94 People v. Berry

2017 COA 65
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 2017
DocketNo15CA13
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

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Bluebook
94 People v. Berry, 2017 COA 65 (Colo. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2017COA65

Court of Appeals No. 15CA1394 Lake County District Court No. 14CR32 Honorable D. Wayne Patton, Judge

The People of the State of Colorado,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

William Steven Berry,

Defendant-Appellant.

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED IN PART AND VACATED IN PART, AND CASE REMANDED WITH DIRECTIONS

Division II Opinion by JUDGE J. JONES Dailey and Berger, JJ., concur

Announced May 18, 2017

Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Jacob R. Lofgren, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellee

Elkus Sisson & Rosenstein, P.C., Donald C. Sisson, Reid J. Elkus, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellant ¶1 A jury found William Steven Berry guilty of embezzlement of

public property and first degree official misconduct. He appeals,

contending that (1) there was insufficient evidence to support the

convictions; (2) the district court erred in defining for the jury

“public property” as used in the embezzlement statute; and (3) the

embezzlement conviction and felony theft acquittal were

inconsistent, requiring that the embezzlement conviction be

vacated.

¶2 We affirm Berry’s conviction for first degree official

misconduct, but, because we conclude that there was insufficient

evidence to prove the embezzlement of public property charge, we

vacate that conviction.

I. Relevant Facts and Procedural History

¶3 Berry was a sheriff’s deputy when he and two other deputies

responded to a domestic violence call involving a husband and his

wife. The wife told the officers that her husband owned four guns

and she wanted them removed from her home. The officers took the

guns and put them in the Lake County Sheriff’s evidence locker,

where the guns remained while the domestic violence charges

against the husband were pending.

1 ¶4 After those charges were resolved, the district attorney

authorized the sheriff to either destroy the guns or return them to

their rightful owner. Because the owner of the guns (the husband)

had been deported from the United States, the sheriff could not

return them to him (even if he were otherwise legally entitled to

them), so the sheriff planned to destroy them. However, before the

guns were destroyed, Berry supposedly bought the guns from the

wife.

¶5 Berry saw the wife while he was on duty, in full uniform, and

driving his patrol car. He followed her in his patrol car to a nearby

gas station and approached her to discuss buying the guns. When

she questioned the legality of such a sale, Berry said, “of course [it

is legal]. I am a representative of the law. If I come to you with this

offer, it is because I can do it, because it is legal.” The wife agreed

to sell the guns, including a rare and valuable pistol, to Berry, for

$500.

¶6 After obtaining the guns, Berry gave one of them to the deputy

in charge of the evidence locker who had released the guns, and

agreed to sell the pistol to an out-of-state buyer.

2 ¶7 Both Berry and the wife agreed that Berry paid the wife $500

for the guns, but the evidence regarding how or from whom Berry

obtained possession of the guns was inconsistent. Berry argued

that the wife signed a sheriff’s department release form and then

sold the guns to him a week later. But the wife testified that she

never signed the release form, denied that she had ever gone to the

sheriff’s office to pick up the guns, and testified that she never saw

the guns after she asked the officers to remove them from her

home.

¶8 As a result of these events, the People charged Berry with

embezzlement of public property, felony theft, taking possession of

a firearm before completion of a firearms transfer background

check, and first degree official misconduct. The district court

instructed the jury, over defense counsel’s objection, that “property

is something owned or possessed.” The jury acquitted defendant of

felony theft and the background check charge, but found him guilty

of embezzlement of public property and first degree official

misconduct.

3 II. The Evidence Was Insufficient to Support the Embezzlement Conviction

¶9 Berry argues that the evidence admitted at trial was, for two

reasons, insufficient to support a guilty verdict on the

embezzlement charge. First, he argues that the statute under

which he was charged — section 18-8-407, C.R.S. 2016 — requires

proof that the property he converted — the four guns — was owned,

and not merely possessed, by Lake County, and that there was no

evidence that Lake County owned the guns. Second, he argues that

there was no evidence that he converted the guns: he had no

authorization to remove them from the Sheriff’s Office evidence

room, and it was undisputed that another deputy actually removed

them from the evidence room. We agree with Berry’s first

argument, and therefore do not reach his second.

A. Standard of Review

¶ 10 Berry’s first argument requires us to determine two things.

Initially, we must determine the meaning of “public property” in

section 18-8-407(1). That, of course, is an issue of law that we

decide de novo. Marsh v. People, 2017 CO 10M, ¶ 19. If we

determine that “public property” in section 18-8-407(1) is limited to

4 property that is publicly owned, we must then determine whether

the evidence was sufficient to establish that element.1 That too is

an issue that we decide de novo. Id.

B. “Public Property” as Used in Section 18-8-407(1) Is Limited to Property Owned by the State or a Political Subdivision Thereof

¶ 11 Section 18-8-407(1) provides as follows:

Every public servant who lawfully or unlawfully comes into possession of any public moneys or public property of whatever description, being the property of the state or of any political subdivision of the state, and who knowingly converts any of such public moneys or property to his own use or to any use other than the public use authorized by law is guilty of embezzlement of public property. Every person convicted under the provisions of this section shall be forever thereafter ineligible and disqualified from being a member of the general assembly of this state or from holding any office of trust or profit in this state.

¶ 12 Because no statutory provision defines the term “public

property” as used in section 18-8-407(1), we must determine the

General Assembly’s intent in using the term by employing

well-established maxims of statutory construction.

1If we determine that “public property” includes property merely possessed by the state, we don’t need to decide whether the evidence was insufficient to show that Lake County possessed the guns because Berry doesn’t argue that it isn’t. 5 ¶ 13 We begin by attributing to the words and phrases used in the

statute their plain and ordinary meanings. People v. Perez, 238

P.3d 665, 669 (Colo. 2010). And we consider the words or phrases

at issue in context — both in the context of the statute of which the

words or phrases are a part and in the context of any

comprehensive statutory scheme of which the statute is a part.

People v. Hill, 228 P.3d 171, 173-74 (Colo. App. 2009); see Krol v.

CF & I Steel, 2013 COA 32, ¶ 15. By applying these principles, we

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