Luscomb v. State

660 So. 2d 1099, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 8993, 1995 WL 502059
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedAugust 25, 1995
DocketNo. 94-2854
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 660 So. 2d 1099 (Luscomb 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
Luscomb v. State, 660 So. 2d 1099, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 8993, 1995 WL 502059 (Fla. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

DAUKSCH, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment and sentence for grand theft.

The question on appeal is the sufficiency of the evidence.

William Holloway, the owner of two Texaco Food Marts, testified at trial that there were six employees working in his Homosas-sa store between December of 1993 and January of 1994. Generally, there are two shifts a day and two employees on each shift. The first shift is from 6:00 a.m. through 2:00 or 3:00 p.m. and the second shift is from the end of the first shift through 11:00 p.m. The store has two cash registers, one of which is in front and the other in back.

Holloway testified that groceries, non-taxable and taxable items and sales tax are calculated on a Z tape in the register and that gas and Lotto sales are calculated separately. Although an accounting is done once a day, the Z tape, gas console and Lotto machine are read at the end of each shift or twice a day. The clerk on duty is responsible for this and for writing the figures on an activity report at the end of his shift. The report is then compared with the actual cash in the cash drawer. The activity reports are posted to a daily accounting sheet the next morning.

The net sales figure in the register is calculated by reading the Z tape after which the tape automatically begins with a zero balance. Every shift therefore begins with a zero balance on the Z tape. The purpose of this is to simplify the employees’ paperwork. There is also a Z counter at the bottom of the tape which counts the Z readings. Additionally, there is a G.T. or grand total of all sales at the top of the tape and a G.S. or grand sum which is the amount collected since the last Z tape was read. The time is printed on the tape each time a Z reading is done. An X reading shows the total amount of sales per day without resetting the grand sum to zero as in the case of a Z reading. Each register has a dated receipt tape from which the customers’ receipts and the Z readings are generated and a journal tape which stays in the register until it runs out. The latter tape is a permanent record of all transactions. When this tape runs out, it is removed and taken to the office.

Holloway testified that on January 8,1994, he noticed that his gas readings were off. Specifically, the figures in the January 7th activity reports did not jibe with those from the gas console. According to Holloway, there was a $600 difference between the gas console total sales figure of $1,805.03 and the two daily activity report figures of $1,260.87. Additionally, the unleaded fuel had run out even though the inventory sheets showed there was still some remaining. Holloway had never experienced such a major discrepancy in his paperwork. He was also alarmed because the first shift had sold approximately $1,000 worth of gas whereas the second shift had sold only $200 worth. After recalculating the figures, Holloway looked at the gas figures in the register. Those figures were close to the gas console figures.

Recalling that he had helped Rachel Hunt, the first-shift clerk, reconcile her shift the day before, Holloway looked for her gas console figures but they were gone. Checking the figures from the register, he found no discrepancy between the G.T. and G.S. from her shift. As to the p.m. shift, however, there was a $1,100 difference between the G.T. and the G.S. After checking the Z readings, Holloway found that a Z reading had been done at 3:30 p.m. and again at 9:52 p.m. Because the Z counter numbers ran in the order of 752 and 754, however, he surmised that another Z reading had been done between the two. Thus, the final figure for the p.m. shift showed only those sales which had been made since the missing Z reading rather than the total sales for the shift. Subtracting the 752 G.T. from the 754 G.T., Holloway testified that he should have arrived at a figure of $2,273.98. The G.S., however, showed a figure of $1,176.13 leaving an unaccounted for difference of $1,097.85.

Holloway recalled that his son, Chris, and appellant had worked on the p.m. shift that day. He admitted, however, that Rachel Hunt had also worked in the store until 5:30 [1101]*1101p.m. Although he thought she might have been stocking the store or working in the cooler, he did not think she could have run the register because he was with her most of the time. He later acknowledged that it could have happened. Holloway verified the work calendar by comparing it with the time cards and the activity reports for the day in question. He later admitted that the clerks had not always signed their activity reports because they were not required to. Although schedule changes were reflected on the time cards, the cards did not all have dates. The date and time could also be changed on the register tape. Because of daylight savings time, Holloway admitted that the time on the machine could be off by an hour. He testified that he had not verified the time on the register tape because he had never had a reason to question it.

Holloway also found a discrepancy in excess of $8,000 between the G.T. and the G.S. between December 9, 1993 and January 7, 1994. On each of the days in question, a portion of or the entire register tape for certain shifts were missing. There was no testimony, however, as to who had worked during those shifts. Based upon the unrecorded sales, Holloway concluded that cash had been removed from the register. He admitted that he was unsure whether the register was “short or over” for each of the days in question. He testified, “The figures were not there. The sales were missing. They were gone.” He later testified that “because we didn’t come out over,” ... “it [the money] went somewhere.” He surmised that “someone rang it up, took the money out, Z’d it and started over again” in the middle of his shift.

Holloway testified that the store had a video camera which was there for the employees’ protection. Although he did not save all of the videotapes which he had recorded, he did save the January 7th videotape in which he noticed several unusual things. First, he observed appellant run a reading on the gas console while Chris was in the cooler. Second, she moved the key in the register and hit the amount tender button after Chris left the store to buy dinner. Although the camera changed angles at that point, Holloway testified that he could hear a register reading being run which lasted between forty and forty-five seconds. He later admitted that he could not tell what type of a reading had been done. Third, the lid was off of the register at one point for no apparent reason. Appellant told Holloway she had pulled the lid out but he did not see a new journal tape indicating that she might have been changing the tape. Thus, he surmised that she had removed the lid to take part of the tape. When he asked her about the register reading and the fact that the gas console had been cleared, she denied that she had touched the register but admitted that she had cleared the gas console to see how much gas she had sold.

Holloway acknowledged that it was not uncommon to have “an over or short” of the total sales amount based upon credit cards, inventory, coupons, cash, house accounts and pay-outs. Despite this fact, however, he had always been able to determine the cause of any accounting discrepancy. Although he denied having ever taken any cash from the register for his own personal use, he admitted that he had sometimes credited credit card sales from one business against the gas at his other business. When he was asked whether this was a common practice, he replied, “I don’t see why not.

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Related

D.F. v. State
721 So. 2d 765 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1998)
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684 So. 2d 298 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1996)

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Bluebook (online)
660 So. 2d 1099, 1995 Fla. App. LEXIS 8993, 1995 WL 502059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/luscomb-v-state-fladistctapp-1995.