1. Defendant appeals his conviction for embezzlement after a trial to the court without a jury. Defendant was on probation, confined by the conditions of his probation to stay within 150 feet of his telephone. As part of his probation, Defendant agreed to wear an electronic monitoring device (EMD) around his ankle which would communicate electronically with a computer connected to his telephоne and thereby verify his presence as long as he continued to wear the EMD. Contrary to the conditions of probation, Defendant removed the EMD, damaging it, and threw it into a field. The value of the EMD was placed аt over $250 and under $2500, thereby making this a fourth degree felony. On appeal, Defendant does not dispute that he violated his probation or that he may have committed the lesser crime of criminal damage to рroperty. Defendant contends that his actions do not constitute the specific crime of embezzlement. We analyze Defendant’s actions in light of the specific statutory elements of embezzlement and affirm.
DISCUSSION
2. The embezzlement statute, NMSA 1978, Section 30-16-8 (Cum.Supp.1996), states: “Embezzlement consists of the embézzling
For you to find the defendant guilty of embezzlement ..., the state must prove to your satisfaction beyond a reasonable doubt each of the following elements of the crime:
1.The defendant was entrusted with
2. The defendant converted this _ (property or money) to the defendant’s own use. “Converting something to one’s own use” means keeping another’s property rather than returning it, or using another’s property for one’s own purpose [rather than] [even though the property is eventually used] for the purpose authorized by the owner;
3. At the time the defendant converted _ (property or money), the defendant fraudulently intendеd to deprive the owner of the owner’s property. “Fraudulently intended” means intended to deceive or cheat;
3. Defendant first argues that there was no showing of a traditional fiduciary relationship, without which he mаintains an embezzlement conviction cannot stand. We disagree. Our earlier case of State v. Moss,
4. Defendant maintains there was no such evidence because Defendant, a convicted felon, was not holding the EMD under any assumption of trust or confidence on his part. We disagree. “Entrustment” occurs when property is committed or surrendered to another with a certain confidence regarding the care, use, or disposal of that propеrty. See State v. Stahl,
5. The crime of embezzlement did not exist at common law. 2 LaFave, supra, § 8.1(b), at 331; 3 Charles E. Torcia, Wharton’s Criminal Law § 383, at 464-65 (1995). Larceny, a common law crime, required that the thiеf take property from the victim’s possession and that there be a “trespass in the taking.” 2 LaFave, supra, § 8.1(a), at 328; see Green,
6. Statutes establishing embezzlement as an offense were passed to eliminate this loophole in the common law. Green,
7. It is clear from the evidence that when the State turned over the EMD to Defendant, the State was relying on Defendant to act in a manner consistent with, and not adverse to, the State’s interests with respect to the EMD. Defendant was after all on probation; he was free from incarceration on the strength of just such assurances that he would do what he was told and live up to his promises. Defendant even signed a
EMD WEARER’S AGREEMENT
1. I Andre Arсhie, understand that the electronic monitoring device (EMD) and all of its accessories are the property of the Adult Probation Parole Division of the Corrections Department with the State of New Mexicо.
2. I accept full responsibility for the care of and return of the electronic monitoring device.
3. I understand that it is my responsibility to immediately notify the Adult Probation Parole Office if the monitor is damaged in any way or if thе bracelet is purposely/aecidentally removed from my leg.
4. I understand that if any part of the electronic monitoring device is damaged or lost while it is in my possession, I will be charged with Embezzlement, Theft, or Criminal Damage. The cost of the device is $1,950.00.
In addition, although Defendant argues that the transfer of possession was only for the State’s benefit, Defendant received the benefit of being placed on probation, rather than being incarcerated. Therefore, assuming that Defendant is correct in arguing that he must receive a benefit, we are satisfied from the record that there was an entrustment of property sufficient to meet the requirements of the statute.
8. Defendant argues there was no evidence that he “converted” the EMD “to his own use”; instead, he disposed of the EMD or abandoned it but did not put it to “use” within the meaning of the statute. Again, we do not agree. When a person having possession of another’s property treats the property as his own, whether he uses it, sells it, or discards it, he is using the property for his own purpose. See UJI 14-1641 (conversion means “using another’s property for one’s own purpose [rather than] ... for the purpose authorized by the owner”); see also Newman v. Basin Motor Co.,
9. According to Professor LaFave, the gravamen of conversion is interfering with the rights of the owner, either to the property itself or to the benefit from the manner in which the property was supposed to have been used. LaFave, supra, § 8.6(b), at 369. The detаils of the interference are less important than the interference itself. Professor LaFave describes the manner of the interference in broad terms: “using it up, selling it, pledging it, giving it away, delivering it to one not entitled tо it, inflicting serious damage to it, claiming it against the owner ... each of these acts seriously interferes with the owner’s rights and so constitutes a conversion” within the meaning of embezzlement. Id. (footnote omitted). The statutory reference that the wrongdoer’s conversion must be “to his own use” is more a reference to a “use” other than that authorized by the owner; or as LaFave states: “These words are not to be taken literally, hоwever, for it is not a requirement for a conversion that the converter gain a personal benefit from his dealing with the property.” Id. at 370.
10. Defendant also claims there was no evidence of the kind of speсific fraudulent intent that is necessary to support a conviction for embezzlement. See Green,
11. Defendant points to the distriсt court’s observation that the charges in this case might have been covered by another lesser criminal statute, such as criminal damage to property. There was sufficient evidence to support a conviction for embezzlement, including evidence of entrustment of property and conversion of property. Entrustment and conversion are not elements of criminal damage to property. See NMSA 1978, § 30-15-1 (Reрl.Pamp.1994). Nor is damage an element of embezzlement. See § 30-16-8. Therefore, this is not the kind of situation discussed in State v. Higgins,
CONCLUSION
12. The conviction is affirmed.
13. IT IS SO ORDERED.
