Adedayo Taiwo v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 10, 2010
Docket01-07-00487-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Adedayo Taiwo v. State (Adedayo Taiwo v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adedayo Taiwo v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued June 10, 2010





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01–07–00487–CR





ADEDAYO TAIWO, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from County Criminal Court at Law No. 14

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1057017





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          A jury convicted appellant, Adedayo Taiwo, of misdemeanor theft of property valued at over $500 and less than $1,500. The trial court assessed punishment at 180 days’ confinement, suspended for two years of community supervision, with a $500 fine. Appellant’s conviction was affirmed on appeal, and petition for review was refused. Taiwo v. State, No. 07-01-0417-CR, 2002 WL 511444, at *5 (Tex. App.—Amarillo Apr. 4, 2002, pet. ref’d). After appellant satisfactorily served her term of community supervision and was discharged, she applied for a post-conviction writ of habeas corpus on the basis that she was denied effective assistance of counsel at trial and on appeal. The trial court granted an out-of-time appeal.

          In two issues, appellant contends that her counsel was ineffective at trial and in her first appeal.

          We reverse and remand.

Background

          Appellant was employed as a sales associate at a Dillard’s department store in Willowbrook Mall in Houston. Appellant’s supervisor was Helen Palmer, the sales manager of the clothing area of the store. According to Palmer, the January 2001 inventory of the store revealed that $800,000 in merchandise was missing. To avoid the risk of losing her job, it was Palmer’s responsibility to determine the source of any losses in her department. According to Palmer, Dillard’s had determined that over 50 percent of inventory losses were attributable to pilferage by employees. Palmer explained that Dillard’s has a policy that it will pay a $750 bonus to any associate who reports another sales associate for stealing from Dillard’s. Palmer testified that she had been suspecting that appellant might be involved in stealing from Dillard’s.

          Just before closing time on Sunday, April 1, 2001, Palmer saw two women with two children wandering around the store and carrying several expensive items of clothing from various areas to appellant’s register in the casual department. There were eight other sales associates on the floor in the clothing area at the time, and appellant was working her register alone. Palmer began to suspect that these two women, who were never identified, fit certain classic patterns of shoplifter behavior. According to Palmer, other sales associates were also watching them.

          When Palmer saw the women bring a stack of clothing to appellant’s register, Palmer walked over and perused the sales tags. She noted that there were about 20 items presented and that one of the blazers had a sales price of $240. Palmer watched appellant ring up six of the items, and then, because appellant seemed nervous, Palmer walked a few feet away and stood behind a display case to try to watch the rest of the transaction. However, Palmer could not see appellant. According to Palmer, she stepped away for “20 seconds.” According to appellant, Palmer was gone for three to four minutes.

          When Palmer returned to appellant’s register, the two women had left and Palmer asked appellant to show her the receipt. The receipt indicated that six items had been purchased for a total of $245.86. According to Palmer, she asked if appellant had totaled up all of the merchandise because she could not believe that appellant could have finished the transaction so quickly, and appellant responded that she might have made a mistake. According to appellant, the women only purchased six items. Appellant looked around for the women, saw them about to board an escalator, and chased after them. Palmer chased after appellant. Appellant caught up with the women and asked to check their bags for “a possible mistake.”

          Appellant testified that, when she checked out the two customers, they had presented six items and that she had placed these six items into one bag. When appellant saw the customers about to board the escalator, she noticed that they were carrying two Dillard’s bags. According to Palmer, the women were carrying three Dillard’s bags. Appellant had not seen the customers with other Dillard’s bags when they were at the register. However, the women had children with them, and there were other people in line at the register, so appellant had not studied the women very closely.

          Palmer asked to see the customers’ receipt. One of the women responded that there were two receipts, and she began rummaging around in her purse. However, she could locate only one receipt for six items, totaling $245.86. Appellant asked the women to come back to the register, and they complied.

          Palmer testified that she called another manager, William Flinn, to assist in comparing the receipt with the items in the bags and that she waited for Flinn to arrive before she disturbed the merchandise contained in the bags. According to Palmer, when she and Flinn dumped the bags out, the six items that were accounted for on the receipt were there, however, there were 12 additional clothing items that were not on the receipt. Palmer testified that it was unusual for the 12 items, which included high-end designer dresses and blazers, to have been stuffed into the bags as they were because customers normally will ask to have such items left on hangers.

          Flinn testified that, when he arrived to meet with Palmer, the two customers had three bags and that the merchandise was still in the bags. Flinn testified that he did not physically compare the items with the receipt but that he “watched Palmer do it.” Flinn also testified that the customers stated that they had another receipt.

          Appellant testified that Palmer had not waited for Flinn to arrive, but had dumped the bags out onto a counter that already had numerous other pieces of clothing laying on it that were waiting to be returned to store shelves from the dressing rooms.

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Adedayo Taiwo v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adedayo-taiwo-v-state-texapp-2010.