Adelaida Reyna Arellano v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 2012
Docket13-11-00477-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Adelaida Reyna Arellano v. State (Adelaida Reyna Arellano 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.

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Adelaida Reyna Arellano v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-11-00477-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI–EDINBURG

ADELAIDA REYNA ARELLANO, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 206th District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Rodriguez, Benavides, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Perkes

Appellant, Adelaida Reyna Arellano, appeals her conviction for forgery by making

a check, a state-jail felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 32.21(a)(1)(A), (b), (d) (West

2011). Following a bench trial, appellant was found guilty and sentenced to 180 days of

confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice—State Jail Division. The trial court suspended the imposition of sentence and placed appellant on community

supervision for a period of two years. The trial court ordered appellant to pay $100.00 in

restitution and $333.00 in court costs. By two issues on appeal, appellant argues the

evidence is “legally insufficient” to show: (1) appellant altered the check; and

(2) appellant intended to defraud another. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On July 20, 2010, the complainant, Evangelina Guerrero, gave appellant a check

in the amount of $15.00, payable to appellant, to reimburse her for purchasing tamales

and a luncheon plate. Appellant and Guerrero worked in the same office.

Later, while reviewing their bank statement, Guerrero’s husband noticed that a

check had apparently been written to appellant for the incorrect amount of $115.00.

Guerrero looked at her duplicate check and realized someone must have altered the

original check. The duplicate check showed that “15.00” was the sum listed in the “item

amount” box, followed by the written words “Fifteen and no/cents.”

Guerrero called appellant and asked what amount the check was cashed for.

Appellant answered, “[w]hatever you made it out for.” Appellant told Guerrero she gave

the check to her husband and that he deposited it with his own checks in Weslaco.

Guerrero informed appellant that she had written the check for $15.00, but that it was

cashed for $115.00, and that she still had her duplicate check. Appellant “went quiet,”

and then told Guerrero that she would go to the bank in the morning and “take care of it.”

Appellant never told Guerrero that she lost the check or that anything happened to it after

Guerrero gave it to her.

2 The next day, Guerrero took her duplicate check to First National Bank in McAllen,

Texas, and stated she wrote the check for $15.00, but that it was cashed for $115.00. A

bank employee looked up Guerrero’s and appellant’s bank accounts, and discovered that

the deposit slip was made out for $115.00, and that the deposit was made in McAllen, not

in Weslaco. The bank manager, Francisco Torres, advised Guerrero that she needed to

file a police report. Guerrero went to the police department in McAllen and provided a

statement. Guerrero was advised to inform her employer about the incident and to meet

with Torres at the bank to fill out a fraud report.

The following Monday, appellant brought Guerrero the sum of $100.00 in cash.

Appellant placed the money on Guerrero’s desk and stated it was merely a “bank error.”

On August 30, 2010, appellant was arrested for forgery. Appellant pleaded “not

guilty” and waived her right to a jury trial. During the bench trial, Guerrero testified she

recognized her signature on the check. She stated she made the check out for the sum

of $15.00, but that it was altered to read $115.00. Guerrero testified the number “1” had

been inserted in front of the number “15,” and the word “one” had been written in front of

the amount for “fifteen” dollars. Guerrero testified these alterations were not in her

handwriting. Guerrero further testified she had previously written many checks in an

amount over one-hundred dollars and that she customarily wrote out the words “one

hundred.” Guerrero stated she recognized appellant’s signature on the endorsement.

Ginno Betancourt, the teller at First National Bank who processed the forged

check, testified the deposit slip belonged to appellant. The deposit slip was dated July

20, 2010. No cash was given to appellant. Betancourt testified he only looks at

3 customers in the drive-through to identify the customer if the customer is receiving cash;

consequently, he never saw appellant or the vehicle she was driving. The record shows

Betancourt and appellant had no prior relationship with one another.

Detective Rene Hernandez, with the McAllen Police Department, testified he

reviewed a copy of the altered check, the duplicate carbon copy of the check, and the

deposit slip. He noticed the account number underneath appellant’s endorsement on

the back of the forged check was written with a unique pen stroke. “[T]he numbers were

written in a—in a manner that whoever wrote this number left a—I guess you could say a

little motion to the right from the bottom of the number going in an upward to the right

motion.” He also noticed the number “1” on the deposit slip was written in the same

manner. He concluded the same person filled out the deposit slip and endorsed the

back of the check.

Detective Hernandez testified appellant visited the McAllen Police Department to

discuss the case with him. She had a worried look on her face when questioned about

the altered check. Appellant told Detective Hernandez that she had been having an

affair and that it was this person who altered the check. The two of them allegedly met at

the K-Mart parking lot next to the bank and started to argue. The man asked if she

wanted him to deposit the check. Appellant informed Detective Hernandez that she had

already endorsed the check, written out her name, and written her account number on the

back of the check. Detective Hernandez asked if she had filled out the deposit slip.

Appellant said no. Rather, the man took the check and deposit slip away from her and

filled out the deposit slip. Appellant let him take the check and make the deposit. They

4 then went their separate ways. Appellant told Detective Hernandez that she later

received a phone call from the man and that he told her, “You know what, don’t [ . . . ] with

me,” and then hung up. A few days later appellant received a phone call from Guerrero

advising her of the amount of money that was actually deposited.

Detective Hernandez testified he gave appellant several opportunities to provide

him with information about the man so he could confirm her story. He asked her to

provide a name, address, and phone number. Appellant indicated she did not want to

get the man involved. She finally told him that his name is “Robert Crocker” and that

Crocker was a truck driver from the Austin area. She did not want to give Detective

Hernandez his phone number or any other information so Detective Hernandez could

verify his identity. Based on the limited amount of information appellant gave him,

Detective Hernandez was only able to run a local check. He could not find anyone in the

area with the name Robert Crocker.

Detective Hernandez testified he contacted the bank to find out if there was video

surveillance of the transaction. The bank provided him with a video, but he could not

determine whether the time on the video matched the time stamped on the check. The

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