Allen v. State

253 S.W.3d 260, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 582, 2008 WL 1958939
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 7, 2008
DocketPD-0468-07
StatusPublished
Cited by399 cases

This text of 253 S.W.3d 260 (Allen v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Allen v. State, 253 S.W.3d 260, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 582, 2008 WL 1958939 (Tex. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

PRICE, J.,

delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

It is a defense to the offense of simple assault that the victim effectively consented to the offender’s assaultive conduct or that the offender reasonably believed that the victim consented, at least so long as the conduct did not threaten or inflict serious bodily injury. 1 When evidence at trial raises the defense of consent, “the court shall charge [the jury] that a reasonable doubt on the issue requires that the defendant be acquitted.” 2 In the instant cause, involving a prosecution for simple assault, the trial court concluded that the evidence raised the defense of consent and instructed the jury on that defense. However, the trial court neglected to instruct the jury, either in the abstract that it must acquit should it have a reasonable doubt with respect to any defense, or specifically in the paragraph applying the law of consent that it must acquit the appellant should it have a reasonable doubt on that issue as raised in her case. In the absence of any objection to this omission, the court of appeals applied the standard for egregiously harmful jury charge error in Almanza v. State, 3 found egregious harm, and reversed the appellant’s conviction, remanding the cause for a new trial. 4

In its petition for discretionary review, the State concedes that the court of appeals applied the right standard for assessing egregious harm under Almanza. However, the State contends that the court of appeals’s application of that standard conflicted with this Court’s recent application of the standard in Olivas v. State. 5 We granted the State’s petition in order to examine this contention. 6

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

The appellant was charged by information with the misdemeanor offense of as *262 sault, allegedly committed by striking Jackie Dubendorf with her hand in the early morning hours of December 14, 2002, in a Denny’s restaurant. A number of customers and employees of the restaurant testified that the appellant and her two friends created a disturbance and were asked by the managing waitress to leave. The State’s witnesses claimed that the appellant was loud, raucous, and threatening, and that her language was laced with profanity. It is undisputed that the appellant threw a beverage on the managing waitress. For their part, the appellant and her two friends denied that they had created any kind of disturbance. In their testimony, they claimed that it had been another group of patrons who had been loud and boisterous, and that they were taken by surprise when asked to leave. They denied threatening anyone, or that they had used an excessive amount of profanity. The appellant contended that she only threw the beverage after the managing waitress had spilled food in her lap and on her coat while attempting to clear their table of dishes in an effort to persuade them to leave. One of the customers was alarmed enough to call 9-1-1 on his cell phone.

When the appellant and her friends approached the cash register to pay their check, they began to use abusive language against the cashier. But they claimed they only began to berate him when he falsely accused them of being “drunks.” At this point the complainant, who had been sitting in the smoking section of the restaurant and had witnessed the scene from a distance, approached. She testified that she told the appellant “that she wasn’t impressing anybody.” The appellant answered that she “sure the fuck ain’t trying to impress you ... I ought to walk over there and slap the fuck out of you.” The complainant testified that at this point, “I stood back with my arms out to my side and said, then, slap me.” The appellant struck the complainant, tearing a ring from her pierced eyebrow and inflicting a wound that bled substantially and had to be closed with a butterfly bandage.

For her part, the appellant described the assault as follows:

Q. Okay. What happened next?
A. Well, when [the complainant] walked up to me, I looked at her and she said, do you think you’re impressing anybody. I looked at her and it was like, I don’t know you, I don’t have to impress you. And, she goes, well, you’re not. And, at that point, she got closer to my face.
Q. How close was she?
A. About this close. About eight inches away. So, what I did, I took a step back and I said, back away from me. A response to me telling her to back up was, well, what are you going to do. I backed up again. So, now instead of being closer to the door, I’m closer to the register. And, it was like a mob of people coming toward me. The more I backed up the more they came toward me. And, I was like, one more time, if you don’t back up, I’m going to slap the shit out of you. She got real flamboyant like, well, go ahead. Do it. Do it. At this time, she’s so close, she’s like, spitting in my face. I kept backing away and I fell into it.
Q. What did you do?
A. I slapped her.

Other witnesses claimed that the complainant had responded to the appellant’s threat to slap her by saying, “if you want to hit me, hit me,” “well then, come on, hit me,” “well, slap me, then,” “do it, do it,” or words to that effect. According to the *263 appellant and one of her Mends, the complainant said this in a “challenging,” or “demanding” tone. Immediately after the appellant struck the complainant, the police arrived and arrested her.

The trial court submitted jury instructions on the defensive issues of self-defense and consent. The instruction on self-defense properly informed the jury that a reasonable doubt on the issue would require the jury to acquit the appellant. But when it came to give the charge with respect to the defense of consent, the trial court instructed the jury:

You are further instructed that it is a defense to a prosecution for assault if the victim of the assault effectively consents to the conduct of the actor, or the actor reasonably believed that the victim consented to the actor’s conduct.
Therefore, if you find from the evidence, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant, Kimberly Lynn Allen, struck Jackie Dubendorf with her hand; but, you further find from the evidence that Jackie Dubendorf effectively consented to the strike by her conduct, you will acquit Kimberly Lynn Allen and say by your verdict, “not guilty.”

Conspicuously absent from this instruction is the requirement that the jury acquit the appellant should it have a reasonable doubt with respect to whether the complainant consented to the assaultive conduct. The appellant failed to object to this deficiency at trial. 7

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
253 S.W.3d 260, 2008 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 582, 2008 WL 1958939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/allen-v-state-texcrimapp-2008.