MEMORANDUM DECISION
Pursuant to Ind. Appellate Rule 65(D), this Mar 09 2015, 9:25 am
Memorandum Decision shall not be regarded as
precedent or cited before any court except for the
purpose of establishing the defense of res judicata,
collateral estoppel, or the law of the case.
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Darren Bedwell Gregory F. Zoeller
Marion County Public Defender Attorney General of Indiana
Appellate Division
Indianapolis, Indiana Brian Reitz
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN THE
COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA
Amanda Choban, March 9, 2015
Appellant-Defendant, Court of Appeals Case No. 49A02-
1406-CR-400
v. Appeal from the Marion Superior
Court
State of Indiana, Cause No. 49F15-1208-FD-51160
Appellee-Plaintiff.
The Honorable James B. Osborn,
Judge
Brown, Judge.
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[1] Amanda Choban (“Choban”) appeals her conviction for theft as a class D
felony. Choban raises one issue which we revise and restate as whether the
charging information and lack of a jury instruction requiring unanimity resulted
in fundamental error. We affirm.
Facts and Procedural History
[2] In the beginning of 2012, Choban’s aunt, Christina Choban (“Christina”),1
resided on Shelbyville Road in Marion County and offered to let Choban come
and stay with her because Choban did not have a place to live. Choban, her
four children, her boyfriend Daniel Matthews, and her three dogs moved into
Christina’s residence, which was a house she rented from Chris Harrison. At
the time that Choban moved in to Christina’s house, Harrison was using the
detached garage as an office space. Christina traveled for work and was home
on the weekends. When she returned home or was not traveling, there were
problems. In early June, the house “was kind of tore up,” “there were no
dishes that were clean,” there was food in the microwave that had been sitting
there for awhile, Choban’s children were breaking things, and Choban and
Matthews were not keeping up the house. Transcript at 44.
[3] After a fight ensued, Christina told Choban that she needed to “get out of [her]
house.” Id. at 45. Christina spoke with Harrison about the problems, and
Harrison suggested the detached garage, which was about ten feet from
1
Christina is referred to as Christie and Christi in the record.
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Christina’s residence, as a place for Choban. Choban made an arrangement
with Harrison, and Choban and Matthews moved into the garage, but they still
had access to Christina’s house because there was no running water in the
garage. Christina thought that with more space, “it might have gotten better,”
but “it got worse.” Id. at 46. Christina’s things “were still getting broken,” and
her things were being taken without her permission. Id. Choban found her
silverware in the trash can and found her pizza pan outside, and observed that
her good cookware was used to feed the dogs and then left outside.
[4] Choban and Matthews lived in the garage less than a month before moving out
on July 1. On the night of their move, “they confirmed they were going to be
out of the house, and that they were going to take [Christina’s] things and wash
them, and bring them back,” and Christina said: “No, just leave them all on the
couch, and I’d take care of cleaning them.” Id. at 49-50. On the morning after
the move, Christina found that her trash can was full of her own belongings.
She found her pizza pan, a microwave plate, cups, towels, forks, DVDs, a hair
clip, a glass, a candle jar, a plate, toothpaste, a coffee mug, and cups in the trash
can. She noticed that fifty to one hundred pieces of clothing were missing and
discovered “a lot of it” in the trash can. Id. at 48. She also discovered that one
of her bed sheets had been hammered to a wall to make a door cover in the
garage. Choban and Matthews never brought items back to Christina.
[5] At some point, Choban asked her grandmother, Christina’s mother, if she could
have a garage sale at her house, and her grandmother said yes. Choban and
Matthews had access to a shed on the grandmother’s property and placed a
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padlock on it during the garage sale. A garage sale took place, and Choban’s
uncle, Doug Choban (“Doug”), observed swords, some drills, and towels.
Doug learned that items were missing from Harrison’s garage, took a
photograph of one of the items that Harrison described as missing, and sent it to
him. When the garage sale was over, Doug replaced the padlock with a key
lock.
[6] Doug called Christina and asked her to come over to her mother’s house.
When she arrived, Doug showed her the shed behind the house and a tarp over
her blankets and “just a pile of stuff.” Id. at 62. Christina found several of her
items in the pile under the tarp or in the shed including towels, washrags, a
voice changer from a Halloween costume, a blanket, and DVDs. Christina also
observed a “walkie talkie system,” a tool, and a sword that belonged to
Harrison in the shed or under the tarp. Id. at 67. Indianapolis Police Detective
Kurt Rincker arrived at the scene, and Christina identified her items as being
stolen. Detective Rincker spoke with Harrison and took control of one or two
swords and walkie talkies that belonged to Harrison. The next day, Harrison
identified the items that belonged to him.
[7] On August 7, 2012, the State charged Choban and Matthews with theft as a
class D felony. Specifically, the State alleged that Choban “on or about July 1,
2012, did knowingly exert unauthorized control over the property, that is:
sword(s) and/or radio(s) and/or a computer and/or household item(s), of
Christi[na] Choban and/or Chris Harrison, with intent to deprive Christi[na]
Choban and/or Chris Harrison of any part of the value or use of said property .
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. . .” Appellant’s Appendix at 24. On August 15, 2012, the State filed an
amended information to add a date range of April 8, 2012 to July 3, 2012, and
to add Doug as a victim. On March 22, 2013, Choban filed a motion to sever
her trial from the trial of Matthews. On March 27, 2013, the court granted
Choban’s motion to sever.
[8] A few months later, Christina saw Choban, and Choban called her a f------ b----.
On January 2, 2013, Choban gave three swords that had been hanging in the
garage when Christina moved into Harrison’s rental property to the police, the
police gave the swords to Christina, and Christina gave them to Harrison.
[9] On March 19, 2014, the court held a jury trial. Before the trial, the prosecutor
stated: “I was not aware that [another prosecutor] had added um, Mr. Choban
as a main victim. Um, the things weren’t his, so I guess the State would request
that we remove his name from the charging information.” Transcript at 4.
Choban’s counsel did not object, and the court allowed the State to amend the
charging information to delete Doug’s name from the information.
[10] At trial, Christina, Doug, and Detective Rincker testified to the foregoing.
Choban testified that she did not take anything belonging to Christina or
Harrison, that she was under the impression that the swords belonged to
Matthews, and that she did not put anything in the trash can. When asked by
the prosecutor whether some of the items that Christina let her use were the
items that ended up in the trash, Choban testified: “Most of the items that I saw
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today belonged to me.” Id. at 144. She also testified that she was “quite upset
about that.” Id.
[11] Preliminary Instruction No. 4 states:
In this case, the State of Indiana has charged the Defendant with
Theft, a Class D Felony. The charge reads as follows:
Count I
On or about or between April 8, 2012 and July 3, 2012, in Marion
County, State of Indiana, the following named defendant, Amanda
Choban, did knowingly exert unauthorized control over the property,
to wit: sword(s) and/or radio(s) and/or a computer(s) and/or
household item(s), of another person, to wit: Christi[na] Choban
and/or Chris Harrison, with the intent to deprive the person of any
part of its value or use.
Appellant’s Appendix at 45. Preliminary Instruction No. 6 states in part:
Before you may convict the Defendant, the State must have proved
each of the following beyond a reasonable doubt:
The Defendant
knowingly
exerted unauthorized control
over the property of Christi[na] Choban and/or Chris Harrison
with intent to deprive Christi[na] Choban and/or Chris Harrison of
any part of its value or use.
If the State failed to prove each of these elements beyond a reasonable
doubt, you must find the Defendant not guilty of theft, a Class D
felony, as charged in Count I.
Id. at 47.
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[12] The jury found Choban guilty as charged. At the sentencing, Choban made a
statement, and the court stated: “[N]othing that I heard you say I find
believable. I – you don’t come across as credible. The jurors didn’t find you
credible when you testified.” Id. at 195. The court sentenced Choban to 365
days with 180 days served on Community Corrections Home Detention with
GPS monitoring and 185 days suspended to probation.
Discussion
[13] The issue is whether the charging information and lack of a jury instruction
requiring unanimity resulted in fundamental error. Choban argues that the
charging information as amended alleged at least two crimes in a single count,
and that Preliminary Jury Instruction #4 alleged two separate thefts of
numerous unrelated items from two unrelated people over a period of months.
She asserts that she did not object to the duplicity in the charging information,
but the cumulative impact of this and other errors was fundamental error,
including that the jury was not instructed that it must unanimously agree on a
theft before convicting her. Choban argues that one juror could have believed
that she threw away some of her aunt’s dishes out of spite, but knew nothing
about the swords and another juror could have believed that the household
items removed from the garage belonged to Choban but that she helped
Matthews steal the swords. She claims that the cumulative impact of these
errors made a fair trial impossible.
[14] The State maintains that Choban has not demonstrated fundamental error, and
that her counsel may very well have made a strategic decision to waive the issue
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at trial because, if her counsel had objected to the charging information and the
State had chosen to separate the offense into separate counts, then Choban’s
sentence may have been longer or more severe. The State also argues that her
claims of error fail both individually and cumulatively. It contends that the
facts do not constitute separate offenses requiring more than one charged count
of theft and that “[b]ecause the State only charged and convicted Choban on
one offense, the theft of items from Christina’s residence during the period
Choban resided there, this instruction is not required.” Appellee’s Brief at 9.
The State also points to other jury instructions that were given including that
the State must prove each element beyond a reasonable doubt, and that “[t]o
return a verdict, each of you must agree to it.” Appellant’s Appendix at 68.
The State contends that Choban is requesting that we reweigh the evidence and
points out that the trial court stated that Choban was not credible and that the
jurors did not find her credible.
[15] As Choban acknowledges, she did not object at trial to the charging
information, the instructions, or to the lack of a jury instruction on unanimity.
To circumvent waiver, Choban contends that the court permitted the trial to
proceed on two separate thefts charged in a single count and failed to provide
an instruction on unanimity and this resulted in fundamental error.
Fundamental error is an extremely narrow exception that allows a defendant to
avoid waiver of an issue. Cooper v. State, 854 N.E.2d 831, 835 (Ind. 2006). It is
error that makes “a fair trial impossible or constitute[s] clearly blatant violations
of basic and elementary principles of due process . . . present[ing] an undeniable
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and substantial potential for harm.” Id. “This exception is available only in
‘egregious circumstances.’” Brown v. State, 929 N.E.2d 204, 207 (Ind. 2010)
(quoting Brown v. State, 799 N.E.2d 1064, 1068 (Ind. 2003)), reh’g denied.
“Fundamental error is meant to permit appellate courts a means to correct the
most egregious and blatant trial errors that otherwise would have been
procedurally barred, not to provide a second bite at the apple for defense
counsel who ignorantly, carelessly, or strategically fail to preserve an error.”
Ryan v. State, 9 N.E.3d 663, 668 (Ind. 2014), reh’g denied.
[16] As pointed out by the State, Choban’s attorney may have made a strategic
decision to waive the issue of the charging information because separate counts
may have resulted in a longer sentence. The State charged Choban with theft
occurring between April 8, 2012, and July 3, 2012, and the record reveals that
items belonging to Christina and Harrison were stolen during the period
alleged. Based upon the allegations in the charging information, the State could
have charged Choban with two separate offenses resulting in two separate
convictions. Even assuming error, the State presented evidence that Choban
had access to the stolen items, that items were in her possession, that she took
the items without permission, and that she attempted to sell or otherwise
dispose of the items. The only issue was the credibility of the alleged victims
and Choban, and the jury resolved the basic credibility dispute against the
defendant. Indeed, the trial court noted at the sentencing hearing: “[N]othing
that I heard you say I find believable. I – you don’t come across as credible.
The jurors didn’t find you credible when you testified.” Transcript at 195.
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Additionally, an instruction was given directing the jury that to return a verdict
they must all agree to it. We cannot say that Choban has demonstrated that
any error so prejudiced her that she was denied a fair trial.
Conclusion
[17] For the foregoing reasons, we affirm Choban’s conviction.
[18] Affirmed.
Bailey, J., and Robb, J., concur.
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