Hosier v. State

1 P.3d 107, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2000 WL 290283
CourtCourt of Appeals of Alaska
DecidedMarch 17, 2000
DocketA-6893, 1669
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1 P.3d 107 (Hosier v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hosier v. State, 1 P.3d 107, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2000 WL 290283 (Ala. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

O P I N I 0 N

MANNHEIMER, Judge.

Donald R. Hosier appeals his convictions on several counts of second-degree forgery and one count of second-degree theft. 1 Hosier contends that the trial court committed error by allowing the State to amend the indictment at trial to conform to the evidence. Hosier also contends that he was prejudiced when the trial judge did not inform him of a note received from the jury in the middle of trial. Finally, Hosier claims that the trial court should not have allowed the State to play a tape recording of an interview between Hosier and the police because this interview contained references to Hosier's prior criminal acts. For the reasons explained here, we conclude that the amendment of the indictment was not error, that Hosier was not prejudiced by the trial judge's failure to inform him of the jury note, and that Hosier failed to preserve his objection to the playing of the tape. We therefore affirm Hosier's convictions.

The amendment of the indictment

Hosier was convicted of forging Richard Dabl's name on several checks written against Dahl's account at Key Bank in Ket-chikan. Hosier's indictment mistakenly identified the bank as "First Bank". At Hogier's trial, Superior Court Judge Michael A. Thompson allowed the State to amend the indictment to name the correct bank.

Hosier asserts that Judge Thompson should not have allowed the State to amend the indictment in this fashion. He contends that the identity of the bank was a material element of the charge against him, and thus the amendment substantially prejudiced his rights to be informed of the charge and to have a grand jury review the charge. 2 Hosier is mistaken: the identity of the bank was not a material element of the forgery charge.

As defined in AS 11.46.510(a), the crime of forgery is committed when a person, acting with intent to defraud, either forges (4.e., falsely makes, completes, or alters) a written instrument or, alternatively, possesses or circulates a forged instrument. 3 Here, the State's basic allegation was that Hosier, acting with intent to defraud, wrote checks against a bank account when he had no authority to write the checks or to draw funds from the account.

AS 11.46.990(10) states that when "intent to defraud" is an element of an offense, an intent to defraud any person suffices to establish this element. Thus, if Hosier intended to commit fraud by forging checks, it was irrelevant whether Hosier intended to defraud the owner of the account, the bank that maintained the account, the merchant who accepted the check as payment, or all three.

There may be times, however, when the identity of the victim is relevant to determining whether a defendant has committed forgery. To rebut a charge of forgery, a defendant may assert that they were authorized (or reasonably believed themselves authorized) to make or alter the written instrument as they did. When this defense is *109 raised, the identity of the purported victim may be crucial to the jury's determination of whether the defendant was actually authorized to take the actions alleged in the indictment. In such cireumstances, the defendant's rights might be substantially prejudiced if the trial judge allowed mid-trial amendment of the indictment to name a different victim.

But generally, the defendant will have no greater claim of authority to create or alter documents in the name of one victim as opposed to another. The normal rule, therefore, is that when a forgery or theft indictment is amended at trial to name a different victim, this amendment does not allege a different offense, and the alteration of the indictment is not a "material" or "fatal" variance. 4

The Alaska Supreme Court applied this rule in Price v. State 5 The defendant in Price was accused of forgery. The indictment asserted that Price had forged a woman's name as an endorsement to a check, but the indictment failed to explicitly specify that the checking account belonged to this woman. The indictment also failed to explicitly identify the bank at which this account was held. 6 At trial, the court allowed the State to cure these deficiencies by amending the indictment to incorporate a copy of the front side of the forged check. 7 On appeal, Price asserted that the amended indictment fatally varied from the original indictment. But the supreme court rejected this argument:

The original of the check referred to in the indictment was introduced in evidence as part of the state's case in chief without objection by [Price], so {[he] then knew, prior to putting on his defense, what the precise nature of the charge against him was. In addition[,] the trial court ... offered to give [Price] a reasonable time in which to prepare his defense if he claimed that he was taken by surprise by the ... «amendment to the indictment. No such claim was made; a continuance was not requested by [the] appellant.
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The failure of the indictment to name the date, the amount and the maker of the check, and the bank on which it was drawn, was an "error in form" within the meaning of [Criminal Rule 7(e)]. The amendment ... does not charge an additional or different offense from that charged by the indictment prior to the amendment. And as we have already [indicated, the] appellant has not shown that any of his substantial rights have been prejudiced.

Price, 437 P.2d at 832-38.

In Hosier's case, the forged checks were admitted into evidence at trial. Hosier does not claim that the State failed to discloge this evidence to him before trial, nor does he claim that he was taken by surprise by any aspect of this evidence. Rather, Hosier insists only that the identity of the bank was a material element of the offense, an allegation that could not be changed unless the case was re-submitted to the grand jury. We reject this contention. The identity of the bank was not a material element of the forgery charge against Hosier. And because Hosier has not claimed, much less shown, that the change in the name of the bank prejudiced his defense, the amendment of the indictment was proper under Criminal Rule T(e).

*110 For the same reasons, we reject Hosier's claims (1) that the jury should have been instructed that the identity of the bank was a material element of the offense, and (2) that he should have been granted an acquittal because the State's proof concerning the identity of the bank varied from the allegation in the indictment.

The jury note

On the second day of Hogier's trial, during the State's case-in-chief, the jury sent a note to Judge Thompson, requesting that he ask the prosecutor to speak more slowly and the defense attorney to speak more loudly. Normally, a trial judge should notify the parties of any communication from the jury, and this notification should take place on the record.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 P.3d 107, 2000 Alas. App. LEXIS 36, 2000 WL 290283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hosier-v-state-alaskactapp-2000.