Court Opinion

ID: 5151636
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-02 01:58:21.261171+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:25:05.306086
License: Public Domain

A petition was filed in the interest of Virginia Joanie Goodman in the Juvenile Court of San Juan County alleging that she was delinquent in that she used an alcoholic beverage in violation of Section 32-7-15, U.C.A. 1953, and that she did intentionally interfere with Kenneth Vee Palmer, deputy sheriff of San Juan County, who was effecting an arrest of Linda Lehi by interrupting said officer and by using foul language.
On November 29, 1973, Officer Palmer was proceeding along a highway north of Bluff, Utah, when he noticed one Linda Lehi operating her vehicle. The officer knew that Linda Lehi did not have a driver's license and proceeded to stop her. The officer had Mrs. Lehi get into his patrol car so that he could write a citation. While the officer was engaged in writing the citation, Mrs. Goodman came up to the patrol car and requested Officer Palmer to drive her to Bluff. The officer told Joanie to go away and leave him alone, whereupon she called him vulgar names before leaving the vicinity of the patrol vehicle. At the time the officer was engaged in writing a citation for operating a vehicle without a driver's license and for driving while under the influence of liquor. Joanie left the patrol vehicle but later returned to the officer's vehicle where she requested a ride to Bluff, and cursed the officer when he refused to comply. At no time did Joanie use any force, nor did she make any threats to use force upon the officer. At the trial the officer testified that Joanie was intoxicated. *Page 479 
Section 32-7-15, U.C.A. 1953, is one of the statutes alleged to have been violated by Joanie. That statute is in the following language:
 (1) No person shall sell or supply alcoholic beverages to any person under the age of 21 years.
 (2) This section does not apply to the supplying of liquor to a person under the age of 21 years for medicinal purposes by the parent or guardian or to the administering of liquor by a physician in accordance with the provisions of this act.
Evidence of intoxication does not show nor intend to show a violation of the statute above set forth. It is quite evident from a reading of the statute that it deals with an entirely different subject matter. The court nevertheless found Joanie guilty of violating that provision. The court was in error in that finding.
The petition also charges Joanie with violating Section 76-8-305, which is as follows:
 A person is guilty of a class B misdemeanor when he intentionally interferes with a person recognized to be a law enforcement official seeking to effect an arrest or detention of himself or another regardless of whether there is a legal basis for the arrest.
Even though Joanie interrupted the officer in his preparation of a citation by entering into a conversation with him and by calling him inappropriate names, this is insufficient to show that Joanie intentionally interfered with the officer. The record does not clearly show that the officer was engaged in making an arrest at the time, and we are of the opinion that the legislature did not intend to make a simple interruption or distraction of an officer in performing his duties a criminal offense.
The judgment of the court below is reversed.
HENRIOD, C.J., and MAUGHAN, J., concur.