Opinion
No. 02-08-341-CR
Delivered: February 25, 2010. DO NOT PUBLISH. Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b).
Appealed from Criminal District Court No. 4 of Tarrant County.
PANEL: WALKER, MCCOY, and MEIER, JJ.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4.
I. INTRODUCTION
Appellant Lawrence Samuel Jr. appeals his conviction for forgery. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 32.21 (Vernon Supp. 2009). In six points, Samuel argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain his conviction and that the trial court erred by denying his motion to suppress his statement made to police. We will affirm.II. BACKGROUND
In January 2007, Panthea Christakis went to Jackson Hewitt, located in a Wal Mart in Arlington, Texas, to have her income taxes prepared. Christakis's tax refund totaled almost $3000. The Jackson Hewitt representative who prepared Christakis's tax return told her that her check would be available in about eight business days. The representative also told Christakis that she would need to return in order to pick up her check. According to Christakis, over two weeks passed and no one from Jackson Hewitt contacted her. Christakis repeatedly called to inquire about her check. At first, Jackson-Hewitt's representatives explained that Christakis's check had not arrived, but later they informed her that her check had been delayed because of a misspelling and that she would need to come back and amend her paperwork in order to receive her check. But before Christakis could return, she received a letter from a bank explaining that she had cashed the check and that she owed bank fees. Confused, Christakis called Jackson Hewitt multiple times and explained to numerous representatives that she had never received her check. Eventually, on March 16, 2007, Jackson Hewitt's general manager, Donald Maceachran, called Christakis and told her that he would print her a new check within twenty four hours. Christakis, however, did not receive a check until late March 2007. Christakis testified that she had never authorized anyone to cash the first check and that she had never seen Samuel before the day she testified at trial. Maceachran testified that he first learned sometime in February 2007 that Christakis had not received her check. According to Maceachran, his office manager called him concerned that a check had been printed for Christakis but the check could not be located. Maceachran said that he did not remember whether he was ever aware that the first check might have had a misspelling on it, but he was initially unable to locate the first check when it was brought to his attention that Christakis had not received it. Maceachran testified that the original check would have been printed at the branch where Samuel worked and that all employees at that branch would have had access to Christakis's check. He also said that if Christakis had picked up the check, there should have been a photocopy of her identification and a sheet with her signature indicating that she had picked up her check, but that neither of these items were found in her file. Maceachran said that after he learned the check was missing, he called an employee meeting which Samuel attended. Maceachran stated that he had each employee including Samuel write down what they knew about the missing check. By Maceachran's account, Samuel responded that he "had never seen the check and had nothing to do with the disappearance of the check." Maceachran then called Jackson-Hewitt's bank in an effort to get a reprint of the check and learned that the first check had in fact been cashed. Maceachran investigated. The bank faxed Maceachran a copy of the negotiated check, and he learned that the check had been cashed at a convenience store in Fort Worth. Maceachran went to the store and learned that whoever cashed the check had presented Samuel's identification along with the check. Maceachran also learned that the negotiated check also contained Samuel's thumbprint on it. Maceachran said that he fired Samuel shortly after learning these things. According to Maceachran, his files indicated that he fired Samuel on February 27, 2007. Maceachran identified Samuel at trial as the man he fired. Maceachran also contacted the Arlington Police Department. Abdul Wafayee, the owner of the convenience store where the first check was negotiated, testified at trial. Wafayee said that his store was a combination gas station, grocery store, and check cashing store. According to Wafayee, whenever a check is cashed for more than $500, he makes a photocopy of the check, a photocopy of the driver license of the person who is cashing the check, and the right thumbprint of the person cashing the check. Wafayee said that he was familiar with Samuel because Samuel was a routine customer. He said that on the night the check was cashed, Samuel came to the store and presented the check, his driver license, and his business card. Wafayee also testified that Samuel came in with a file and explained that he was cashing the check for one of his clients. Originally, Wafayee testified that it was Samuel who signed the back of the check with the signature "P. Christakis," but later Wafayee said that he did not remember whether the check was signed in his presence or prior to the check being presented to him. When asked again by the State whether Samuel signed the check, Wafayee said that he was "positive" that Samuel signed the check in his presence. But when defense counsel asked again who signed the check, Wafayee said both that his testimony was that Samuel had signed the check and also that he did not remember who signed the check. Wafayee admitted that English is not his "first language." Wafayee said that he cashed the check because Samuel "works for the tax office, I trusted him. He had [a] business card." According to Wafayee, he could not remember whether Samuel had come in by himself or with a woman and that if Samuel had come in with a woman, he did not remember what she looked like. Wafayee also said that he did not remember telling the police that Samuel had come in alone to cash the check. The State then called Arlington Police Detective Darren McMichael to the stand. The court held a motion to suppress hearing outside the presence of the jury. Samuel argued that the statement he made to McMichael during McMichael's investigation should be suppressed because Samuel believed he was in custody after McMichael read a card to Samuel that contained Miranda warnings. Specifically, Samuel argued that reading Miranda warnings to an individual who is not in custody is "inappropriate" because it would lead someone to "believe that, in fact, they were in custody." Samuel also contended at the hearing that he was not challenging the voluntariness of his statements nor was he alleging that McMichael "did anything uncordial or coercive in obtaining [Samuel's] statement." At the hearing, McMichael testified that during his investigation in early April 2007 he called Samuel and asked him "to voluntar[ily] come in and give a statement regarding the incident." McMichael said that Samuel came to the station on his own and that no one went and picked him up and brought him to the station. After Samuel arrived, McMichael informed Samuel that he was not under arrest, that "he was there voluntarily[,] and [that] he could leave at any time." McMichael said that it was the Arlington Police Department's policy to read a "city-issued green Miranda card" to anyone who was being interviewed. The State introduced into evidence a card bearing Miranda warnings that has a line drawn diagonally across the text and a signature. McMichael said that policy dictated that he read the card and have any interviewee sign a diagonal line drawn on the card after the warnings are read to indicate the interviewee waived those rights. According to McMichael, the signature on the green card was Samuel's and the signature indicated that proper policy had been followed. McMichael testified that he made it clear to Samuel that he was free to leave. He also testified that Samuel was not restrained in any way, there was no warrant for Samuel's arrest, Samuel was the closest to the door in the interview room, and there were no other officers in the room with them. McMichael recalled that after he confronted Samuel with evidence that Christakis's check had been cashed by someone using Samuel's identification, Samuel explained that "a woman had come and approached him about having difficulties cashing the check because there was a misspelling of her name." After he was approached, Samuel explained that he took the check to a convenience store along with the woman and helped her cash the check. McMichael asked Samuel to describe the woman. After Samuel gave a description of the alleged woman, McMichael challenged Samuel by explaining that he "had factual evidence [that McMichael] knew the actual correct answers to and advised him that . . . the answers he was giving me were not the fact." McMichael said that Samuel immediately asked if there was something he could do "to make this go away." According to McMichael, Samuel even offered to pay the money that was "taken from the check [if] this [would] go away." McMichael responded that the victim was adamant about prosecuting. At this time, by McMichael's account, Samuel stated that he "didn't want to talk much more about the case." McMichael said that he then informed Samuel that he would make note in his report of his decision to conclude the interview. When asked what happened next, McMichael said:Well, as I'm wrapping up my notes and everything that I had on the table, I told him that I said, [Samuel], I said, there are reasons that people make decisions that they do, and I said, sometimes people opt for bad decisions. And, at that point, he put his hands in his head and said, you hit the nail on the head. And so we got up and started to proceed out of the interview room and down the hallway to exit the police station.McMichael said that as they walked toward the exit, Samuel said that the pressures of money had gotten to him, that he had cashed the check because he needed money to pay bills, and that no one had accompanied him to the convenience store to cash the check. McMichael said that the interview lasted "[a]pproximately 30 to 40 minutes" and that after Samuel made these statements to him, Samuel left the police station. McMichael also said that he did not record the interview because of technical difficulties. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court overruled Samuel's objection and said, "I'm going to find that [Samuel] was not in custody when he made the statement." McMichael then testified before the jury. McMichael retold many of the same things he had already said during the hearing. He also detailed his investigation and how it led him to Samuel. McMichael said that he interviewed Wafayee and Wafayee had indicated that Samuel was alone when he cashed the check and that Samuel was the person who signed the check. In addition, McMichael said that during his investigation Christakis signed a forgery affidavit which indicated that she was not the person who cashed the check and that she had not benefitted from the check being cashed in any way. McMichael also said that Christakis was interested in having the person who cashed the check prosecuted. Samuel testified in his own defense. According to Samuel, a coworker had brought his attention to a check with a misspelling of Christakis's name on it in January 2007. Samuel said the coworker laughed about the misspelling made by another coworker who frequently made mistakes. Samuel said that sometime in "mid February" a woman came to his Jackson-Hewitt booth claiming to be Christakis. Samuel said that it was late, "about 9:00." Samuel described the woman as crying because her check had a misprint on it, and Samuel said she claimed that she was unable to cash her check. Samuel said that when she showed him the check, he was already familiar with it because of the coworker who had previously pointed it out to him. Samuel testified that he told the woman that he could help her cash her check by taking her to a convenience store and that he felt compelled to do so because he knew of the misspelling and he knew that people who come to Jackson-Hewitt are typically lower income individuals. Samuel stated that the woman presented an ID to him, but that he did not look at it closely because of his familiarity with the check. According to Samuel, the woman followed him in a separate car to Wafayee's convenience store, where they both went in and presented the check to Wafayee, and he showed Wafayee his ID. Samuel said that the woman who brought the check to him was standing next to him in the convenience store while Wafayee processed the check. Samuel said that after he cashed the check, "I gave her the money." Samuel testified that after he gave her the money, she thanked him, they went their separate ways, and he never saw her again. Samuel also said that he was never fired from Jackson-Hewitt; rather, he "got another job." Samuel said that Christakis, who had testified earlier, was not the woman who came to him asking for help. Samuel also testified to his account of the interview with McMichael. Samuel said that McMichael called him in late March. According to Samuel, he thought that he was being interviewed about a scanner that was missing from Jackson-Hewitt. When McMichael asked him about the check, Samuel said that he told him that he had helped a woman cash a check that had a misspelled name on it. Samuel denied ever telling McMichael that he had cashed the check alone. Samuel also denied ever signing the check. Samuel claimed that the check was already signed when it was received by him. Samuel said that McMichael claimed to have a videotape of him cashing the check. Samuel admitted that he told McMichael that he was willing to pay back whatever money Jackson-Hewitt might have lost because of his actions but that he had offered to do so because he believed he had made a mistake helping a person, not because he had committed a crime. Samuel said that although he was intimidated by McMichael because McMichael is "a pretty big guy" he left the police station after the interview. Samuel denied ever telling McMichael that he had cashed the check alone because of money pressures. After closing arguments, the jury retired to deliberate. The jury found Samuel guilty and assessed punishment as six years' confinement. This appeal followed.