Defendant appeals from his conviction of attempting to obtain property by false pretenses and of being an habitual felon. We find no error.
The State presented evidence at trial tending to show the following: On 5 January 2001 defendant entered a Wal-Mart store in Rockingham, North Carolina. Defendant approached the jewelry counter, placed two necklace chains on the counter, and asked if he could return them. Defendant had no receipt for the chains and was told that he could not return them because there was no inventory of those items at the store. The jewelry department manager testified that, as defendant walked away from the counter, he removed a watch from the store shelf, placed it in his pocket, and discarded the packaging. The manager then observed defendant request a refund for the watchband from the customer service department. Defendant was informed that he could only return those items in the jewelry department. Defendant then returned to the jewelry department and requested a refund for the necklaces and the watchband. Wal-Mart policy prohibited employees from confronting defendant about shoplifting the watch. Defendant received $13.64 for the watchband.
Defendant presented no evidence. The jury found defendant guilty of attempt to obtain property by false pretenses. Defendant pled guilty to habitual felon status. The trial court imposed a sentence of 142 months to 180 months. Defendant appeals.
The record on appeal contains nine separate assignments of error. Defendant brings forward six of the assignments of error in his brief. The remaining assignments of error are abandoned. N.C. R.
App. P. 10(b). Defendant asserts (1) the indictment and superceding indictment returned against him were invalid; (2) the trial court erred when it
I. Indictments
Defendant first contends that the original indictment and superceding .indictment for obtaining property by false pretenses were invalid, because the indictments for obtaining property by false pretenses did not include a specific amount of currency which defendant was alleged to have obtained. Defendant argues that the failure of the indictments to state the amount of currency did not provide adequate notice. We do not agree.
The “indictment must charge the essential elements of the alleged offense.”
State v. Thomas,
Regarding the crime of obtaining property by false pretenses, “[i]t is the general rule that the thing obtained . . . must be described with reasonable certainty, and by the name or term usually employed to describe it.”
State v. Walston,
Although defendant is correct in asserting that the North Carolina Supreme Court has held that the indictment should describe the money by giving the amount in dollars and cents when alleging money has been obtained by false pretenses, the present case can be distinguished from these earlier holdings.
See State v. Smith,
II. Motion to Dismiss
Second, defendant argues there was a variance between the indictment and the
“In ruling on a motion to dismiss for insufficient evidence, the trial court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, which is entitled to every reasonable inference which can be drawn from that evidence.”
State v. Dick,
State’s witness, Theresa Hatcher, testified that defendant “asked could he get a refund for any of this — which was the watchband and the necklace.” Ms. Hatcher also testified, “He went back there [to the jewelry counter] and he pulled out the watchband and this necklace and throwed [sic] them on the counter again, and told them that he wanted a refund.” Another witness for the State, Amy Updike, testified at trial, “he came back to the service desk, and he was still trying to get a refund. He had a watchband and a necklace that he put up on there. . . . And he wanted to know if he could get a refund on anything.” Mary Durocher, a witness for the State, testified, “[h]e came up to the service desk. And he opened up his hand and had jewelry — -a chain in his hand, and a watchband in his hand. And he showed them to me like this, and he was like, . . . ‘What do I need to do with this?’ ”
When viewed in the light most favorable to the State, a reasonable juror could conclude from the State’s evidence that defendant represented that he was entitled to a refund.
III. Jury Instructions
Third, defendant argues the jury instructions were prejudicial because they were not specific to the misrepresentation alleged in the indictment. Defendant alleges the trial court erred in giving the following instruction to the jury:
First, that the defendant made a representation to another. Second, that that representation was false. Third, that the representation was calculated and intended to deceive. You need not find that the person to whom the representation was made was in fact deceived. And, fourth, that the defendant thereby attempted to obtain property from the victim.
Defendant asserts that the jury was never instructed as to the specific misrepresentation it needed to find in order to convict defendant based on the indictment. We do not agree.
Because there was no objection to the instructions during the charge conference, defendant’s contention is reviewed under the plain error standard. To determine whether plain error has been committed, “the appellate court must examine the entire record and determine if the instructional error had a probable impact on the jury’s finding of guilt.”
State v. Odom,
A jury instruction that is not specific to the misrepresentation in the indictment is acceptable so long as the court finds “no fatal variance between the indictment, the proof presented at trial, and the instructions to the jury.”
State v. Clemmons,
The indictment stated that “defendant represented to an employee of Wal-Mart that he was entitled to a refund for a watch band, when in truth and in fact, the defendant knew that he had unlawfully taken the watch band and was not entitled to refund.” The
TV. Habitual Felon Status
Fourth, defendant argues that the judgment and commitment impose an active sentence on him solely for being an habitual felon. This argument is based on the omission of the file number for the charge of attempting to obtain property by false pretenses in the upper right corner of the judgment. The judgment lists both file numbers, but only the file number corresponding with the habitual felon indictment is in the upper right comer position. Defendant asserts that this is a judicial error, requiring reversal. We disagree.
Habitual felon is a status meant to enhance a sentence after a person is convicted of a crime. The habitual criminal act does not create a separate offense that is sufficient to support a criminal sen
tence by itself.
State v. Thomas,
V. Prior Record Level
Defendant argues that two of his prior convictions were incorrect for the purposes of his habitual felon status. Defendant correctly notes that his conviction for sell/delivery of cocaine should have been calculated as a Class H felony instead of a Class G felony and the convictions for 97 CRS 9949 should have been counted once, for a resulting record level of V.
However, defendant has suffered no prejudice, as his sentence was within the range for a Class C level V felon. In addition, the trial court reviewing the miscalculation found as fact that the District Attorney’s office discovered convictions that it failed to include in the initial sentencing worksheet. Including these convictions in defendant’s prior record would place him at nineteen points; the presumptive range for level VI. Thus, defendant has suffered no prejudice as a result of the error.
VI. Proportionality of the Sentence
Finally, defendant argues that his sentence of 142 months to 180 months is disproportionate to the crime he committed, and that it therefore violates the Eighth Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment. We do not agree.
It is highly unusual for the sentence in a non-capital case to be so disproportionate that it violates the Eighth Amendment.
State v. Hensley,
No error.
