Delano Compton, etc. v. Commonwealth , 22 Va. App. 751 ( 1996 )


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  •                    COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
    Present: Judges Benton, Elder and Annunziata
    Argued at Salem, Virginia
    DELANO COMPTON, S/K/A
    WILLIAM LUTHER DELANO COMPTON
    OPINION BY
    v.        Record No. 1119-95-3           JUDGE ROSEMARIE ANNUNZIATA
    JULY 30, 1996
    COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
    FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF SMYTH COUNTY
    Charles H. Smith, Jr., Judge
    Thomas R. Scott (Street, Street, Street,
    Scott & Bowman, on brief), for appellant.
    Steven A. Witmer, Assistant Attorney General
    (James S. Gilmore, III, Attorney General, on
    brief), for appellee.
    Following a bench trial, appellant, William Luther Delano
    Compton, was convicted of fraudulent conversion of property in
    violation of Code § 18.2-115, sentenced to three years
    imprisonment, all of which was suspended, and placed on three
    years probation.   Appellant contends that his signature did not
    appear on the lease agreement and, therefore, the evidence is
    insufficient to support his conviction.    We disagree and affirm.
    I.
    When considering the sufficiency of the evidence on appeal
    in a criminal case, this Court views the evidence in a light most
    favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable
    inferences fairly deducible therefrom.     Higginbotham v.
    Commonwealth, 
    216 Va. 349
    , 352, 
    218 S.E.2d 534
    , 537 (1975).     On
    review, this Court does not substitute its own judgment for that
    of the trier of fact.   Cable v. Commonwealth, 
    243 Va. 236
    , 239,
    
    415 S.E.2d 218
    , 220 (1992).   The trial court's judgment will not
    be set aside unless it appears that the judgment is plainly wrong
    or without supporting evidence.   Code § 8.01-680; Josephs v.
    Commonwealth, 
    10 Va. App. 87
    , 99, 
    390 S.E.2d 491
    , 497 (1990) (en
    banc) (quoting Martin v. Commonwealth, 
    4 Va. App. 438
    , 443, 
    358 S.E.2d 415
    , 418 (1987)).
    Timberland Log and Lumber, Inc., d/b/a/ Timberland of
    Saltville, Timberland Log and Lumber ("Timberland"), and Compton
    Logging, Inc. ("Compton Logging"), entered a lease agreement in
    which Timberland agreed to lease to Compton Logging a sawmill and
    certain related equipment.    The lease provided, inter alia, that
    (1) Timberland would continue to own the leased equipment until
    the lease terms had been fully complied with; and (2) Compton
    Logging would not sell or otherwise part with possession or
    control of the equipment without Timberland's written consent.
    The court found, and appellant conceded at trial, that
    appellant acted as Compton Logging's agent.   Timberland's former
    secretary and treasurer, Ralph Williams, testified that appellant
    negotiated the terms of the lease on behalf of Compton Logging.
    Williams' testimony was corroborated by Timberland's former
    president, Vencil Minton.    Williams further testified that the
    lease embodied the terms of the agreement reached with appellant,
    that appellant was present when the lease was signed, and that
    appellant directed that the lease be signed on behalf of Compton
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    Logging.
    After Compton Logging fell behind in its lease payments,
    Williams brought the arrearages to appellant's attention.
    Appellant assured him "something would be done."   Upon his return
    to the sawmill, however, Williams found it abandoned and some of
    the leased items, including a bulldozer and a loader, were later
    found missing.   During his investigation of the case, Officer
    Danny Waddell of the Smyth County Sheriff's Office took a
    statement from appellant.   Appellant stated that both the
    bulldozer and the loader had been sold or traded to an equipment
    company in West Virginia.   He further stated, "I traded these
    pieces of equipment about October or November of last year."
    With respect to certain trailers and trucks leased to Compton
    Logging, appellant stated, "They were junk when I bought or
    leased them."    Williams denied that Timberland had given
    permission to sell the bulldozer and loader.   Moreover, no
    evidence of written consent to sell the equipment as required by
    the terms of the lease was presented.
    II.
    Code § 18.2-115 provides in part:
    Whenever any person is in possession of
    any personal property, including motor
    vehicles or farm products, in any capacity,
    the title or ownership of which he has agreed
    in writing shall be or remain in another, or
    on which he has given a lien, and such person
    so in possession shall fraudulently sell,
    pledge, pawn or remove such property from the
    premises where it has been agreed that it
    shall remain, and refuse to disclose the
    location thereof, or otherwise dispose of the
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    property or fraudulently remove the same from
    the Commonwealth, without the written consent
    of the owner or lienor or the person in whom
    the title is, or, if such writing be a deed
    of trust, without the written consent of the
    trustee or beneficiary in such deed of trust,
    he shall be deemed guilty of the larceny
    thereof.
    Appellant does not dispute that sufficient evidence supports the
    trial court's finding that he fraudulently sold the equipment in
    question.   However, appellant contends that because the evidence
    fails to establish that he signed the lease agreement as required
    under Code § 18.2-115, his conviction must be reversed.     We
    disagree with appellant's reasoning and affirm the trial court on
    the following grounds.
    It is well settled that where a corporation's business
    "involves a violation of the law, the correct rule is that all
    who participate in it are liable."      Crall v. Commonwealth, 
    103 Va. 855
    , 859, 
    49 S.E. 638
    , 640 (1905); Hays v. Commonwealth, 
    55 S.W. 425
    , 426 (Ky. 1900) ("It is evident that a corporation, if
    in fact it engaged in [illegal conduct] through its agent or
    servant, would be liable to indictment and conviction . . . and
    likewise the agent so violating the law might be indicted and
    punished"); City of Wyandotte v. Corrigan, 
    10 P. 99
    , 102 (Kan.
    1886) ("It is immaterial [with respect to criminal liability]
    whether appellant was acting for himself or for the company").
    Accordingly, corporate agents may not use the corporate entity to
    shield themselves from criminal liability for their own acts.
    See Bourgeois v. Commonwealth, 
    217 Va. 268
    , 274, 
    227 S.E.2d 714
    ,
    - 4 -
    718 (1976) ("[A]n officer cannot avoid criminal responsibility
    for an illegal act on the ground that it was done . . . through
    the instrumentality of the corporation which he controls and
    dominates and which he has employed for that purpose); United
    States v. Sherpix, Inc., 
    512 F.2d 1361
    , 1372 (D.C. Cir. 1975);
    State v. Childers, 
    415 S.E.2d 460
    , 465-66 (W. Va. 1992); State v.
    Lang, 
    417 S.E.2d 808
    , 809-10 (N.C. Ct. App.), review denied, 
    421 S.E.2d 158
    (N.C. 1992); State v. Seufert, 
    271 S.E.2d 756
    , 759
    (N.C. Ct. App. 1980), review denied, 
    276 S.E.2d 289
    (1981); State
    v. Louchheim, 
    244 S.E.2d 195
    , 203-04 (N.C. Ct. App. 1978), aff'd,
    
    250 S.E.2d 630
    (N.C.), cert. denied, 
    444 U.S. 836
    (1979); see
    generally 1 Kathleen F. Brickey, Corporate Criminal Liability
    §§ 5:01-5:02 (2d ed. 1991); 1 Wayne R. LaFave & Austin W. Scott,
    Jr., Substantive Criminal Law § 3.10 (1986); 18B Am. Jur. 2d
    Corporations § 1893 (1985); 19 C.J.S. Corporations §§ 551-552
    (1990).
    "`[A] corporation obviously acts, and can act, only by and
    through its member agents[,] and it is their conduct which
    criminal law must deter and those agents who in fact[] are
    culpable.'"   
    Childers, 415 S.E.2d at 465
    (quoting Miller v.
    State, 
    732 P.2d 1054
    , 1059 (Wyo. 1987)).   "No doctrine of agency
    law would permit corporate agents to immunize themselves from
    criminal responsibility for their own acts by the simple
    expedient of incorporating."   1 Brickey, supra, § 5:02, at 152
    (citing State v. Cooley, 
    206 S.W. 182
    (Tenn. 1918)).   "If the
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    individual personally engaged in the criminal conduct or directed
    or permitted its commission, it is no defense that the offense
    was performed on behalf of the enterprise."    1 LaFave & 
    Scott, supra
    , § 3.10, at 361; see also 
    Bourgeois, 217 Va. at 274
    , 227
    S.E.2d at 718; 
    Lang, 417 S.E.2d at 810
    (rejecting defendant's
    contention that principles concerning liability extend only to
    corporate share-holders); 
    Crall, 103 Va. at 859
    , 49 S.E. at 640;
    1 Brickey, supra, §§ 5:01, 5:02, at 148-53; 1 LaFave & 
    Scott, supra
    , § 3.10, at 361; 
    Childers, 415 S.E.2d at 466
    ; 
    Seufert, 271 S.E.2d at 759
    .
    Here, the evidence established that appellant exercised
    significant control over Compton Logging and either directed its
    acts or personally and directly engaged in acts which violated
    Code § 18.2-115.   Appellant alone dealt with the Timberland
    officers in negotiating the lease.     Appellant directed the lease
    to be signed on behalf of Compton Logging.    Appellant admitted to
    Officer Waddell that he leased the missing trailers and trucks.
    Appellant gave assurances to the Timberland officers that the
    late lease payments would be made.     And, appellant admitted to
    Officer Waddell that he traded the bulldozer and loader to the
    West Virginia equipment company.   The evidence proved that
    appellant sold the equipment in contravention of that lease and
    that he was aware the lease terms required written consent from
    Timberland before the equipment could be sold.    Although the
    evidence was in dispute as to whether appellant had obtained such
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    consent, that dispute was resolved by the trier of fact against
    appellant.
    In short, although appellant's signature does not appear on
    the lease, each element necessary to the commission of the crime
    was committed either personally by appellant or by the
    corporation at appellant's direction. 1
    Accordingly, appellant's conviction is affirmed.
    Affirmed.
    1
    The dissent's focus on appellant's failure to
    personally sign the lease ignores other material evidence in the
    case which established that the corporate lease was signed solely
    at appellant's direction. The dissent fails to address the
    applicability of established principles in Virginia law, under
    which liability is imputed to an agent for criminal corporate
    acts performed at the agent's direction and in his stead.
    The dissent reasons that, because Code § 18.2-118 excludes
    the requirement of an agreement by the accused in writing,
    appellant should have been prosecuted under that section and, by
    extension, a conviction under Code § 18.2-115 is necessarily
    precluded. The reliance placed on Code § 18.2-118 is misplaced.
    First, Code
    § 18.2-115 addresses the offense at issue here, and appellant was
    properly prosecuted under it; appellant's conviction arose from a
    violation of the rights of a secured creditor. See Bain v.
    Commonwealth, 
    215 Va. 89
    , 93, 
    205 S.E.2d 641
    , 644 (1974) (the
    offense contemplated by this section arises when a debtor
    deprives "a secured creditor of his collateral by appropriating
    it to the debtors' own use"). Second, the dissent fails to
    recognize that, notwithstanding the absence of an agreement
    signed by the accused, prosecution under Code § 18.2-118 also
    requires an analysis premised on Virginia's corporate agent
    liability principles. Under the facts of this case, the "person"
    in which the terms of the lease place possession or control of
    the equipment, was the corporation, not appellant. See Code §§
    18.2-118(a) and (b).
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    Benton, J., dissenting.
    William Luther Delano Compton was convicted of violating
    Code § 18.2-115, which reads in pertinent part as follows:
    Whenever any person is in possession of
    any personal property, including motor
    vehicles or farm products, in any capacity,
    the title or ownership of which he has agreed
    in writing shall be or remain in another, or
    on which he has given a lien, and such person
    so in possession shall fraudulently sell,
    pledge, pawn or remove such property from the
    premises where it has been agreed that it
    shall remain, and refuse to disclose the
    location thereof, or otherwise dispose of the
    property or fraudulently remove the same from
    the Commonwealth, without the written consent
    of the owner or lienor or the person in whom
    the title is, or, if such writing be a deed
    of trust, without the written consent of the
    trustee or beneficiary in such deed of trust,
    he shall be deemed guilty of the larceny
    thereof.
    
    Id. (emphasis added). To
    prove a violation of the statute, the Commonwealth had to
    prove that Compton "agreed in writing" that title to the property
    was to remain with Timberland or that Compton "ha[d] given a
    lien" on the equipment to Timberland.   The evidence proved
    neither.
    The evidence proved Compton Logging, Inc., a Virginia
    Corporation, entered into a written lease agreement with
    Timberland.   Pursuant to the agreement, Compton Logging, Inc.
    leased a sawmill and various equipment and other property.    Under
    the agreement, Compton Logging, Inc. had "the right to sell or
    trade equipment . . . [upon] prior written approval of
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    [Timberland] and such approval [could] not be unreasonably
    withheld."   The agreement further stated that "[u]ntil all of the
    terms of this lease are complied with each item of leased
    equipment shall be at all times the sole, exclusive property of
    [Timberland]."   The agreement did not "prohibit the use of the
    equipment by any manager or managing agent retained by [Compton
    Logging, Inc.] to manage the premises in which the equipment
    shall be located."   The agreement was signed on behalf of Compton
    Logging, Inc. by "Margaret R. Compton, by M.R. Scott, her
    attorney-in-fact."   Under the signature line was the designation,
    "President/Vice President."   The corporate seal of Compton
    Logging, Inc. was attested by "Mary R. Scott," the corporation's
    secretary.
    The evidence proved that Margaret R. Compton, the
    "President/Vice President," was Compton's wife.   No evidence in
    this record proved that Compton was an employee, officer, or
    director of Compton Logging, Inc.   In addition, no evidence
    proved that Compton had the authority to sign the lease, direct
    that the lease be signed, or approve the execution of the lease.
    More significant, however, the evidence undisputably proved that
    Compton did not sign the lease agreement, any writing concerning
    the title or ownership of the equipment, or any lien regarding
    the equipment.
    Furthermore, no evidence proved that any person that signed
    the lease fraudulently sold, pledged, pawned or removed the
    - 9 -
    equipment.    Indeed, no evidence proved that the corporation
    engaged in a criminal act.
    Acknowledging that "[Compton's] signature does not appear on
    the lease," the majority nonetheless concludes that "each element
    necessary to the commission of the crime was committed either
    directly by [Compton] or by the corporation at [Compton's]
    direction."    The majority's exhaustive discussion of criminal
    liability of corporate agents fails to explain the basis for
    imposing liability under Code § 18.2-115 when Compton,
    personally, had not agreed by any writing, an essential element
    proscribed by the statute, to do the act that the statute
    specifies.
    The legislature has specifically addressed Compton's conduct
    in Code § 18.2-118.    That statute reads in pertinent part as
    follows:
    (a) Whenever any person is in possession or
    control of any personal property, by virtue
    of or subject to a written lease of such
    property, except property described in
    § 18.2-117, and such person so in possession
    or control shall, with intent to defraud,
    sell, secrete, or destroy the property, or
    dispose of the property for his own use, or
    fraudulently remove the same from the
    Commonwealth without the written consent of
    the lessor thereof, or fail to return such
    property to the lessor thereof within ten
    days after expiration of the lease or rental
    period for such property stated in such
    written lease, he shall be deemed guilty of
    the larceny thereof.
    (b) The fact that such person signs the lease
    or rental agreement with a name other than
    his own, or fails to return such property to
    the lessor thereof within ten days after the
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    giving of written notice to such person that
    the lease or rental period for such property
    has expired, shall be prima facie evidence of
    intent to defraud. For purposes of this
    section, notice mailed by certified mail and
    addressed to such person at the address of
    the lessee stated in the lease, shall be
    sufficient giving of written notice under
    this section.
    (c) The venue of prosecution under this
    section shall be the county or city in which
    such property was leased or in which such
    accused person last had a legal residence.
    Simply put, the Commonwealth prosecuted Compton under the wrong
    statute.   The majority's decision sanctions and compounds the
    error.
    For these reasons, I dissent and would reverse the
    conviction.
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