Woodfork v. State
This text of 377 So. 2d 912 (Woodfork v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Grover WOODFORK
v.
STATE of Mississippi.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*913 Fraiser, Burgoon, Henson & Abraham, James W. Burgoon, Jr., Greenwood, for appellant.
A.F. Summer, Atty. Gen. by Catherine Walker Underwood, Sp. Asst. Atty. Gen., Jackson, for appellee.
Before ROBERTSON, LEE and BOWLING, JJ.
ROBERTSON, Presiding Justice, for the Court:
Grover Woodfork was indicted, tried and convicted in the Circuit Court of Leflore County for the crime of obtaining money by false pretenses from Rosie Lee Gibson on March 31, 1978. He was sentenced to serve 2 years with the State Department of Corrections, with credit for time served in the Leflore County jail.
His four assignments of error can be summed up in these three questions:
I. Did the indictment fail to allege ownership of the money and fail to set forth a representation as to an existing fact or past event?
II. Did the trial court err in refusing to grant the appellant's motion for directed verdict?
III. Did the trial court err in refusing a peremptory instruction and motion for new trial, and was the verdict against the overwhelming weight of the evidence?
I.
We are of the opinion that the trial court was correct in overruling the demurrer to the indictment. There was sufficient language *914 in the indictment alleging ownership of the $313 by Rosie Lee Gibson, and that she had the money in her possession and turned it over to Woodfork because of his false representations to her.
This Court said in Westmoreland v. State, 246 So.2d 487 (Miss. 1971):
"The requirements of specificity with respect to allegation of ownership demand neither a deraignment of title nor a statement in `direct terms' showing perfect title where ownership of the money or property obtained reasonably appears from the whole indictment and there is nothing in the indictment to support or suggest any other reasonable conclusion." 246 So.2d at 489-90.
II.
Appellant contends that a directed verdict should have been granted because of a material variance between the indictment and the evidence adduced and because the state failed to prove an intent to defraud.
Although there probably is some merit in these grounds, the appellant has failed to properly preserve these errors for appeal. This Court has consistently held that an appellant on appeal cannot assign as error the overruling of a motion for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of the State's case when the appellant proceeds on the overruling of his motion to introduce evidence in his own behalf. Rich v. State, 322 So.2d 468 (Miss. 1975); Anselmo v. State, 312 So.2d 712 (Miss. 1975).
In the case at bar, the appellant testified in his own behalf after the court overruled his motion for a directed verdict.
III.
The principal evidence against Woodfork was the testimony of Rosie Lee Gibson, a social security recipient, and Carl McLean, Woodfork's supervisor at the social security office in Greenwood.
Woodfork testified in his own behalf at the trial, and Alma Gardner Taylor, a co-worker at the Greenwood social security office, testified for the defense at the hearing on the motion for a new trial.
Rosie Lee Gibson had been drawing social security benefits for about a year when in February, 1978, she received a routine questionnaire from the Social Security Administration. She completed the questionnaire and mailed it back, where it was examined by Grover Woodfork, a claims representative for the social security office in Greenwood.
Woodfork's job with the social security office was to evaluate these questionnaires, called redeterminations, to see if a change in status required an increase or decrease in supplemental security income. He correctly determined that Ms. Gibson should have been receiving more benefits. Woodfork programmed the redetermination into the computer system to issue a check in Baltimore for retroactive benefits for Ms. Gibson from February, 1977. The redetermination was programmed into the computer on March 17, 1978, and the check was issued on March 23, 1978. Subsequently, upon re-reading and studying the social security regulations, Woodfork thought he had erred in the redetermination; that Ms. Gibson could only receive retroactive benefits from July, 1977, and that the check already programmed to be issued would result in an overpayment.
Ms. Gibson testified that she received a postcard advising her to call Woodfork at the social security office. Woodfork told her she was to get an additional check for retroactive benefits but because of an overpayment, she would have to return $313.00 of it, and she was instructed to call him when she received the check for retroactive benefits.
Woodfork testified that rather than put the correction into the computer, which might not have accepted the reprogramming, and, in any event, would have delayed the check already being processed, he began a manual overpayment file on a Friday afternoon to record the correction. He was out of the office the following week and on his first day back, Ms. Gibson called to tell him she had received and cashed the check. Ms. Gibson, after receiving the *915 check, also received a form letter from the social security office in Baltimore explaining the check. She became suspicious and called the social security office and the police about Woodfork's instructions to return $313.00 to the government. Ms. Gibson agreed to cooperate with the police to set a trap for Woodfork by recording the serial numbers on the money, spraying it with a fluorescent dye, and calling Woodfork to inform him that she had received the check. When she called Woodfork, he went to her home about noon on March 31, 1978, received $315.00 in cash from her, and gave her $2.00 in change. Ms. Gibson testified Woodfork told her he could not give her a receipt then because his receipt book was in Washington, while Woodfork testified he had left his receipt book at the office where he intended to return with the money, purchase a money order to be forwarded to Washington, and mail a receipt to Ms. Gibson. After Woodfork received the money and was about to get in his car, Ms. Gibson gave a pre-arranged signal to hidden police who immediately arrested Woodfork.
Carl McLean, the assistant district manager at the Greenwood social security office and Woodfork's supervisor, testified on the normal procedures for recording and collecting overpayments. He stated that the computer printout did not reflect an overpayment to Ms. Gibson, and that the office is required to give written notice to an overpaid individual rather than verbal notice by telephone. McLean had not heard of the terms "manual overpayment file," or "manual collection of overpayment." He admitted that not all overpayments were programmed through the computer system and that the Greenwood office had a backlog of some 300 cases to be programmed into the computer. Of the 6,200 redeterminations handled in the Greenwood office, numerous overpayments had been made and Woodfork was supposed to collect these. Woodfork in the past had made other cash collections of overpayments and turned them into the office, as had other social security personnel.
At the hearing on the motion for a new trial on the grounds of newly-discovered evidence, Ms.
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