State v. Orth

359 S.E.2d 136, 178 W. Va. 303, 1987 W. Va. LEXIS 576
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 18, 1987
Docket17167
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 359 S.E.2d 136 (State v. Orth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Orth, 359 S.E.2d 136, 178 W. Va. 303, 1987 W. Va. LEXIS 576 (W. Va. 1987).

Opinions

McGRAW, Chief Justice:

This is an appeal by Nancy Orth from her conviction in the Circuit Court of Ohio County on two counts of obtaining money by. means of a worthless check in violation of West Virginia Code § 61-3-39 (1984 Replacement Vol.). Because we find that the recipient of the checks in question had reason to believe the appellant did not have sufficient funds on deposit, the statute is inapplicable, and we reverse.

Following the death of her husband, the appellant began to gamble. She regularly traveled from her Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania home to Wheeling Downs to bet on the dog races. The general manager of the racetrack testified that the appellant became a track veteran and gambled there on almost a daily basis.

Wheeling Downs cashed patron’s checks, utilizing an established procedure which included the availability of a mechanism for verifying with the customer’s bank that sufficient funds were on deposit. The appellant frequently wrote checks at the racetrack in order to have cash for placing bets. Between April 20, 1982 and June 21, 1982 the appellant cashed eleven checks totaling $7350 at Wheeling Downs. Six of those checks, totaling $4800, were returned by the bank for insufficient funds while five checks totaling $2550 cleared the bank. The appellant paid the $4800 to Wheeling Downs, and the general manager decided to continue cashing the appellant’s checks in order to have her continue betting at the track. No limits were placed on the amount of checks the appellant could cash and no one verified the adequacy of the appellant’s bank balance before cashing her checks.

Beginning one month later, between July 26, 1982 and August 9, 1982, the appellant cashed seven checks at the track totaling $5600, all of which were returned by the bank. When the appellant did not make these checks good and stopped frequenting the track, the racetrack obtained warrants for her arrest in December 1982. In August 1983 the appellant returned to the track, where she was arrested.

The appellant signed a waiver of the preliminary hearing after an accommodation was negotiated by the assistant prosecuting attorney for Ohio County, providing for restitution to Wheeling Downs. The agreement was not reduced to writing, but apparently involved the appellant’s promise to repay Wheeling Downs $150 a month in return for the State’s agreement not to seek an indictment so long as payments were made. The appellant made several payments totaling $750 directly to Wheeling Downs. Her last payment was made in April 1984, after which she failed to send any money at all. Wheeling Downs then sought and obtained presentment of the charges to the grand jury, and a seven count indictment was returned on September 11, 1984.

The appellant was tried and found guilty on all seven counts. The circuit court granted the appellant’s post-trial motion for a judgment of acquittal on five of the seven counts, finding that Wheeling Downs had notice that the appellant did not have sufficient funds on deposit to cover the checks involved. The instant appeal is from the conviction on the remaining two counts.

I.

There was no criminal liability at common law for the specific act of making a worthless check, State v. Stout, 142 W.Va. 182, 185, 95 S.E.2d 639, 641 (1956), but the [306]*306Legislature made it a crime in 1911, Chapter 76, Acts of the Legislature, Regular Session, 1911. The current statute is set out in West Virginia Code § 61-3-39, making it unlawful to obtain money or other things of value by means of a worthless check. By its own terms, however, that statute does not apply when the person receiving the check “knows ... or has reason to believe that the drawer did not have on deposit or to his credit with the drawee sufficient funds to insure payment.” W.Va.Code § 61-3-39.

Fraud is the gravamen of the offense proscribed by section .thirty-nine. See State v. McGinnis, 116 W.Va. 473, 181 S.E. 820 (1935). When the payee or holder accepting a check knows there are not sufficient funds on deposit, he cannot be the victim of fraud and, thus, no offense is committed. Under similar statutory provisions, a person who discloses to the payee that there are not currently adequate funds on deposit to cover a check is not guilty of passing a worthless check, because the payee had actual notice of the insufficiency. People v. Poyet, 6 Cal.3d 530, 99 Cal.Rptr. 758, 492 P.2d 1150 (1972); Rigaud v. State, 404 So.2d 791 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1981); People v. Cundiff, 16 Ill.App.3d 267, 305 N.E.2d 735 (1973).

The more difficult question arises when a person receiving a check does not have actual notice of insufficiency but has reason to believe that sufficient funds are not on deposit. Cashing a check at one’s own bank does not normally form the basis for a conviction, 32 Am.Jur.2d False Pretenses § 81 (1982), even though the bank employee accepting the check does not have actual knowledge of the insufficiency. See, e.g. State v. Mullin, 225 N.W.2d 305 (Iowa 1975). Even though the bank did not have on its books an actual insufficiency, a bank official’s knowledge that “something was going on” led to the reversal of the defendant’s conviction for a check kiting scheme in State v. Creachbaum, 24 Ohio App.2d 31, 263 N.E.2d 675 (1970), 28 Ohio St.2d 116, aff'd, 276 N.E.2d 240 (1971). “The injured party in cases of this nature cannot be defrauded by any representation made of a fact he knows or could have known by the exercise of ordinary prudence in using the means at hand to detect the true condition of the account.” Deitle v. State, 363 S.W.2d 939, 940 (Tex.Crim.App.1963).

The record in this case shows that Wheeling Downs had reason to believe that there were insufficient funds in the appellant’s account to cover the checks she wrote in July and August of 1982. As noted earlier, the general manager was aware that the appellant gambled on an almost daily basis; he characterized her as a “big spender” at Wheeling Downs. The general manager testified that, with any customer, if multiple checks totaling thousands of dollars were returned “we’d certainly stop cashing checks.” Just weeks before the period in question here, the appellant had bounced not one but six checks at the track, totaling $4800. Nevertheless, the track cashed more checks for the appellant and then had her arrested when they were returned for insufficient funds.

There is no evidence on the record that the appellant engaged in an elaborate scheme to outwit the track manager or evade the normal check cashing procedures at Wheeling Downs. Her thoughts were simple and full of pathos. “My idea,” she testified, “was that I’m going to be lucky this day and I’m really going to win and I’ll be able to put that money — everything back in the checking account so that no checks will bounce.” This statement is indicative of the lack of rationality which characterized the appellant’s dealings with the track. The behavioral standards articulated in the West Virginia criminal statutes anticipate at least a minimum level of rationality.

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State v. Orth
359 S.E.2d 136 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
359 S.E.2d 136, 178 W. Va. 303, 1987 W. Va. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-orth-wva-1987.