Bullen v. State

518 So. 2d 227
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Alabama
DecidedSeptember 8, 1987
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 518 So. 2d 227 (Bullen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bullen v. State, 518 So. 2d 227 (Ala. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

John C. Bullen was indicted in November of 1984 on 38 counts of theft of property (30 counts of theft in the first degree and eight counts of theft in the second degree). The appellant stood trial on these charges in July of 1985 but a mistrial was declared because of a hung jury.

Following this trial, ten of the counts were dismissed by the trial court (six counts of theft in the first degree and four counts of theft in the second degree). The appellant was tried on the remaining 28 counts in February of 1986. The jury found the appellant guilty on all 28 charges. The trial judge imposed six sentences of one hundred forty-nine (149) months' imprisonment (each of those sentences to run concurrently), 18 sentences of sixty (60) months' (each of those sentences to run concurrently with each other but consecutively with the 149 month sentence) and four sentences of thirty-one (31) months (each of those sentences to run concurrently with each other but consecutively with the 149 and 60 month sentences). The appellant's sentences totalled 240 months or 20 years. The trial judge also ordered the appellant to make restitution in the amount of $261,441.

In the fall of 1983, the 28 prosecuting witnesses each took their crop of soybeans to Redmont Grain, Inc (hereinafter referred to as Redmont). Redmont was owned and operated by this appellant. Some of the beans which the farmers brought to Redmont were sold at the time of delivery. The farmers would then receive cash representing the market price of the soybeans on that day multiplied by the number of bushels sold. The rest of the beans were left at Redmont to be sold at a later time.

The price of soybeans on the commodities market was always low at harvest time because of the glut of soybeans at that point in time. The farmers would leave their soybeans at Redmont on a "price later" basis, hoping that they could obtain a better price for their beans later in the year when the price of soybeans rose.

When the farmers left their soybeans at Redmont, they received a weight ticket indicating the quantity of beans the farmers left at Redmont. Although the various terms "store," "delay price," and "open *Page 229 storage" were printed on the tickets, all of the farmers stated that they left their beans to be stored. Some of the farmers testified that the appellant or his manager at Redmont told them they were to be charged a storage fee of four cents a bushel per month. However, all of the weight tickets which were introduced into evidence indicated that there was no storage fee.

Most of the farmers testified that they knew the appellant was in the business of buying and selling grain, and they realized that their particular beans might not remain in the grain elevator until they were ready to sell. However, the farmers stated that they thought the appellant would retain at Redmont an amount of beans equal to the quantity they had stored there.

In the spring of 1984, the appellant and Redmont declared bankruptcy. At this time, no beans remained in the bins at Redmont. Most of the farmers testified that they had never given the appellant permission to sell their beans. A few farmers had given the appellant permission to sell their beans several weeks immediately preceding the bankruptcy. However, when these farmers received a check for their beans, the check "bounced," and they learned that their beans had already been sold at the time they gave permission to sell.

After bankruptcy was declared, the farmers went and talked to the appellant. The appellant told the farmers that the beans were gone and he had no money. He said he was going to sell all his property and he would pay them for their beans plus 14 percent interest.

All of the farmers had filed a claim in the bankruptcy proceedings, and, also, each had joined in filing a civil suit against this appellant. Some of the farmers testified that the criminal charges were filed as a means to obtain their money. Some testified that they would not have filed the charges if they had been paid for their beans. Most stated that all they wanted was their money. Many of the farmers testified that they had stored grain at Redmont in the past and had always been paid for their beans when they were sold.

Joe Tucker, a certified public accountant, testified that he examined the checks and deposits of Redmont for the years 1981 through 1984. These documents revealed that the appellant had taken $384,000 more dollars out of Redmont than he put into it. Tucker stated that there were several entries in Redmont's journal which he did not use in his tabulation because he had no supporting documents for these entries. These include: $130,000 for new grain bins which were built by the appellant; $107,000 for bank notes which were paid for by the appellant; $7,500 in posting errors; $125,000 for the transfer of a feed mill to Redmont from the appellant; and $76,000 in deposits made after the bankruptcy. Tucker also did not include any monies the appellant may have put into the business when it was started. Tucker admitted that, if he had considered the above figures, the appellant would have put more dollars into the business than he took out.

Tucker further testified that there was a difference of $200,000 between the amount that the appellant paid to Dean Witter Reynolds over the amount which he was paid by them. He stated there was a large deficit between the storage payable and Redmont inventory, and the Dean Witter Reynolds account. However, Tucker stated there were no irregularities found in the books which were kept by Redmont's bookkeeper.

Ronnie Brown was the manager of Redmont during the years it was in business and he testified to the operating procedures at Redmont. The farmers would come to Redmont with a load of beans and Brown would grade and weigh the beans. If the farmer wanted to sell his beans right then, Brown would give the farmer a check. If the farmer wanted to sell his beans later, Brown would give the farmer a scale or weight ticket.

Brown stated Redmont was never successful in charging for storage. Storage fees were only charged on a few occasions out of several thousand transactions.

When the beans were left at Redmont, they were placed in grain bins. Redmont originally had two grain bins, and two more *Page 230 were built in the summer of 1981. The total capacity of the grain elevator was 200,000 bushels. The bins would fill up at harvest time and the beans would be moved out gradually during the rest of the year. The beans with a high moisture content deteriorated rapidly and had to be moved first.

When the appellant wished to sell beans, they were usually sold and transferred to Bunge Corporation in Decatur, Alabama. The appellant would then buy a number of bushels of beans on the futures market equal to those he sold to Bunge. The use of a hedge locks in the elevator operators' profit. If the price of the beans went up, the appellant would gain on the futures market but would lose an equal amount on the cash sale at the time when the farmers priced his beans. The opposite was true if the price of beans went down. The use of a hedge account protects farmers and grain elevator operators from market fluctuations and it is a legitimate business practice in the grain elevator trade. Although the farmers' beans were not in the bin when Redmont traded in the futures market, they had a right to that same quantity of beans on the futures market. Brown stated that the money which the appellant earned in the futures market was used in the operating account of the business. When Brown wrote checks on the operating account, the checks were covered by a draw note from the bank if there were insufficient funds in the operating account.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
518 So. 2d 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bullen-v-state-alacrimapp-1987.