Appellant Elauin Hebron was convicted by a jury of first degree theft, which requires proof that the stolen property had a value of $250 or more. D.C.Code § 22-3812(a) (1996) (now D.C.Code § 22-3212 (2001)). On his appeal, a division of this court, per curiam, reversed his conviction on the ground that, under an especially demanding standard that might be read into certain language of our existing case law relating to proof of value, the government failed to present sufficient evidence to support a first-degree theft conviction.
Hebron v. United States,
We, therefore, grant the petition for rehearing en banc and undertake to clarify language used in our proof of value cases that may have fostered a misimpression, namely, that some sort of “super proof’ is required in the proof of the element of value. Our past decisions, despite the emergence of language terming our proof of value as, for example, “very strict,” never required any such enhanced proof. As a result and to correct any misconception as to what proof of value is required, we now reapply our long existing standard to the facts of appellant’s case and hold, en banc, that the same uniform and familiar standard of evidentiary sufficiency applies to proof of value that applies to any other element of the charged offense, namely, proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
See Rivas v. United States,
I.
The approach, in at least some of our cases, which could be read to suggest that the value of an item must be proved with some sort of special strictness seems to have found its origin in this jurisdiction in a 1970 decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit,
United States v. Thweatt,
140 U.S.App. D.C. 120,
Our own case law, however, developed in a manner that tended, in its phraseology, to suggest that the government’s proof of value was subject to a requirement of proof distinct from and well above and beyond that required for other elements of an offense, which we variously termed “very strict” or “requiring affirmative proof of value” or “substantial probative evidence of value” or “clear proof of value.”
Zellers v. United States,
The underlying purpose of the proof of value requirement was and has always been to ensure that the jury’s verdict was not “‘based on surmise or conjecture’ about the value of the property.”
Zellers,
It is important to keep in mind precisely what must be proven when the issue is whether a statutory value amount has been exceeded in a prosecution for first degree theft and similar criminal offenses. The matter to be determined is not the absolute value of the items stolen, as would be the case in, for example, a condemnation action. Rather, the proof must only show that the value, whatever it may be in absolute terms, exceeded the statutory minimum. To be sure, when the proof indicates a value nearing that minimum, such proof may need to be offered with greater precision. In that sense the use of phrases like “strict rule” can be under
A jury, as a result, should not be precluded from drawing reasonable inferences from an item’s purchase date and price when determining, on the totality of facts and circumstances, whether the government has met its burden of proving value under the theft statute. In another criminal context, the Supreme Court has recognized “the saving grace of common sense.”
Bell v. United, States,
II.
We now apply this uniform standard to appellant’s case. In doing so, we affirm his conviction of first-degree theft, with its requirement that the stolen property have a total value of $250 or more. D.C.Code § 22-3212(a) (2001).
While our focus herein remains on the evidence of value, we first recount the
Two government witnesses testified that on Sunday, March 21, appellant was moving furniture, clothes and other items out of the apartment with the help of one or two other people. One of the witnesses, who identified himself as one of the people who had assisted appellant at that time, testified that he loaded a dozen or so boxes, some of which were “big,” into his own pick-up truck and that he and appellant, in another vehicle, traveled to appellant’s mother’s house where they unloaded the boxes.
Jones returned to Salahuddin’s apartment around 2 p.m. that Sunday. Although the apartment had been fully furnished when she left the previous afternoon, it was now considerably stripped. All of Salahuddin’s clothes, shoes, and pictures were gone. His closet had been cleared out, along with his statuettes and the carpets on his bathroom floor. At that time, Salahuddin’s living room furniture, dining room furniture, bed, television, VCR, and stereo still remained in the apartment. However, when Jones returned to visit the apartment a second time on Monday around 11 a.m. with two detectives, these items and everything else in the apartment were gone. They found the apartment entirely empty.
Jones gave the detectives a detailed list of Salahuddin’s missing property. Thereafter, two search warrants were executed for Salahuddin’s property. The first warrant was executed at the home of appellant’s girl friend. There, the detectives recovered a black couch, a stereo, several CDs, a mattress, and a box spring. A second warrant was executed at appellant’s mother’s house, where the detectives found a black futon, a television, a VCR, two black musical statuettes, a green Koran with gold letters, a prayer carpet, a floor lamp, a coffee table, and two end tables. Jones identified all these items as Salahuddin’s property.
Jones then gave further testimony about the purchase price, age, and condition of
Before the jury, thus, was specific information about standard items of household furniture, almost brand-new, with a total purchase price exceeding $600. Even a fifty per cent drop in the value of these sturdy items over the four-month period between purchase and theft would render them sufficient, standing alone, to exceed the minimum value needed to convict for first-degree theft.
But, of course, these furniture items did not stand alone. The AIWA stereo, for which Jones provided the original purchase price, also had been stolen. Jones also testified about a black sofa/sleeper, which she specifically described as being in good condition. And, testimony was presented about a myriad of other stolen items, including but not limited to a 13-inch color television, a four-head VCR/ VHS tape player, Salahuddin’s bed, all his clothes and shoes, all the pictures from the apartment walls, and two Chinese rugs. These items, as with almost all of the stolen property, were of a general type familiar to ordinary jurors.
The evidence here, in fact, might be viewed as greater than in our more recent prior cases in which we found value to be insufficient under our so-called strict rule. For example, in our most recent holding to this effect, a telephone bought two weeks prior to the subject theft carried a purchase price of $249, a dollar below the statutory minimum. As we phrased the relevant issue, “we must determine, then, whether the price of shipping and handling [$7.50] and the warranty contract [$54.58] can be included in determining the value of the chattel,” thereby implicitly taking the telephone, although now second-hand, at its original purchase price.
Chappelle,
For the foregoing reasons, we are quite satisfied that, on the totality of the evi
Accordingly, the judgment of conviction appealed from is
Affirmed.
Notes
. For examples of additional cases, each using slightly different language to describe our proof of value requirement, see
Terrell v. United States,
. We note that the
Malloy
dissent would have found the purchase price testimony by the complainant and her daughter, coupled with the sheer number of items named in the indictment, to be sufficient proof of value.
. The uniform standard applied to proof of value seems generally in step with those of other jurisdictions which appear to require no greater strictness than proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
See, e.g., United States v. DiGilio,
.
See Zellers,
. Appellant was tried for first degree murder and related offenses, including the first degree theft charge at issue here. The jury acquitted him on all charges, except for theft.
. Jones testified that she had known Salahud-din since they were in sixth grade together, that Salahuddin had fathered her daughter in February 1999, that she visited his Xenia Street apartment every weekend, and that she and Salahuddin had planned to move into a new apartment together on March 27, 1999. Jones, by virtue of her close relationship to Salahuddin, demonstrated an intimate familiarity with his daily affairs.
