Cobb v. State of Maine

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedNovember 20, 2010
DocketPENcr-07-32
StatusUnpublished

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

Bluebook
Cobb v. State of Maine, (Me. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

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-/ STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, SS. DOCKET NO DOVSC-07-32

STATE OF MAINE RECEIV~D & ,::ILED V. ORDER NOV 3 o 2U09 ROY LEMIEUX PISCATAQUIS COUNTY Clerk's Office

On July 15, 2008, the defendant was convicted by jury verdict of Count I, theft

class D (victim Jason Tyler) and Count IV, theft class C (victim Brian Campbell). He had

originally been charged with additional counts II, theft class E (victim Theresa

Daughton), and III, theft class E (victim Michael Bunker). The Court granted the

defendant's motion to acquit on Count II at the close of his case because the state had

failed to prove that if the defendant took possession of that victim's property it was

done without her permission. The jury returned a guilty verdict with regard to Count

III but the Court granted the defendant's motion for acquittal on that count as well.

Count I had originally expressed a class C offense, but it was reduced to class D during

trial by stipulation. The Court gives the following overview of the evidence and then

will focus on what findings a rational juror could have made.

The incident that gave rise to these charges was somewhat complicated. Central

Maine Power had hired Jason Tyler's company to clear its right of way. The company

had sent out letters to abutting landowners notifying them of the clearing and giving

them an opportunity to claim wood that was cut on their land in the process of clearing

the right of way. According to CMP's agreement with Tyler, he would be able to keep

any wood that was not claimed. Mr. Lemieux, a woodcutter, is a resident of the area ) who was aware that the right of way was being cleared and that Mr. Tyler was keeping

unclaimed wood. As the clearing progressed, Mr. Lemieux approached Bunker and

Campbell in separate phone calls on Friday, March 9, 2007, expressed to them that their

wood was being stolen and asked them if they wanted to sell it to him. Mr. Campbell

declined and expressed that he needed to check first, but had made arrangements for

Mr. Tyler to sell it and reimburse him. Mr. Bunker's response was more encouraging,

even if one believes his version of the conversation as opposed to defendant's version.

Mr. Bunker testified that the property had been his mother's, that she was deceased,

and he was the personal representative of her estate and had not received a letter from

CMP. He told defendant that he certainly was interested in selling the wood to him but

wanted to find out what was going on and that he was going to wait until Monday to

make a decision. He said, "I'm willing to sell it to you when we settle everything with

CMP and see exactly what's going on.;' He also testified that the reason he wanted to

wait was to make sure CMP had not already made other arrangements and selling to

another would "screw the whole deal up." In fact Bunker spoke with Tyler, but was

unable to contact CMP successfully. Mr. Lemieux testified that Bunker said he would

sell him the wood, without reservation. Later that day, Mr. Lemieux secured the

services of Mr. Simmons who transported wood. At defendant's direction, he went to

the site of the clearing operation, loaded a pile of logs that had blue markings on the

ends of the logs, and transported them to his residence.

The pile of logs that Mr. Simmons loaded came from trees that Tyler's crew felled

on property within the right of way but owned by Daughton, Campbell, the estate of

Bunker's mother, and maybe Pike Industries. The lower grade pulp cut from this area

was located in piles set apart from the logs and Mr.Tyler marked the end of the logs

himself in part because Mr. Lemieux had also visited him and Tyler wanted to mark the logs for security reasons. While the defendant and Simmons were loading the logs,

defendant sliced the blue paint from each log and painted the tip with red and wrote

"Bunker" on one of the logs. The most valuable of the logs came from a large pine tree

located on what was probably Campbell property that was felled and cut into four logs.

On the following Saturday or Sunday Defendant contacted Mr. Bunker for the

first time since their Friday conversation and said, "Mike, you don't have to worry, I've

taken your wood." He went on to say that he got it first and hid it. Mr. Bunker did not

report a theft and the wood was seized by the State Police during the weekend. By

Sunday, Mr. Campbell became aware the logs were missing and he called Mr. Lemieux

who admitted that he had taken the log pile to protect the landowners including

· Bunker, and said Campbell's logs must have been mixed in. Defendant said the wood

was safe and he could match the logs to the stump and there would be no problem.

After seizure, the wood was eventually sold and the proceeds were distributed to Tyler,

Campbell, and Bunker.

ANALYSIS

In deciding whether a motion for judgment of acquittal should be granted, the

Court must view the evidence from a standpoint that is favorable to the state and

assume the validity of the prosecution's evidence, and then determine whether there

was relevant evidence from which the jury could have properly concluded that the

accused was guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Blier, 371 A.2d 1091 (Me 1977).

After the jury verdict finding the defendant guilty of counts I, III, and IV, the Court

properly granted a motion to acquit with regard to Count III because there was

insufficient evidence of intent to deprive with regard to this count. In viewing the

evidence in a manner that was most favorable to the State, Mr. Lemieux removed Mr.

Bunker's logs on Friday, after having a discussion earlier in the day in which Mr. Bunker told Lemieux that he was willing to sell him the logs, but only after he first

checked with the forester and CMP. Mr. Lemieux removed the blue markings from the

logs when he took them and painted the tips red and wrote "Bunker" on the end of one.

He then called Mr. Bunker and told him not to worry, that he had the logs and they

were hidden. From this, one could rationally conclude that Mr. Lemieux had exercised

unauthorized control over the logs from Friday until they were seized by the police, but

not that he did so with the intent to deprive Mr. Bunker of the logs. Because he wrote

Bunker's name on the end of one of the logs in the pile and changed their marking color

as he took possession of them, and soon thereafter called Mr. Bunker with the news, a

rational fact finder could not find, as is required at 17A MRSA 352(3) that it was his

conscious object to withhold the logs "permanently or for so extended a period or to use

under circumstances that a substantial portion of (their) economic value, or the use and

benefit of (the logs) would be lost."

Next, was there sufficient evidence for a conviction on Count I, in which it is

alleged that Mr. Lemieux stole property from Mr. Tyler? This charge could only be

proved if the logs were to be considered his property, not the property of a non­

responding landowner such as Mr. Bunker or Ms. Daughton. In order to convict Mr.

Lemieux of this count, the State must prove that the logs were the "property of

another". According to 17-A MRSA 352 (4), "property of another" includes property in

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Related

State v. Brewer
1997 ME 177 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1997)
Pineo v. State
2006 ME 119 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2006)
State v. Cobb
2006 ME 43 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2006)
State v. Blier
371 A.2d 1091 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1977)
Doucette v. State
463 A.2d 741 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1983)

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Cobb v. State of Maine, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cobb-v-state-of-maine-mesuperct-2010.