequently, Hunt attempted to introduce a stallion of
    his own into the group of horses, telling Neighbor “if I got to
    have colts and you’re not going to buy them from me, I’m going
    to take my own stud out there and raise colts that I want.” Hunt
    testified that, in response, Neighbor raised his voice and warned
    Hunt that if he brought a stud out there, Neighbor would “make
    dog meat out of” it. Undeterred, Hunt introduced a stud of his
    own to the group of free-grazing horses, and observed his new
    stallion “closely [for] two or three weeks.” Hunt noticed that his
    new stallion “drove . . . Confetti Magic off and took control of
    the horses.” After a few weeks, however, Hunt’s new stallion
    disappeared, only to be discovered at an animal shelter, badly
    beaten as if “with a chain . . . around the head and the ears and
    on the legs.” After the stallion recovered, Hunt reintroduced him
    into the group of horses, but about two weeks later the stallion
    disappeared again, and this time was never found. After the
    stallion’s second disappearance, Confetti Magic once again
    resumed his dominance of the horse herd.
    2. Whether Confetti Magic bears sole responsibility or not,
    neither party appears to dispute that the number of horses free-
    grazing in the area grew significantly over time.
    20160963-CA                     4              
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    State v. Hunt
    ¶8      Soon thereafter, Hunt brought some new bulls to the
    area and attempted to drive them to his water point. Hunt
    was riding a “green broke stud” horse and was attempting to
    ensure that his bulls, which were “new to the country,”
    would learn to drink at the water point before they “started
    wandering off.” When he was still a quarter-mile from the
    water, however, Hunt noticed Confetti Magic running towards
    him with a “band of horses following him.” Hunt observed
    that Confetti Magic’s ears were laid back and that he was
    charging fast, and Hunt worried that the stallion intended to
    initiate a “stud fight” with his own horse. Because of this,
    Hunt raced his horse back to a horse trailer and penned it in,
    then stood by while Confetti Magic circled the trailer, apparently
    still agitated. Hunt testified that, at this point, he said to himself
    “that’s it. I’ve had it.” Hunt then corralled several
    horses, including Confetti Magic and the now-two-year-old
    pinto stud, and decided to castrate them. Hunt needed
    assistance, however, so he got in his truck to go pick up a friend
    to help him. After completing the three-mile round-trip journey,
    Hunt, his friend, and Hunt’s son proceeded to castrate five
    stallions that Hunt described as “three of them mine, two of
    them [Neighbor’s].”
    ¶9     Neighbor subsequently complained to the sheriff’s office,
    and Hunt was eventually charged with wanton destruction of
    livestock. The State filed the case as a second-degree felony,
    based on its estimate of the value of Neighbor’s castrated horses.
    Hunt attempted to defend the case on three general grounds.
    First, Hunt argued that the State could not demonstrate
    Neighbor’s “ownership” of the horses without presenting
    evidence that there had been an official brand inspection.
    Second, Hunt argued that he had acted in self-defense. Finally,
    Hunt asserted that the State could not prove that any livestock
    had been damaged, because he believed that the horses were
    worth more as geldings than as stallions.
    20160963-CA                      5                
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    State v. Hunt
    ¶10 Prior to trial, Hunt attempted to develop his first defense
    by filing a motion to suppress any testimony regarding livestock
    ownership that did not come from an official state brand
    inspector, arguing that, under the Utah Livestock Brand and
    Anti-Theft Act, only a state brand inspector could establish
    ownership of livestock. The court denied this motion, ruling that
    the State could endeavor to prove ownership of the horses
    through conventional means, and that it was not required to do
    so by proving that there had been an official brand inspection.
    Hunt then moved to dismiss the case, arguing that, if ownership
    of livestock could be proven without an official brand
    inspection, then the wanton destruction of livestock statute was
    unconstitutionally vague. The court also denied this motion. At
    trial, however, Hunt ended up acknowledging that both Confetti
    Magic and the two-year-old pinto stallion belonged to Neighbor.
    ¶11 During trial, Hunt attempted to develop his other two
    defenses. He asked the court to instruct the jury regarding self-
    defense, arguing that he acted only in defense of himself and
    third parties. The court refused to give these instructions,
    concluding that a self-defense or defense-of-third-parties
    instruction would be inappropriate under the facts of this case,
    because by the time Hunt castrated the horses, they had been
    corralled and any imminent threat had passed. Also, during
    trial, after the State presented expert testimony that the two
    stallions were worth $14,000 less as geldings than as stallions,
    Hunt presented expert testimony of his own that the stallions
    were worthless originally and that the castration actually
    increased the value of both horses as work animals, causing
    them to appreciate in value by up to $1,500.
    ¶12 At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found Hunt guilty,
    but found that the stallions’ value was between $500 and $1,500,
    resulting in a class A misdemeanor conviction rather than a
    second-degree felony conviction.
    20160963-CA                    6               
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶13 Hunt now appeals, and asks us to consider three issues.
    First, Hunt contends that, if brand inspection is not required to
    prove ownership, then Utah’s wanton destruction of livestock
    statute is unconstitutionally vague. Whether a statute is
    unconstitutionally vague is a question of law, which we review
    for correctness. State v. Norris, 
    2007 UT 6
    , ¶ 10, 
    152 P.3d 293
    .
    Relatedly, Hunt contends that the trial court erred when it
    determined that, under Utah’s wanton destruction of livestock
    statute, the State could prove ownership of the horses through
    conventional means, rather than solely by presenting the
    testimony of a state livestock brand inspector. We review a trial
    court’s interpretation of a statute for correctness. Marion Energy,
    Inc. v. KFJ Ranch P’ship, 
    2011 UT 50
    , ¶ 12, 
    267 P.3d 863
    .
    ¶14 Second, Hunt contends that the trial court erred when it
    declined to instruct the jury on the subjects of self-defense or
    defense of a third party. 3 We review the court’s refusal to issue
    3. In his statement of issues on appeal, Hunt also asserts that the
    trial court erred by refusing to give additional jury instructions
    on various topics, including trespassing and estray horses.
    However, Hunt does not elaborate on these arguments, other
    than to briefly note that he wishes to challenge the trial court’s
    decision to exclude those instructions. While failing to elaborate
    on arguments raised on appeal is not necessarily “an absolute
    bar to our review of an argument,” an appellant who “fails to
    devote adequate attention to an argument . . . will almost
    certainly fail to carry [his] burden of persuasion.” State v.
    Gardner, 
    2018 UT App 126
    , ¶ 22, 
    428 P.3d 58
     (quotation
    simplified). Because Hunt has not clarified why he believes he
    was entitled to those instructions, he has not met that burden.
    See State v. Sloan, 
    2003 UT App 170
    , ¶ 13, 
    72 P.3d 138
     (noting that
    we decline to address an issue when “the overall analysis of the
    (continued…)
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    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    specific jury instructions for an abuse of discretion. State v.
    Berriel, 
    2013 UT 19
    , ¶ 8, 
    299 P.3d 1133
    .
    ¶15 Third, Hunt contends that there was insufficient evidence
    to support the jury’s valuation of the stallions. “We will reverse a
    guilty verdict for insufficient evidence only when the evidence is
    so inconclusive or inherently improbable that reasonable minds
    must have entertained a reasonable doubt that the defendant
    committed the crimes of which he or she was convicted.” State v.
    Kennedy, 
    2015 UT App 152
    , ¶ 19, 
    354 P.3d 775
    .
    ANALYSIS
    I
    ¶16 Hunt first contends that the wanton destruction of
    livestock statute used to convict him is unconstitutionally vague,
    as applied to the facts of this case, unless it is interpreted to
    incorporate a mandate that livestock ownership be established
    by an official state brand inspector.
    ¶17 The relevant statute provides that “a person is guilty of
    wanton destruction of livestock if that person . . . injures . . .
    livestock” and does so “intentionally or knowingly” and
    “without the permission of the owner.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6
    -
    111(2) (LexisNexis 2017). When interpreting a statute, our
    objective is “to give effect to the intent of the legislature in light
    of the purpose the act was meant to achieve.” Gutierrez v. Medley,
    (…continued)
    issue is so lacking as to shift the burden of research and
    argument to the reviewing court” (quotation simplified)). We
    therefore have no reason to disturb the trial court’s decisions
    regarding these other requested instructions.
    20160963-CA                      8                
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    
    972 P.2d 913
    , 915 (Utah 1998). To discern that intent, we look first
    to the statute’s plain language, presuming that the legislature
    used each term “advisedly” and “according to its ordinary
    meaning.” State v. LeBeau, 
    2014 UT 39
    , ¶ 26, 
    337 P.3d 254
    . If “the
    plain meaning of the statute can be discerned from its language,”
    then we need not employ any “other interpretive tools.” LPI
    Services v. McGee, 
    2009 UT 41
    , ¶ 11, 
    215 P.3d 135
    .
    ¶18 The statute in question contains internal definitions for
    several of its terms, but does not include a definition for the
    word “owner.” See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-111
    (1)(b) (defining
    “livestock”); see generally 
    id.
     §§ 76-6-101, 111 (nowhere defining
    “owner”). In the absence of any internal definition, Hunt asserts
    that the trial court should have imported language from the
    Utah Livestock Brand and Anti-Theft Act, which states that “[a]
    brand inspector . . . shall verify livestock ownership by
    conducting a brand inspection during daylight hours.” See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 4-24-303
    (1). 4 Hunt argues that livestock ownership
    cannot “be proven with sufficient certainty to satisfy probable
    cause or proof beyond a reasonable doubt . . . without a
    certificate of brand inspection.” Accordingly, Hunt asserts that,
    if Utah Code section 76-6-111 is not interpreted to incorporate a
    requirement for brand inspection in order to demonstrate
    ownership, the statute is void for vagueness because it fails to
    clarify how ownership can be determined.
    ¶19 When a party raises an as-applied vagueness challenge,
    “[a] court should . . . examine the complainant’s conduct before
    analyzing other hypothetical applications of the law.” Village of
    Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 
    455 U.S. 489
    , 495
    4. This statute was initially numbered as Utah Code section 4-24-
    12, but was renumbered in 2017. Because the pertinent text of the
    statute has not changed, we cite to the current version of the
    statute for convenience.
    20160963-CA                      9               
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    (1982). “This is because a [person] who engages in some conduct
    that is clearly proscribed by statute cannot complain of the
    vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others.” State
    v. Tulley, 
    2018 UT 35
    , ¶ 55 (quotation simplified). More broadly,
    to survive a vagueness challenge, a criminal statute
    must (1) define the criminal offense with sufficient
    definiteness that ordinary people can understand
    what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that
    does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory
    enforcement, and (2) establish minimal guidelines
    that sufficiently instruct law enforcement so as to
    avoid arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.
    Id. ¶ 54 (quotation simplified). As applied to the circumstances
    of this case, Hunt has failed to establish that the statute violates
    either element of this test.
    ¶20 As to the first element, we are not convinced that the
    statute’s language is so vague that Hunt would have had no
    reason to suspect that castrating two horses he knew belonged to
    Neighbor would violate the statute. Hunt argues that the statute
    is vague if it does not require ownership to be proven by the
    testimony of a brand inspector because, absent a brand proving
    ownership, a person of ordinary intelligence would not know
    “whether castration of a feral, estray horse” 5 would be
    prohibited. But Hunt’s own testimony undermines his
    argument. At trial, Hunt stated clearly that Confetti Magic and
    the pinto stallion he castrated belonged to Neighbor, and that he
    5. An “estray” is defined, under Utah law, as “an unbranded
    sheep, cow, horse, mule, or ass found running at large,” or as “a
    branded sheep, cow, horse, mule, or ass found running at large
    whose owner cannot be found after reasonable search.” 
    Utah Code Ann. § 4-25-102
    (1)(a).
    20160963-CA                     10               
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    State v. Hunt
    knew this at the time he castrated them. Even assuming—
    without deciding—that the term “owner” might be vague when
    applied to a random estray horse that appears to be wild, an
    “ordinary person” in Hunt’s position would certainly know that
    a statute prohibiting injuring animals without their owner’s
    permission applied to horses that Hunt knew were owned by
    another person. The statute is therefore not vague as applied to
    Hunt’s conduct. See Tulley, 
    2018 UT 35
    , ¶¶ 54–55.
    ¶21 Further, and in any event, we are not persuaded
    by Hunt’s argument that livestock ownership can never
    be established in the absence of an official brand inspection.
    While the Utah Livestock Brand and Anti-Theft Act does
    require that owners brand most free-range livestock, see
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 4-24-205
    (1)(a), and does require a “certificate
    of brand inspection” before the slaughter or sale of livestock, see
    
    id.
     §§ 4-24-302(1), 304(1), neither that statute nor any other of
    which we are aware requires a brand inspector to verify
    ownership of livestock in other contexts in which ownership of
    livestock might be disputed, such as, for instance, civil litigation
    between individuals regarding ownership, or criminal cases like
    this one.
    ¶22 Moreover, not even the Utah Livestock Brand and Anti-
    Theft Act considers a brand inspection as the exclusive method
    of determining ownership of livestock. That statute certainly
    requires that brand inspectors “verify livestock ownership by
    conducting a brand inspection,” but it also states that, if during
    that same inspection “no brand or mark appears on such
    livestock, the brand inspector may demand evidence of
    ownership.” See 
    Utah Code Ann. § 4-24-303
    (1), (4) (emphasis
    added). Therefore, the statute merely provides that ownership
    can be established through an official brand inspection; it stops
    well short of mandating that brand inspection is the only
    method for determining ownership of livestock.
    20160963-CA                     11               
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    ¶23 Indeed, litigants often prove property ownership through
    a host of diverse methods, including through presentation of the
    testimony of the property’s putative owner. See State v. Buck,
    
    2009 UT App 2
    , ¶ 13, 
    200 P.3d 674
     (noting that prosecutors
    proved that a victim owned a stolen laptop computer by
    presenting the victim’s testimony that he owned the computer
    and the defendant did not); see also State v. Norcutt, 
    2006 UT App 269
    , ¶ 22, 
    139 P.3d 1066
     (affirming a trial court’s decision to
    allow the introduction of a “methamphetamine cookbook” into
    evidence because “evidence of [the defendant’s] possession of
    the methamphetamine cookbook” would be probative of
    whether that defendant owned or controlled a particular
    methamphetamine lab). Here, the State elected to rely on similar
    methods, presenting Neighbor’s and Hunt’s testimony that
    Neighbor owned both Confetti Magic and the pinto stallion
    Hunt castrated. In this case, we see no legal infirmity with the
    State’s decision to prove ownership by presenting Neighbor’s
    testimony that he owned the horses, as well as Hunt’s testimony
    acknowledging that fact.
    ¶24 Having concluded that the statute is sufficiently definite,
    under these circumstances, to have notified Hunt that his
    conduct was prohibited, we next examine whether the statute
    encouraged arbitrary or discriminatory enforcement. See
    Kolender v. Lawson, 
    461 U.S. 352
    , 357–58 (1983) (holding that the
    void for vagueness doctrine requires the legislature to “define
    the criminal offense . . . in a manner that does not encourage
    arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement,” and that to avoid
    unconstitutional vagueness a statute must “establish minimum
    guidelines to govern law enforcement” (quotation simplified)).
    ¶25 Here, Hunt argues that, if brand inspection is not
    recognized as the only means of determining livestock
    ownership, then the statute is “subject to arbitrary and
    capricious case-by-case determination” because “there is no
    reasonably ascertainable standard of evidence” to prove
    20160963-CA                    12              
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    ownership beyond brand inspection. But this claim is again
    undermined by Hunt’s own testimony that he was aware that
    the stallions belonged to Neighbor. “In an as applied challenge”
    we “focus on the particular conduct at hand and not on the
    possible conduct of hypothetical parties.” State v. Green, 
    2004 UT 76
    , ¶ 51, 
    99 P.3d 820
    . Considering Hunt’s particular conduct, we
    conclude that any “reasonable law enforcement official
    acquainted with [Hunt’s] behavior” could determine that his
    actions might well violate the wanton destruction of livestock
    statute. See Tulley, 
    2018 UT 35
    , ¶ 73 (quotation simplified).
    ¶26 Accordingly, the trial court did not err in determining
    that ownership of livestock could be determined independent of
    an official brand inspection, and Hunt has failed to demonstrate
    that the wanton destruction of livestock statute is
    unconstitutionally vague as applied to him.
    II
    ¶27 Hunt next contends that the trial court erred when it
    declined to instruct the jury about self-defense and defense of
    third parties. Hunt argues that he “was justified in exercising
    force against” Confetti Magic and the pinto stallion in order to
    defend himself and others, and that the trial court therefore
    abused its discretion when it refused to instruct the jury
    regarding Hunt’s self-defense theory.
    ¶28 A defendant is generally entitled to instructions that
    support his theory of the case. State v. Berriel, 
    2013 UT 19
    , ¶ 10,
    
    299 P.3d 1133
    . But this entitlement only applies if “the record
    evidence supports [the] defendant’s theory.” 
    Id.
     In this case,
    Hunt asked that the jury be instructed that he had the right to
    defend himself or a third party “against another person’s
    imminent use of unlawful force” by “using force . . . when and to
    the extent” that he reasonably believed it was necessary. See
    
    Utah Code Ann. § 76-2-402
    (1)(a) (LexisNexis 2017). Even
    20160963-CA                    13               
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    State v. Hunt
    assuming, without deciding, that Confetti Magic and the pinto
    stallion each constituted “another person” for the purpose of the
    self-defense statute, Hunt’s argument fails for the simple reason
    that there exists no evidence that—at the time he castrated the
    stallions—he was facing an imminent threat of unlawful force.
    ¶29 While Hunt testified that Confetti Magic charged
    him with the other horses close behind, he also testified that he
    fled the charge and subsequently managed to secure the
    horses inside his corral before electing to castrate the stallions.
    Had Hunt acted in his own defense in the moment
    when Confetti Magic was charging at him, the analysis may
    well be different. But on the facts presented here, by the time
    Hunt corralled the horses, any imminent threat had passed,
    and Hunt was no longer endangered by Confetti Magic’s
    aggression. And the mere fact that Confetti Magic had a track
    record of aggressive behavior is not by itself sufficient to justify a
    self-defense instruction. Indeed, our supreme court has noted
    that “a history of violence or threats of future violence,”
    standing alone, “are legally insufficient to create a situation of
    imminent danger” that would warrant a self-defense jury
    instruction. Berriel, 
    2013 UT 19
    , ¶ 20 (quotation simplified); see
    also State v. Alires, 
    2018 UT App 173
    , ¶ 27 (holding that a
    spouse’s alleged history of domestic abuse, without more, does
    not create a “situation of imminent danger” sufficient to justify a
    self-defense instruction); State v. Hernandez, 
    861 P.2d 814
    , 820
    (Kan. 1993) (holding that, even though “the term ‘imminent’
    describes a broader time frame than immediate,” the term is “not
    without limit,” and an abusive spouse’s “history of violence,” by
    itself, cannot create “a situation of imminent danger” absent
    some indication that danger is “near at hand” (cited with
    approval in Berriel, 
    2013 UT 19
    , ¶ 20)). Because, at the time Hunt
    castrated the stallions, he was no longer subject to any imminent
    threat of harm, he was therefore not entitled to use force in self-
    defense. Accordingly, the trial court did not err by refusing to
    20160963-CA                      14               
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    State v. Hunt
    instruct the jury about Hunt’s self-defense and defense-of-others
    theories.
    III
    ¶30 Finally, Hunt contends that the evidence was insufficient
    to support the jury’s determination that the stallions had an
    aggregate value between $500 and $1,500 prior to their
    castration. Here, Hunt bases his argument on the fact that the
    jury was given competing assessments of value by his expert
    and the State’s expert. Hunt’s expert testified that the stallions
    had no cash value prior to their castration, but were worth up to
    $1,500 after their castration because they would be better work
    animals. The State’s expert, in contrast, focused more on the
    animals’ value as stud horses, and testified that the stallions
    were worth $16,000 prior to their castration, and were worth
    only $2,000 afterwards. Because the jury determined that the
    value of the stallions was between $500 and $1,500, Hunt posits
    that it must have accepted his expert’s valuations and rejected
    the State’s, and therefore asserts that the jury must have found
    that the stallions were valueless prior to his actions.
    ¶31 We disagree with Hunt’s analysis of the jury’s valuation.
    While the jury clearly did not completely accept the valuation
    provided by the State’s expert, it does not follow that the jury
    completely rejected that valuation either. Certainly, the jury did
    not wholeheartedly accept the conclusions of Hunt’s experts, or
    it would have acquitted him. Indeed, it is entirely possible that
    jurors made use of their entitlement to refrain from accepting
    any “expert’s testimony as conclusive,” and instead exercised
    their right to give each expert’s testimony the “weight they
    choose, including no weight at all.” See Dixon v. Stewart, 
    658 P.2d 591
    , 597 (Utah 1982). As has been noted in the analogous context
    of calculating damages in civil trials, “juries are generally
    allowed wide discretion in the assessment of damages,” Bennion
    v. LeGrand Johnson Constr. Co., 
    701 P.2d 1078
    , 1084 (Utah 1985)
    20160963-CA                    15               
    2018 UT App 222
    State v. Hunt
    (quotation simplified), and we will “uphold [a jury’s] calculation
    of damages so long as there is competent evidence to sustain it,”
    Cornia v. Wilcox, 
    898 P.2d 1379
    , 1386 (Utah 1995). Here, the jury
    received expert testimony that the value of the stallions ranged
    between $0 and $16,000, and it selected a value within that
    range. Because it was entitled to afford whatever weight to the
    experts’ damage valuations it wanted, and because the value it
    selected was within the range the experts presented, the jury’s
    conclusions as to value were supported by competent evidence.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶32 Hunt has not established that the wanton destruction of
    livestock statute is unconstitutionally vague as applied to his
    conduct, nor that, under Utah law, livestock ownership in
    criminal cases may only be proven through brand inspection.
    The trial court did not err when it permitted the State to prove
    ownership through the testimony of the putative owner and
    other conventional evidence. Further, the court did not err when
    it refused to give jury instructions regarding self-defense or
    defense of a third party. Finally, the evidence was sufficient to
    support the jury’s valuation of the stallions Hunt castrated.
    Accordingly, we affirm Hunt’s conviction.
    20160963-CA                    16              
    2018 UT App 222