Cody W. Brewer v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedMarch 10, 2020
Docket1665182
StatusPublished

This text of Cody W. Brewer v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Cody W. Brewer v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody W. Brewer v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Chief Judge Decker, Judges Beales and AtLee Argued at Richmond, Virginia PUBLISHED

CODY W. BREWER OPINION BY v. Record No. 1665-18-2 CHIEF JUDGE MARLA GRAFF DECKER MARCH 10, 2020 COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF COLONIAL HEIGHTS Steven C. McCallum, Judge

Matthew C. Stewart for appellant.

Virginia B. Theisen, Senior Assistant Attorney General (Mark R. Herring, Attorney General, on brief), for appellee.

Cody W. Brewer appeals his conviction for computer fraud in violation of Code

§ 18.2-152.3. He contends that the trial court erred by finding that the evidence was sufficient to

prove that he perpetrated a fraud using a “computer or computer network” as defined in Code

§ 18.2-152.2. We hold that the evidence supports the trial court’s ruling that the appellant’s

cellular telephone was a device that falls within the statutory definition of a computer.

Consequently, we affirm the appellant’s conviction.

I. BACKGROUND

During 2015 and 2016, the appellant made unauthorized mobile withdrawals from a bank

account maintained by his grandmother, Margaret Peade, at a SunTrust Bank in Colonial

Heights. Peade, who did not use mobile banking, knew that she had not made the transactions. Additionally, she had not authorized anyone to make them and did not know who had done so.1

Consequently, she reported the unauthorized transactions to the police.

Sergeant T.E. Johnson of the Colonial Heights Police Department investigated the thefts.

Johnson identified the appellant as a suspect and arranged to interview him. The appellant

admitted engaging in a series of transactions in which he transferred a total of at least $6,000

from Peade’s SunTrust account to his accounts with Capital One and Amazon. Evidence

established that Peade had once written the appellant a personal check, and a search warrant

executed at the appellant’s residence produced a voided check from Peade’s account.

The appellant was charged with computer fraud based on the bank transactions. At his

trial, Monique Gray of SunTrust Bank testified that she obtained the bank’s records for Peade’s

account. Gray noted that the disputed transfers from Peade’s SunTrust account to Capital One

were listed as “mobile payments.” She testified that this notation meant that the transfers were

made using a mobile phone.2 According to Gray, payments could also be made from a desktop

computer but using this method would have resulted in an entry listing an “online” payment

rather than a “mobile” one as in the instant case.

Gray characterized the type of phone required to generate a “mobile payment” entry in

Peade’s account records as a mobile “electronic device.” She agreed with the prosecutor’s

characterization that such a mobile transfer would require “online access” and some form of

computer-related device.

1 The appellant claimed at trial that he had permission to transfer the money. However, his grandmother testified that he did not. In convicting the appellant, the trial court, as the trier of fact, accepted the Commonwealth’s evidence on this point and rejected the appellant’s evidence. Additionally, this Court denied the appellant’s assignment of error challenging the trial court’s ruling on the issue of permission to transfer the funds. 2 Peade’s SunTrust account records, admitted at trial, reflect fourteen “mobile” payments to Capital One over a period of six months totaling about $6,000. -2- Gray further explained that in order for a person to make such a mobile transfer from the

SunTrust account, he would have to “download [onto his mobile phone] the app” of the company

he intended to be the recipient of the funds, in this case Capital One, and then use the mobile

phone to make the payment. She elaborated that the person would need to enter the routing and

account numbers for the SunTrust account. She added that this information could be obtained

from a check for the account.

Gray was questioned about a specific transaction reflected in Peade’s account records that

occurred on October 13, 2015. The transaction was listed as an “electronic[/ACH] debit, Capital

One mobile payment.” Gray explained that the electronic debit was “money that went out of

[Peade’s] account electronically” and was transferred to Capital One “using a mobile device.”

She characterized the “mobile device” needed as “some sort of computer device.”

The appellant testified in his own behalf. He admitted that he had a cellular telephone,

specifically an iPhone. He conceded that he downloaded the Capital One “app” onto his phone

and used Peade’s SunTrust account information to transfer money from her account to his

Capital One account.

At the close of the Commonwealth’s evidence and again at the conclusion of all the

evidence, the appellant moved to strike the computer fraud charge. He suggested that the statute

does not cover “a mobile payment . . . to a credit card [account]” such as his Capital One

account. The prosecutor replied that making “mobile payments . . . on an electronic device such

as a smart phone,” which requires “access[ing]” the Internet and putting “certain identifying . . .

private information” into “the mobile app using the Internet,” is behavior proscribed by the

computer fraud statute.

The trial court denied the motions. It ruled in pertinent part that “a mobile device such as

a smart phone, . . . loaded with an app that permits electronic banking, specifically funds . . .

-3- withdrawn from Sun Trust[ and] deposited into Capital One,” was “functionally . . . a computer

or computer network” for purposes of the statute.

The court convicted the appellant of computer fraud and sentenced him to ten years for

that offense, with all of that time suspended.3

II. ANALYSIS

The appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to prove that he committed

computer fraud as proscribed by Code § 18.2-152.3. His argument is limited to the claim that the

cellular telephone with which he transferred his grandmother’s funds was not a “computer”

under the applicable statutory definition.

A. Standard of Review

In determining whether the evidence was sufficient to support a criminal conviction, the

appellate court views the facts in the “light most favorable” to the Commonwealth. See Moter v.

Commonwealth, 61 Va. App. 471, 473 (2013) (quoting Commonwealth v. Hudson, 265 Va. 505,

514 (2003)). In conducting this review, the Court defers to the trial court’s findings of fact

unless they are plainly wrong or without evidence to support them. See Ramsey v.

Commonwealth, 65 Va. App. 694, 697 (2015). “These principles apply ‘with equal force’ to

bench trials no differently than to jury trials.” Commonwealth v. Moseley, 293 Va. 455, 463

(2017) (quoting Vasquez v. Commonwealth, 291 Va. 232, 249 (2016)).

However, as applicable in this case, to the extent that the issue on appeal requires the

Court to determine the meaning of a statute and its terms, it reviews that issue de novo. See

Barson v. Commonwealth, 284 Va. 67, 71-72 (2012); Miller v. Commonwealth, 64 Va. App.

3 The appellant was also charged with grand larceny and identity theft, in violation of Code §§ 18.2-95 and -186.3, based on the same course of events. He was tried and convicted simultaneously for all three offenses.

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