State v. Doe

825 P.2d 681, 1992 WL 9663
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJanuary 15, 1992
Docket900159-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 825 P.2d 681 (State v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Doe, 825 P.2d 681, 1992 WL 9663 (Utah Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

825 P.2d 681 (1992)

STATE of Utah, Plaintiff and Appellee,
v.
Doe, Defendant and Appellant.

No. 900159-CA.

Court of Appeals of Utah.

January 15, 1992.

*682 Craig S. Cook, Salt Lake City, for defendant and appellant.

R. Paul Van Dam and Christine Soltis, Salt Lake City, for plaintiff and appellee.

Before BENCH, P.J., and BILLINGS and ORME, JJ.

OPINION

ORME, Judge:

Defendant Doe appeals his conviction for theft by deception, a second degree felony in violation of Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-405 (1990). Defendant challenges the lower court's denial of his motion for judgment of acquittal, claiming that the State failed to prove essential elements of its prima facie case. Further, defendant argues that there was insufficient evidence to sustain the jury's verdict. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

This case revolves around a series of complex and rather amorphous financial transactions involving the defendant and two banks. Detailed explanations of banking methods and specialized banking terminology pervade the record, and the briefs of both parties pay substantial attention to the interplay of defendant's financial manipulations and the banks' account monitoring practices. However, as the facts crucial to this decision relate primarily to specific representations made by defendant to bank employees, and not to the intricacy of defendant's financial legerdemain, a cursory summary of the key facts will suffice.

In autumn of 1984, defendant managed and controlled two corporations in the Salt Lake area: Consolidated Companies, which was in the debt collection and real estate investment businesses, and Steelport Systems, which was engaged in the carport erection business. Consolidated had maintained its primary bank account at Zions First National Bank since 1981. Steelport had opened an account at First Interstate Bank in the spring of 1984. In September of 1984, eleven checks averaging $12,660 in amount were drawn on the Consolidated account at Zions Bank and deposited into the Steelport account at First Interstate. The transfer of funds from Consolidated to Steelport increased each month thereafter until, in May of 1985, forty-six checks averaging $75,667 were drawn on the Consolidated account. During that same period, Steelport issued almost exactly the same number of checks, in roughly the same amounts, to Consolidated. In total, Consolidated issued $14,367,370 in checks to Steelport in nine and one-half months, which were deposited to Steelport's account at First Interstate, while Steelport issued $14,408,768 in checks to Consolidated, which were deposited to Consolidated's Zions account. It is uncontroverted that neither Consolidated nor Steelport possessed the funds necessary to cover the checks drawn on their accounts.[1] Defendant designed and implemented a scheme through which illusory balances were maintained *683 in the two accounts, by making alternating deposits from each company's account into the account of the other.[2] Further, by continually increasing the number and amount of the checks, defendant was able to inflate the artificial balance in each account.[3]

Successful operation of the scheme required defendant to keep meticulous track of the recorded balances in the two accounts, to carefully calculate the amount of necessary deposits, and to make those deposits at the correct times. Further, because the scheme was designed to take advantage of each bank's pattern of crediting defendant's account as soon as checks were deposited, while the funds represented by those checks were still uncollected, the scheme was dependent upon each bank's consistent observance of that pattern. Due to either breakdowns in defendant's maintenance of the accounts, or a bank's failure to credit an account in the amount of an uncollected check, the scheme did not always work to perfection.

Marva Colby, the manager at the First Interstate bank where Steelport had its account, testified that in December of 1984 she grew concerned because a number of checks deposited into the Steelport account were being returned unpaid, due to insufficient balances in the Consolidated account on which the checks were drawn. Because these checks had been credited to the Steelport account while still uncollected, and defendant had already utilized the credit — either to cover checks written to Consolidated, or to make cash withdrawals — Zion's refusal to honor the checks meant that defendant had utilized funds that did not exist. As a result, an overdraft had developed in the Steelport account. Colby contacted defendant and requested that he provide compensating balances, i.e., collateral in the form of other accounts, to cover the overdraft should it not otherwise be discharged. At that time, defendant informed Ms. Colby he had obtained a $100,000 line of credit from Zions Bank. At trial, Ms. Colby claimed that this representation made her "feel more comfortable *684 about paying checks" on uncollected funds because it caused her to believe that "if there was a problem [defendant] had that line of credit to draw the money from." At trial, the State adduced evidence which, while not wholly unchallenged, would support the conclusion that defendant had no such line of credit. Through conversations with defendant, Ms. Colby was also led to believe, apparently with regard to her periodic decisions whether Consolidated checks presented for deposit should be treated as cash items, that "there was plenty of money" in the Consolidated account.

Finally, in June of 1985, the house of cards collapsed when Zions refused to pay four Consolidated checks, made payable to Steelport and signed by defendant, totaling approximately $300,000. The checks were returned to First Interstate unpaid, whereupon Ms. Colby and her colleagues requested a meeting with defendant. When the dust settled, it was discovered that over the life of the Steelport account only about $288,500 in actual funds had been deposited into the account — all from sources other than Consolidated — while defendant had made approximately $529,600 in withdrawals. The difference between these two amounts, some $241,100, constituted a loss to First Interstate. This loss was attributable to the bank's consistent practice of crediting Steelport's account in the amount of checks issued to Steelport by Consolidated, before the funds represented by those checks were collected from Zions. The State contends that this practice had its genesis in defendant's misrepresentations.[4]

Defendant was originally charged with Communications Fraud under Utah Code Ann. § 76-10-1801 (1990), and Theft under Utah Code Ann. § 76-6-404 (1990). The circuit court dismissed the theft count after a preliminary hearing, but bound defendant over to the district court on the one remaining charge. The district court subsequently dismissed the Communications Fraud charge as violating the Ex Post Facto clause of the federal and Utah Constitutions.[5] The State then filed a new information in circuit court, charging defendant with Theft by Deception, a second degree felony in violation of section 76-6-405.

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Bluebook (online)
825 P.2d 681, 1992 WL 9663, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-doe-utahctapp-1992.