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IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON ^ >I,C
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STATE OF WASHINGTON, 9? BW
No. 71530-5-1 ^ S2
Respondent,
DIVISION ONE
v.
KIMBERLY ANN BAILEY,
UNPUBLISHED OPINION
Appellant.
FILED: June 8, 2015
Becker, J. — Once a trial court decides that there are sufficient facts from
which a reasonable person could conclude that a defendant made an adoptive
admission, the question of whether the defendant actually adopted the statement
is an issue for the jury. Here, the defendant signed statements admitting the
crime. A reasonable jury could conclude her signature meant she was adopting
the contents of those documents as her own statements. We conclude the
documents were properly admitted.
Kimberly Ann Bailey was caught shoplifting at two department stores in
Seattle. She was ultimately convicted of one count of organized retail theft in the
second degree under RCW 9A.56.350(1 )(c). This crime requires evidence of
theft or possession of retail items with a cumulative value of at least $750. Bailey
alleges the trial court erred when it allowed the State to present her signed
statements as an adoptive admission of the price of the stolen merchandise.
No. 71530-5-1/2
The decision to admit evidence lies within the trial court's discretion. A
court abuses its discretion when it misapplies the law or predicates its decision
on incorrect legal principles. State v. Powell. 126 Wn.2d 244, 258, 893 P.2d 615
(1995).
An out-of-court statement introduced to prove the truth of the matter
asserted is generally inadmissible under the prohibition against hearsay. ER
801(c), 802. However, a statement is not hearsay if it is offered against a party
and is "a statement of which the party has manifested an adoption or belief in its
truth." ER 801(d)(2)(H). Before admitting evidence under ER 801(d)(2)(H), trial
courts must, as a foundational matter, determine whether the statement and
circumstances "were such that it is reasonable to conclude the party-opponent
would have responded had there been no intention to acquiesce." State v.
Neslund, 50 Wn. App. 531, 551, 749 P.2d 725. review denied. 110Wn.2d 1025
(1988). Whether a defendant actually adopted the statement, however, is a
question for the jury. Neslund. 50 Wn. App. at 551-52.
Bailey specifically takes issue with the admission of exhibits 4, 9, and 18.
These exhibits are Bailey's signed statements. It is undisputed that Bailey
admitted theft in these statements. But the statements also incorporated
computer-generated lists of the merchandise and the price of each item she
stole. Bailey claims the State presented insufficient evidence that she admitted
the price of those items.
Exhibit 4 was prepared by a loss prevention officer at one of the stores
after she caught Bailey shoplifting in December 2012. The officer testified that
No. 71530-5-1/3
she prepared exhibit 4 as required by the store's loss prevention policies. Bailey
signed exhibit 4, which begins with the following statement:
Consent of: Kimberley Ann Bailey. I admit of my own free
will, without threats or promises, that on 12/18/12 I took the
following items listed below from the possession of [store].
That paragraph is followed by a list itemizing five items of jewelry by price,
inventory number, and department. Below the itemized list is the following
statement:
All of which is $555.28. When I took the merchandise, I did so
intending it for my own personal use knowing I was depriving [store]
of their property.
The officer testified that she discussed each item listed in the admission
statement with Bailey before Bailey signed the document. She further testified
that Bailey mistakenly believed that two of the stolen necklaces listed in the
itemized portion of the admission statement were the same. Bailey signed the
statement only after the officer clarified that one of the necklaces was teardrop in
shape while the other resembled a diamond.
Another loss prevention officer at the same store laid the foundation for
exhibit 9. He testified that he prepared exhibit 9 after he caught Bailey shoplifting
in January 2013. Exhibit 9 is similar to exhibit 4. Bailey signed exhibit 9, which
begins with the following statement:
Consent of: Kimberley Ann Bailey. I admit of my own free
will, without threats or promises, that on 1/26/13 I took the following
items listed below from the possession of [store].
That paragraph is followed by a list itemizing two bracelets and a ring by price,
inventory number, and department. Below that list is the following statement:
No. 71530-5-1/4
All of which is $145.05. When I took the merchandise, I did so
intending it for my own personal use knowing I was depriving [store]
of their property.
The loss prevention officer testified that he read exhibit 9 aloud to Bailey and
explained its contents to her before she signed the document.
Exhibit 18 is a "Statement of admission" prepared by a loss prevention
officer at the second store after Bailey was caught shoplifting jewelry on January
11, 2013. The exhibit begins with the following statement:
I, Kimberly Ann Bailey . . . make this statement voluntarily and of
my own free will and accord, without intimidation by threats or
promises, that on Friday, January 11, 2013, I did take merchandise
and/or cash belonging to [store] without consent or permission and
with the intent to permanently deprive [store] of their property.
That paragraph is followed by a list of 18 pieces of merchandise itemized by
description, quantity, and price, totaling $822. Bailey's signature and address are
located below the itemized list.
With respect to each exhibit, the loss prevention officers testified that the
price listed for each item was obtained by scanning the item's bar code number
into the store's computer. That process generates the item price from the store's
computer database.
Bailey contends exhibits 4, 9, and 18 were inadmissible because the State
did not establish that she knew how the department store computers generated
the retail prices listed in each exhibit. According to Bailey, the State had to prove
she knew how each retailer's computer system works. We do not agree that
such proof is required to show that Bailey manifested an adoption or belief in the
truth of the information contained in the exhibits. In each exhibit, the material
No. 71530-5-1/5
admissions were the fact of the theft and the price of the items taken. Whether
Bailey understood how the department store computers functioned to generate
the alleged retail prices is immaterial. The threshold issue under the adoptive
admission doctrine is not whether the party understood how the document was
created, it is whether the party has manifested an adoption or belief in its truth.
ER 801(d)(2)(H).
Bailey signed admission forms that itemized the prices of the stolen
merchandise. The circumstances were such that it is reasonable to conclude she
would have refused to sign had she not intended to acquiesce in the prices listed.
Exhibits 4, 9, and 18 were therefore properly admitted.
Bailey also assigns error to the admission of a computerized printout
presented as exhibit 29. The trial court admitted exhibit 29 as a business record
over Bailey's objection that it was hearsay.
Notwithstanding the prohibition barring hearsay evidence, properly
authenticated business records are generally admissible at trial.
A record of an act, condition or event, shall in so far as relevant, be
competent evidence if the custodian or other qualified witness
testifies to its identity and the mode of its preparation, and if it was
made in the regular course of business, at or near the time of the
act, condition or event, and if, in the opinion of the court, the
sources of information, method and time of preparation were such
as to justify its admission.
RCW 5.45.020.
To qualify under the business records exception, the proponent must show
that a record (1) is that of a business; (2) produced and kept in the regular course
of that business; (3) memorializes an act, condition, or event; (4) at or near the
No. 71530-5-1/6
time of that act, condition, or event; and (5) was produced under circumstances
that suggest reliability. State v. Ben-Neth. 34 Wn. App. 600, 602-03, 663 P.2d
156 (1983). A document that is specifically prepared for trial is not admissible
under the business records exception if that document is not made in the regular
course of business. Owens v. City of Seattle. 49 Wn.2d 187, 193-94, 299 P.2d
560(1956).
Exhibit 29 is a collection of computer-generated receipts. It was compiled
by a loss prevention officer at the second store at the request of the prosecutor,
10 months after the shoplifting event. The purpose was to show the company-
wide prices of the items Bailey stole as of the date she stole them. The loss
prevention officer testified that the store maintains an electronic database that
records every purchase, return, and voided transaction associated with an item's
unique barcode at the time the event occurs. The number is located on an item's
price tag and is scanned into the store's database at the time of purchase. The
officer testified that she obtained the receipts in exhibit 29 by conducting a
search for the unique bar code number associated with the items stolen by Bailey
on the date of the theft. She said that she pulled the receipts from the database
10 months after the theft at the prosecutor's direction in order to determine the
items' sale prices, but the same information could have been pulled "in real time."
Bailey concedes the information compiled in exhibit 29 came from a
database created at the time she shoplifted. Nevertheless, she contends exhibit
29 is not a business record because the exhibit itself is not a document produced
No. 71530-5-1/7
and kept in the store's regular course of business and it was produced
specifically for litigation.
The trial court determined the report was simply a printout of what already
existed and admitted the compilation.
So it's not correct to say that the record was created in
October. It was created back January. It just existed in the
electronic form, and somebody ended up asking for the date range,
and somebody hit the print button. That's very different than to say
it was generated for purposes of litigation. It was printed at that
point, yeah, for purposes of litigation, but it was simply a printout of
what already existed at the time it was generated.
We addressed similar evidentiary issues arising in connection with retail
theft in State v. Quincv. 122 Wn. App. 395, 95 P.3d 353 (2004), review denied.
153 Wn.2d 1028 (2005), and State v. Rainwater. 75 Wn. App. 256, 261, 876 P.2d
979 (1994). review denied. 127Wn.2d 1010(1995). In these cases, we upheld
the superior court's decision to admit price tags as business records as well as
computer-generated itemized lists of stolen merchandise created by scanning
bar codes.
The fact that the receipts were compiled after the theft is immaterial
because they were records created at or near the time of Bailey's theft. The act
of collecting the receipts and prices and assembling them into one document to
be used at trial did not diminish the accuracy or reliability of the information.
Because the records were created during the regular course of business, this
case is distinguishable from Owens, a case in which the data in the exhibit was
specially created for trial. It would elevate form over substance to hold that
No. 71530-5-1/8
stapling the receipts together into a single exhibit took them out of the business
records exception.
We find no abuse of discretion in the admission of the challenged exhibits.
Affirmed.
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WE CONCUR:
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