State of Minnesota v. Charles Edward Love ( 2014 )


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  •                          This opinion will be unpublished and
    may not be cited except as provided by
    Minn. Stat. § 480A.08, subd. 3 (2012).
    STATE OF MINNESOTA
    IN COURT OF APPEALS
    A13-1321
    State of Minnesota,
    Respondent,
    vs.
    Charles Edward Love,
    Appellant.
    Filed August 4, 2014
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded
    Willis, Judge
    Anoka County District Court
    File No. 02-CR-13-243
    Lori Swanson, Attorney General, St. Paul, Minnesota; and
    Anthony C. Palumbo, Anoka County Attorney, Marcy S. Crain, Assistant County
    Attorney, Raina Urton, certified student attorney, Anoka, Minnesota (for respondent)
    Cathryn Middlebrook, Chief Appellate Public Defender, Ted Sampsell-Jones, Special
    Assistant State Public Defender, St. Paul, Minnesota (for appellant)
    Considered and decided by Kirk, Presiding Judge; Hooten, Judge; and Willis,
    Judge.
    
    Retired judge of the Minnesota Court of Appeals, serving by appointment pursuant to
    Minn. Const. art. VI, § 10.
    UNPUBLISHED OPINION
    WILLIS, Judge
    On appeal from his conviction of third-degree burglary and misdemeanor theft,
    appellant argues that (1) the district court committed reversible error by improperly
    instructing the jury about the elements of burglary; (2) there is insufficient evidence to
    support his burglary conviction; (3) the district court abused its discretion by admitting a
    witness’s recollections of a destroyed video; and (4) the district court abused its
    discretion by admitting a video without proper authentication. We affirm in part, reverse
    in part, and remand.
    FACTS
    On Sunday, December 30, 2012, at about 11:45 a.m., H.L. found that cash and a
    laptop computer had been taken from his employer, Fu Yuan, a restaurant in Coon
    Rapids.   After making this discovery, H.L. reviewed surveillance footage from the
    neighboring gas station’s exterior cameras with the gas station’s manager, T.C. The
    footage showed a man enter the restaurant and leave several minutes later. H.L. then
    returned to the restaurant to review surveillance video from inside the restaurant, which
    showed the same man inside the restaurant, where he was seen walking to the cash-
    register counter and opening the cash-register drawer; searching the pockets of jackets
    hanging in the restaurant; and walking to a table where a laptop was sitting. The man
    seen in the videos was wearing a hat, a jacket with a fur-lined hood, a striped shirt, black
    pants, and a tiny earring.     When H.L. examined the cash register, he found that
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    approximately $80 in one-dollar bills was missing, along with a Toshiba laptop computer
    that had been on a table in the restaurant.
    Later the same day, a man driving a green Chevrolet Tahoe purchased gas from
    the neighboring gas station using 26 one-dollar bills, and T.C. recognized the man as
    being the same person he had seen in the surveillance videos. T.C. provided the vehicle’s
    description and license-plate number to police, who identified the vehicle’s owner as
    appellant Charles Love, a picture of whom matched the man seen on the surveillance
    videos. Police obtained a search warrant for the green Tahoe and an apartment in a
    building next to the strip mall where the restaurant was located. The apartment was
    rented to a person named Charles Love. When executing the warrants, police found Love
    in a vehicle in the parking lot of the apartment building. He was wearing a jacket similar
    to the one seen in the surveillance videos but without a hood. In the apartment, which
    was rented by Love’s son, among other possessions linked to Love, police found a green
    knit hat; a zipped-off, fur-lined hood that matched the jacket; a pair of dark jeans; a
    striped polo shirt; and a pair of tennis shoes, all matching the clothing seen on the suspect
    in the surveillance videos.
    Love was charged with third-degree burglary, and misdemeanor and felony theft.
    The felony-theft charge was dropped before trial. Love moved to dismiss the remaining
    charges or suppress testimony regarding the internal video from the restaurant because of
    the state’s failure to preserve that surveillance footage. The state argued that the video
    was not preserved because of a malfunction in the recording system and argued that there
    was no bad faith and that there was no exculpatory evidence in the video. The district
    3
    court denied Love’s motions, and a jury trial was held. H.L. testified regarding the
    contents of the internal-surveillance video and about the restaurant’s hours of operation.
    A photograph admitted into evidence shows that the restaurant’s posted opening time on
    Sundays was 11:30 a.m. Three police officers also testified, including one who said that,
    based on his analysis of the gas-station’s surveillance video, Love entered the restaurant
    at about 9:30 a.m. T.C. testified regarding the surveillance equipment used at the gas
    station. Love’s son also testified that Love had gone out for groceries between 9:00 a.m.
    and 10:00 a.m. and returned with a black Toshiba laptop, but no groceries, and he
    identified Love as the man in the surveillance footage. Love waived his right to testify
    and presented no evidence.
    Before closing arguments, the state requested an amendment to the jury
    instructions to include language indicating that even if an establishment is open to the
    public, a burglary can occur if an individual enters an area that is not open to the public.
    Over Love’s objection, the district court amended the jury instructions to include this
    language. The jury found Love guilty of both counts, and Love was sentenced to 39
    months in prison. This appeal follows.
    DECISION
    I.     The burglary jury instruction misstated Minnesota law.
    District courts are allowed “considerable latitude” in the selection of language for
    jury instructions, State v. Baird, 
    654 N.W.2d 105
    , 113 (Minn. 2002), but the instructions
    must “fairly and adequately explain the law of the case,” State v. Koppi, 
    798 N.W.2d 4
    358, 362 (Minn. 2011). “An instruction is in error if it materially misstates the law.”
    State v. Kuhnau, 
    622 N.W.2d 552
    , 556 (Minn. 2001).
    Love contends that the district court misstated the second element of burglary
    when it instructed the jury as follows:
    Second, the defendant entered a building without the consent
    of the person in lawful possession. The entry does not have
    to be made by force or by breaking in. Entry through an open
    or unlocked door or window is sufficient. Whoever enters a
    building while open to the general public does so with
    consent, except when consent was expressly withdrawn
    before the entry. A person who enters a building open to the
    public exceeds the scope of consent given to members of the
    public by entering an area of the building that is off limits to
    the general public.
    Love objects to the last sentence of this instruction, arguing that it is a misstatement of
    Minnesota law.
    Minn. Stat. § 609.582, subd. 3 (2012), provides that “[w]hoever enters a building
    without consent and with intent to steal . . . while in the building . . . commits burglary in
    the third degree.” To enter a building without consent means “to enter a building without
    the consent of the person in lawful possession,” but “[w]hoever enters a building while
    open to the general public does so with consent except when consent was expressly
    withdrawn before entry.” Minn. Stat. § 609.581, subd. 4 (2012). The standard jury
    instruction detailing the elements of third-degree burglary mirrors this language and does
    not include the last sentence of the instruction given here. 10A Minnesota Practice,
    CRIMJIG 17.11 (2006). The state argues that the disputed language is consistent with
    the holding of State v. McDonald, 
    346 N.W.2d 351
    (Minn. 1984), contending that even if
    5
    the restaurant was open to the public when Love entered, he exceeded the scope of
    consent given to the public by going behind the cash-register counter. We disagree.
    McDonald was a summary affirmance on a sufficiency-of-the-evidence issue in an
    appeal from a burglary conviction. The appellant there “entered a drugstore during
    business hours but at a time when the pharmacy was closed and, without consent, entered
    a closed storage room that was off limits to the general public and from there tried to gain
    access to the locked pharmacy for the purpose of stealing controlled substances.” 
    Id. at 352.
    In affirming his conviction, the supreme court stated that there was no burglary
    when the appellant entered the “part of the store that was open to the public,” but “the
    burglary was complete once defendant exceeded the scope of the consent given him and
    other members of the public and entered the storage room with intent to gain access to the
    locked pharmacy from there.” 
    Id. McDonald is
    factually distinguishable from this case
    and does not establish the definition of burglary provided by the district court here.
    District courts should exercise extreme caution when using language from a sufficiency-
    of-the-evidence case in jury instructions.       See State v. Gassler, 
    505 N.W.2d 62
    , 68
    (Minn. 1993) (stating that jury instructions are conceptually different from tests for the
    sufficiency of evidence).
    Though the evidence suggests that Love went to the cash-register counter, there is
    no evidence that he went into any separate, contained area not open to the public or that
    consent to enter the cash-register area was expressly revoked. While this is a novel case,
    a jury instruction given in the form here could lead to the result of having the crime
    committed, and the punishment imposed, depend entirely on where a person is standing
    6
    while in a building that is open to the public. The ruling in McDonald is not applicable to
    jury instructions, and the jury instruction provided here does not reflect the language of
    the statute.
    Having concluded that the jury instruction was erroneous, we must consider
    whether the error was harmless. State v. Vance, 
    765 N.W.2d 390
    , 394 (Minn. 2009),
    overruled on other grounds by State v. Fleck, 
    810 N.W.2d 303
    (Minn. 2012); see State v.
    Mahkuk, 
    736 N.W.2d 675
    , 683 (Minn. 2007) (quotation omitted) (“An erroneous jury
    instruction does not require a new trial if the error was harmless beyond a reasonable
    doubt.”). Because consent to enter a building is a key element in burglary cases and was
    a central issue in this case, we cannot say that the erroneous jury instruction had no
    significant impact on the verdict rendered because it gave an expanded basis upon which
    the jury could conclude that Love did not have the owners’ consent to be in the
    restaurant.    See 
    Mahkuk, 736 N.W.2d at 683
    (“A jury instruction given in error is
    harmless only if it can be said that, beyond a reasonable doubt, the error had no
    significant impact on the verdict rendered.” (quotation omitted)); see State v. Watkins,
    
    820 N.W.2d 264
    , 268 (Minn. App. 2012) (“failure to properly instruct the jury on all
    elements of the offense charged is plain error” (quotation and alteration omitted)), aff’d
    on other grounds, 
    840 N.W.2d 21
    (Minn. 2013).           Accordingly, we reverse Love’s
    convictions and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this
    opinion.
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    II.    The evidence may be sufficient to support a conviction of burglary.
    Love concedes that there is sufficient evidence to support his theft conviction but
    argues that there is insufficient evidence to establish that he entered the restaurant
    without consent, therefore his actions could not constitute burglary. In evaluating the
    sufficiency of the evidence, we conduct “a painstaking analysis of the record to determine
    whether the evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the conviction,” is
    sufficient to allow the jury to reach a verdict of guilty. State v. Ortega, 
    813 N.W.2d 86
    ,
    100 (Minn. 2012) (quotation omitted). “And we will not disturb the verdict if the jury,
    acting with due regard for the presumption of innocence and the requirement of proof
    beyond a reasonable doubt, could reasonably conclude that the defendant was guilty of
    the charged offense.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    As noted above, to establish that Love committed a burglary, the state had to prove
    that he entered the restaurant without consent by showing that it was not open to the
    public at the time of the burglary or that consent to enter had been expressly revoked.
    Minn. Stat. § 609.581, subd. 4. The state argues that the restaurant was not open to the
    public at the time Love entered. The record contains conflicting evidence. While Love
    entered the restaurant about two hours before its posted opening time, he entered through
    an unlocked door, and H.L. testified that it is the restaurant’s practice not to refuse orders
    that are placed shortly before it officially opens for the day. “[I]t is the jury’s duty to
    weigh conflicting evidence and to make credibility determinations.” State v. Gunderson,
    
    812 N.W.2d 156
    , 165 (Minn. 2012).          Additionally, the state asserted in its closing
    argument that, even if the restaurant was open, Love committed a burglary by exceeding
    8
    the scope of consent given by going to the area around the cash register, which we have
    determined is a misstatement of the law. Although the record may contain sufficient
    evidence to support Love’s burglary conviction, because the jury did not have the
    opportunity to weigh conflicting evidence based on a proper instruction, we reverse and
    remand for a new trial. See 
    id. (arriving at
    the same conclusion regarding the charge in
    that case).
    III.   Because Love did not demonstrate that the restaurant’s surveillance footage
    was destroyed in bad faith, the district court did not abuse its discretion by
    allowing a witness to testify regarding his recollections of this footage.
    Love argues that the district court erred by admitting H.L.’s testimony regarding
    his recollections of the contents of the internal-surveillance footage, contending that this
    violated the best-evidence rule because the state destroyed this evidence in bad faith. We
    disagree.
    “Evidentiary rulings rest within the sound discretion of the [district] court and will
    not be reversed absent a clear abuse of discretion.” State v. Amos, 
    658 N.W.2d 201
    , 203
    (Minn. 2003) (citation omitted).      Under the best-evidence rule, an original video
    recording is required to prove its contents, Minn. R. Evid. 1002, but other evidence of its
    contents is admissible if the originals have been lost or destroyed, “unless the proponent
    lost or destroyed [it] in bad faith.” Minn. R. Evid. 1004(1); see Minn. R. Evid. 1001(2) (a
    video or motion picture is considered a “photograph” under the rules of evidence). The
    state’s failure to preserve potentially useful evidence “does not constitute a denial of due
    process unless the defendant shows bad faith on the part of the police.” State v. Jenkins,
    
    782 N.W.2d 211
    , 235 (Minn. 2010) (citation omitted). Bad faith requires an intentional
    9
    act by the state, as well as a showing that the state either (1) “purposefully destroyed
    evidence favorable to a defendant so as to hide it,” or (2) “failed to follow standard
    procedures when it destroyed the evidence.” State v. Hawkinson, 
    829 N.W.2d 367
    , 373
    (Minn. 2013). The defendant has the burden of demonstrating bad faith. 
    Id. Relying on
    Hawkinson, Love argues that the district court’s determination that the
    destruction of the internal-surveillance footage was not in bad faith is erroneous because
    the court failed to consider whether the state followed standard procedure in collecting
    evidence. But Hawkinson involved the destruction of evidence, not its collection. 
    Id. at 373.
    Even if Love is correct, he failed to meet his burden of demonstrating bad faith by
    establishing a deviation from the state’s standard procedure in collecting evidence.
    Instead he merely describes efforts that the police could have taken to preserve the
    surveillance footage.
    Love alternatively argues that even if the state did not act in bad faith, the district
    court erred by admitting secondary evidence when the state did not prove that the internal
    surveillance footage was lost or destroyed. See City of St. Paul v. Dahlby, 
    266 Minn. 304
    , 315, 
    123 N.W.2d 586
    , 592 (1963) (the “party seeking to introduce secondary
    evidence as to the provisions of a lost instrument must prove that a diligent but
    unsuccessful search has been made for it.”). But the record reflects that the state was
    unable to copy the footage from the surveillance system when it attempted to collect this
    evidence in the days immediately after the incident and that the surveillance system
    retains footage for only eight days. By the time of trial, three months had passed, and the
    district court concluded that the footage “got erased in the normal course of this business
    10
    doing its business.” This determination is supported by the record, which suggests that a
    diligent search by the state would have been unsuccessful.
    IV.    The external-surveillance footage was adequately authenticated.
    Love also contends that the district court abused its discretion by admitting the
    external-surveillance footage recorded by the gas station’s surveillance system because
    the evidence was not properly authenticated. We disagree.
    “[T]he standard of review for the adequacy of foundation with respect to the
    admission of evidence is abuse of discretion.” Turnage v. State, 
    708 N.W.2d 535
    , 542
    (Minn. 2006).     “The requirement of authentication . . . as a condition precedent to
    admissibility is satisfied by evidence sufficient to support a finding that the matter in
    question is what its proponent claims.” Minn. R. Evid. 901(a). This court has adopted a
    method for authenticating video evidence “by testimony describing the reliability of the
    process or system that created the tape . . . if the evidence sufficiently demonstrates that
    the videotape is what its proponent claims.” Matter of Welfare of S.A.M., 
    570 N.W.2d 162
    , 166 (Minn. App. 1997).
    Love argues that T.C.’s testimony was insufficient to authenticate the video
    because T.C. was not a video technician, and in S.A.M. this court determined that a video
    technician’s testimony as to how the video was made, that it produces an accurate result,
    and as to its chain of custody was sufficient to demonstrate the reliability of the process.
    
    Id. at 166-67.
    But T.C. provided an explanation of how many cameras constitute the gas
    station’s surveillance system, a description of the monitor, and a description of how the
    system’s database holds video on its hard drive. Additionally, he explained that the
    11
    system is always turned on and automatically records. T.C. also testified that he had used
    the system to look at recorded footage on various occasions, and he explained that the
    live feed from the cameras, though a millisecond off, displayed an image on the system’s
    monitor that showed what the cameras were actually seeing and recording. T.C. also
    testified that, aside from being condensed and having titles added, the external footage
    presented as evidence was accurate, based on his viewing of the footage on the
    surveillance system’s monitor with H.L. Based on S.A.M. and the “broad guideline for
    authentication set out in Rule 901(a): that is, evidence was produced showing that the
    tape is what its proponent claimed,” 
    id. at 166-67,
    we conclude that the district court did
    not abuse its discretion by determining that the external-surveillance footage was
    properly authenticated.
    Love also contends that the timestamp on the video was not properly
    authenticated. But even if T.C.’s testimony were insufficient for this purpose, the police
    officer who condensed the video testified that the timestamp is embedded in the video file
    and that his investigation showed that the timestamp was an hour off because it had not
    been adjusted for daylight-savings time, but it was otherwise accurate. This evidence
    shows that the timestamp on the tape is what the state claimed. The district court did not
    abuse its discretion by admitting evidence of the timestamp.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
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