Barnum v. State

7 S.W.3d 782, 1999 WL 1075118
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 2000
Docket07-98-0185-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 7 S.W.3d 782 (Barnum 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
Barnum v. State, 7 S.W.3d 782, 1999 WL 1075118 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

*786 PHIL JOHNSON, Justice.

Appellant Barak Lee Barnum appeals his conviction for murder and his sentence of 40 years confinement and a fine of $10,000.00. Appellant asserts that (1) the conviction was based on legally and factually insufficient evidence; (2) a written statement of decedent was admitted in violation of the hearsay rule and his constitutional rights to confront witnesses against him; (3) the trial court should have given an appropriate limiting instruction in regard to the written statement of decedent; and (4) during jury argument on punishment the State impermissibly commented on appellant’s failure to testify. We reverse and remand.

I. Factual BackgRound

Cathy Jean Barnum was last seen alive on December 6, 1994. Her body was discovered in a field near the Amarillo International Airport on April 5, 1995. Forensic reports indicated that she died by strangulation. Cathy’s husband, appellant Barak Lee Barnum, was convicted for her murder.

During November of 1994, appellant was housed at the Panhandle Addiction Recovery Center (PARC). He returned home from PARC on December 6, 1994, the same day Cathy was last seen alive. While appellant was undergoing treatment at PARC, Cathy had begun dating a man by the name of Blane Jones. Cathy and Jones began a sexual relationship shortly after they began dating. While appellant was at PARC, he learned that Cathy and Jones were dating. Cathy told Jones that she was divorcing appellant. She at first told Jones that she was not going to allow appellant to stay in the home with their sons and her when appellant returned from PARC. Cathy apparently made the same statement to appellant. While he was still in PARC, appellant was talking on the telephone with his Mend Gladys Blevins and told Gladys that he threatened to kill Cathy if she did not let him return home and see the children.

Just before appellant actually returned from PARC, Cathy told Jones that she was going to allow appellant to stay at home one night. On December 6th, the day -appellant returned from PARC and the day of Cathy’s disappearance, Cathy went to the office from which she ran her business. Jones went to Cathy’s office that afternoon and she asked him to go with her to pick up one of her children from school. Jones left his pickup truck at Cathy’s office. Jones decided that it might not be a good idea for him to be with Cathy and her son when she dropped the boy off at her home because it was the first day appellant was home from PARC. Cathy, therefore, dropped Jones off at his house before she picked up her son. Jones understood that she would return after she took her son home and would then take him to her office to pick up his truck. Jones testified that he never saw Cathy again.

The three Barnum boys testified that on the evening of December 6th they ate supper with appellant while their mother stayed in her bedroom. The boys and appellant stayed up late watching television, and the four of them slept in the living room with the television on. Their mother did not participate in their activities. The boys recalled seeing their mother in bed, seemingly asleep, with the bed-covers pulled up around her shoulders. One of the boys thought he recalled his mother leaving the house about 1:00 a.m., but he was not certain that his recollection was not a dream. Each child’s trial testimony differed somewhat from statements previously given to police.

Michelle Norman was the Barnum’s neighbor from across the street. On the morning of December 7th, appellant called Norman to ask if she had seen Cathy. Norman told appellant that she thought she had seen her at about 7:45 a.m. driving her car, however, she could not tell whether or not it actually was Cathy. The woman she had seen had blonde hair and drove *787 a white ear. Norman testified that appellant told her that she was his “witness.”

On Thursday evening, December 8th, Norman took appellant and his boys some stew. She witnessed appellant asking his sons questions about the night Cathy disappeared. Norman testified that appellant said he had to keep “drilling” his boys so that they would keep their stories straight.

On December 10th, Gary Grice gave appellant a ride from Dumas to Amarillo. Grice testified that appellant told him he had talked to Cathy on the phone since her disappearance and that she was staying at a house in Canyon, Texas.

Cecil Howard had been friends with appellant for a long time. He also knew Cathy. Howard saw a car similar to Cathy’s parked near Elwood Park in Amarillo. Two or three weeks later he mentioned the car to appellant and the two men went to look at it. When they reached the car, appellant went immediately to the car and entered it, contrary to the advice of police. Appellant acknowledged to the police that he had entered the car to make sure it was Cathy’s, but he denied that he or anyone other than Cathy had keys to her car. During a search of Howard’s truck, however, the police found keys to Cathy’s car under the passenger seat where appellant had been riding. Both Howard and appellant denied any knowledge of the presence of the keys.

An overnight bag, a change of clothes, and curlers were found in Cathy’s car. Cathy’s mother, Jackie Bolden, testified that the clothes were uncoordinated summer clothes which Cathy would not have packed, especially for a trip in December. The curlers did not have curler pins, and they would have been useless without the pins. Cathy wore contacts, but the contact case and solution were not packed in the bag. Neither Cathy’s makeup nor her makeup mirror were in the bag.

Some time after Cathy was last seen alive, Bolden was invited by appellant to help move some of Cathy’s personal effects. During the move, Bolden discovered an envelope containing a statement in Cathy’s handwriting. In the statement Cathy wrote that she believed appellant “may be contemplating murdering me for my $100,000.00 life insurance policy.” Accompanying the statement was an undated list of figures which Cathy -wrote that she had found and which was in appellant’s handwriting. The list included a notation of $5,000 for “funeral,” but did not include any explanation of the purpose for which the list was made. Bolden testified that Cathy’s insurance policy lapsed before Cathy’s disappearance.

Appellant was eventually arrested and charged with Cathy’s murder. He was in jail for a time before he was able to post bail. Two of appellant’s three cellmates testified against him at trial. One testified that appellant stated he was worried that if police talked to his children, they would know that he had “done it.” A second cellmate testified that after appellant’s sons were questioned, appellant stated, “I think they know I did it.” The third cellmate testified that he did not believe either of the other two inmate witnesses were truthful.

II. Sufficiency of the evidence

A. Legal Sufficiency

Appellant first claims that the evidence in support of the verdict is legally insufficient. We disagree.

The standard for legal sufficiency of the evidence is whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia,

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.3d 782, 1999 WL 1075118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnum-v-state-texapp-2000.