Mildred Griffin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 16, 1999
Docket03-98-00061-CR
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
Mildred Griffin v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-98-00061-CR



Mildred Griffin, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 299TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 0972108, HONORABLE JON N. WISSER, JUDGE PRESIDING



Appellant Mildred Griffin, in a jury trial, was convicted of the offense of passing a forged check. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 32.21 (West 1994 & Supp. 1999). The trial court assessed appellant's punishment at confinement in a state jail facility for two years, suspended imposition of sentence, and placed appellant on community supervision for two years.

Appellant asserts that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the jury's verdict and that inadmissible evidence was admitted. We will overrule appellant's points of error and affirm the trial court's judgment.



Facts

Appellant was a member of and had accounts at the Austin Municipal Federal Credit Union. At about 11:30 a.m. on February 14, 1997, appellant presented a check to a credit union employee for which she requested cash. The check for $2778 was dated February 14, 1997 and was payable to and purportedly indorsed by Leilani Burton. The check had been stolen earlier the same morning. Appellant, testifying in her own defense, asserted that she did not know the check had been stolen and did not know the payee's indorsement on the check had been forged. She testified that her son-in-law, Isaac Jerome Thomas, called her and asked her to meet him at the credit union to assist him in cashing a check. Her son-in-law needed appellant's help because he did not have an account at the credit union and the credit union would not cash the check for him. Appellant testified that on prior occasions, she had helped her son-in-law cash checks, that those checks had all been "good," and that she had no reason to believe that this check was "bad."

Appellant testified that when she presented this check to the credit union employee, she explained to the employee that she had encountered problems in 1993 when she cashed third-party checks. She testified that she asked the credit union employee to determine whether the check she presented was "good" before she indorsed and cashed it because she didn't want to cash a bad check. Appellant testified the credit union employee went to "the back" twice and then told appellant that after she indorsed the check they would cash it but would retain $1560 of the check's proceeds until it cleared. Appellant testified that she agreed to this condition and accepted $1218, which she testified she gave to her son-in-law. She explained to her son-in-law that the credit union would pay the balance of $1560 after the check cleared.

The credit union employee who cashed the check testified that she did not remember appellant asking her to ascertain whether the check was good. The employee only had authority to cash checks up to $500 so she sought and received her supervisor's approval to cash the check. She brought the check back to appellant and appellant indorsed the check in her presence. The employee returned to her supervisor who gave her the cash that she in turn gave to appellant. $1560 was retained by the credit union because appellant was indebted to the credit union. However, it had not been determined at that time how much money appellant owed the credit union.

Appellant testified that about an hour after she gave her son-in-law the money, she received a telephone call from a credit union employee who told her the check she had cashed had been stolen. Appellant then went out and found her son-in-law's car parked at his aunt's house. She went home, called the police, and gave them a description of her son-in-law's car and told them he was the person who gave her the check to cash for him. She testified that when the officers attempted to arrest her son-in law, he escaped.

After the payee of the check, Leilani Burton, was notified that her check had been stolen, she went to the police station. While she was talking to an officer at the police station, the officer received a telephone call from appellant. The police officer handed the phone to Burton. While Burton was being cross-examined by defense counsel, she recounted her telephone conversation with appellant as follows:



Q. Okay. Did they make you aware of who took the check?



A. No.



Q. Okay. Have you ever heard the name Isaac Jerome Thomas before?


A. Yes.


Q. Where have you heard that name?


A. From her (indicating [appellant]).


Q. Okay. So have you spoken to her directly?


A. At the police station when she called. The officer gave me the phone.


Q. Okay. So she called the police station while you were there?




Q. And at that time, did she tell -- the police officer tell you that the person that took the check was Isaac Jerome Davis -- or excuse me, Isaac Jerome Thomas?



MR. COBB: Your Honor, object as to what the police may have told.



MR. TURRO: I'll rephrase the question, Your Honor.



Q. (By Mr. Turro) Okay. Did Ms. Griffin tell you at the time who took the check?



A. She said that her daughter's boyfriend had took -- had made her take the check. That's what she told me.



Q. Made her take the check from where?


A. From where -- that she -- they was together or something and that they had got the check. And she -- she said that he made her cash it.



Q. Okay. So he made her cash the check, but she didn't take the check?


A. I don't know if she took it or not, because I didn't want to talk to her anymore.



Q. Okay. And she didn't have any knowledge at the time -- she didn't tell you she knew the check at the time was not supposed to be his check?



A. No, she just said that she wanted to pay the money back. The officer told her to bring the money back and that he would -- he wouldn't press charges.



Burton was not asked to clarify her testimony by either defense counsel or the prosecutor.

A credit union employee testified that in 1993 appellant, who was a member and had credit union accounts, indorsed and cashed five third-party checks. Appellant received a portion of each check in cash and the remaining portion was credited to her account.

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