After a jury convicted Whitney Lyn Wells of embezzlement in
violation of Virginia Code § 18.2 – 111, she appealed. Wells
v. Commonwealth, __ S.E.2d __, 2012 WL 1498433 (Virginia Court of Appeals
2012).
The case arose from something Wells (allegedly) did on
October 30, 2010, while she
was working as a sales
associate/cashier at Macy's in the children's department. On that day she gave
unauthorized discounts to a customer and permitted that customer to take other
items without paying for them.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
At Wells’ trial, Robert Street, the loss prevention officer
for Macy's, testified that he viewed the store surveillance tape for that day
and observed the following:
[A]n unidentified female walk[ed] out with three
men's Polo shirts, walk to the register. You see her standing at the base of
the register. The next frame is her walking into view with a large amount of
boys' Polo items. Right after that the
unidentified female and Whitney Wells walked back over to the men's Polo where
they both selected items, they both walked back to the register with items in
hand.
A couple of minutes later the
customer's transaction was complete. The customer walks away with three large
bags.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
(The opinion notes that a “digital video recorder scanned”
Wells’ registrar, but the video was not “produced
at trial because the hard drive had
crashed.” Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.
The prosecution therefore relied on Street, who “testified as to what he
observed when he first viewed the video.”
Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.)
The opinion also explains that Macy’s computer records
showed that
nine boys' Polo shirts and three men's
Polo shirts were marked down by [Wells]. Each boy's shirt was originally priced
at $35 but had been marked down to $17.50. Each of the men's shirts was
originally priced at $75 but rang up at $28.99. None of those items was on
sale. . . .The value of the
unauthorized markdowns exceeded $200.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
Wells did “not contest the value” of the markdowns. Wells
v. Commonwealth, supra. She also
admitted she gave “the same customer eleven boys' Polo shirts [valued at $385] without any payment” because “she was
trying to make people happy.” Wells v.
Commonwealth, supra.
For Wells “to manually alter the price of any item of
merchandise,” she had to “enter an override code into the register/computer.” Wells v. Commonwealth, supra. According to the opinion, a sales associate
“generally” must “receive permission from a manager” before “changing a
price”. Wells v. Commonwealth, supra. I gather Wells did not.
When Street “confronted” Wells with the facts outlined
above, she
admitted making the markdowns. She said
the customer, whom she claimed to know only from the store, `always asked for
discounts and asked for items for free.’ [Wells] told Street that `she gives in
easy, that she is easily manipulated and that she changed the prices for the
customer.’
[Wells] admitted that she was stealing
and knew it was wrong. She thought she could get away with it. There was no
evidence [she] received any of the proceeds from the sale or that she received
any of the merchandise.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
Virginia Code § 18.2 – 111 defines the crime of embezzlement
as follows:
If any person wrongfully and
fraudulently use, dispose of, conceal or embezzle any money, bill, note, check,
. . . or any other personal property, tangible or intangible, which he shall
have received for another or for his employer, . . or by virtue of his office, trust, or
employment, or which shall have been entrusted or delivered to him by another
or by any court, corporation or company, he shall be guilty of embezzlement.
On appeal, Wells challenged “the sufficiency of the evidence
[to support her conviction], contending that the uncontradicted evidence shows
she did not benefit from the price markdowns.”
Wells v. Commonwealth, supra. Wells raised this issue below, when the trial
judge was preparing to instruct the jurors on the applicable law. Wells
v. Commonwealth, supra.
As Wikipedia explains, in the U.S. judicial system, jurors
are the trier of fact in a jury trial (and judges are the trier of fact in a
bench trial).
In other words, it is their job to sort
through disputed accounts presented in evidence. The judge decides questions of
law, meaning he or she decides how the law applies to a given set of facts. The
jury instructions provide something of a flow chart on what verdict jurors
should deliver based on what they determine to be true. . . .
At Wells’ trial, the trial judge found
there was no evidence showing any
pecuniary benefit to [Wells], but opined that such benefit is not mandated by
the law. The Commonwealth, the trial court concluded, must prove benefit to the
defendant or benefit to another.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
He therefore instructed the jury (in Instruction No. 4ii)
that
The defendant is charged with the crime
of embezzlement. The Commonwealth must prove beyond a reasonable doubt each of
the following elements of that crime:
1. That the defendant wrongfully and fraudulently
converted to the use of another or disposed of, property, with the intent to
permanently deprive the rightful owner thereof; and
2. That the property had been received by the
defendant by virtue of her employment, office, or trust for her employer; and
3. That the value of the property was
$200 or more.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
The trial judge refused to give this instruction, which was
proposed by Wells:
To establish the crime of embezzlement,
the Commonwealth must prove the accused wrongfully appropriated to his or her
own benefit, with the intent to deprive the owner thereof, the property
entrusted or delivered to the accused. Proof of the misappropriation of
property entrusted to the possession of the accused is insufficient standing
alone to prove embezzlement.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
He did give this instruction, which was also proposed by
Wells: “A fraudulent or dishonest act is
one which involves bad faith, breach of honesty, a want of integrity or moral
turpitude.” Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.
Wells’ challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence on
appeal was based on two arguments. One
was that the “evidence shows she did not benefit from the price markdowns.” Wells
v. Commonwealth, supra. The other
was that “she entertained no fraudulent intent, as her only intent was to
please the customer.” Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.
The Court of Appeals did not buy her first argument, for two
reasons. Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.
The first reason was that the
plain language of the statute does not
require the employee to personally benefit in order to be guilty of embezzlement. Proof of
the `[u]nauthorized and wrongful exercise of dominion and control over
another's personal property, to [the] exclusion of or inconsistent with [the]
rights of the owner,’ is sufficient to prove embezzlement. Evans &
Smith v. Commonwealth, 226 Va. 292, 308 S.E.2d 126 (1983).
In Chiang
v. Commonwealth, 6 Va. App. 13, 365 S.E.2d 778 (1988), this Court concluded
that it is not necessary to show that the defendant misappropriated the
property for `his own personal use and benefit’ [to prove embezzlement]; it is
sufficient to show that the defendant took the property to benefit another.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
As to the second reason, the Court of Appeals initially
noted that “at trial, [Wells] did not object to Commonwealth's Instruction No.
4ii which stated, in part, that the prosecution must prove that `the defendant
wrongfully and fraudulently converted . . . to the use of another. . . .’” Wells
v. Commonwealth, supra.
It then explained that the Virginia Supreme Court
opined in Wintergreen Partners
v. McGuireWoods, 280 Va. 374, 698 S.E.2d 913 (2010), `”‘instructions
given without objection become the law of the case and thereby bind the parties
in the trial court and this Court on review.’“’ Id. at 379,
698 S.E.2d at 916 (quoting Owens–Illinois, Inc. v. Thomas Baker
Real Estate, Ltd., 237 Va. 649, 379 S.E.2d 344 (1989)). . .
Thus, [Wells] is bound by Instruction
No. 4ii, i.e., that the Commonwealth need not prove appellant personally
benefitted from the misappropriation.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra. In other words, Wells waived
her right to raise the issue by not objecting to the instruction at the time
the trial judge was considering it.
The court then took up her second argument, which was that “there
was no evidence of fraudulent intent because her only intent was to accommodate
the customer and that she was authorized to mark down items.” Wells
v. Commonwealth, supra. It noted
that
`[t]o constitute embezzlement,
fraudulent intent to deprive the owner of his property must be proved beyond a
reasonable doubt.’ Dove v. Commonwealth, 41 Va.App. 571, 586
S.E.2d 890 (2003). . . . `Proof of intent inheres in the words or conduct of
the accused.’ Id. . . . . Intent often must be proved by
circumstantial evidence. See Wilson v. Commonwealth, 249
Va. 95, 452 S.E.2d 669 (1995)(`Intent is a state of mind that may be proved by
an accused's acts or by his statements and that may be shown by circumstantial
evidence.’).
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
The Court of Appeals found that Well’s argument on this
issue failed
two reasons. First, it ignores [her]
statement to Street, the store's loss prevention officer, that she was stealing
and she knew it was wrong. She said she thought she could get away with it. Second, [Wells] told
Street that if a customer wanted a price reduction, `I would call a manager.’
During the transaction which is the subject of this appeal, she did not call a
manager. Further, Street testified that a sales associate, in order to mark
down a sale price, must get permission from a manager, except in limited
circumstances not applicable here. Furthermore, in addition to these
unauthorized markdowns, [Wells] also gave away other shirts to the customer.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra.
The court concluded by first rejecting her argument that
“proof of misappropriation of property is not enough to prove embezzlement” and
then finding that
the evidence proved more than that [Wells]
simply misappropriated Macy's property. [She] admitted to stealing her
employer's property. Further, there was evidence that [her] acts were
unauthorized.
Wells v. Commonwealth,
supra. For this and other reasons,
it affirmed her conviction (and whatever punishment was imposed on her – the
opinion does not say what it was). Wells v. Commonwealth, supra.
3 comments:
here are a couple of articles that you might want to talk about. I realize that one of them is 2 yrs old, but it is quite a case and I have never heard of the ACLU being able to do something like that.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/03/sexting-lawsuit/?utm_source=Contextly&utm_medium=RelatedLinks&utm_campaign=Previous
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/05/new-york-porn-surfing/
what does this case have to do with cybercrime?
(i) the override on the computer/register;
(ii) the crashed hard drive on the digital recorder;
(iii) the doctrinal proposition that manipulating digital devices to appropriate property for someone constitutes embezzlement.
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