Alfred Gene Davis, Sr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 2006
Docket11-05-00115-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Alfred Gene Davis, Sr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion filed December 14, 2006

Opinion filed December 14, 2006

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                 ____________

                                                          No. 11-05-00115-CR

                                                    __________

                               ALFRED GENE DAVIS, SR., Appellant

                                                             V.

                                        STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                                          On Appeal from the 39th District Court

                                                         Haskell County, Texas

                                                     Trial Court Cause No. 6034

                                                                   O P I N I O N

The jury convicted Alfred Gene Davis, Sr. of possession of methadone in an amount of one gram or more but less than four grams.  Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. ' 481.102(4) (Vernon Supp. 2006), ' 481.115 (Vernon 2003).  The jury found that two enhancement allegations were true and assessed punishment at ninety-nine years confinement and a $10,000 fine.  Appellant challenges his conviction in three issues.  We affirm.

                                                               Background Facts


Law enforcement officers of Haskell executed a search warrant on a residence located in Haskell on the morning of July 14, 2004, for the purpose of searching for cocaine.  The officers found three occupants in the house at the time of the search: appellant, Donna McCulloch, and appellant=s father.  Appellant was in the north bedroom of the house.  Haskell Police Officer William Alexander Glass testified that appellant and McCulloch had lived together at the house since April or May 2004.  He also testified that appellant=s father had been visiting appellant and McCulloch for a period of about two days.  Officer Glass said that he knew appellant and McCulloch would be at the house at the time of the search.  He also said that appellant and McCulloch had lived together at other residences in the past.  Haskell County Deputy Sheriff Winston Stevens testified that he had known appellant and McCulloch for about three years.  He said that appellant and McCulloch were boyfriend and girlfriend and that they had lived together for some time.

Officer Glass testified about the search of the house.  He and Haskell Police Officer Donald Matthew Cunningham searched the north bedroom of the house.  Officer Glass testified that the north bedroom was the main bedroom in the house, that there was a bed on the north wall of the bedroom, that there was a recliner by the bed, that there was a dresser on the north wall, and that there was a dresser on the south wall.  Officer Glass found a Ahuge crack pipe@ on top of a pile of men=s clothes on the recliner.  The officers discovered other contraband in the north bedroom. Officer Cunningham found money that had been hidden in a lamp.  The officers also found two pill bottles containing pills on each of the dressers in the room.  The prescription label had been torn off of one of the pill bottles on the north dresser.  Officer Cunningham testified that this pill bottle contained pretty large tablets.  Officer Glass testified that this pill bottle was in plain view.  Testing of the tablets at a Department of Public Safety laboratory showed that the tablets contained methadone.  The other pill bottle on the north dresser had a prescription label with McCulloch=s name on it and contained two types of pills.  Some of the pills in the bottle matched the prescription label, but the other pills in the bottle did not match the prescription label.  The two pill bottles on the south dresser had prescription labels with McCulloch=s name on them and contained multiple types of pills.  Officer Glass collected the evidence.

Officer Glass testified that he saw Amen=s stuff@ and clothes on the north dresser in the north bedroom.  Officer Cunningham searched the contents of the north dresser.  He said that he found men=s clothing in the dresser.


Officer Cunningham retrieved his drug-sniffing dog to assist in the search.  The dog alerted on McCulloch.  The dog did not alert on appellant or on appellant=s father.  Haskell County Constable Kim Bassett took McCulloch into the bathroom and conducted a strip-search of McCulloch.  During the search, McCulloch took an item from her shorts and threw it into the toilet. Constable Bassett prevented McCulloch from flushing the toilet.  Officer Glass retrieved the item from the toilet.  The item was a small bag containing rocks of an off-white substance.  Officer Glass believed that the substance was cocaine.  As a result of the search, the State charged McCulloch with possession of cocaine.  The State did not charge appellant with possession of cocaine.

                                                        Sufficiency of the Evidence

In his first two issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction for possession of methadone. 

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