State of Tennessee v. Darren Eugene Fleshman, Alias

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 18, 2014
DocketE2013-00557-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
State of Tennessee v. Darren Eugene Fleshman, Alias, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE February 25, 2014 Session

STATE OF TENNESSEE V. DARREN EUGENE FLESHMAN, ALIAS

Appeal from the Criminal Court of Knox County No. 95808 Steven W. Sword, Judge

No. E2013-00557-CCA-R3-CD - Filed June 18, 2014

Darren Eugene Fleshman, alias1 (“the Defendant”), was convicted of theft of property of at least $10,000 but less than $60,000. Following a sentencing hearing, the trial court sentenced the Defendant to four years, suspended to supervised probation, and ordered him to pay restitution in the amount of $42,815.93. On appeal, the Defendant challenges the following: the trial court’s interpretation of the definition of “owner” under Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-11-106(a)(26) (2006); the sufficiency of the evidence at trial; and the amount of restitution imposed by the trial court. After a thorough review of the record and the applicable law, we affirm the Defendant’s conviction. We, however, vacate the trial court’s order of restitution and remand this matter for a new hearing as to the amount and manner of restitution.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Criminal Court Affirmed in Part and Vacated in Part; Remanded

J EFFREY S. B IVINS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which J AMES C URWOOD W ITT, J R., and D. K ELLY T HOMAS, J R., JJ., joined.

Mark E. Stephens (on appeal) and Scott Carpenter, Assistant Public Defender (at trial), Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Darren Eugene Fleshman.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General and Reporter; Benjamin A. Ball, Senior Counsel; Randall Nichols, District Attorney General; and Kenneth F. Irvine, Jr., Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

1 It is the policy of this Court to use the name of the Defendant as written in the indictment. We cannot discern from the record why the indictment indicates that the Defendant’s name is an alias. OPINION

Factual and Procedural Background

The Defendant was indicted on October 27, 2010, on one count of theft of property of at least $10,000 but less than $60,000, a Class C felony. See Tenn. Code Ann. § 39-14- 103, 105(a)(4)(2006). He proceeded to a jury trial on July 23, 2012.

James Lusby testified that he was working as a security officer at Home Federal Bank at the time of the events in question. He identified an account contract showing that the victim, Jean Hobock, had opened an account with the bank in 1995. The Defendant was designated as the beneficiary of that account and therefore was “entitled to the funds payable upon the account holder’s death.” Nobody other than Hobock ever was given authority to make deposits or withdrawals on the account.

Lusby confirmed that the account in question was such that it only generated an account statement once every six months, and he identified two account statements from June 2008 and December 2008. As with the account contract, the June 2008 account statement listed Jean Hobock as the owner of the account and the Defendant as the account beneficiary. The June 2008 statement listed the value of the account at $43,535.69. The December 2008 statement contained the designation: “Jean F. Hobock or Darren E. Fleshman.” This was contrary to the account contract and the June 2008 statement because the use of “or” on the statement signified “a co-ownership situation.”

Lusby identified a withdrawal receipt signed by the Defendant showing that $5,000 was withdrawn from the account on July 29, 2008. He also identified another withdrawal receipt signed by the Defendant showing that $37,815.93 was withdrawn from the account on August 19, 2008. Of the August 19, 2008 withdrawal, $5,000 was taken in cash, and the remainder was taken in a cashier’s check made out to the Defendant. These two transactions completely emptied the account. Lusby further identified two “Affidavit of Forgery Withdrawal” documents completed by Hobock on November 28, 2008. In those documents, Hobock contested the two withdrawals as unauthorized.

Lusby testified that he began investigating the withdrawals in November 2008 following Hobock’s allegations that the withdrawals were unauthorized. He discovered that “there was a coding error in our data entry department on the address on the account, and when that was done . . . the trustee status was removed from Ms. Hobock, and the appearance was given that [the Defendant] was made co-owner.” As a result of this error, it would have appeared to any teller who referenced the computer information on the account that the Defendant was a co-owner of the account. Pursuant to this discovery, Lusby contacted the

-2- Defendant by phone, explained the error, and “asked him to return the funds.” However, the Defendant refused. According to Lusby, “[The Defendant] wouldn’t divulge any information to me about where the funds were or what he had done with them, no. He said that he had the rights to the money.” As a result of the bank error and the Defendant’s refusal to cooperate, the bank was forced to replace the contested funds in Hobock’s account.

On cross-examination, Lusby explained that the letters “TR,” which stood for trustee and appeared on the June 2008 statement, were erroneously converted to “or,” which appeared on the December 2008 statement. Lusby agreed that the Defendant did not forge the withdrawal slips or present himself to be someone other than himself. Lusby could not remember if the Defendant seemed surprised when Lusby called to discuss the contested withdrawals. He could not recall if anyone sent a letter to the Defendant asking him to return the money. Lusby identified his signature on an affidavit of complaint attached to the arrest warrant in the instant case. Lusby agreed that, once an account owner makes a deposit into an account, the bank “owns the money” but maintains a “debtor/creditor relationship to the person who deposits the money.”

Annie Cox testified that she was working as a teller at the Fountain City branch of Home Federal Bank at the time of the events in question. Shown the documents from the Defendant’s August 19, 2008 withdrawal, Cox identified a notation of the Defendant’s name and driver’s license number as her own handwriting. She testified that such a notation was normal procedure for conducting transactions with any person unfamiliar to the bank. Cox also testified that, on August 19, 2008, the Defendant approached her while she was working at the bank “and wanted to close his account out.” She remembered that the Defendant “wanted some in cash, and the rest was a cashier’s check made out to him.” The Defendant claimed the account was his. She checked the computer records to confirm the Defendant’s ownership of the account and then proceeded to complete the Defendant’s request. She had not dealt with the Defendant either before or after the transaction in question.

On cross-examination, Cox explained that, at the time of the Defendant’s transaction, the actual account contract containing the account owner’s signature was not kept at the Fountain City branch because that is not where the account was opened. Therefore, she could check only the computer data regarding the account and could not view the original documents. Cox testified that “you cannot add someone to an existing account.” Therefore, in order to add an owner to an account “you have to close the account out and reopen with another person.” Cox agreed that, when she conducted the transaction in question, she “acted in an honest belief that [the Defendant] was entitled to those funds.”

At this point in the trial, the Defendant made a motion to limit the anticipated testimony of Jean Hobock.

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