Monty Wayne Cain v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 20, 2005
Docket02-03-00381-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Monty Wayne Cain v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                        NO.  2-03-381-CR

MONTY WAYNE CAIN                                                          APPELLANT

                                                   V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                STATE

                                              ------------

           FROM THE 372ND DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

Introduction


Appellant was indicted for theft of a welder and concrete mixer from Home Depot.  He pleaded not guilty and was tried to a jury.  The jury found Appellant guilty, and the trial court sentenced him to fifteen months= confinement.  In two points, Appellant argues that the independent evidence is insufficient to corroborate the accomplice testimony and that the evidence is factually insufficient.  We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

During its case, the State called as witnesses Steve Coffman, a Pro Account Sales Associate at Home Depot; Jason Barker, the store manager; Robert Hood, the loss prevention manager; Corporal Robert Howell of the Fort Worth Police Department; and Joshua Gray, an order puller and Appellant=s accomplice.

Coffman testified that as a Pro Account Sales Associate at the Home Depot in Fort Worth, he works at the Apro desk@ and exclusively assists commercial contractors in placing and filling their orders.  While working in this capacity, Coffman met Appellant and formed a business relationship with him and became the person through whom Appellant would place orders.  Appellant provided Coffman with his credit card number, which was standard; however, Appellant insisted that Coffman not place his credit card number in a file that could be accessed by other employees.  Therefore, Coffman maintained Appellant=s credit card number in a small notebook that he kept in his Home Depot apron.  Coffman kept the notebook in his apron whenever he worked and kept the apron and notebook in a locked drawer when he was not working.


Coffman explained that generally if Appellant wished to add on to a phone order that he had placed when he arrived at the store, Coffman could add the merchandise to the order and ring it up separately.  However, because Appellant=s credit card number was not on file, if Coffman was unavailable and Appellant wished to add to an order, Appellant would have to present his credit card or have a special services associate or manager get into the computer system and find Appellant=s credit card number.

Appellant=s accomplice, Joshua Gray, waived his Fifth Amendment right not to testify as part of a plea bargain agreement.  He stated that he first met Appellant in late November 2002 at the Apro desk@ as Appellant was placing an order with Coffman, and he assisted Appellant with his order.  Gray testified that while he was assisting Appellant with his order, Appellant asked Gray if he had a Ahook up at Home Depot.@  Gray stated that he understood Appellant to be asking whether he could steal from Home Depot, and Gray told Appellant that he could.  Gray stated that Appellant asked him to steal around $100 of lumber to add to the order that he had placed with Coffman.  Gray added the lumber to the cart, and he and Appellant pushed the cart outside.  Appellant did not pay for the additional lumber, but Appellant gave Gray $40 or $50 after they finished loading Appellant=s vehicle.


Gray testified that two or three days later, Appellant returned to the store to pick up an order he had placed and asked Gray to Athrow in some extra air compressors and generators,@ and Gray Awillingly loaded them up for him.@ Gray placed two air compressors, a larger air compressor, and a generator in with Appellant=s order.  Gray stated that Appellant=s orders were typically very large, and it was easy to add merchandise to his orders.  Gray testified that Appellant did not pay for these additional items but gave Gray $200.  Gray also testified that in the beginning of December 2002, he again helped Appellant steal another air compressor. 

Gray testified that he received a phone call from Appellant on Thursday, December 12, 2002, and Appellant told him Ato be ready for Saturday.@  Gray informed another employee, Robbie Harvey, who would also be working that Saturday, to be Aheads-up@ because they might have Asome business to . . . tend to.@ 


Harvey contacted Barker and informed him that Gray had been stealing merchandise with an unidentified customer and they were planning to steal from the store on Saturday.  Barker contacted Hood to alert him to the information he had received from Harvey.  Barker, Hood, and another loss prevention associate, Donnie Hamilton, met early that Saturday morning to devise a surveillance plan.

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Monty Wayne Cain v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monty-wayne-cain-v-state-texapp-2005.