State of Tennessee v. Wayne Boykin

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 26, 2011
DocketW2010-00719-CCA-R3-CD
StatusPublished

This text of State of Tennessee v. Wayne Boykin (State of Tennessee v. Wayne Boykin) 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. Wayne Boykin, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT JACKSON Assigned on Briefs December 7, 2010

STATE OF TENNESSEE v. WAYNE BOYKIN

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Madison County No. 08-375 Roy B. Morgan, Judge

No. W2010-00719-CCA-R3-CD - Filed September 26, 2011

Following a bench trial, the defendant, Wayne Boykin, was convicted of fraudulently using a credit card to obtain goods with a value in excess of $60,000, which is punishable as a Class B felony. The Circuit Court of Madison County sentenced the defendant to ten years incarceration as a Range I, standard offender. On appeal, the defendant maintains that (1) the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction, and (2) his sentence was excessive. After careful review, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

J OHN E VERETT W ILLIAMS, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which T HOMAS T. W OODALL and A LAN E. G LENN, JJ., joined.

Joseph T. Howell, Jackson, Tennessee (on appeal); George Morton Googe, District Public Defender; and Susan Korsnes, Assistant Public Defender (at trial), for the appellant, Wayne Boykin.

Robert E. Cooper, Jr., Attorney General & Reporter; Cameron L. Hyder, Assistant Attorney General; James G. Woodall, District Attorney General; and Jody S. Pickens, Assistant District Attorney General, for the appellee, State of Tennessee.

OPINION

The defendant was convicted of one count of fraudulently using a Fleet One charge card in violation of Tennessee Code Annotated section 39-14-105 (2008), which was provided to him by his former employer, Quality Outdoor Products, while he was a driver for the company. At his trial on September 30, 2008, the defendant conceded that he used the card to make some unauthorized purchases but contested the total amount of the charges for which he was responsible (and, therefore, the severity of the punishment merited by his offense).

During the State’s case-in-chief, Michael Nicolay, the operations manager of Quality Outdoor Products in Jackson, Tennessee, testified that the company employed drivers to transport components to their installation locations across the southeast. Each driver was issued a credit card and was instructed that the card was to be used for business purposes only. Specifically, the card was to be used solely for purposes of purchasing fuel or motor oil for use in the company trucks. The defendant was hired as a truck driver on March 28, 2006, and was issued a Fleet One charge card. At the time the defendant’s card was issued, the company had six Fleet One charge cards labeled Card 1 through Card 6, and the defendant was issued Card 1. Mr. Nicolay stated that, in addition to cautioning the defendant that the charge card was to be used for business purposes only when he first gave the card to the defendant, he again reminded the defendant that the card was to be used to purchase gas and motor oil only at some point later during the defendant’s employment and cautioned the defendant against using the card to purchase any other items, even food.

Mr. Nicolay stated that the defendant’s job was based out of Jackson, Tennessee, and that the defendant made deliveries from that location. Mr. Nicolay further testified that the defendant’s employment was terminated on October 7, 2007, after he was seen by another employee loading company materials into his truck in the middle of the night without authorization. At the time of his termination, the defendant surrendered a copy of the Fleet One charge card that he had been issued.

In March 2008, the company’s accountant contacted Mr. Nicolay about some unusual activity on Card 1. Mr. Nicolay said that he then reviewed the charge card’s records and discovered a multitude of unauthorized charges spanning from April 2006 to March 2008 – well after the defendant’s relationship with the company had been terminated. Many of the charges were for unleaded fuel at the Horizon gas station and the Love’s Travel Stop, both located in Jackson, Tennessee. Mr. Nicolay testified that the company had no gasoline- burning vehicles at its Jackson location. Consequently, Mr. Nicolay concluded that all fuel charges made using Card 1, other than those for diesel fuel, were unauthorized.

Mr. Nicolay stated that soon after the defendant’s termination, some employees at the company’s site in Louisiana notified him that they had lost one of their fuel cards. Mr. Nicolay sent them the defendant’s old card, Card 1, to use until Fleet One could issue them a new card. During the month of October, 2007, while the card was physically located in Louisiana, unauthorized charges continued to accumulate on the account for purchases made in Jackson, Tennessee, and West Memphis, Arkansas. After a few weeks, employees from Louisiana returned the card to the company in Jackson, Tennessee. Since October of 2007,

-2- Mr. Nicolay testified that no company employee had been issued Card 1, and that all charges on the card since that time were unauthorized.

Following his discovery of the unauthorized charge card activity, Mr. Nicolay testified that he contacted the Jackson police and provided them with documentation showing that the unauthorized purchases on the card occurred predominately at the Horizon and Love’s gas stations in Jackson, Tennessee. Both during the ensuing investigation and while on the stand, Mr. Nicolay identified the defendant from a photograph taken at what appeared to be the Love’s Travel Stop in Jackson, dated March 24, 2008. He testified that records reflected that charges were made on Card 1 at the Love’s Travel Stop in the amount of $219.99 on March 24, 2008, and in the amount of $359.98 on March 28, 2008. Mr. Nicolay testified that the amount of the unauthorized charges made on Card 1 totaled $48,250.30 at locations in Madison County, $14,576.96 at locations in Haywood County, and $3,712.53 in miscellaneous counties, including out-of-state transactions in Arkansas and Georgia.

Mr. Ben Moyer was the general manager of the Love’s Travel Stop located in Madison County, Tennessee. He testified that Jackson Police Department Investigator Chad French approached him and requested that he retrieve the store’s video surveillance tapes from March 24 to March 28, 2008, and that he had retrieved and reviewed those tapes. Mr. Moyer identified the defendant as being the subject of two recorded store transactions occurring on March 24 and March 28, 2008. Both transactions involved the purchase of Garmon GPS units. Mr. Moyer testified that the store’s surveillance video taken at 6:17 p.m. on March 24, 2008, showed one of the store’s sales associates selling a GPS unit to the defendant. During this transaction, the defendant swiped a credit card into the store’s electronic reader and typed information such as his mileage and his driver’s license number into a key pad in front of the register. Mr. Moyer testified that this video showed that the defendant signed a sales receipt on this occasion, but he was unable to locate that receipt during a subsequent search of the company’s records.

Mr. Moyer testified that at 12:12 p.m. on March 28, 2008, he served the defendant while working as a cashier at the same location. Mr. Moyer recalled that he sold the defendant two GPS units and that the transaction stuck out in his mind because it was very rare for the store to sell two such units at one time. Mr. Moyer recalled that the defendant paid for the units using a Fleet One charge card from Quality Outdoor Products and signed the receipt. The receipt from this transaction was entered into evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
State of Tennessee v. Wayne Boykin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-tennessee-v-wayne-boykin-tenncrimapp-2011.