¶ 1. The State appeals the district court’s grant of motions to dismiss by defendants Victoria Willard-Freckleton, Calista Tanner, and Kara Orfanidis in three unrelated but factually similar cases. The three defendants were accused of stealing cash receipts from their employers. All three cases raise the question of whether an employee who steals property placed under her care, but remaining in her employer’s constructive possession, violates the embezzlement statute, 13 V.S.A. § 2531. The trial court, following
State v. Ward,
¶2. The trial court dismissed the charges against the three defendants pursuant to Vermont Rule of Criminal Procedure 12(d). When reviewing the grant of a Rule 12(d) motion to dismiss, we employ the same standard as the trial court and view the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, excluding modifying evidence, to determine whether the evidence can fairly and reasonably establish guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
State v. Hutchins,
I. The Facts
A. State v. Willard-Freckleton
¶ 3. Victoria Willard-Freckleton was manager of a Dunkin’ Donuts in Brattleboro. As part of her job, she was responsible for making bank deposits of daily sales proceeds. A company audit *28 revealed that the bank deposits did not match the daily sales records for thirteen days between February 10 and March 19, 2005, for a total discrepancy of $5,850. On March 26, after being questioned by Dunkin’ Donuts management about the discrepancies and denying any knowledge, Willard-Freckleton left the store with proceeds for March 25 and 26 totaling $4,402. WillardFreckleton had not deposited any of that money when the police questioned her on March 30, 2005. In that interview, WillardFreckleton admitted to shorting the deposits entrusted to her and confirmed the amounts taken. She later returned the March 25 and 26 proceeds, minus nearly $700 that she had already spent.
B. State v. Tanner
¶ 4. Calista Tanner worked at the Rockingham branch of Halliday’s Flower Shop. On February 19, 2005, she traveled to Halliday’s Bellows Falls branch where she helped transfer the day’s proceeds from the store’s cash register into manila envelopes. Tanner then brought those envelopes back to Rockingham for storage in that shop’s cooler. While alone in the shop, Tanner removed cash from the envelopes before placing them in the cooler. After being questioned by police, Tanner admitted taking approximately $420 from the envelopes for personal use. Tanner also admitted deleting approximately ten to twelve transactions from the Rockingham shop’s register and taking the corresponding cash, approximately $200 to $300. In total, Tanner admitted to stealing between $600 and $800 from her employer.
C. State v. Orfanidis
¶ 5. On seven separate occasions in January and February 2005, Kara Orfanidis stole money from the cash register of her employer, a Fleming Oil gas station in Bellows Falls. On each occasion, the cash-out amount from her register was $35 to $140 less than the receipts. The discrepancies totaled $935.31. On the last occasion, Orfanidis took money from the register and abruptly left during her shift, locking the door behind her in the middle of the afternoon. Orfanidis later admitted taking money from the register.
II. The Law
¶ 6. The State charged all three defendants with embezzlement under 13 V.S.A. § 2531. That statute provides:
*29 [A] clerk, agent, bailee for hire, officer or servant . . . who embezzles or fraudulently converts to his own use, or takes or secretes with intent to embezzle or fraudulently convert to his own use, money or other property which comes into his possession or is under his care by virtue of such employment, notwithstanding he may have an interest in such money or property, shall be guilty of embezzlement ....
13 V.S.A. § 2531. We have, to date, understood embezzlement and larceny to be mutually exclusive; embezzlement applying only when an accused, in lawful possession of property on behalf of the intended owner, converts that property to his own use before passing it to the owner’s possession. In preempting legal possession by the owner, there is no trespass against that possession to complete the theft, and without a trespass there is no larceny. Thus, in
State v. Ward
this Court overturned an embezzlement conviction where an employee removed money from a cash drawer.
¶ 7. Here the State does not allege embezzlement of monies in the legal possession of the employees. Rather, in each of these three cases the State charged the defendant with taking money that “came into her care” by virtue of her employment. The State argues that the statute not only outlaws traditional embezzlement by an employee of “property which comes into his possession,” but also expressly extends embezzlement to apply to an employee who wrongfully “takes . . . money or other property which comes . . .
*30
under his care by virtue of such employment.” The State contends that
Ward
erred in focusing solely on possession without considering the statute’s alternative language covering an employee’s theft of property “under his care.” The State maintains that
Ward’s
requirement of lawful possession by the thief in every embezzlement case renders the “under his care” phrase nugatory, a result contrary to standard statutory construction. See
Holton v. Dep’t of Employment & Training,
¶ 8.
Ward’s
holding is not without support from outside authorities, even in a few jurisdictions with similar statutes. See, e.g.,
State v. Weaver,
¶ 9. Unlike the early English statutes, 13 V.S.A. § 2531 includes the phrase “under his care,” which encompasses more than takings that occur while the defendant is in legal possession. Other jurisdictions have long interpreted statutes with similar phrases to extend embezzlement to property in the defendant’s custody. See, e.g.,
Henry v. United States,
¶ 10. Though generally bound by the principles of stare decisis to follow past precedent, we are not “slavish adherents” to this doctrine,
O’Connor v. City of Rutland,
III. Applying the Law
¶ 11. The parties do not address the question of whether, given this Court’s reversal of the district court’s dismissal of the instant cases based on its interpretation of existing law, our decision should be applied to these cases. Considering the state of the evidence at this stage of the proceedings, we do not address this question, but rather leave the issue for the trial court to resolve, if raised, when the facts are established to the point that the relevant criteria can be applied.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Rulings to this effect in other states that had similar statutes have been superseded by newer statutes that consolidate most theft crimes. See
Aabel v. State,
See, e.g.,
Nolan v. State,
Accord
Gill v. People,
Review of the State’s information in Ward reveals that the defendant was charged, as here, with embezzling monies “under his care.” However, the matter of today’s statutory interpretation was neither raised nor resolved in the Court’s decision.
