Arthur Louis Foley, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 29, 2015
Docket08-13-00039-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Arthur Louis Foley, Jr. v. State (Arthur Louis Foley, Jr. 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
Arthur Louis Foley, Jr. v. State, (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

ARTHUR LOUIS FOLEY, JR., § No. 08-13-00039-CR Appellant, § Appeal from the v. § Criminal District Court Number Three THE STATE OF TEXAS, § of Tarrant County, Texas Appellee. § (TC# 1302886R) §

O P I N I O N1

Appellant Arthur Louis Foley, Jr., was indicted on one count of murder for killing Brandon

Sibley. The State alleged three alternative means of commission in the indictment. See TEX.

PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.02(b)(1)-(3) (West 2011) Under section 19.02(b)(3), felony-murder, the

State alleged the underlying felony was unlawful possession of firearm, and the trial court’s charge

included an instruction on possession by a convicted felon. The charge also included a

self-defense and defense of a third person instruction. On November 19, 2012, Appellant was

found guilty and the following day sentenced to 25 years in the Institutional Division of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice. On appeal, in three issues, Appellant challenges the trial court’s

1 This case was transferred to this Court from the Second Court of Appeals pursuant to an order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas. See TEX.GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013). (1) allowing the State to impeach him with a conviction that was older than ten years; (2) admitting

incomplete and unreliable criminal records of the 1987 conviction to impeach him; and (3) failing

to declare a mistrial sua sponte when defense counsel should have requested a mistrial but did not.

We affirm.

FACTUAL HISTORY

On May 23, 2011, Sibley, a former employee of Appellant’s, went to Appellant’s auto

repair shop to pick up speaker-boxes he left there. Appellant and his employee, Davis, told Sibley

the speakers had been stolen during a burglary of the shop and he would be paid for the speakers

once the insurance claim was settled. Sibley disputed Appellant’s claim of a burglary and

demanded to be paid for the speakers. Sibley drove away angry.

Later that day, Sibley returned and again demanded the return of his speakers. Miracle,2

Appellant’s sister, and Sibley began to fight and she swung a stick at Sibley. Appellant testified

that, believing his sister could be killed, he shot Sibley. Appellant claimed he also shot Sibley in

self-defense. Appellant stated Sibley was yelling, “I’ll kill all of y’all.”

Plumber Greg Bogan, sitting in a van parked down the street, heard Miracle and Sibley

arguing and saw her swing a stick at Sibley. Bogan observed Miracle go inside the shop. Bogan

stated Appellant came outside the shop, walked toward Sibley and shot him once. Sibley ran to

Bogan’s van and fell inside the open door. Bogan called 9-1-1 as Appellant walked calmly back

into the shop. Everyone at the shop left quickly. Sibley stopped breathing shortly after police

officers arrived.

Appellant said he shot Sibley with a .9-millimeter gun that rolled out from Sibley’s pant

leg. According to Appellant he picked up the gun and shot Sibley as Sibley came toward him. 2 Miracle had stopped by after a chemotherapy treatment and was deceased at the time of trial. 2 Appellant maintained the gun was not his, but that Sibley had brought it to the shop. Appellant

denied owning a gun despite the fact that ammunition for the .9-millimeter gun was found in his

office. He admitted to buying the ammunition in anticipation of eventually purchasing a

.9-millimeter handgun. Appellant stated he intended to purchase a .9-millimeter gun under his

wife’s name if his prior felony conviction prevented him from obtaining one in his name.

A search of Appellant’s auto shop revealed a Hi-Point .9-millimeter handgun from the

workbench in the garage area. A .9-millimeter bullet casing had been collected from Appellant’s

shop parking lot. Testing of the Hi-Point .9-millimeter handgun concluded the .9-millimeter

casing found in the parking lot came from the Hi-Point handgun found in the shop.

A former customer of Appellant’s, Bloomer, testified he had hidden a Hi-Point

.9-millimetter handgun in the trunk of a vehicle he had left there in 2011. Later, he returned for

his vehicle and Appellant told him it was gone. Bloomer never recovered the Hi-Point .9

millimeter hand gun from his vehicle. Sibley’s father stated he saw Appellant sitting at his desk

with a black semi-automatic weapon about a week to two weeks before his son’s death.

PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The trial court admitted portions of Appellant’s criminal records from the Louisiana

Department of Public Safety and Corrections as State’s Exhibit 62A without objection from

Appellant. State’s Exhibit 62A contains an indictment out of the “Criminal District Court for the

Parish of Orleans” that states: “MIKE FORD aka ARTHUR FOLEY” committed theft of an

automobile valued at five hundred dollars or more. The records also include a “WAIVER OF

CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS PLEA OF GUILTY” which is signed by Arthur Foley and his

attorney. The Waiver also recites “State of Louisiana versus Mike Ford aka Arthur Foley.” It

3 further indicates that Appellant pled guilty to theft over $500. The sentencing document reflects

on 9-11-1996 in the case of State of Louisiana v. Mike Ford that “[t]he above defendant…

tendered to the Court a plea of guilty as charged” in which the sentence is “Three (3) years in the

department of corrections – Suspended Two (2) years active probation $541.00 restitution.”

Appellant elected to testify in the guilt-innocence phase of the trial. During direct

examination he stated:

I had every intention of buying a handgun. I went to the pawnshop. I looked at some guns. I was going to buy a Ruger 9-millimeter. I filled out the paperwork. He told me it would take two days. I told him I had a prior in New Orleans maybe 18 – 17, 18 years ago. He say he would run the police report, and I come back Tuesday, he will let me know.

On cross-examination the following colloquy followed:

STATE: Mr. Foley, you told Detective Carroll, I don’t think I can get a gun, didn’t you?

APPELLANT: Yes, sir. You’re right.

STATE: There’s only one reason you would have told him that, right?

APPELLANT: Yes, sir.

STATE: What’s that reason?

APPELLANT: Because I had committed a crime in New Orleans and I – I was on probation for it. I had got three years – three-year sentence, two years probation, which I completed. I was supposed to be adjudicated. So I – I actually thought I could have owned a gun. But I know nothing about Texas law, so I would have had to do research.

STATE: Right. When you committed auto theft in Louisiana, you didn’t know about what the law for firearms would be in Texas, did you?

APPELLANT: Exactly.

STATE: Auto theft in Louisiana when you were convicted was a felony offense.

4 APPELLANT: It was an offense, I was convicted of it.

STATE: You can’t – you can’t buy a gun because you’re a convicted felon.

STATE: That’s why you can’t buy a gun because you’re a convicted felon. That’s why you told that to Detective Carroll.

APPELLANT: I – I guess you could say that. I—I wasn’t sure. I would have had to do research on it.

STATE: By the way, who’s Mike Ford and why were you using his name?

APPELLANT: I wasn’t using his name. When I first got arrested on that, apparently somebody was using my name. And that person turned out to be Mike Ford. And it was a huge thing trying to separate the two. And it – it actually stuck with me to life.

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