Ann Whitlow Clark v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 17, 2005
Docket08-03-00154-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ann Whitlow Clark v. State (Ann Whitlow Clark 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
Ann Whitlow Clark v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Criminal Case Template

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS


ANN WHITLOW CLARK,


                            Appellant,


v.


THE STATE OF TEXAS,


                            Appellee.

§





No. 08-03-00154-CR


Appeal from the


265th District Court


of Dallas County, Texas


(TC# F-0022003-PR)



O P I N I O N


            This is an appeal from a jury conviction for the offense of murder. The jury assessed punishment at fifteen years’ imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

            Appellant Ann Whitlow Clark met the victim, Michael Hayes, while she was separated from her husband. Michael Hayes’s brother, Rick Hayes, described Michael as a drug addict and a drug dealer. Appellant testified that she and Hayes began dating and Hayes began staying over at Appellant’s farm in Salina, Texas. However, in the fall of 1996 Hayes became violent, so she broke up with him when she relocated to Dallas to run the struggling Clark Bolt Company, which she had acquired in her divorce. The equipment at the Clark Bolt Company was badly in need of repair so Appellant called Hayes, who was adept at working with machinery, to assist her. She continued to associate with Hayes and “trade favors” despite violence towards her, including an assault in 1997 to which Hayes pled guilty. Appellant testified that she and her employees called the police approximately ten times regarding Hayes that year because they were afraid of him. Appellant explained that she continued to associate with Hayes because he “played on [her] emotions” and she loved him. She wanted to think that he would be different. Nevertheless, she began carrying a gun in 1997 because Hayes would wait for her in her apartment and rape her. In May 1998, Appellant ended up in the hospital with a broken jaw and a broken finger allegedly caused by Hayes. She also recalled two assault cases against Hayes that year. She dropped the charges for one of them and the other was dismissed. In March 1999, Appellant obtained a one-year protective order against Hayes. Hayes violated the order on three occasions. In 1999, Appellant filed another assault case against Hayes, but the case was no-billed by the grand jury.

            Doyle Jennings, a businessman from Houston, testified that he met Appellant in March 2000. While their initial contact dealt with the possibility of Jennings investing in the Clark Bolt Company, Jennings and Appellant began dating. According to Jennings, problems developed in their relationship because Appellant continued to have contact with Hayes. Jennings heard voice messages left by Hayes, describing them as “very nasty.” He heard Hayes threaten Appellant, but he never witnessed any violence. Appellant testified that while she was with Jennings, her relationship with Hayes was sporadic. In April 2000, Appellant filed a complaint with the police because Hayes fired a gun at Appellant and Jennings through her front door. Problems also developed between Appellant and Jennings over a dispute about a diamond. Appellant claimed that Jennings stole a diamond valued at around $50,000. Jennings testified that Appellant had given him the diamond to sell, that he sold it for $2,000, but that he did not give her the money because she stole his new Corvette. Appellant filed a theft complaint with the police over the dispute about the diamond. Her house was raided and she was arrested based on a tip from Doyle Jennings. While she believed it was a narcotics raid, it was actually a search for stolen cosmetic goods. Upon her release from jail, Appellant moved into Kathy De La Marre’s house. While there, Hayes attempted to break in. He also repeatedly left angry messages on the answering machine during late June and early July.

            The State also introduced a number of messages left on Hayes’s voice mail by Appellant where Appellant was at various times friendly, such as when she needed help moving a water tank, and threatening, such as when she said she would burn down the rest of Hayes’s house. Appellant explained that she threatened him because she had been provoked.

            Appellant testified that on July 9, 2000, the day of the murder, she and Kathy went to the Clark Bolt Company warehouse to feed the horses. Both women carried guns belonging to Appellant, as was their custom. Appellant received a phone call from Hayes at 2:18 p.m., but she did not recall receiving the call or listening to the phone message. Her phone records also showed a phone call made to Hayes at 2:28 p.m. Appellant claimed that she did not make that phone call. She guessed that Kathy made the phone call, possibly about drugs.

            The witness testified that while she and Kathy were sitting in a breezeway near the building, Hayes arrived. When Appellant saw Hayes, she had “a bad feeling, a real bad feeling.” According to Appellant, Hayes asked her, in not so polite terms, if she had slept with a man he had seen her with recently. When she responded, “Not yet,” he charged at them. He knocked Kathy to the ground, and then approached Appellant. Appellant claimed that she thought he had a knife and that he had stabbed Kathy. She began to pull out her gun but Hayes was able to knock it out of her hands. A struggle then ensued over the gun. While Appellant was backed into a corner, Hayes quickly ran back to hit Kathy and then returned to Appellant, carrying Kathy’s gun. He pointed the gun at her head and pulled the trigger, but it did not fire. While Hayes was loading the gun, Appellant dove for her gun and fired. She shot Hayes in the right side of the abdomen.

            Appellant and Kathy then ran inside the warehouse and closed the door. After calling a friend of Kathy’s, Appellant called 911. The call was placed at 4:43 p.m. Police Detective Douglas Parr arrived within five minutes, shortly after three other officers arrived. When the police arrived, Appellant told them that she shot Hayes and was arrested. At the scene, Detective Parr saw a body lying face-down on the ground. He and another officer rolled the body over to check for a pulse and weapons. It appeared to Parr that Hayes had been dead for quite some time because the blood had pooled in the lower portions of his body, the arms had rigor mortis, the bloody clothes under the body were nearly dry, and the body was covered in ants. Due to the blood trail on the ground and smears on the car, Detective Parr surmised that after being shot, Hayes walked back to his car but was unable to get inside.

            Dr. Salzeberger testified that lividity and rigor mortis provide only a very broad range of time of death. Both heat and drugs cause rigor to set in quickly. Dr. Salzeberger would not guess the effect of the summer afternoon heat on Hayes’s body. Dr. Salzeberger also testified that Hayes had methamphetamine and amphetamine in his blood, but no alcohol.

            Jennings testified that Appellant called him from jail and asked him to care for her horses. Jennings claimed that when she got out of jail, Appellant took him to the bolt company and walked him through the crime scene, describing what happened.

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