Phillips v. State

553 P.2d 1037, 1976 Wyo. LEXIS 210
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 1976
Docket4566
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 553 P.2d 1037 (Phillips v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. State, 553 P.2d 1037, 1976 Wyo. LEXIS 210 (Wyo. 1976).

Opinion

ARMSTRONG, District Judge, Retired.

Defendant was convicted of forgery under § 6-17, W.S.1957, in Albany County, Wyoming. He seeks reversal on appeal alleging the following errors:

I. The accomplices’ testimony was not corroborated.

2. Insufficient evidence to connect defendant with the commission of the crime.

3. Lack of evidence of intent to commit the crime.

4. Failure of the State to prove the crime was committed in Albany County, Wyoming.

5. Money in possession of defendant when arrested, and retained by police, should be returned to him.

This court finds no merit in the first four assignments of error, but reverses the District Court with respect to the fifth.

Sufficient facts of this case may be shown by a brief abstract of some of the testimony introduced at trial.

Appellant Phillips began the series of events leading to commission of the crime of forgery, by stating he was go1' .rom Colorado to Wyoming to get s - money. Phillips was accompanied by Jesse Hole-man and Mary Domecillo. The trip was made in Holeman’s car. Upon leaving, Phillips made a special point of carrying a check protector with him, stopping in Denver to obtain a paper bag which one of the accomplices observed was the same bag in which he saw the check protector.

When Phillips and his two associates arrived in Casper each of them purchased a part of a total of thirty one-dollar money orders from Buttrey’s Food Store. The manager of the store testified to the sale of thirty one-dollar money orders on the date in question. An employee of the store identified appellant as the first of the three people to make the purchase.

They drove from Casper to Laramie and checked into a motel. Appellant took possession of the thirty money orders that night. Holeman testified he saw the money orders the next morning and noticed that different amounts had been impressed on them by a check protector, the original amount on the order having been bleached off by using Purex and alcohol. He also saw the appellant return the check protector to Holeman’s car.

Domecillo testified that under Phillips’ direction one of the money orders in the amount of $85.00 was filled out by Hole-man and passed by her at the Ideal Discount Store of Laramie. That money order, and twenty*-five others seized incident to the arrest of the three, were identified as being those sold in Casper. . An employer of the discount store identified Domecil-lo as the person who passed the altered $85.00 instrument. Domecillo further swore that the $85.00 she received when she cashed the forged instrument was turned over to Phillips.

Further corroboration came from Dr. James Booker of the State Crime Laboratory. He testified that the money orders had been altered, the new dollar amounts having been impressed by a check protector making an impression identical to that made by the protector seized from Hole-man’s car. He further testified that stains found on Phillips’ trousers were made by the active ingredients of Purex, which lent credence to Holeman’s testimony that it *1040 was one of the agents used by appellant to bleach the original one-dollar amount from the money order.

1. Considering the five alleged errors, from that brief recitation of facts it is clear the testimony of the accomplices was sufficiently corroborated to allow the jury to give full credit to their statements, even though such corroboration may not have been needed.

There is no statute in our state requiring the testimony of an accomplice to be corroborated. The case law states that a conviction may be had upon the uncorroborated testimony of an accomplice. Filbert v. State, Wyo., 436 P.2d 959, (1968); Pike v. State, Wyo., 495 P.2d 1188, (1972); Loddy v. State, Wyo., 502 P.2d 194, (1972). The admonition given in Pike “that such testimony must be most carefully scrutinized and that a jury in a case tried before it must have advice to that end,” was more than adequate in the instruction given to the jury in this case. The instruction given in the case at bar, in fact, charged the jury to receive such testimony “with great caution, and you ought not to convict the Defendant of the crime charged upon the testimony of an accomplice alone, unless it is corroborated by other credible evidence,” tending to show guilt.

Clearly appellant cannot find any prejudice in the trial court’s super-precautionary instruction.

2. In addition to the testimony of the accomplices, there is ample direct and circumstantial evidence for the jury to have connected appellant to the commission of the felony charged. Harris v. State, Wyo. 487 P.2d 800 (1971); Wharton’s Criminal Evidence, 13th edition, § 649.

3. Without again detailing the testimony, the record shows, more than adequately, facts from which the jury could infer beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant had the requisite intent to defraud. State v. Grider, 74 Wyo. 88, 108, 284 P.2d 400, 407 (1955); State v. Jackson, 75 Wyo. 13, 291 P.2d 798, 803 (1953); Jaramillo v. State, Wyo., 517 P.2d 490, 492 (1974).

4. The evidence showed that the alteration and utterance of the forged money orders were accomplished in Laramie, Albany County, Wyoming. The contention that the crime was not proven to have been committed in Albany County, Wyoming, is completely without merit.

5. At the time of his arrest, appellant had in his possession approximately $400.00. This was seized and retained by the police but never introduced into evidence. Before trial the court granted a motion to release enough of the money to purchase suitable clothing for appellant’s appearance in court; $348.00 remained. At the sentencing hearing, appellant moved that the remaining money be transmitted to the penitentiary for his use. That motion was denied on the ground that the court was informed by the county and prosecuting attorney that the money, in his Opinion, was the proceeds of appellant’s unlawful activities and that he had notified the victims. The court thereupon ruled three ways:

(a) That it would hold the money until an action was brought to determine whether it belonged to other persons as a result of crime.
(b) That if it was not so determined, the court would hold the money subject to the right of the State to contend that it should be used for payment of fees incurred for his defense.
(c) “The court believes and will hold at this time that if Mr. Phillips has any money that money should be used for his defense.”

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Bluebook (online)
553 P.2d 1037, 1976 Wyo. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-state-wyo-1976.