State v. Hoffer

420 So. 2d 1090
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 18, 1982
Docket82-KA-0067
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 420 So. 2d 1090 (State v. Hoffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Hoffer, 420 So. 2d 1090 (La. 1982).

Opinion

420 So.2d 1090 (1982)

STATE of Louisiana
v.
Louis Ronnie HOFFER.

No. 82-KA-0067.

Supreme Court of Louisiana.

October 18, 1982.

William J. Guste, Jr., Atty. Gen., Barbara Rutledge, Asst. Atty. Gen., J. Nathan Stansbury, Dist. Atty., Michelle Jackson, Asst. Dist. Atty., for plaintiff-appellee.

Stephen K. Peters, Baton Rouge, for defendant-appellant.

DIXON, Chief Justice.

The defendant Louis Ronnie Hoffer was charged by bill of information with the crime of theft of more than five hundred dollars (R.S. 14:67).[1] He was tried by a judge who found him guilty as charged. He was sentenced to two years at hard labor, suspended on the special conditions that he serve six months in the parish jail and that he make full restitution to the victim in the amount of $7400.00 during the term of his two year active probation. The defendant has appealed arguing that the state failed to prove the necessary elements of felony theft beyond a reasonable doubt and that a sentence imposing incarceration for six months on a first offense nonviolent crime was improper without a showing of the reasons therefor.

*1091 The facts in this record reveal that the defendant attended an auto auction in Lafayette on the evening of January 26, 1978. Though the auction was for licensed and bonded automobile dealers only, the defendant was neither licensed nor bonded.

The defendant filled out an application requiring such information as his dealer number, address, credit information, etc. prior to his participating in the auction. A completed application was required of all purchasers who intended to pay for cars by means of bank draft. The application could not be located and was therefore not offered at trial.

The information on the application could not be verified at night because banks and the state offices were closed. Seeing the defendant bidding on cars, the auction owner, Mr. Estillette, approached him and introduced himself. The defendant said that he was Ronnie Hoffer and that he owned Auto City in Baton Rouge. The auction owner then went to other Baton Rouge dealers and inquired about him. They did not know him, but they did know that Auto City had put up a large sign. This satisfied Estillette; he knew that it was against the law to put up a sign without being licensed and bonded.

The defendant successfully bid on fourteen cars, signing bank draft envelopes for each one. He removed the cars from the auction lot a short time after the auction. The cars were placed on the Auto City lot and offered for sale. Depending on their condition, some of the cars were sent to a body shop for reconditioning prior to being placed on the lot.

The draft envelopes containing the titles to the cars were forwarded to the defendant's bank. Of the fourteen drafts, three were paid. The remaining eleven, totaling $7400.00, were returned unpaid, and remained unpaid at the time of trial.

Several of the fourteen cars purchased were sold to customers without titles, a violation of state law for which the defendant was subsequently convicted and fined $50.00. Several other cars were towed to a lot near the office of the attorney representing Auto City where they deteriorated from disuse and were later towed by the police as abandoned. Two or three of the cars could not be located or accounted for by the attorney. The trial judge found that the defendant disposed of all of the cars except one.

The defendant and Silas Musselwhite[2] both testified that the defendant's interest in the lot was sold to Musselwhite prior to the purchases at the auto auction. The defendant's testimony was that the lot was low on cars, and that Musselwhite asked the defendant where cars could be purchased close to Baton Rouge. Defendant knew of the Lafayette Auto Auction; Musselwhite asked him to go to the auction to purchase cars on behalf of the lot. It was the understanding between the defendant and Musselwhite that Musselwhite would be responsible for the drafts when they came in.

After the sale of the lot and the auction, the defendant helped out at the lot selling cars, as Musselwhite was unfamiliar with the car business. Three of the cars were sold. The defendant took the proceeds of the sales to the bank, paid the drafts on those cars, and received the titles for delivery to the purchasers.[3] The remaining drafts were returned unpaid.

*1092 Mr. Estillette contacted the State Department of Public Safety and the district attorney's office. The authorities inspected the lot and sought the business records. Estillette, with the titles to the remaining eleven cars in his hands, induced Musselwhite to write a check for the balance, but refused to deliver the titles until the check cleared. Musselwhite withdrew the funds from the account and the check bounced.

The lot was subsequently closed by the authorities. Other auctioneers who also had not been paid (as the lot could no longer sell cars) picked up their cars remaining on the lot.[4]

R.S. 14:67 was enacted with the purpose of combining the various statutes dealing with larceny, obtaining by false pretenses, and embezzlement. It was thus designed to remove the common law distinctions among the various crimes and to broaden the scope of the statute to include misrepresentations as to future facts as well as past and present facts. State v. Dabbs, 228 La. 960, 84 So.2d 601 (1955). The statute now includes all forms of "... misappropriation or taking of anything of value which belongs to another, either without the consent of the other ... or by means of fraudulent conduct, practices, or representations....".

The trial court found that the defendant misrepresented himself as a licensed and bonded dealer when he participated in an auction for licensed and bonded dealers only. This fact, along with the fact that the drafts were not paid during the time between their signing and the filing of the information, some seventeen months, convinced the trial judge that the requisite element of intent had been shown. The defendant challenges this conclusion of the trial court, contending first that no material misrepresentation was proved and second that a later failure to repay a debt cannot prove intent to defraud since the intent to defraud must exist at the time of the taking.

As the defendant has not admitted, and has expressly denied, any intent not to pay for the automobiles purchased, the prosecution necessarily was forced to prove intent through circumstantial evidence. R.S. 15:445;[5]State v. Duncan, 390 So.2d 859, 861 (La.1980). Where such circumstantial evidence is used, "... in order to convict, it must exclude every reasonable hypothesis of innocence." R.S. 15:438.[6]

Our standard of review in cases where a conviction is challenged based on insufficiency of the evidence is mandated by Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).[7] There the United States Supreme Court determined that, to properly balance the roles of the trier of fact and the reviewing court, the relevant question is "... whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt...." 443 U.S. at 319, 99 S.Ct. at 2789. We must therefore consider whether any rational trier of fact could have found that the evidence of intent, viewed in the light most *1093

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Bluebook (online)
420 So. 2d 1090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hoffer-la-1982.