State v. Borochov

948 P.2d 604, 86 Haw. 183
CourtHawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 6, 1997
Docket18016
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 948 P.2d 604 (State v. Borochov) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii Intermediate Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Borochov, 948 P.2d 604, 86 Haw. 183 (hawapp 1997).

Opinion

ACOBA, Judge.

We hold that in Hawaii Revised Statutes (HRS) § 708-830(6)(a) (1985) the phrase “whether from the property or its proceeds or from the [defendant’s] own property reserved in equivalent amount” qualifies the defendant’s obligation to make a specified payment or other disposition from property he or she obtained, and, therefore, describes part of the attendant circumstances of the theft offense defined under subsection (6)(a).

Because the indictment in the instant ease charged the theft offense defined under HRS § 708-830(6)(a) but omitted this phrase, the indictment was defective for failing to allege all essential elements of the offense charged. Therefore, we vacate the April 6, 1994 judgment of conviction and sentence imposed on Defendant-Appellant Amir Borochov (Defendant) for theft in the first degree.

I.

A.

On September 4, 1991, Stephen Kinney (Kinney) received an 8.56 carat “round brilliant” diamond for consignment sale from his client and the owner of the diamond, George Williams (Williams). On October 18, 1991, Kinney also received a 5.66 carat “round brilliant” diamond from Williams for consignment sale.

On November 21, 1991, Kinney transferred possession of the diamonds to Defendant, who owned a diamond business known as ABC Diamonds. Defendant had represented that a “David,” later identified as David Zuri-ano (Zuriano), could take the diamonds from Honolulu to Los Angeles to show to Zuri-ano’s “boss” “who had expressed an interest in purchasing the stones.”

Upon receiving the diamonds, Defendant executed and signed an ABC Diamonds pre- *185 printed memorandum form (memorandum) 1 and gave a copy of it to Kinney. The memorandum, which specified it was “from” Kinney, stated the following:

The goods described and valued below are delivered to you in shop condition for EXAMINATION AND INSPECTION ONLY and are not on sale or return or constitute an offer to you to purchase. The goods remain our property subject to our order and shall be returned to us immediately after examination and inspection or on demand and until returned to us and actually received you will take all strict precautions as to the safety and security of all the goods and bear all consequences for loss, theft, damage, or otherwise. You have NO RIGHT OR POWER TO SELL, PLEDGE, HYPOTHECATE, OR DEAL with the goods in any manner whatsoever. If you wish to purchase all or any of such goods, our Invoice or Sale Note will be rendered after mutual agreement as to price and terms of sale thereof.
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Received the above goods in good order on the terms and conditions set out (This is NOT an invoice or bill of sale.) Merchandise described above is on a S[-]day consignment or memo.

(Emphases added.) The memorandum also established the value of the 8.56 carat diamond at $32,000 and the 5.61 2 carat diamond at $25,000.

At trial, Defendant testified that after receiving the diamonds from Kinney, he discovered that Zuriano would be in Hawaii for the weekend. Defendant thus decided to mail the diamonds to Los Angeles via registered mail. Defendant explained that on November 22, 1991, he mailed the diamonds to Meirov Brothers, a Los Angeles jeweler with whom Zuriano was supposedly associated. A xerox copy of the domestic return receipt, the receipt for registered mail, and the post office receipt dated November 22, 1991 to “Meirov Bros.” in Los Angeles, California, were received in evidence. The return receipt showed that it was received on November 27, 1991 and signed by a person whom Defendant believed to be a secretary of Meir-ov Brothers.

Defendant also represented that on November 27, 1991, Zuriano apprised him of someone who was interested in purchasing the diamonds if Meirov Brothers would not buy the stones for $42,000. According to Defendant, Kinney approved the sale.

Kinney, instead, disclaimed any “agreement” to sell the diamonds but admitted knowing of the $42,000 offer. Kinney also related that Williams had agreed to the sale when Kinney first discussed it with him. Williams, however, denied discussing the offer with Kinney and denied approving the sale.

On Friday, November 29, 1991, Defendant issued a check to the order of Kinney Enterprises in the amount of $5000. Kinney asserts that the check was a “good faith” deposit for the diamonds.. Defendant, on the other hand, viewed the check as a “deposit as a down payment.”

Kinney attempted to “cash” the check that day but was unable to do so because of insufficient funds in Defendant’s account. Defendant then suggested Kinney negotiate the cheek on the following Monday, December 2, 1991. Kinney attempted to collect the cheek proceeds on that date, but again was unable to do so because of Defendant’s insufficient account.

After learning that the diamonds were purportedly in Los Angeles, Williams, on or about December 3, 1991, demanded they be *186 returned. Kinney communicated Williams’s demand to Defendant. Defendant notified Kinney that Zuriano would be returning to Honolulu on December 4 and that Zuriano would have the diamonds with him.

However, on December 5, Defendant explained that Zuriano had not returned with the diamonds but with “two business checks for the purchase price that [they] had been negotiating.” Kinney asked to see the checks but Defendant never showed the cheeks to him.

Defendant related that on the evening of December 5, Zuriano presented him a cheek for only $7000 and told him “he had not collected the $42,000 yet,” and that Defendant “would have to buy some time.”

As a “good faith measure,” Defendant offered Kinney the $42,000 on the condition that the money would be returned after the diamonds were received by Williams. Defendant and Kinney agreed to meet at a bank where Defendant would give Kinney the $42,-000. Defendant failed to appear at the designated time.

Kinney requested that Defendant make arrangements for Defendant’s “buyer” to return the diamonds to Williams’s wife at the Beverly Wilshire Hotel in Los Angeles. Under this plan, Williams would meet his wife after he arrived in Los Angeles, retrieve the diamonds from her, “and all [of] this [would] be resolved.” Defendant concurred in these arrangements. On December 6, 1991, Williams went to Los Angeles but never received the diamonds.

Kinney testified that after placing some telephone calls for the purpose of discovering Defendant’s “sources,” he was given the name of Benny Meirov (Meirov). Kinney called Meirov, who in turn advised Kinney that he knew about the diamonds, that Defendant had sold them and had been paid, and that Meirov was not the buyer.

Defendant consented to a conference call between his buyer and Kinney, but the call did not transpire because Defendant was “[un]able to reach” the buyer.

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Bluebook (online)
948 P.2d 604, 86 Haw. 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-borochov-hawapp-1997.