State v. McKenney

459 A.2d 1093, 1983 Me. LEXIS 676
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 29, 1983
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 459 A.2d 1093 (State v. McKenney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. McKenney, 459 A.2d 1093, 1983 Me. LEXIS 676 (Me. 1983).

Opinion

GODFREY, Justice.

The defendant, Donna McKenney, appeals her conviction of theft by unauthorized taking or transfer (Class E), 17-A M.R. S.A. § 353 (1983), 1 after a jury-waived trial in Superior Court, Lincoln County. On appeal she argues (1) that there was insufficient evidence to establish her guilt and (2) that the Superior Court erred in refusing to strike hearsay testimony given by a prosecution witness. We affirm the judgment.

The testimony at trial disclosed that on February 10, 1982, at about 2:45 p.m., the defendant and her brother, Robert Creamer, entered Wiscasset Hardware Store. Just before they entered, Blaine Cram, a store employee, had removed a Bearcat model 210 scanner from its box and was beginning to “program” the scanner when he was interrupted by arrival of a customer named Hume, who wanted his television set repaired while he waited. The defendant and Creamer remained in the store for ten to twenty minutes. During that time, they were the only customers in the store except Hume, who remained with Cram in the service area. For all of that time Creamer was looking at television sets in the television area of the store with the assistance of Mitchell Ross, a store salesman.

Moments after the defendant and Creamer left the store Cram discovered that the Bearcat scanner was missing. The defendant had spent much of her visit in the scanner area and was the only customer in that area when the scanner disappeared. *1095 Both Hume and Creamer spent the whole time talking with store employees elsewhere in the store.

*1094 2. As used in this section, “exercises unauthorized control” includes but is not necessarily limited to conduct heretofore defined or known as common law larceny by trespas-sory taking, larceny by conversion, larceny by bailee' and embezzlement.

*1095 The scanner display was on open shelving, set back four to five feet behind a gate with a bell. Neither Cram nor Ross saw the defendant open the gate or heard the bell tinkle. However, the bell is easily muffled, and for a brief time, neither Cram nor Ross could see the defendant when she was near the gate.

The defendant kept her long, loose-fitting winter coat buttoned while she was in the store, although the temperature inside was sixty-eight to seventy degrees. She kept her hands in her coat pockets. When she produced the coat at trial one pocket was torn. She could not remember when the tear occurred.

The scanner itself was about ten to twelve inches long, seven or eight inches deep, and four or five inches high, and it weighed about two pounds. The defendant remained in the store about ten minutes after the short interval when the two employees had lost sight of her. At one point during the ten minutes, she swore at David Stetson, one of the owners of the store, who had been watching her. When she rejoined Creamer in the television area just before the two left, Ross did not notice signs of anything concealed under her coat.

The defendant returned with Creamer and her husband fifteen to thirty minutes later, looking for David Stetson, who had been in the store during the latter part of her first visit. By then, a policeman, Officer Drake, had arrived. The defendant again railed at Stetson. She went outside with Officer Drake, who searched her car with her permission. The scanner was never recovered.

The defendant took the stand and denied any wrongdoing. She said she visited the store, accompanied by her brother, to purchase a television set for her sister and some speakers for herself. She described a bizarre encounter with Stetson fifteen years earlier, for which she said he still held a grudge against her. Stetson denied knowing of any such incident.

The disputed evidentiary ruling came in the middle of the trial while Mitchell Ross was testifying for the state on direct examination. In the course of a long, discursive and partly non-responsive answer to a question by the prosecutor, Ross said that Creamer, the defendant’s brother, had said that he had to “go cash a check and he would be right back to pay — to pick up the TV set.” The following discussion ensued:

Q [PROSECUTOR]: Who is — if I could . ask, who is “he”? Because it may be objectionable.
A The gentleman that was with her, Mr. Creamer.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I would object to anything he said and move to strike.
THE COURT: It would be overruled. She is a named defendant in this matter and it was stated to have been said in her presence.

RosS’s testimony about Creamer’s statement remained immaterial until near the end of the trial, when the defendant took the stand. In cross-examination, the prosecutor asked her several questions about who was going to pay for the television set and by what means. Defendant answered, in effect, that she was going to pay for the set with $2,000 she had in cash on her person, inherited from her mother. The earlier testimony of Ross, that Creamer said he was going out to the bank to get money to pay for the set, had some tendency to impeach defendant’s testimony about her plans to pay for the set. Creamer himself did not testify at the trial.

At the close of the state’s case and again at the close of all evidence, defense counsel moved for a judgment of acquittal. 2 The court denied both motions and found the defendant guilty.

*1096 I. Sufficiency of the evidence

When a conviction is challenged on the ground of insufficiency of the evidence, the Law Court will set the conviction aside only if, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, no rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Van Sickle, 434 A.2d 31, 34 (Me.1981); State v. Theriault, 425 A.2d 986, 988 (Me.1981).

The state’s evidence was circumstantial. As the defendant concedes, a conviction based on circumstantial evidence is not for that reason less conclusive. State v. LeClair, 425 A.2d 182, 184 (Me.1981). Instead, she contends that the evidence was simply inconsistent with her guilt. The opportunity to take the scanner, when both employees lost sight of her, arose early in her visit. She says that a shoplifter would not have lingered in the store another ten minutes, and certainly would not have confronted the store owner, drawing attention to herself. She also emphasizes that store employee Ross saw no sign of anything concealed under her coat.

Nevertheless, the trial court could have rationally found the defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

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Bluebook (online)
459 A.2d 1093, 1983 Me. LEXIS 676, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-mckenney-me-1983.