People v. Stark CA1/1 ( 2015 )


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  • Filed 7/22/15 P. v. Stark CA1/1
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED IN OFFICIAL REPORTS
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION ONE
    THE PEOPLE,
    Plaintiff and Respondent,
    A141131
    v.
    BRUCE ANTHONY STARK,                                               (Lake County
    Super. Ct. No. CR930046A)
    Defendant and Appellant.
    INTRODUCTION
    Defendant Bruce Stark was the pastor of a small church in Lake County. He
    pleaded no contest to grand theft of property from the church over a period of five years.
    He timely appeals from the court’s restitution order insofar as it awards the church
    $11,413.03 for lease payments made by a church member on ATM/credit card equipment
    used in defendant’s water company. We find merit in defendant’s contention. We will
    modify and, as modified, affirm the court’s restitution order, minus the award of
    $11,413.03.
    STATEMENT OF THE CASE
    In August 2012, defendant was charged with one felony count of grand theft of
    money, real property, a van, and electronic equipment, the property of Hilltop Apostolic
    Church, from May 2005 through August 2010. (Pen. Code, § 487, subd. (a).)1 The
    1
    Unless otherwise indicated, all statutory references are to the Penal Code.
    complaint also alleged the value of the property taken, damaged or destroyed exceeded
    $50,000 and that the thefts were not discovered until February 2009. (§§ 12022.6,
    subd. (a), 803, subd. (c).)2
    Defendant pleaded no contest to grand theft, and the loss allegation was dismissed
    with a Harvey waiver. (People v. Harvey (1979) 
    25 Cal. 3d 754
    .) Defendant’s attorney
    stipulated to a factual basis for the plea.3 (People v. West (1970) 
    3 Cal. 3d 595
    .) After
    consideration of the probation report and defendant’s testimony, the court sentenced
    defendant to state prison for three years.
    A hearing to determine restitution was held over four dates in May and June 2014.
    On June 16, 2014, the court issued a written restitution order in the amount of
    $110,478.14. Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal from the restitution order.
    STATEMENT OF THE FACTS 4
    Defendant was pastor of Hilltop Apostolic Community Church from 2002 to 2008.
    At the time defendant was pastor, the church had 10 to 12 members. The church
    subscribed to a tithing obligation. According to the current pastor, tithing is a voluntary
    donation to the church of 10 percent of a member’s income. It is paid by cash or check to
    the church, not to the pastor directly. Defendant believed the tithing was for the “upkeep
    of the priesthood,” and when he needed funds, he could get them from the church account
    because the tithing was deposited into that account. He did not need board approval to do
    2
    Defendant’s wife was also charged in the complaint but is not a party to this appeal.
    3
    The parties stipulated that “between the dates of May 13th, 2005, and August 26th,
    2010, . . . during much of which time Mr. Stark was employed by the Hilltop Epistolic
    [sic] Church in Lower Lake, Mr. Stark stole several items, including real property,
    personal property belonging to the church and to members, and also money, with the
    intent to deprive those persons permanently of said items.”
    4
    The factual summary is drawn from the probation reports filed on February 18 and
    May 15, 2014 in the trial court, and from the evidence adduced at the sentencing and
    restitution hearings.
    2
    that. Defendant paid for personal expenditures, such as his DirecTV bills, out of the
    church’s account.
    About three months after the proceeds of a loan were disbursed to the church’s
    account, Ms. Carol Powell went to the bank at the deacon’s behest because a check had
    bounced. She found out the church had only $15 and change in its account. Ms. Powell
    expected there to be “[a]t least about [$]54 or [$]53,000.” She filed a forgery claim with
    the bank and went to the Clearlake Police Department.
    According to the probation report, on January 10, 2010, church secretary Gloria
    Turner told a Clearlake police detective that while defendant was pastor, he “forged and
    cashed numerous church checks, stole church offerings, mortgaged or put up as collateral
    parcels of land owned by the church and left Clearlake with the church’s van.” He was
    responsible for $54,006.42 missing from the church bank account, had mortgaged 20
    parcels of land owned by the church for $25,000, taken the church van to a multi-church
    gathering in 2007 and failed to return it, absconded with $1,200 in donations made to the
    church at the gathering, and had written checks to himself or family members without the
    express approval of the board of directors, which was required.
    In addition, “the church benefactor, Carol Powell, reported having purchased
    ATM credit card equipment for approximately $11,000 and donated the equipment to the
    church. The ATM credit card equipment was reported missing and being taken by the
    defendant.”
    Gloria Turner provided the probation department with a claim for restitution on
    behalf of the church requesting (1) $91,939 for unauthorized or misappropriated checks,
    (2) $11,413.03 for the amount Carol Powell paid to TimePayment Corporation for the
    ATM/credit card equipment donated to the church, and (3) $25,000 for the total amount
    borrowed against the 20 parcels of land owned by the church, for a total restitution
    amount of $128,352.03.
    3
    With respect to the ATM/credit card equipment, the restitution request submitted
    by the church stated: “Carol Powell is requesting that the $11,413.03 which represents
    money she used to pay off TimePayment Corp be also restored to Hilltop Apostolic
    Community Church as this was Tithe/offering that belonged to the church, however
    Bruce Stark manipulated it into a business called Jamestown Pure Water Co under the
    guise of the Church.” In her victim impact letter to the probation department, Carol
    Powell wrote: “I was deeply hurt by the betrayal of trust of ex-Pastor Bruce Stark. He
    forged my name on countless checks and stole my tithe of money and property to the
    Lord that was supposed to go to [Hilltop Apostolic Community Church]. . . . [¶] . . . [¶]
    I also invested in a business which Stark said would be for Hilltop Apostolic Church in
    which I invested 5 years[’] worth of advanced tithes to help with, which he also
    mismanaged for his own personal gain.”
    Sentencing Hearing
    Defendant testified that under the church’s bylaws, which he produced at the
    hearing, the pastor was not a salaried employee but was entitled to receive the tithing and
    a stipend to pay for one-half of the pastor’s monthly expenses.5 However, by the time he
    became pastor, the church was unable to pay him because it was $157,000 in debt.
    Regarding the commercial cash register, credit card machine and PIN pad,
    defendant testified he eventually found out that Carol Powell had purchased them. He
    put them in his store, Jamestown Pure Water. When he discovered TimePayment
    Corporation was trying to charge the church $10,500 for items he found at Home Depot
    for less than $700, he called the company and told them he did not want them and was
    5
    Defendant also testified Carol Powell and the former pastor drafted the bylaws in 1987.
    However, Powell testified at the restitution hearing she had never seen Exhibit N (the
    bylaws) before.
    4
    sending them back. Defendant produced the UPS shipping order for the three pieces of
    equipment he sent back. 6
    Asked why the church “need[ed] something like that,” defendant responded:
    “[B]ecause I wanted to keep the church, I went and took my cars, a Mercedes and a
    Lexus, and I sold them so that I could have money to buy this business. The church
    didn’t pay for it. I sold my cars.”
    Two weeks later, he found out someone from the company had gotten in touch
    with Carol Powell and told her she had to pay for the machine, but he had already told
    Powell, “Don’t pay them. Have them contact me because I’m sending it back to the
    company because we don’t have that kind of money.”
    Supplemental Probation Report.
    After defendant was sentenced, Ms. Turner submitted additional loss
    documentation and a revised restitution request on the church’s behalf for $144,820.21.
    This total included the amount paid to TimePayment Corporation “for defendant’s
    company Jamestown Pure Water Co. that he paid for using money tithed/offered to
    Hilltop Apostolic Community Church.” The new Summary of Restitution Request
    submitted to the probation department by the church explained that with respect to
    “Jamestown Pure Water Co—Carol Powell and Bruce Stark discussed that Stark wanted
    to open a business for the church to help the church. He wanted Carol and him to
    become partners. . . . She refused but she did offer to pay the lease for banking
    equipment with what she called advanced tithes in the amount of more than $10,000. She
    6
    The shipping order, dated January 29, 2008, reflected that customer “Carol Powell–
    James Town Pure Water” shipped a package weighing 51.32 pounds to TimePayment
    Corporation. The shipping cost was $133.36, and the customer’s signature was “Bruce
    Stark for Carol Powell.” A computerized version of the order listed the contents as “cash
    register, credit card machine w/pinpad.” A barely legible handwritten notation on the
    shipping order lists the contents as one Verifone 3750, a Verifone PIN pad and a Casio
    terminal.
    5
    was made to think this was for the church’s benefit, however later discovered it was all
    about Bruce Stark. The church never saw any of the proceeds from this business and it
    was never discussed with the congregation or Board of Directors. Carol Powell sought
    legal advice from her attorney and was advised to get out of this deal as it appeared Stark
    was either a ‘scammee or a scammer.’ Therefore, she paid off the equipment to keep her
    credit from getting ruined and her good name from being mixed up with Stark. She is
    requesting this money she paid goes back to the church where she originally intended it
    to go. We are requesting the $11,413.03 as restitution back to the church. ([S]ee
    attached copy of receipt.)”
    Six pages of supporting documentation for this request were submitted. The first
    page is titled, “Non Cancellable Commercial Equipment Lease Agreement” and is dated
    November 17, 2007. It shows that Carol Horton Powell, doing business as Jamestown
    Pure Water in Stockton, California, authorized an automatic debit from a business
    checking account No. 3804275026 with Guarantee Bank. The name on the account was
    Jamestown Pure Water. The schedule of payments shows $215 per month for 48 months
    ($10,320). Identifying Ms. Powell as the owner, this document indicates she was the
    only lessee and personally guaranteed the lease. The equipment leased was described as
    one Verifone credit card terminal, one Verifone PIN pad, and one Casio terminal (which,
    a handwritten note states, was “recovered in Stockton”).
    The second page is an invoice from TimePayment Corporation to Jamestown Pure
    Water, indicating a deposit of $7,706.09 was received on November 28, 2007 for the
    three items listed on page 1. The third page is a lease application signed on
    November 17, 2007 by Carol Powell. It indicates the equipment to be leased was for
    Jamestown Pure Water of Stockton, which had been in business for three and one-half
    years. It lists as the guarantor Carol Powell of Clearlake, the “100% owner” of the
    company. The equipment and payments were the same as those listed on page 1.
    6
    The fourth page is a voucher or receipt showing a minimum lease payment of
    $7,706.09 from Carol A. Horton Powell to a dealer, apparently by check. The fifth and
    sixth pages are the terms and conditions of the lease agreement, initialed by Carol Powell.
    Restitution Hearing.
    Defendant testified the equipment at issue was purchased by his business,
    Jamestown Pure Water, for use in the water store. Carol Powell’s connection to the
    business was that she was “the cosignor on it” because his “credit was not very well.”
    The total cost came to “something like [$]10,000 and something.” After he called Powell
    to tell her he was sending the equipment back because it was too expensive, the company
    contacted her and told her they had the machine but still wanted payment for it. Powell
    called him and said she had the machine back; she told him to take it and try to sell it.
    Defendant told her he could not get that kind of money back for it. He picked up the cash
    register from her house and took it back to his water store.
    One Sunday in church, Powell handed him a note, which said: “Pastor, what if
    you wrote a check to me for advanced tithe, I sign it over as a personal loan to you, then I
    would just keep applying tithe and leave your paid back as in whatever tithe that is mine
    is your responsibility. Sister Powell.” The note was introduced into evidence.
    Carol Powell testified she was a lay member of the church. Prior to 2004 she was
    church secretary and a board member. She donated 20 lots of real property to benefit the
    church. She “called it a tithe and ascribed it was for the church.”
    Defendant lied to her when he said only three people needed to sign to get a loan
    against the property because they were being foreclosed upon. In fact, all board members
    needed to authorize a loan for the church. She agreed to authorize the loan because
    defendant told her if the loan was not approved, “we would lose the church.”
    With respect to the water company, defendant approached her to be a business
    partner. She declined. He then said he needed help to get an ATM machine. She
    “understood this was all to benefit the church” and “[t]hat all the money that he would
    7
    make from Jamestown Pure Water would be to help pay for Hilltop Church.” She was
    the cosignor on the contract for an ATM machine owned by TimePayment Corporation.
    She gave the machine to defendant and told him it had to be paid off. He told her there
    was “no way we can—the church can pay you back.” She said okay and defendant took
    the machine. She last remembered seeing it back at the church “as evidence.” A cash
    register was retrieved and returned to the church by Detective Carl Stein.
    Ms. Powell did not know what happened to the ATM machine. As far as
    Ms. Powell and Ms. Turner knew, the ATM machine was never returned to the church.
    Ms. Powell thought she may have sent it back to the company. Ms. Powell agreed she
    did tell defendant he could take that machine after it was returned to her by the seller.
    Ms. Powell ended up paying off the entire amount of $11,000 because she was
    “equally liable for the total amount and could not rescind the contract. This was a
    noncancellable contract.” If she had not paid, she would have been sued. No proceeds
    from the water business were returned to the church, to her knowledge. Nor was the
    business venture ever approved by the board.
    Ms. Powell recognized the letter she wrote to defendant about the loan/check/tithe
    arrangement to pay for the ATM machine. She explained: “Pastor Stark came to me. He
    wanted help to get the ATM machine and to get the business going. This is only a
    proposal but was never anything further than that. Instead, what happened was I signed
    as a cosignor for the ATM machine. This didn’t even make any sense to me when I read
    it. And I realized that’s kind of silly.”
    Defendant maintained there was no separate ATM machine. The TimePayment
    Corporation equipment consisted of a cash register, a Casio connector to the cash
    register, and a PIN pad. Those three items were returned to Carol Powell. She gave him
    back the cash register, which Detective Stein recovered. After conferring with audience
    members off the record, the prosecutor represented to the court there were two machines,
    one of which was a cash register and another which had ATM capability, but the
    8
    audience members were not sure if it was a “straight-up A.T.M. machine or if it was an
    A.T.M. card reading machine.” They did not gain possession of the second machine.
    The prosecutor argued defendant should have to pay the entire amount, even
    though one machine was returned, stating: “Well, for what it’s worth, neither of these
    machines were machines that were asked for by the church itself. These were ostensibly
    for Mr. Stark’s business that he was starting up, which he asked Ms. Powell to provide
    funding for. So, she ended up having to pay for those machines, because she was in
    breach of a contract if she didn’t.”
    The Trial Court’s Restitution Order.
    The court ordered defendant to pay the church $110,478.14 in restitution,
    disallowing $34,342.07 of the church’s claim. Specifically, the court reviewed the
    checks proffered by the church as evidence of $91,024.41 in unauthorized expenditures
    and disallowed $3,265 as checks for legitimate church expenses. The church also
    claimed $9,021.63 in overdraft fees and electronically debited personal items. The court
    reviewed bank statements and found the evidence supported a claim of $5,444.56 in
    check fees and electronically debited personal items. The court found no additional
    restitution was owed for the $25,000 loan obtained by defendant using vacant lots owned
    by the church as collateral. Out of the proceeds from the loan, almost $20,000 was used
    to pay for legitimate church expenses, such as back taxes and delinquent mortgage
    payments, and the remainder was drawn down by both authorized and unauthorized
    expenditures for which restitution had already been ordered. The court denied the
    church’s request for $2,500 to compensate it for the loss of the church van, which the
    church sold as scrap for $200, because no evidence was presented to show “how
    defendant’s conduct reduced the value of the van.”
    The court awarded the entire requested amount of $11,413.03 “for credit card
    terminals/cash registers leased by defendant from Jamestown Pure Water through
    TimePayment Corp. without authorization. The equipment was leased by Carol Powell
    9
    based on defendant’s representations that the machines were to benefit the church.
    Ms. Powell intended this as a donation to the church, but later discovered that the
    equipment was solely for use in defendant’s personal business operations. [¶] There was
    a dispute in the testimony on whether one or two terminals were acquired. Documents
    show two terminals and a pin pad were acquired (Prob.Rpt.Exh.#A-6). Church members
    stated that one of the machines was returned to the church. However, this was a lease
    agreement not a purchase, so the church would not have acquired ownership of either
    terminal. Ms. Powell was forced to pay the entire lease amount for the entire lease
    period. The documents show the lease agreement required 48 payments with a base
    monthly payment of $215.00 plus taxes and fees. The total base payments for 48 months
    would amount to $10,320.00. Ms. Powell indicated the total cost to her was $11,413.00;
    if taxes and fees are added to the total of base payments, this figure appears accurate. It
    is ordered.”
    DISCUSSION
    Defendant argues the court erred in finding that defendant owed restitution to the
    church for the payments made to TimePayment Corporation by Carol Powell, because the
    equipment was not a gift to the church, and the lease for the equipment was a business
    transaction between Ms. Powell and defendant. Consequently, the church was not a
    direct victim of a crime so far as the equipment or the lease payments were concerned.
    Defendant’s argument requires us to consider whether the church was a “direct
    victim” of the lease agreement under the relevant statutes and constitutional provisions.
    This is a legal question of statutory construction which we review de novo. (People v.
    Saint-Amans (2005) 
    131 Cal. App. 4th 1076
    , 1084 (Saint-Amans); People v. Brunette
    (2011) 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 268
    , 277.)
    The Church Was Not a Direct Victim of the Theft of the Lease Payments.
    In California, “all persons who suffer losses as a result of criminal activity shall
    have the right to seek and secure restitution from the persons convicted of the crimes
    10
    causing the losses they suffer.” (Cal. Const., art. I, § 28, subd. (b)(13)(A).)
    Implementing that constitutional right, section 1202.4, subdivision (a)(1) provides “that a
    victim of crime who incurs an economic loss as a result of the commission of a crime
    shall receive restitution directly from a defendant convicted of that crime.” The
    sentencing court is required to order restitution for economic losses caused by the
    defendant, “based on the amount of loss claimed by the victim . . . or any other showing
    to the court” (§ 1202.4, subd. (f)), in an amount sufficient to fully reimburse the victim
    “for every determined economic loss incurred as the result of the defendant’s criminal
    conduct” (§ 1202.4, subd. (f)(3)).
    Economic losses include “[f]ull or partial payment for the value of stolen or
    damaged property. The value of stolen or damaged property shall be the replacement
    cost of like property, or the actual cost of repairing the property when repair is possible.”
    (§ 1202.4, subd. (f)(3)(A).) The term “victim” includes “[a] corporation, business trust,
    estate, trust, partnership, association, joint venture, government, governmental
    subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any other legal or commercial entity when that
    entity is a direct victim of a crime.” (§ 1202.4, subd. (k)(2), italics added.)
    Construing almost identical language in a predecessor statute to section 1202.4,
    subdivision (a)(1), our Supreme Court held that the Legislature intended to require the
    offender “to make full restitution for all ‘losses’ his crime had caused, and that such
    reparation should go entirely to the individual or entity the offender had directly
    wronged.” (People v. Birkett (1999) 
    21 Cal. 4th 226
    , 246 (Birkett).) “[R]estitution
    statutes should be interpreted broadly and liberally. [Citations.] Specifically, this state’s
    Supreme Court has stated that the term ‘victim’ has a broad and flexible meaning.”
    
    (Saint-Amans, supra
    , 131 Cal.App.4th at p. 1084.)
    However, that meaning is not so broad and flexible that it includes entities that are
    indirect or collateral victims of the crime of which the defendant was convicted. The
    term “direct victim,” as applied to entities, has been construed by our Supreme Court to
    11
    mean “ ‘entities that are the “immediate objects of the . . . offenses ” ’; or ‘ “entities
    against which the . . . crimes [have] been committed.” ’ [Citations.]” (People v. Slattery
    (2008) 
    167 Cal. App. 4th 1091
    , 1095, citing People v. Martinez (2005) 
    36 Cal. 4th 384
    ,
    393, quoting 
    Birkett, supra
    , 21 Cal.4th at pp. 233, 232.) “A victim is the object of a
    crime. [Citations.] ‘ “Actual” ’ or ‘ “direct” ’ victims are ‘the real and immediate
    objects’ of the offense. [Citation.] Thus, people or entities are entitled to restitution
    when the crime was committed against them.” 
    (Saint-Amans, supra
    , 131 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1086, citing 
    Birkett, supra
    , at pp. 232, 233.)
    In addition, our high court has defined “direct” as “ ‘ “straightforward,
    uninterrupted, [or] immediate” in time, order or succession, or “proceeding [in logic]
    from antecedent to consequent, from cause to effect, etc., uninterrupted,” or generally
    “[e]ffected or existing without intermediation or intervening agency; immediate.”
    [Citation.] In legal contexts, “direct” similarly stands for . . . “proximate; by the shortest
    course; without circuitry; operating by an immediate connection or relation, instead of
    operating through a medium. . . .” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]” (People v. 
    Slattery, supra
    ,
    167 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1095–1096, citing 
    Birkett, supra
    , 21 Cal.4th at p. 232, fn. 6.)
    Applying these standards, California courts have rejected restitution orders made
    to entities indirectly affected by the crime for which the defendant was convicted. For
    example, in the seminal case of Birkett, our Supreme Court decided an insurance
    company that indemnifies the victim, its insured, against covered losses is not the direct
    victim of a defendant convicted of auto theft and operating a “chop shop.” (
    Birkett, supra
    , 21 Cal.4th at pp. 229–230.) Likewise, a law enforcement entity that spends
    money to buy illegal drugs in undercover operations is not the direct victim of a
    defendant convicted of selling methamphetamine. (People v. Torres (1997)
    
    59 Cal. App. 4th 1
    .) A state department that pays for the toxic cleanup of
    methamphetamine labs is not the direct victim of a defendant convicted of
    methamphetamine manufacture. (People v. 
    Martinez, supra
    , 
    36 Cal. 4th 384
    .) A trade
    12
    association representing the United States recording industry is not a direct victim of a
    defendant convicted of selling counterfeit compact discs. (People v. Kelly (2010)
    
    189 Cal. App. 4th 73
    .) A hospital is not a direct victim entitled to restitution for a patient’s
    unpaid medical bills from a defendant convicted of inflicting injury on an elder adult (the
    patient). (People v. 
    Slattery, supra
    , 
    167 Cal. App. 4th 1091
    .) A county animal services
    agency is not a direct victim entitled to restitution from a defendant convicted of animal
    cruelty and neglect. (People v. 
    Brunette, supra
    , 
    194 Cal. App. 4th 268
    .) And a homicide
    victim’s estate is not a direct victim entitled to restitution from a defendant convicted of
    vehicular manslaughter. (People v. Runyon (2012) 
    54 Cal. 4th 849
    .)
    On the other hand, an insurance company is a direct victim entitled to restitution
    from a defendant convicted of insurance fraud. (People v. O’Casey (2001)
    
    88 Cal. App. 4th 967
    ; People v. Moloy (2000) 
    84 Cal. App. 4th 257
    .) Likewise, a county
    agency is a direct victim entitled to restitution when the defendant is convicted of welfare
    fraud. (People v. Crow (1993) 
    6 Cal. 4th 952
    .) And a bank is a direct victim entitled to
    restitution for reimbursing a bank customer for fraudulent debits made from his account
    when the defendant is convicted of burglarizing the bank 
    (Saint-Amans, supra
    ,
    
    131 Cal. App. 4th 1076
    ) or forging checks (People v. Bartell (2009) 
    170 Cal. App. 4th 1258
    [restitution ordered in a forgery case not filed pursuant to plea bargain]).
    Here, defendant pleaded no contest to the charge that he did “unlawfully take
    money and personal property . . ., to wit . . . electronic equipment the property of Hilltop
    Apostolic Church.” The only “electronic equipment” identified in the testimony was the
    machines Carol Powell leased from TimePayment Corporation. Although the factual
    basis for the plea stated defendant stole real and personal property and money “belonging
    to the church and to its members,” neither the complaint nor factual basis statement
    named Carol Powell as a victim of defendant’s crime, or the lease payments—as opposed
    to the leased equipment—as part of the church’s loss.
    13
    According to the restitution request submitted on behalf of the church at the time
    of the original probation report, the church believed Ms. Powell had “donated” the
    ATM/credit card equipment to the church, and the church was requesting $11,413.03 for
    the amount she paid to lease them from TimePayment Corporation. They also viewed
    this money as a “[t]ithe/offering that belonged to the church.” In her victim impact
    statement, Ms. Powell stated she invested “five years worth of advanced tithes” in a
    business “which Stark said would be for Hilltop Apostolic Church . . ., [but] which he . . .
    mismanaged for his own personal gain.”
    A revised restitution request submitted to the probation department on the
    church’s behalf explained that Ms. Powell and defendant discussed becoming business
    partners in Jamestown Pure Water Company because defendant represented the business
    was to help the church. Ms. Powell decided against becoming a partner, but did “offer to
    pay the lease for banking equipment with what she called advanced tithes.” However, the
    church never saw any proceeds from the business and it was not discussed with the
    congregation or the board of directors of the church. Ms. Powell discussed the
    transaction with her attorney, who advised her to get out of the deal, which she did by
    paying off the equipment to keep her credit from getting ruined and her good name from
    being mixed up with defendant.
    Applying the logic and language of the foregoing cases to the facts at hand, we are
    not persuaded the church is the direct victim of the equipment lease payments made by
    Carol Powell, because the church was not the immediate object of defendant’s fraud.
    Ms. Powell testified she agreed to help defendant lease the equipment for defendant’s
    business because he said “all [the] money that he would make from Jamestown Pure
    Water would be to help pay for Hilltop Church.” (Italics added.) To the extent defendant
    never intended the profits from his business to benefit the church, or converted the profits
    of his business to benefit himself, Ms. Powell was defrauded. To the extent defendant
    was merely a bad businessman, Ms. Powell turned out to have invested her money
    14
    unwisely. But the church was not the “immediate object” of the theft of lease payments.
    The lease payments were not made from money in the church’s account. Nothing in the
    documentary evidence or testimony before the court suggested that at the time
    Ms. Powell entered into the lease agreement, the church itself was the intended donee of
    the equipment, or the beneficiary of redirected advance tithes. At most the church was
    indirectly affected by defendant’s failure to turn over any profits from the water company
    to the church.
    Here, the documentary evidence shows that Ms. Powell, doing business as
    Jamestown Pure Water, signed a “Non Cancellable Commercial Equipment Lease
    Agreement” for one Verifone Omni credit card terminal, one Verifone PIN pad and one
    Casio terminal. She identified herself as the “100% owner” of the business on the lease
    application and as “owner” on the agreement. She was the sole lessee and guarantor of
    the lease agreement. She authorized automatic debits from Jamestown Pure Water’s
    business bank account. She signed the agreement on November 17, 2007, and
    TimePayment Corporation signed it on November 29, 2007.
    According to the lease terms and conditions, which Ms. Powell initialed, “[t]he
    original Lease Term . . . commence[d] on the commencement date and expire[d] at the
    end of the number of months indicated on the front page,” presumably the 48 months
    during which payments of $215 were due. At the end of the lease term, the lessee had the
    option of (1) promptly returning the equipment; or (2) extending the lease for the same
    terms and conditions on a month-to-month basis until such time as the lessee gave written
    notice of an election to terminate the lease; or (3) purchasing the equipment for the fair
    market value as quoted to the lessee by the company at that time, plus any applicable
    taxes.
    In 2007, when she signed the lease agreement, Ms. Powell was not the church
    secretary or a member of the church’s board of directors, and had no authority to enter
    into contracts on the church’s behalf. Nor did the church’s board authorize the contract.
    15
    It does not appear the church even knew about the contract at the time it was signed.
    Both Ms. Powell and defendant testified they were “cosignors” of the lease, although
    there is nothing in the documentary evidence to suggest defendant cosigned anything.
    Ms. Powell testified she gave the machine to defendant and told him it had to be paid off.
    When he remonstrated there was no way he or the church could pay her back, she said
    okay and let defendant take the machine back to his business.
    Ms. Powell never testified she used advanced tithes to finance the equipment
    lease, or that she donated the machines to the church. By contrast, she did testify she
    donated 20 parcels of land to the church and “called it a tithe and ascribed it was for the
    church.” The only evidence Ms. Powell intended the lease payments to be advanced
    tithes was the note she wrote to defendant, which stated: “Pastor, what if you wrote a
    check to me for advanced tithe, I sign it over as a personal loan to you, then I would just
    keep applying tithe and leave your paid back as in whatever tithe that is mine is your
    responsibility.” However, in her testimony Ms. Powell specifically disavowed the letter.
    She testified it was “only a proposal but was never anything further than that. Instead,
    what happened was I signed as a cosignor for the ATM machine.”
    She testified she was not defendant’s business partner and agreed to cosign the
    equipment lease because she “understood this was all to benefit the church” and “[t]hat
    all the money that he would make from Jamestown Pure Water would be to help pay for
    Hilltop Church.” She apparently did not sign the lease with the intent to make the lease
    payments herself, because she testified she gave the machine to defendant and told him it
    had to be paid off. Even after he told her there was “no way” he or the church could pay
    her back, and after the machine was returned to her by the leasing company, she told
    defendant he could take the machine back to his business, albeit under false pretenses that
    he intended to use the profits from his business to benefit the church. Mrs. Powell ended
    up paying off the entire amount of $11,000 because she was “equally liable for the total
    amount and could not rescind the contract. This was a noncancellable contract.”
    16
    The picture that emerges from the sum total of the evidence is that Ms. Powell
    signed the lease with the understanding that defendant would make the lease payments,
    and never thought she would have to pay them. She did so because she thought helping
    defendant’s business would help the church. She paid off the lease only after realizing
    she was “equally liable for the total amount and could not rescind the contract” and
    would be sued if she did not pay.7
    Since there is no credible evidence to support the view that Ms. Powell paid for
    the lease agreement with tithe money, or intended to donate the leased equipment to the
    church at the time of the lease agreement, we find the church was not a direct victim of
    the fraudulent lease agreement for which it was entitled to restitution of lease payments
    totaling over $11,000. We will therefore strike that portion of the restitution award.
    CONCLUSION
    The church was not a direct victim of the fraudulent equipment lease within the
    meaning of section 1202.4. Ms. Powell, not the church, was the object of defendant’s
    fraud. The church could not incur an economic loss as a result of the fraud on
    Ms. Powell because there was no credible evidence that (1) Powell used advance tithe
    money pay for the lease or (2) donated the equipment to the church at the time of the
    lease. To the extent the church suffered a loss from the equipment lease transaction, it
    was the indirect loss of profits from defendant’s business. Ms. Powell did suffer a
    possible loss, but as she was not a victim of the crime for which defendant was convicted,
    she must rely on the civil law remedies available to her.
    DISPOSITION
    The trial court’s restitution order is modified to remove the award of $11,413.03 to
    the church for equipment lease payments made by Ms. Carol Powell. As modified, the
    restitution order is affirmed.
    7
    Ms. Powell did not testify she consulted her attorney.
    17
    _________________________
    DONDERO, J.
    We concur:
    _________________________
    MARGULIES, Acting P. J.
    _________________________
    BANKE, J.
    18
    A141131
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A141131

Filed Date: 7/22/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021