OPINION
Fоllowing a trial to the bench, Dalton B. Stewart was convicted of theft and sentenced by the trial court to two years in a state jail facility. The sentence was suspended and community supervision was granted for a period of five years, confinement in the Montgomery County Jail for a period of ten days was imposed as a condition of community supervision, a $1,000 fine was assessed, and Stewart was ordered to perform 400 hours of community service. Stewart appeals raising three issues.
Stewart blackmailed the complainant, his ex-wife, by calling her at her residence in Mоntgomery County and threatening to distribute nude pictures of her taken during their marriage. Stewart told the complainant to send him $5,000 or he would distribute the pictures to all the churches in her area and all the surrounding businesses. Stewart gave the complainant a deadline, but before it arrived, she reсeived a letter from Stewart at her home, in Montgomery County. Inside the envelope was a flier with the name and address of the hair salon she and her second husband owned. In the middle of the page was one of the pictures. An accompanying letter threatened a mass mailing of thе flier to the Conroe business and church community unless the complainant complied with Stewart’s demands within seven days.
The complainant contacted Detective Gene De Forrest of the Conroe Police Department, with whom she had spoken after the initial threat was made, аnd took him the envelope and its contents. The complainant was put in contact with Inspector Bruce Beckham of the United States Postal Service. The complainant submitted $1,600 to the postal inspector to be delivered to Stewart through United States Express Mail. This occurrеd in Montgomery County. The money was delivered to Stewart at his residence in Harris County. Stewart was then arrested with the money in his possession.
In his first issue, Stewart claims the State failed to establish venue in Montgomery County. The specific venue statute for theft provides, “Where property is stolen in onе county and removed by the offender to another county, the offender may be prosecuted either in the county where he took the property or in any other county through or into which he may have removed the same.” TexCode CRiM. PROC. Ann. art. 13.08 (Vernon 1977). The Court of Criminal Appeals has сoncluded article 13.08 “applies to all of the offenders who are prosecuted under the consolidated theft statute.” Jones v. State,
Jones was charged with receiving stolen proрerty. The Court of Criminal Appeals found venue lay only in Burleson county (where the property was received), not in Brazos County (where it was taken), because Jones “assumed control of the property at his home in Burleson County.” Id. at 657. The Court concluded that venue for the offense nеver attached in Brazos County because the State never showed Jones received the property in Brazos
Stewart also was charged under the consolidated theft statute. Thus, according to Jones, we determine if venue was proper in Montgomery County pursuant to article 13.08, and not article 13.18.
The State alleged in its indictment that Stewart unlawfully appropriated money. Thus, the State had to prove the money was appropriated in Montgomery County or that the money was appropriated elsewhere and later taken to or through Montgomery County. See Weaver v. State,
An analogous situation arose in Weaver v. State,
The court further found there was “no evidence that the money acquired by cashing Simpson’s check was ever taken to or through Harris County.” Id. at 146. The court concluded the Statе “failed to prove what it alleged, theft of Simpson’s money in Harris County.” Id. Weaver’s conviction was upheld, however, because the court found the proof on the other counts supported the conviction for a second degree felony offense. Id.
To the contrary is Salazar v. State,
Ellis v. State,
In the present case, as in Weaver, the inducement occurred in Montgomery County but the defendant did not obtain the money in that county. Because Weaver was determined under the correct venue statute, we find it more persuasive. We disagree with Salazar and Ellis that control can be exercised over property that is not in the possession, whether it be actual or “possessory,” of the defendant.
The State cites Geter v. State,
Geter contended she never actually possessed currency, or even a check representing currency, and thus she could not be guilty of acquiring or exercising control over the currency. Id. Geter did not contest venue. The issue before the court was whether the transfer of funds from the AAMCO account to Geter’s account by means of withdrawal and deposit slips constituted an exercise of control over the currency. Id. at 209-10. The court noted that exercising control does not require possession and found that by ordering the withdrawal of all funds from the account, and by using that money to purchase a certificate of deposit, Geter effectively exercised control over the currency. Id. at 210. The court used as an example a shipping clerk who re-routes a package to a friend by changing the address label. The court said that although the clerk did not have possession, his conduct constituted an exercise of control over the package. Id.
In the instant ease, Stewart never had possession of the currency in Montgomery County. There is no evidence Stewart exercised control over any instrument which representing the currency or redirected any package containing the currency. The only action of Stewart occurring in Montgomery County was inducing the complainant, through blackmail, to send the currency. Thus the present case is akin to Weaver, where venue was found not to lie in the county where only the inducement occurred, and is dissimilar to Geter.
Like Geter, in Bailey v. State,
Regarding venue, Bailey contended the evidence established an appropriation in Harris County, rather than Dallas County, because the wire transfer was completed in Harris County. Id. at 200. Bailey relied on Coats for the proposition that a theft by wire transfer is completed only upon the crediting of an accused’s account. Id. (citing Coats,
Unlike Bailey, Stewart was never a fiduciary of the currency in question and did not transfer the funds. Bailey is inappo-site to the present case because Stewart had no control over the money until it was delivered to him.
The State cites Wood v. State,
We do not disagree with the authority cited by the State which finding an unlawful or harassing telephone communication is made or committed in the county in which the communication is received as well as the community from which it is sent. See Haigood v. State,
Ware also decided venue under article 13.18. Ware,
All three of these cases involve unlawful telephone communications, not theft. Thus, all three consider the issue of venue under article 13.18 rather than article 13.08. Accordingly, this authority is inap-posite to the issue currently under consideration.
The only action taken by Stewart in Montgomery County was the inducement of the transfer of the currency. In Montgomery County, Stewart did not conduct or dirеct the transfer of the money, or any instrument representing the money, and did not re-direct any packages containing the money. Accordingly, we find he did not exercise control over the currency in Montgomery County. Stewart’s first issue is sustained.
Because our determination of Stewart’s first issue is dispositive of his appeal, we do not address the remaining points. Stewart’s conviction is reversed, and a judgment of acquittal rendered. See Jones,
REVERSED AND RENDERED.
Notes
. There were two complainants.
. In Geter v. State,
. The Court of Criminal Appeals reversed the decision of the Court of Appeals on the basis that "law of the case” doctrine precluded relitigation of the validity of the affidavit and arrest warrant. Ware v. State,
