Austin Kyle Davis v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 5, 2010
Docket06-09-00061-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Austin Kyle Davis v. State (Austin Kyle Davis 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
Austin Kyle Davis v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana ______________________________

No. 06-09-00061-CR ______________________________

AUSTIN KYLE DAVIS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 202nd Judicial District Court Bowie County, Texas Trial Court No. 08F0682-202

Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Moseley MEMORANDUM OPINION

After he was convicted by a jury of murder and assessed a sentence of life imprisonment,

Austin Kyle Davis has filed his appeal. He now complains that the evidence was legally and

factually insufficient to support the jury‘s findings, that the trial court erred in admitting

photographs of the deceased victim into evidence, that he was improperly refused a

lesser-included offense instruction, and that the victim‘s mother should not have been allowed to

testify as victim impact evidence.

I. Factual and Procedural History

Davis had been a friend of the victim, Beau Watty Gibson. However, there was an offense

by Davis against Gibson for which Davis was jailed, and Davis was forced to post bond. Ten

days before Gibson‘s death, Davis‘s girlfriend, Ramona Johnson, collected $500.00 to secure

release on bond. The need for the expenditure of bond money infuriated Davis. Johnson, called

as an adverse witness by the State, testified that Davis said ―he was going to go and get that fool‘s

weed and he was going to resell it to make the money back that I had to put up for the bond. Just

in general, just about every day I had to talk him down out of going over there because he was

angry.‖ These same kinds of threats were overheard by Katherine Cunningham, a mutual friend

of Davis and Gibson. Cunningham testified that Davis had said that ―he was going to go over to

[Gibson]‘s house and kill him. . . . He just -- he thought about it and he said, f*** it, I‘m just going

2 to go over there and take his s*** and get my money back.‖ Johnson and Cunningham failed to

report the threats before the murder occurred.

Davis‘s anger did not subside. On the day of the murder, Davis discovered that his friend,

David Sherrod, had a pistol for sale, and Davis asked Sherrod if he could try out the gun before

purchasing it. Sherrod agreed and lent him the .357 ―Smith & Wesson Model 686 six inch barrel,

Pachmayr type grip, stainless steel‖ pistol. Johnson and Davis‘s friend, Cory Sutton, both

witnessed Davis cleaning the firearm. After Davis repeatedly asked to borrow Johnson‘s red

Honda to take to Gibson‘s apartment, Johnson ―finally just told him to go.‖ Davis then left with

Sutton. Fifteen minutes after he had left, Davis called Johnson and told her she needed to go to

the Woodlands apartments, where Gibson lived, and retrieve the car he had borrowed from her.

It was during that fifteen-minute period that Gibson was killed. According to Sutton,

Davis knocked on Gibson‘s door and the pair were allowed entry. Davis walked to a futon in the

living area and sat beside Gibson and his girlfriend, Britney Morris, and the group engaged in

small talk about movies. Morris‘s friend Brandi Lee Chisum Rabozzi was also present at

Gibson‘s apartment. Because Sutton did not know Gibson, he chose to not sit in the living room

with the others but, instead, remained close to the wall beside the front door. Suddenly, Davis

pulled out a gun from his hoodie; this frightened Sutton, who immediately ran out the door of the

second-story apartment and down the stairs. Pausing at the foot of the stairs when he heard

gunshots, Sutton then ran behind the apartment, jumped a fence, and continued running until he

3 reached his home. Sutton testified that no one had threatened Davis and that the only weapon

displayed while he was in the apartment was that carried by Davis.

Seventeen-year-old Morris described the horrific scene which unfolded. She was looking

forward to enjoying a movie with Gibson and Rabozzi when Davis and Sutton arrived. They

were sitting on the futon when Davis got up, picked up her backpack from the front of the

apartment, and walked toward the door. Because her car keys and wallet were in the backpack,

she tried to wrestle it from Davis‘s hands.

Rabozzi said that Morris ―reached for the bag and began grappling with [Davis], kind of

tugging at it. And I recall him pointedly not trying to, you know, point the gun at her, but he was

roughing her, you know, and pushing her around, trying to get her off him.‖ Gibson ―had gotten

up when they started tussling. . . . And after [Davis] pushed Britney to the floor, [Gibson] made the

move to go around me the opposite direction of everybody else.‖ At first, Davis held the gun

close to his chest. Rabozzi ―felt [Gibson] move past [her], and it was at that point that I believe

[Davis] realized that [Gibson] was going for his own gun, and he aimed or he drew down in our

direction.‖ Davis ―held the gun up in the air and said, mother f*****, you costed [sic] me $500‖

and began to shoot the pistol. ―The gun was thunderous from the front of the apartment.‖

Eventually, Gibson retrieved his gun and was able to return fire. The sound of Davis‘s .357

―overpowered‖ the ―pop‖ made by Gibson‘s .380.

4 Belinda Ann Williams, who was living in the Woodlands apartments, heard the gunshots as

she was checking her mail. She saw ―two guys running from the side of the building.‖ One got

into a red Honda and sped off, while the other ran behind a building. After the rapid exchange of

gunfire ended, Davis approached Gibson, grabbed Gibson‘s and Morris‘s cell phones, and rushed

out of the apartment.

Davis is known to have made two telephone calls shortly after the shooting. One of those

calls (to which reference has already been made) was to Johnson, telling her to come retrieve her

car. In the other, Davis telephoned his friend Charles Lance Matthews (who was also living in the

Woodlands apartments) and told Matthews that ―he had put something on my porch and to put it

up for him.‖ Matthews located a pistol on his porch and took it to a girlfriend‘s mother‘s home,

where he hid it in a plastic toy.

Rabozzi ―could tell that something was wrong. [Gibson] wasn‘t moving.‖ Panic ensued.

Rabozzi ran to the balcony and ―started yelling for a phone.‖ Conquilla Rudd and her friend

heard cries for help and called the police. Rudd went to the apartment and observed Rabozzi with

a gun. She later learned the gun belonged to Gibson. Rudd wrapped the gun in a towel.

Officer Ed Steger arrived at the crime scene within two minutes of the police dispatch

seeking aid. Rudd handed him Gibson‘s .380 pistol and Williams alerted him to two cell phones

that she had found on the ground. Steger recounted that Gibson was lying on his back and

―[t]here was a large pool of blood to the left side of his head and what I assume was some type of

5 brain matter. His eyes were open.‖ LifeNet arrived and Gibson was rushed to the hospital,

where he died later in the night from a gunshot wound to the head.

Johnson walked to the home of her neighbor Robert Jackson and asked for a ride to the

Woodlands so she could get her car. Ambulances and police cluttered the parking lot as Jackson

pulled his automobile onto the grounds of the Woodlands. They discovered Davis sitting on some

steps and waiting for her arrival. Seeing her, Davis then told Johnson that Gibson ―went crazy

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