Alaa Mohamad Weiss v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 2009
Docket02-07-00390-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Alaa Mohamad Weiss v. State (Alaa Mohamad Weiss v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaa Mohamad Weiss v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-07-390-CR

ALAA MOHAMAD WEISS APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM COUNTY CRIMINAL COURT NO. 5 OF TARRANT COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION (footnote: 1)

I.  Introduction

A jury convicted appellant Alaa Mohamad Weiss of assault,  assessed his punishment at 182 days in jail with a $3,000 fine, and the trial court sentenced him accordingly.  Appellant brings ten issues on appeal.  We affirm.

II.  Facts

For several days in July 2005, appellant and his wife, Rania, had been arguing over money.  On July 15, 2005, Rania called appellant’s sister Majd and asked her to help the couple resolve their dispute.  That afternoon, Rania went to Majd’s house and appellant arrived about an hour later.  As they aired their grievances, appellant started cursing Rania’s family.  Rania objected to that and told him to stop.  When he persisted, Rania arose from her chair, crossed the room and placed her bare foot on appellant’s leg, which in their culture, signals disrespect.  Appellant warned her to move away from him or he would hit her.

When she refused to move away, Majd and her husband Haitham stood up and moved closer to the couple.  Appellant also stood, grabbed a remote control from the table, looked Rania in the eye, and struck her in the face with it.

Rania’s face went numb.  Haitham told her she was bleeding.  Rania tried to call the police, but her in-laws took the telephone away from her.

For the next two hours, Rania asked to go to the hospital, but was only given an ice pack and told that she was fine and that she didn’t need to go.  After she tried to leave on her own but swooned against the door, appellant agreed to take her for medical attention, but instructed her to say that her daughter had hit her with a toy.  Appellant and Haitham drove Rania to a CareNow facility, where personnel referred her to the USMD Hospital emergency room.

When she arrived at the hospital, Rania was dizzy, weak, had trouble standing and talking, and her head and eyes hurt.  The doctors diagnosed a concussion.  Appellant told the doctor that Rania’s daughter had hit her.  City of Arlington Police Officer Michael Smith came to Rania’s room and appellant told him the same story.

The doctor ordered a shot and wanted her to wait at the hospital for thirty minutes, but appellant insisted that she leave after the injection, so he took Rania back to his sister’s house.  Rania spent the night there but awoke early the next day, gathered her daughter, and drove home.

On the way, Rania felt dizzy and couldn’t see properly.  Once she arrived home, she called a friend who drove her to the police station where she met with Arlington Police Officer Juan Williams.  Officer Williams thought Rania appeared nervous, frightened, and shaken up.  She told him she was in pain and felt dizzy.  He was concerned that she might faint during the interview.  After he took her report, Officer Williams gave her a ride home because she told him she was afraid appellant might be there waiting for her and that he might retaliate against her for talking to the police.

Appellant was charged with assault bodily injury on a family member and tried by a jury, which found him guilty, and assessed his sentence at 182 days’ confinement with a $3,000 fine.  The trial court sentenced appellant accordingly.

III.  Jury Charge

Appellant’s first issue is a three-part challenge to the jury charge.  In part A, he argues that the trial court erred by combining the defenses of accident and involuntary conduct in an application paragraph.  That paragraph reads as follows:

Therefore, if you believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that [appellant] . . . did then and there intentionally or knowingly cause bodily injury to RANIA WEISS, a member of [appellant’s] family or household, by striking her with a remote control, but you further believe from the evidence or have a reasonable doubt thereof that the injury was a result of an accident and was not the voluntary act of [the] conduct of [appellant] you will acquit [appellant] and say by your verdict “Not Guilty (emphasis added).”  

Appellant and the State agree that “accident” is not a recognized defense and that the court erred by including it in the charge. (footnote: 2)  Appellant also complains that the charge erroneously combined accident with involuntary conduct, which he contends authorized the jury to acquit only upon finding that appellant  acted involuntarily and that the injury was an accident.  

Appellant preserved neither of these complaints by objecting in the trial court.  Although he did raise numerous objections to the charge, none of his objections addressed the word “accident,” the use of accident as a defense, or  the combination of accident and involuntary conduct in the application paragraph of the charge.  Accordingly, we consider whether the error was so egregious and created such harm as to deprive appellant of a fair trial. (footnote: 3)  

Jury-charge error is egregiously harmful if it affects the very basis of the case, deprives the defendant of a valuable right, or vitally affects a defensive theory. (footnote: 4)  In determining whether jury-charge error is egregiously harmful, we consider the entire charge, the evidence, including contested issues and probative weight, arguments of counsel, and any other relevant information revealed by the record as a whole. (footnote: 5)   

The jury in this case was instructed that a person acts intentionally with respect to a result of his conduct when it is his conscious objective or desire to cause the result, and acts knowingly with respect to a result of his conduct when he is aware that his conduct is reasonably certain to cause the result.  The jury was also instructed that it could find appellant guilty only if it found that he intentionally or knowingly caused bodily injury to Rania Weiss.  Viewing the entire charge, the abstract portion, which contained both the required mental state and accompanying definitions, sufficiently instructed the jury on the requisite mental state for the offense.  The application paragraph specifically instructed the jury to find appellant guilty only if it found that he intentionally or knowingly caused bodily injury to Rania.  Further, in the very next paragraph it instructed, “Unless you so find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt or if you have a reasonable doubt thereof, you will acquit the Defendant and say by your verdict ‘Not Guilty’.”

As for the contested issues and weight of the probative evidence, both sides presented straightforward cases that relied largely on the credibility of their key witnesses.  The State maintained that appellant intentionally or knowingly injured Rania by striking her in the face with a remote control, whereas appellant’s theory directly contested the intent element and the State’s allegation of manner and means.

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Alaa Mohamad Weiss v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaa-mohamad-weiss-v-state-texapp-2009.