Casso v. State

182 So. 2d 252
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJanuary 28, 1966
Docket5282, 5283
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 182 So. 2d 252 (Casso v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casso v. State, 182 So. 2d 252 (Fla. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

182 So.2d 252 (1966)

Marie Lee CASSO, alias Jean George, alias Helen O'Brien, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
Ruth N. Kirschbaum, alias Pat Sherwood, alias Ruth Page, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.

Nos. 5282, 5283.

District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.

January 28, 1966.

*254 Hallard J. Greer, St. Petersburg, for appellants.

Earl Faircloth, Atty. Gen., Tallahassee, and Robert G. Stokes, Asst. Atty. Gen., Lakeland, for appellee.

PIERCE, Judge.

Appellants Casso and Kirschbaum (defendants) were jointly informed against in the Pinellas County Circuit Court for the offense of grand larceny, to-wit, the theft of $5,000 in money from one Mrs. Eva L. Shepard. Upon pleas of not guilty, the case was tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict of guilty as to each defendant. From the judgment of conviction pronounced against them, they have individually appealed to this Court. Separate briefs were filed here, but inasmuch as their contentions are the same, we consolidate their appeals for disposition in this opinion.

In seeking reversal defendants raise three points in this Court: (1) sufficiency of the evidence; (2) legality of the arrest and of the admission in evidence of certain articles seized from them at the time of their arrest; and (3) refusal of the trial Court to grant them a mistrial because of certain alleged language used by the prosecuting attorney in his closing argument to the jury.

The record filed here discloses that Mrs. Eva L. Shepard, an elderly lady of 80 years, was bilked out of $5,000 of her money by the two defendants in a variation of the old-time, but well known, "confidence game." Mrs. Shepard was standing on the Maas Brothers Department Store corner in downtown St. Petersburg, was approached by defendant Casso, a total stranger, and was told by Casso that she, Casso, had just collected $5,000 in cash from an insurance company for injuries to her "little girl," who had lost a leg in an automobile accident. Casso further stated she had "met a woman" who had found a paper bag on the ground, and upon opening it had discovered $600 therein. At just about that time the Kirschbaum woman came up and with embellishments confirmed the story of the paper bag. Kirschbaum further told Mrs. Shepard that "her boss" had advised her to keep quiet about the money "as it probably belonged to some gambler." She also stated that upon further searching the paper bag "back to the office" she or her "boss" had also found therein a man's billfold containing $6,000 more. They then, in a most ingratiating gesture, advised Mrs. Shepard that, inasmuch as all three of them knew of the find, the $6,600 would have to be divided three ways, $2,200 to each of them; however, to show "good faith," it would be necessary for Casso and Mrs. Shepard to advance to Kirschbaum $5,000 apiece. Casso thereupon turned over her supposed $5,000 insurance money to Kirschbaum.

The defendants then accompanied Mrs. Shepard in a taxicab to her apartment where she got her bankbook, then the three of them proceeded in the same taxicab downtown to the First Federal Savings & Loan Association, where Mrs. Shepard drew out the $5,000 from her own account, and turned it over to the two defendants on the sidewalk outside the bank. They then walked down the street to the building wherein the supposed "boss" had his office. While Casso and Mrs. Shepard remained downstairs Kirschbaum presumably went up into the building and later came back in a great rush, proclaiming to Mrs. Shepard that the man upstairs wanted to see her, accompanying such advices with the old excited carnival chant, "hurry, hurry, hurry." Mrs. Shepard did thereupon hurry upstairs to the supposed office but when she went in she was met only with blank stares and incredible expressions. Nobody in the office knew what she was talking about. It finally dawned on her what had happened, so she hurried back down to the sidewalk, only to find that the defendants had completely disappeared.

Mrs. Shepard then made quick contact with the police department and explained her situation. The police thereupon galvanized into action and did a remarkably *255 fast and efficient piece of investigative work. They quickly located the cab driver who had taken the three women to Mrs. Shepard's apartment and then back downtown and from him got a good description of the two defendants. From the descriptions so obtained, from Mrs. Shepard and the cab driver, coupled with the modus operandi employed by the defendants, the officers immediately got a positive identification of Casso by Mrs. Shepard from a police photograph. They then located a cab driver who had taken the two defendants from downtown St. Petersburg to the Eldorado Motel on the Gulf Beach where they were apparently staying. They then found another taxi driver who had taken the defendants from the Eldorado Motel to the Port-O-Call Motel at Tierra Verde, a distance of about five miles. They then went to the Port-O-Call and at about 9:30 P.M., the same day of the money transfer, the officers went up to the room rented by the defendants at the Port-O-Call. They knocked at the door, using the strategem of delivering a telegram, but the defendants, who were inside, refused to open up. The police, whose forces in the meantime had been augmented by sheriffs' deputies, then made known their identity as being from the Sheriff's office and demanded entrance, but defendants still refused to open the door. The officers then gained entrance by using a bellboy's pass key.

They found the two defendants inside the room, each lying on a twin bed, apparently waiting for the entrance of the officers. They then arrested the two defendants, seized two packed suit cases and contents, including part of the stolen money, and took the defendants down to jail. They were searched by a jail matron, who at that time did not find any more money. The next morning, upon a more detailed search by the matron, the money was found, located at a strategic place upon the person of each defendant. After the first money was found upon the person of Kirschbaum, whom the police matron knew as Pat Sherwood from past brushes with the law, said defendant thereupon volunteered that the rest of the money was upon the person of Casso, similarly located. Upon being apprised of such statement, Casso voluntarily produced the balance of the money from her person.

Neither of the defendants elected to take the witness stand, so the foregoing facts went to the jury, undenied and uncontradicted.

A. The first point as to insufficiency of the evidence to convict is wholly without merit. All former distinctions between larceny, embezzlement, and obtaining money or other property by false representations, have been abolished by statute and are now merged into the one offense of larceny. F.S. Section 811.021, F.S.A., provides in part: "A person who, with intent to deprive or defraud the true owner of his property * * * [t]akes from the possession of the true owner * * * by * * * false representations or pretense * * * any money * * * is guilty of larceny."

One obtaining personal property by trick, device, or fraud, intending to appropriate it, is guilty of "larceny" on subsequent appropriation. Murray v. State, 93 Fla. 706, 112 So. 575; McKinley v. State, 102 Fla. 632, 136 So. 380; Finlayson v. State, 46 Fla. 81, 35 So. 203; Knight v. State, Fla. 1950, 46 So.2d 497.

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182 So. 2d 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casso-v-state-fladistctapp-1966.