Defendant appeals from his conviction of two counts of larceny under $100, contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-16-1 (Cum.Supp. 1990) (petty misdemeanor), one count of larceny over $250, contrary to Section 30-16-1 (fourth degree felony), and one count of residential burglary, contrary to NMSA 1978, Section 30-16-3(A) (Repl.Pamp.1984) (third degree felony), contending (1) the two convictions for larceny under $100 merged, and (2) there was insufficient evidence to support the conviction for larceny over $250. We agree that the convictions for larceny under $100 merged and remand for resentencing. We affirm the conviction for larceny over $250.
I.
Julie Oliver and Vivian Adams lived at 611 Lead, S.W., Apartment 706, in Albuquerque. A little after 6:00 a.m. on March 17, 1990, Oliver awakened and discovered Defendant sleeping on the living room couch. She summoned the police. Defendant told the police that an acquaintance had let him in with a key and had then departed. Oliver’s backpack was on the patio next to Defendant’s bicycle. Inside the backpack were a Sony compact disc player and eight compact discs. Defendant said that the items on the patio belonged to him. Adams’s gloves were found in Defendant’s pocket and her briefcase was found outside on the lawn. Officer Trout found two screwdrivers lying under a front window of the women’s apartment.
The police found several hundred dollars in Defendant’s pockets. Officer Wood asked Defendant where he obtained the money, and he replied that he had been paid. He did not have any documentation. James Moiling and Chad Bridges lived at 611 Lead, S.W., Apartment 722. At approximately 9:00 a.m. on March 16, 1990, Moiling noticed that a Sony compact disc player owned by Bridges and approximately $400 in $20 bills were missing. Bridges had purchased the player for $100. Bridges noticed later that six of his compact discs were missing. The police gave the money found in Defendant’s pockets to Moiling.
A grand jury indicted Defendant for two counts of residential burglary, one count of larceny over $250, and two counts of larceny under $100. One of the counts of larceny charged Defendant with taking Adams’s gloves and briefcase; the other charged him with taking Oliver’s backpack. The trial court directed a verdict regarding one count of residential burglary.
II.
Defendant argues that his two convictions for larceny of the items taken from Oliver and Adams must merge under the single larceny doctrine. Under that doctrine, the stealing of property from different owners at the same time and the same place constitutes only one larceny. See generally Daniel H. White, Annotation, Single or Separate Larceny Predicated upon Stealing Property from Different Owners at the Same Time,
In Herron, the supreme court held that numerous convictions for criminal sexual penetration violated guarantees against double jeopardy because they subjected the defendant to multiple punishments for the same offense. In making this determination, the court first identified “the appropriate unit of prosecution” under the relevant statute. Id. at 359,
Section 30-16-1 defines larceny as “the stealing of anything of value which belongs to another.” This court has said that in prosecuting larceny, the state need not prove ownership in a particular person; proof that the property belonged to someone other than the defendant is sufficient. State v. Ford,
Herron set forth a number of factors to be considered in reviewing acts of criminal sexual penetration occurring during a single attack. Mares paraphrased those factors so they could be applied to allegations of multiple batteries. We further refine the factors for application in this multiple larceny case. They include the time between the criminal acts, the location of the property when it was taken, the existence of any intervening events, distinctions in the manner of committing the thefts, the defendant’s intent, and the number of victims.
There was evidence that Adams’s gloves were taken from her bedroom or the kitchen, that her briefcase was taken from her bedroom closet or the living room, and that Oliver’s backpack was taken from the room in which she slept, which was the den, in the same apartment. The State argues that this evidence establishes that the items were taken from different locations and must have been taken at different times. However, a brief interval between thefts makes no difference if they were part of the same transaction. State v. Sampson,
Adams’s and Oliver’s possessions were subsequently recovered from different locations in and near their apartment. The State contends that this evidence establishes two distinct criminal intents. We disagree. The fact that Defendant placed the items in different places after he seized them is not probative of two distinctive general intents when he committed the thefts.
There was no evidence that a significant period of time separated the thefts, that the items were taken from locations in which the other owner had no substantial
Bolen indicates that under the single larceny doctrine, “ ‘[t]he stealing of property from different owners at the same time and at the same place constitutes but one larceny.’”
We note, however, that in at least one jurisdiction the analysis of robbery counts differs from the analysis of larceny counts. Compare State v. Mills,
III.
Defendant contends that since the trial court granted a directed verdict with respect to the charge of residential burglary of the men’s apartment, it follows that the evidence was insufficient to establish that Defendant stole items from the apartment because the only way he could have obtained them was through a burglary. Defendant does not cite any authority to support his contention. See In re Adoption of Doe,
Defendant also argues that while the jury could have inferred that the compact disc player found on the women’s patio belonged to Bridges, the money found in Defendant’s pockets could have belonged to Defendant, and possession of the allegedly stolen items was insufficient to establish that Defendant took them from the men’s apartment. We disagree.
The jury was not required to draw an inference favorable to Defendant with respect to the ownership of the money. See State v. Lankford,
Defendant argues that Aragon is distinguishable. In this case, there was no taped conversation and there was no evidence that the two residential burglaries were accomplished in the same manner. While we agree that there are differences in the evidence in Aragon and the evidence offered in this case, we are not persuaded by those differences that the evidence in this case is insufficient.
IV.
Defendant’s conviction for larceny over $250 is affirmed. We affirm one of the two convictions for larceny under $100, and we reverse the judgment and sentence of the district court, remanding with instructions to vacate one of Defendant’s convictions for larceny under $100, to impose a new sentence, and to enter an amended judgment and sentence. See Herron v. State.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
