Jay Parker v. State of Arkansas , 2022 Ark. App. 516 ( 2022 )


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  •                                      Cite as 
    2022 Ark. App. 516
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION II
    No. CR-22-83
    Opinion Delivered December   14, 2022
    JAY PARKER
    APPELLANT APPEAL FROM THE SCOTT
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
    V.                                             [NO. 64CV-19-85]
    STATE OF ARKANSAS                               HONORABLE JERRY DON RAMEY,
    APPELLEE JUDGE
    AFFIRMED
    MIKE MURPHY, Judge
    Appellant Jay Parker appeals the verdict of the Scott County jury finding him guilty
    of two counts of theft and one count of cruelty to animals and sentencing him to six years
    in the Arkansas Department of Correction. His arguments on appeal could be generally
    described as challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence and assertions of prejudice due to
    the charging information and an issue with an alternate juror. 1 We affirm.
    At trial, Dr. Robert Cobb, a retired veterinarian, and co-owner of Sprayberry CGC,
    Incorporated (Sprayberry), testified that in December 2017, Sprayberry and Parker entered
    into a cattle-care contract whereby Sprayberry would pay Parker to care for Sprayberry’s cattle.
    The contract contemplated that Sprayberry would entrust 337 bred cows to Parker’s care and
    1
    But for the State’s brief, this case would likely havebeen sent back for rebriefing.
    management. Under the agreement, Sprayberry would pay Parker $425 per cow per year,
    and in turn, Parker would ensure that the needs of the cattle were met. The contract
    specifically provided that Parker’s cattle company “will pay for all feed, water, mineral, labor,
    lick supplements, medicine, dewormer and vaccinations (except for vaccinations given to
    calves at weaning.” Parker was also responsible for supplemental rations as needed to
    maintain a good body condition on all the animals. Calves were to be weaned at five hundred
    pounds and cared for until ready to market at approximately six hundred pounds. The
    agreement further provided that if more than 2 percent of the cattle died, Parker would
    compensate Sprayberry for the loss. Sprayberry was to “be notified in every death loss by
    phone, text, or email.”
    Dr. Cobb testified that in December 2017, Sprayberry shipped 337 healthy bred cows
    to Parker and paid Parker a total of $75,825 for the first year of the contract. He said nothing
    in the contract allowed Parker to sell the cattle. At Parker’s behest, Sprayberry purchased
    ninety-six more cows around March 2018 and compensated Parker for their care as well.
    Around the same time, Sprayberry was getting concerned with the lack of communication
    from Parker. He sent his father-in-law to check on the cows and was told they were not
    looking good and had lost a lot of weight. Sprayberry opted to wean the calves four months
    early. He said he contacted Parker with his concerns about their weight and Parker promised
    to get them more hay and feed. Sprayberry learned the cattle were “declining fast” in October
    2018, so the co-owners decided to move the cattle. When they arrived to move the cattle,
    there were 112 cows, and 257 calves were missing. The remaining animals were weak,
    2
    malnourished, and in very bad shape. Some died during the move. Dr. Cobb said that, in
    total, over 60 percent of the calves and 46 percent of the cows died or were missing.
    Bart Perrier, a special ranger with the Texas and Southwestern Cattle Raisers
    Association, testified that he assisted with a criminal investigation involving Parker.
    Throughout the investigation, he learned Parker had sold eighty-three cattle at livestock
    auctions in Oklahoma and Texas. During an interview with Parker, Parker admitted he had
    sold Sprayberry’s cattle without permission but had used the money from Sprayberry to pay
    personal bills and therefore had no money left over to care for the cattle. Parker admitted
    overgrazing the property. Perrier testified that Parker admitted selling the cattle and
    pocketing the money. A recorded portion of Parker’s statement to Perrier was played for the
    juryin which Parker admitted selling over $72,000 of Sprayberry cattle. He said the physical
    condition of the cattle was due do his poor management. He said that thirty to seventy cows
    had died.
    Officer Billy Black with the Arkansas Department of Agriculture also worked on the
    investigation. He said that through investigating, after accounting for the cattle recovered
    and sold, they presumed 286 animals to be dead. Officer Black visited the pasture where the
    cattle were kept and observed and photographed dead cattle in various stages of
    decomposition. Those photos were entered into evidence. He said the cattle were trying to
    eat cedar trees in order to stay alive; they were not taken care of at all.
    Brenda Abbott, a neighbor, had fifty to sixty cattle on her own property but lost only
    one calf to pneumonia that year. She watched the Sprayberry cattle deteriorating. She said
    3
    she did not have any problems with drought or dry grass but that if there had not been
    enough grass, she would have fed them, provided them hay, or started selling her older
    animals.
    The jury found Parker guilty of two counts of theft of leased, rented, or entrusted
    property with a value of $25,000 or more and one count of cruelty to animals. Parker now
    appeals.
    For the sake of clarity and constitutionality, Parker’s arguments are summarized and
    addressed out of order. We address sufficiency-of-the-evidence questions first because if the
    judgment of conviction is not supported by substantial evidence, an appellant may not be
    tried again under the principle of double jeopardy. Brown v. State, 
    347 Ark. 308
    , 314, 
    65 S.W.3d 394
    , 397–98 (2001). Throughout Parker’s brief, he makes points that tend to go to
    the sufficiency of the evidence. His second point can best be couched as an assertion that
    the circuit court erred in denying his motion for directed verdict due to the existence of a
    contract between the parties that contemplated the acts for which Parker is charged. He
    contends that the charges against him are no more than a civil breach-of-contract issue, and
    are misplaced in a criminal setting. He argues that the the contract supports the position
    that he lacked the requisite mental culpability to support the charges.2
    A motion for a directed verdict is a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence. Akram
    v. State, 
    2018 Ark. App. 504
    , at 1, 
    560 S.W.3d 509
    , 511. In reviewing a challenge to the
    2
    This is a generous summary of Parker’s arguments—not one criminal case was cited
    in his opening brief.
    4
    sufficiency of the evidence, the appellate court views the evidence in the light most favorable
    to the State and considers only the evidence that supports the verdict. Collins v. State, 
    2021 Ark. 35
    , at 4, 
    617 S.W.3d 701
    , 704. We will affirm the conviction if substantial evidence
    supports it. Shelton v. State, 
    2017 Ark. App. 195
    , at 3, 
    517 S.W.3d 461
    , 463. Substantial
    evidence is that which is of sufficient force and character that it will, with reasonable
    certainty, compel a conclusion without resort to speculation or conjecture.
    Additionally, circumstantial evidence may provide a basis to support a conviction, but
    it must be consistent with the defendant’s guilt and inconsistent with any other reasonable
    hypothesis. Collins, 
    2021 Ark. 35
    , at 4, 617 S.W.3d at 704. Whether the evidence excludes
    every other reasonable hypothesis is for the jury to decide. Dunn v. State, 
    371 Ark. 140
    , 142,
    
    264 S.W.3d 504
    , 506 (2007). A criminal defendant’s intent or state of mind is seldom
    capable of proof by direct evidence and usually must be inferred from the circumstances of
    the crime. Drennan v. State, 
    2018 Ark. 328
    , at 7, 
    559 S.W.3d 262
    , 266. Further, the weight
    of the evidence and the credibility of the witnesses are matters for the fact-finder. Jimmerson
    v. State, 
    2019 Ark. App. 578
    , at 6–7, 
    590 S.W.3d 764
    , 769.
    A person commits the offense of theft of leased, rented, or entrusted property if he
    [p]urposely, with a purpose to defraud, or by false pretense takes, carries, leads, drives
    away, destroys, sells, secretes, converts, or appropriates in any wrongful manner any
    personal property of another person that is leased, rented, or entrusted to the actor;
    or [f]alsely reports of his . . . wealth or mercantile credit and by false report
    fraudulently obtains possession of personal property or the labor or service of another
    person.
    
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-36-115
    (a)(1)–(2) (Supp. 2021).
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    “A person acts purposely with respect to his or her conduct or the result of his or her
    conduct when it is the person’s conscious object to engage in conduct of that nature or to
    cause the result.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-2-202
    (1) (Repl. 2013). The offense of theft of leased,
    rented, or entrusted property is a Class B felony if the value of the property, service, or labor
    is $25,000 or more.” 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-36-115
    (g)(1)(A).
    A person commits the offense of cruelty to animals if he knowingly subjects any
    animal to cruel mistreatment, kills or injures any animal owned by another person without
    legal privilege or consent of the owner, abandons an animal at a location without providing
    for the animal’s continued care, fails to supply an animal in his custody with a sufficient
    quantity of wholesome food and water, fails to provide an animal in his custody with
    adequate shelter that is consistent with the breed, species, and type of animal, or carries or
    causes to be carried in or upon any motorized vehicle or boat an animal in a cruel or
    inhumane manner. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-62-103
    (a) (Repl. 2016). A person acts knowingly
    with respect to his conduct or the attendant circumstances when he is aware that his conduct
    is of that nature or that the attendant circumstances exist; or when he is aware that it is
    practically certain that his conduct will cause the result. 
    Ark. Code Ann. § 5-2-202
    (2).
    Substantial evidence supports Parker’s convictions for both theft of leased, rented, or
    entrusted property and cruelty to animals. Parker admitted that Sprayberry had entrusted
    him with its cattle and that Sprayberry also had entrusted him with money to care for the
    cattle—nearly $80,000—before the cattle even arrived at his property. He also admitted that
    6
    he knew he was supposed to use that money to feed and care for Sprayberry’s cattle but did
    not.
    Additionally, he admitted that he did not have Sprayberry’s permission to sell the
    cattle, but he sold the cattle anyway, beginning only a month after he had misappropriated
    the nearly $80,000 Sprayberry had entrusted to him, upfront, to care for the cattle because
    he needed money. Moreover, on the same day Parker sold some of Sprayberry’s cattle because
    he had no money to feed them, he falsely stated to Sprayberry that he could handle more
    cattle, deceptively convincing Sprayberry to give him even more money to purchase and care
    for more cows. Parker further admitted selling over $72,000 of Sprayberry cattle without
    permission.
    Parker insists the contract between him and Sprayberry dictates the outcome of his
    case. He contends that his behavior was contemplated under the contract and, at most, there
    was a civil issue between the parties. That, however, was for the jury to determine. Whether
    the evidence excludes every other reasonable hypothesis is for the jury to decide. Dunn, supra.
    The trier of fact is free to believe all or part of any witness’s testimony and may resolve
    questions of inconsistent evidence. Colen v. State, 
    2022 Ark. App. 148
    , at 5–6, 
    643 S.W.3d 274
    , 279.
    Evidence also supports the cruelty-to-animals offense. Parker argues that because the
    State did not test the bones, the evidence could not conclusively point to him as the cause
    of the animals’ death. However, Dr. Cobb said that when he went to retrieve the cattle, the
    ones that were still alive were weak, malnourished, and in very bad shape. Some died while
    7
    being relocated. Parker testified that the physical condition of the cattle was due to his poor
    management and thirty to seventy cows died. Parker, at a minimum, knowingly failed to
    provide sufficient food and water for the animals in his custody.
    Parker’s remaining two arguments are procedural in nature. Of the two, the first was
    that he was not “charged under the appropriate section” of the theft-of-property statute. He
    says that the offense with which he was charged “created bias.” Appellants, however, do not
    dictate the charges filed against them. Such authority belongs solely to the prosecutor. Ark.
    Const. amend. 21, § 1; Simpson v. State, 
    310 Ark. 493
    , 497, 
    837 S.W.2d 475
    , 478 (1992). To
    the extent his argument suggests the jury should have been instructed on the lesser-included
    offenses, Parker did not ask for or proffer any jury instructions on the matter. Williams v.
    State, 
    2017 Ark. App. 198
    , at 8, 
    517 S.W.3d 446
    , 450–51. In Williams, we wrote:
    [I]t is well established that one requesting a jury instruction must prepare and submit
    to the court a correct instruction, and where he fails to do so, he is in no position to
    argue on appeal that the request should have been granted. The failure to
    proffer . . . the proposed instruction precludes this court from considering the issue
    on appeal. Appellant never obtained a ruling on this jury instruction issue and failed
    to proffer the jury instruction, therefore, this court is precluded from hearing this
    argument.
    Parker’s final procedural argument is that he was prejudiced by the circuit court’s
    alternate-juror substitution after it released one juror for medical reasons during the jury’s
    deliberations. He claims the jury failed to follow the circuit court’s instructions “to start
    deliberations anew” after the substitution. Parker did not object to the alternate-juror
    substitution, nor did he raise any argument regarding the jury’s alleged failure to follow the
    8
    circuit court’s instructions.He did not move for a new trial; thus, this issue is not preserved
    for review. See, e.g., Carter v. State, 
    324 Ark. 395
    , 403–04, 
    921 S.W.2d 924
    , 928 (1996).
    Affirmed.
    ABRAMSON and GLADWIN, JJ., agree.
    Caddell Reynolds, P.A., by: Blake A. Ray, for appellant.
    Leslie Rutledge, Att’y Gen., by: Rachel Kemp, Sr. Ass’t Att’y Gen., for appellee.
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