State v. Vinyard
This text of 986 So. 2d 197 (State v. Vinyard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
STATE of Louisiana, Appellee,
v.
Frank R. VINYARD, Jr., Appellant.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*198 Tracy W. Houck, Ruston, for Appellant.
Jerry L. Jones, District Attorney, John M. Ruddick, Neal G. Johnson, Assistant District Attorneys, for Appellee.
Before BROWN, DREW, and MOORE, JJ.
BROWN, Chief Judge.
Defendant, Frank R. Vinyard, Jr., was employed as the facilities engineer at Guide Corporation's Monroe headlight production plant for approximately six years. His convictions and sentences arise out of a common scheme involving numerous bogus or sham purchases defendant facilitated on behalf of his employer from a corporation set up by defendant. Defendant was charged by bill of information with nine counts of felony theft in excess of *199 $500, violations of La. R.S. 14:67, and one count of money laundering in excess of $100,000, a violation of La. R.S. 14:230. According to the indictment, Guide Corporation was defrauded out of $313,274.22 (the total loss charged in the nine felony theft counts). A 12-person jury found defendant guilty of counts four, six, and nine of felony theft in excess of $500 and one count of money laundering in excess of $100,000. Following a presentence investigation, defendant was sentenced to five years imprisonment at hard labor on each count, and the sentences were ordered to run concurrently. A timely filed motion to reconsider sentence was denied and this appeal ensued.
Denial of Motion for Mistrial
Defendant contends that the trial court abused its discretion in failing to grant a mistrial based upon the state's reference to sales tax during its rebuttal closing argument.
Defendant filed a motion in limine to prevent the state from referring to defendant's alleged failure to remit sales taxes to the state as being a crime. After a hearing, it was stipulated that the prosecution would avoid making any reference to the crime of non-remission of sales taxes to the State of Louisiana committed by defendant, the fact that failure to pay sales taxes may be a crime in Louisiana, and that there was a criminal investigation related to defendant's alleged failure to pay sales taxes. The trial court also rendered an oral ruling on the motion in limine, which stated that there shall be no reference by any witness that there was a crime of non-remission of sales taxes to the State of Louisiana that occurred in connection with the charged offenses.
Ironically, defendant's scheme was discovered when the Louisiana Department of Revenue and Taxation conducted a state sales tax audit following the department's inability to verify sales taxes paid by Guide Corporation to defendant's corporation, ASAP Industrial Supply/Technologies, or by ASAP to the department.
During his closing argument on rebuttal, while explaining defendant's theft scheme, the prosecutor set forth a hypothetical situation regarding the sale of a car using the defense attorney as the seller:
Now, ladies and gentlemen, Mr. Cook wants to sell you his vehicle and tells you that the blue book value is worth this and he can get that tomorrow and he's going to sell it for three times the value of what he can actually get it for. And if you paid three times of what it's worth, even if you want to jump around that first part of the steeplechase course and just assume and give him any benefit of the doubt that one item made it there, if you want to go there, then a three hundred and eighty (380) percent profit is a theft over five hundred dollars ($500.00). Two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) worth of sales tax on each one of those items is a theft of over five hundred dollars ($500.00). He never intended to pay it. He just kept padding their price. It wasn't enough to get three hundred and eighty (380) percent. Let's throw a little sales tax in there too.
At that point, defense counsel made a motion for mistrial based upon the state's reference to sales taxes during its closing argument on rebuttal. After hearing arguments, the trial court denied the motion for mistrial, finding that the reference to sales taxes was allowable under La. C.E. Art. 404(B)(1) as "an integral part of the act or transaction that is the subject of the present proceeding" and that there was no question of adequate notice to the defense that the amount of sales taxes would be "called upon to answer" by the trial.
*200 According to defendant, the trial court erred in failing to grant his motion for mistrial based upon the prosecutor's reference to defendant's failure to remit sales taxes collected from the victim to the State of Louisiana during closing arguments. Defendant points out that he was never charged with tax evasion and the state's reference violated La. C.E. Art. 404(B) and La. C. Cr. P. Art. 770(2).
On the other hand, the state notes that during closing arguments, defense counsel repeatedly argued that the evidence showed that the items reflected in the invoices were actually delivered to defendant's employer and thus no crime was committed. On rebuttal, the prosecutor argued that defendant's scheme had multiple aspects, including fraudulent markups of up to 200% to 300% and that sales taxes were part of the invoices that formed the state's case. That is, the amount the victim paid to defendant included the sales taxes. According to the state, the sales taxes comprised a portion of the total amount of the theft, and this theft of sums for sales taxes from Guide Corporation on non-existent sales of merchandise was not other crimes evidence, but direct evidence of the amount of the theft. The reference to sales taxes as part of the transactions was clearly reference to an integral part of the crimes charged.
According to La. C.E. Art. 404(B), evidence of other crimes is inadmissible for the purpose of proving that the defendant acted in conformity with a bad character, but it may be admitted if relevant to a material purpose. In State v. Grant, 41,745 (La.App.2d Cir.04/04/07), 954 So.2d 823, 834-835, writ denied, 97-1193 (La.12/07/07), 969 So.2d 629, the court held:
Evidence of integral acts, or res gestae, is admissible under La. C.E. Art. 404(B)(1) without requiring the state to give Prieur notice or the trial court conducting a Prieur hearing. State v. Boyd, 359 So.2d 931 (La.1978); State v. Mandosia, 36,827 (La.App.2d Cir.04/09/03), 842 So.2d 1252. Evidence of integral acts, or res gestae, is admissible so that evidence may be presented in context of the circumstances:
This court has approved the admission of other crimes evidence when it is related and intertwined with the charged offense to such an extent that the state could not have accurately presented its case without reference to it. In such cases, the purpose served by admission of other crimes evidence is not to depict the defendant as a bad man, but rather to complete the story of the crime on trial by proving its immediate context of happenings near in time and place. (Citations omitted).
Having reviewed the closing arguments and the representations made by the attorneys during the hearing on defendant's motion in limine, we find no abuse of the trial court's discretion in its ruling on this issue.
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986 So. 2d 197, 2008 WL 2265738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-vinyard-lactapp-2008.