State v. Tate

385 N.W.2d 456, 222 Neb. 586, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 944
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 25, 1986
Docket85-669
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 385 N.W.2d 456 (State v. Tate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska 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. Tate, 385 N.W.2d 456, 222 Neb. 586, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 944 (Neb. 1986).

Opinion

Caporale, J.

A jury found defendant, Vivian E. Tate, also known as Vivian E. Johnson, guilty of second degree forgery. She was thereupon so adjudged and thereafter sentenced to imprisonment for a term of not less than 3 nor more than 10 years. Subsequently, she was granted post conviction relief by being permitted to file this appeal on the ground she had been *587 improvidently deprived of her right to a timely direct appeal. Defendant assigns as errors to the court trying her (1) the failure of that court to dismiss the charge at the close of the State’s case and (2) the sentence, claiming it to be excessive and disproportionate. The conviction and sentence being without error, we affirm.

The first assignment of error rests on the premise that since there was insufficient evidence to convict her as of the close of the State’s case, the court trying the matter erred in not dismissing the case pursuant to defendant’s motion at that point in the trial.

The trial evidence adduced by the State establishes that at approximately 10 a.m. on September 9, 1983, a witness saw a man enter the mailbox at the apartment of Ingrid and Del Stites in Bellevue, Nebraska. The box contained a piece of outgoing mail which included checks drawn on the Stites’ account at the First National Bank of Bellevue. This man was then seen joining another man and a woman, who was wearing a bandanna on her head, in a Chevette automobile bearing license No. 1-TR282. The other man was in the driver’s seat of the automobile. The witness reported the incident to the police and provided them the vehicle’s license number.

At approximately 10:30 a.m. a woman wearing a bandanna on her head and driving a Chevette with the partial license No. 1-T attempted to cash a $580 check at one of the drive-in lanes of the First National Bank of Bellevue, which is located approximately 2V2 blocks from the Stites’ apartment. The check was drawn on the account of an Omaha attorney, was payable to the order of Ingrid Stites, and purported to have been endorsed by her. The endorsement also bore the Stites’ account number.

The teller to whom the check was presented considered the presentation to be suspicious and went to a supervisor to discuss the matter. By the time the teller and supervisor returned to the teller’s window, the vehicle and its occupants were gone.

At approximately that same time a Bellevue police officer saw, in the vicinity of the bank, an automobile which bore the license number and otherwise matched the description of the automobile and its occupants, as reported in connection with *588 the event at the Stites’ apartment. The officer pursued the automobile for a short distance and stopped it. He then noticed that the occupants had changed their seating positions. The woman who had been driving was then sitting in the passenger seat, and the man who had been in the right front seat had moved over to the driver’s side. The woman produced identification as Vivian Tate, and while the officer was at the automobile, removed the bandanna from her head and held it in her lap.

A search of the automobile revealed a yellow gymnasium bag containing a check embosser used to imprint amounts on checks, together with several checks belonging to an Omaha attorney on whose account the check presented to the bank was drawn. No one in the automobile claimed ownership of the bag, embosser, or checks.

While a documents examiner could not testify that defendant wrote anything on the check tendered to the bank, he did testify that the amount of the check had been embossed by the same machine which was found in the automobile.

The attorney on whose account the check was drawn testified that a number of checks had been taken from his office, that he had not written his apparent signature on the check, and that he had not authorized anyone else to sign his name to it. Moreover, he did not know Ingrid Stites.

Although no bank employee could identify defendant as the woman presenting the check, the officer who had stopped the automobile identified her as the person who had been the driver when he first saw the vehicle he later stopped.

Defendant contends that the State failed to prove a prima facie case of second degree forgery because there was no testimony positively identifying her as the person who attempted to cash the check, as the owner of the bag or its contents, or as the person who had forged the instrument.

Neb. Rev. Stat. § 28-603(1) (Reissue 1979) provides:

Whoever, with intent to deceive or harm, falsely makes, completes, endorses, alters, or utters any written instrument which is or purports to be, or which is calculated to become or to represent if completed, a written instrument which does or may evidence, create, *589 transfer, terminate, or otherwise affect a legal right, interest, obligation, or status, commits forgery in the second degree.

In State v. Addison, 196 Neb. 768, 246 N.W.2d 213 (1976), we defined the elements of the crime of uttering a forged instrument to be (1) the offering of a forged instrument with the representation by words or acts that it is true and genuine, (2) the knowledge that the same is false, forged, or counterfeited, and (3) the intent to defraud.

It was therefore not necessary that defendant be shown to have been the owner of the check embosser or that she was the one who actually prepared the check which was presented to the bank. It was only necessary to prove that by her acts she offered a forged check as true and genuine, knowing it to be otherwise, with the intent to defraud. Although the evidence is all circumstantial, it was more than sufficient to so establish.

One accused of a crime may be convicted on the basis of circumstantial evidence if, taken as a whole, the evidence establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. The State is not required to disprove every hypothesis but that of guilt. State v. Schott, ante p. 456, 384 N.W.2d 620 (1986); State v. Piskorski, 218 Neb. 543, 357 N.W.2d 206 (1984); State v. Buchanan, 210 Neb. 20, 312 N.W.2d 684 (1981).

A woman wearing a bandanna arrived at the bank, driving the automobile seen at the Stites’ apartment. That woman presented the bank with a check which proved to be forged. While the bank teller pondered over the check, the automobile drove away. A police officer saw it driven by a woman wearing a bandanna, recognized it as the one reported seen at the Stites’ apartment, and stopped it. The automobile contained checks taken from the office of the attorney on whose account the forged check was drawn. The automobile also contained the embosser which imprinted the amount on the forged check.

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Related

State v. Smith
Nebraska Court of Appeals, 2019
State v. Ward
510 N.W.2d 320 (Nebraska Court of Appeals, 1993)
State v. Guida
434 N.W.2d 522 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1989)
State v. Laue
402 N.W.2d 313 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1987)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
385 N.W.2d 456, 222 Neb. 586, 1986 Neb. LEXIS 944, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-tate-neb-1986.