TB v. State
This text of 732 So. 2d 1163 (TB v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
T.B., A Child, Appellant,
v.
STATE of Florida, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.
Nancy A. Daniels, Public Defender; and P. Douglas Brinkmeyer, Assistant Public Defender, Tallahassee, for Appellant.
Robert A. Butterworth, Attorney General; and Giselle Lylen Rivera, Assistant Attorney General, Tallahassee, for Appellee.
BROWNING, J.
The State filed a petition charging T.B., a juvenile, with kidnapping (Count One), trespass of an occupied structure (Count Two), and driving without a valid driver's license (Count Three). After an adjudicatory hearing, the trial court found T.B. guilty in Count One of the lesser included *1164 offense of false imprisonment, not guilty in Count Two, and guilty as charged in Count Three (which offense T.B. admitted). The court adjudicated T.B. delinquent as to the two counts and imposed a Level 2 commitment constituting community control, for an indeterminate term of supervision, with the conditions that T.B. successfully complete the Tallahassee Marine Institute program, write a letter of apology to the victim (Latifah Shareef), and perform 25 hours of community service. The court entered a single disposition order for the two offenses, which are a third-degree felony and a second-degree misdemeanor.
T.B. challenges the proceedings below on the grounds that the lower tribunal reversibly erred by 1) denying his motion for judgment of acquittal and finding him guilty of false imprisonment, under a principal theory, for aiding his brother in the commission of the offense; and 2) failing to specify in the disposition order T.B.'s term of commitment for Count Three. Finding the evidence adduced sufficient to prove that T.B. aided or abetted his brother in committing the crime of false imprisonment, and that T.B. did not have a valid driver's license, we affirm the adjudication of delinquency for Counts One and Three. As the State properly concedes that the order should have specified the term of supervision for the traffic offense in Count Three, we vacate the disposition order and remand with instructions to the trial court to set the commitment term within the maximum allowable statutory period and to enter separate juvenile disposition orders for the separate offenses. A.L.W. v. State, 22 Fla. L. Weekly D2227,___ So.2d, ___, 1997 WL 578660 (Fla. 1st DCA Sept.16, 1997) (a separate disposition order should be entered for each offense), approved, 717 So.2d 913 (Fla.1998); J.M.J. v. State, 22 Fla. L. Weekly D1673, ___ So.2d ___, 1997 WL 369951 (Fla. 1st DCA 1997) (disapproving single orders addressing multiple offenses in juvenile proceedings), approved sub nom. State v. T.M.B., 716 So.2d 269 (Fla.1998); M.S. v. State, 675 So.2d 215 (Fla. 4th DCA 1996) (order committing juvenile to Level 8 program for indeterminate period of time was improper and should have specified a commitment for one year, the maximum allowable sentence for his misdemeanor).
The pertinent statute governing false imprisonment states:
787.02 False imprisonment; false imprisonment of child under age 13, aggravating circumstances.
(1)(a) The term "false imprisonment" means forcibly, by threat, or secretly confining, abducting, imprisoning, or restraining another person without lawful authority and against her or his will
§ 787.02(1)(a), Fla. Stat. (1997). We have explained in previous decisions: "Before an accused may be convicted as an aider and abettor, it must be shown not only that he assisted the actual perpetrator but [also] that he intended to participate in the crime." Horton v. State, 442 So.2d 1064, 1066 (Fla. 1st DCA 1983); Howard v. State, 473 So.2d 841 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985). Such assistance can consist of "doing or saying something that caused, encouraged, assisted or incited the perpetrators to actually commit the crime." C.P.P. v. State, 479 So.2d 858, 859 (Fla. 1st DCA 1985); B.W. v. State, 546 So.2d 29 (Fla. 1st DCA 1989).
At the adjudicatory hearing, the State's first witness, Latifah Shareef, testified that she used to date T.B.'s brother, Venderrick McCray, who fathered her daughter. Latifah had known 15-year-old T.B. for five and one-half years and frequently had invited him to her home. In fact, T.B. had stayed there on some occasions. Around 11:00 P.M. on September 6, 1998, T.B. and his brother appeared uninvited outside Latifah's residence on Shelfer Road. She did not let them in, but as she went to lock the door, T.B. opened the door and came in. When McCray asked to talk to Latifah, he and she went to a back bedroom, where they had a one and one-half hour private conversation about getting back together and going to counseling, *1165 subjects about which they had talked and to which they had agreed in a conversation on a prior day. Meanwhile, T.B. sat down in the front room and watched television. At a break in her conversation with McCray, Latifah came out to the front room and asked T.B. why he had come over to the residence with his brother, to which T.B. replied that he did not know. At some other time late that evening, Latifah acceded to McCray's request to go outside on the step to talk further. When McCray indicated that he wanted to talk somewhere else, Latifah told him that she did not want to do so. According to Latifah, McCray then "told me that he would sleep in my shed and that he was going to kill me." It is undisputed that T.B. was still inside the house and, thus, was not present outside the residence when his brother made these verbal threats to Latifah.
McCray then went inside and told T.B. to go get the car, a brown Buick that was in the parking lot. Latifah was alone with McCray, who then carried her to the automobile and forced her inside the vehicle as T.B. sat at the wheel. Latifah was placed in the front seat between T.B. and his brother. T.B. drove them down the Woodville Highway toward the bike trail, which was five minutes away from Latifah's residence. Latifah testified that during the ride to the bike trail, she asked T.B. to pull over and not to take her anywhere, but McCray told T.B. "to take her." She specifically asked McCray to take her back home where their three-year-old daughter had remained, and where Latifah said she would talk to him. Instead, T.B. kept driving until they reached the dark, isolated bike trail area around 2:00 A.M. Latifah testified that she voluntarily got out of the car at the bike trail, where she and McCray went for a walk while T.B. remained sitting in the car. When Latifah exited the automobile, McCray told her to calm down because he was not going to hurt her. He said he just wanted to get back together with her because of their daughter. Latifah testified that when a deputy pulled up, McCray told T.B. "to run," and T.B. immediately drove away as McCray headed off on foot, leaving Latifah in the woods.
The State's second witness, Deputy Estes, testified that while on routine patrol in a marked vehicle, he was dispatched to Shelfer Road around 2:15 A.M. upon receiving a radio report of two black males having put a black female in a brown, four-door Buick against her will. He drove past a car that met that description at the bike trail two or three miles away from the address where he was heading. As he pulled into the fairly dark area without engaging his blue light, the deputy saw a man and a woman outside the car. The man took off running in the woods as the Buick immediately proceeded northward on the highway. A quarter mile away, Estes spotted the Buick and pulled it over.
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732 So. 2d 1163, 1999 WL 219331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tb-v-state-fladistctapp-1999.