Batterbee v. State

537 S.W.2d 12, 1976 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 953
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1976
Docket50980
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 537 S.W.2d 12 (Batterbee 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
Batterbee v. State, 537 S.W.2d 12, 1976 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 953 (Tex. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

DOUGLAS, Judge.

This is an appeal from a conviction for the offense of murder with malice after a trial before the court. Punishment was assessed at ten years, probated.

Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. The State’s case is founded primarily on the statement made by appellant after the deceased’s death and the testimony of Dr. Joseph Jachimczyk, Harris County medical examiner. The State introduced evidence that appellant wanted to divorce her husband and that she wanted him dead. Even though she might have wanted to kill him, the question is did she cause the death of Vernon Batterbee?

*13 The indictment, omitting the formal parts, is as follows:

“Ann Batterbee on or about the 12th day of April 1973, in said County and State did with malice aforethought kill Vernon Batterbee by causing him to swallow sec-obarbital so administered did cause the death of the said Vernon Batterbee.”

On May 9, 1973, appellant made a statement. Omitting the formal parts, it is as follows:

“I would like to give Det. Oviedo the following voluntary statement:
“After reading the other statement that I gave I wish to give this statement to make some changes and tell the complete truth.
“On Thursday 4r-12-73 after Vernon and I had relations, about 20 to 30 minutes later he asked for a glass of milk. I took the glass of milk into the bedroom and Vernon had some Seconal pills in his hand. I don’t know how many but it was over two. He took the pills and drank the glass of milk and laid back in bed. After 40 minutes later I went into the bedroom and Vernon was asleep. I took 4 Seconal capsules from a Bufferin bottle that was on the dresser in the bedroom.
I got a glass of water from the bathroom in the bedroom.
“He was laying with his head up asleep and I opened his mouth and put one Seconal capsule in the back of his tongue and closed his mouth and he swollowed it. I repeated this three other times for a total of 4 Seconal capsule and then poured a little water in his mouth and he swollowed them. The Seconal capsule that I gave him came from the same bufferin bottle that I gave Dts. Oviedo and Merchant today at my house. I put the bottle of Seconal capsules in the drawer of the dresser in the bedroom after I gave him the 4 Seconal capsules, before the Doctor got there. I would like to say that I learned and have seen patients being given pills when they are asleep and is why I knew how to do it when a person is sleeping. I was working for a Doctor at the hospital and is where I saw it.
“I would also like to say that when my babies were small Vernon never did stay home on week-ends and never did help with the babies. He would always go out with his buddies on weekends. He told me when I got pregnant, ‘you had the children, you raise them.’ . . .”

Dr. J. C. Holsomback, the family doctor of the Batterbees, was summoned by the appellant to their home on two occasions during the month of April, 1973, the 8th and 12th. He testified that appellant had called him on the 8th day of April because her husband was sick. When he arrived at the Batterbee home,

“Vernon was comatose, he was also cya-notic, he had labored breathing, he was stuperous and couldn’t be aroused and was vomiting and the vomitous was bloody. He was gurgling as though he had aspirated some of this vomitous back into his trachea and bronchial tubes.”

The patient was immediately taken to the intensive care unit of Baytown Medical Care Center Hospital where his stomach was pumped out and his mouth, throat and upper trachea were suctioned out.. He testified that Vernon Batterbee was near death but no medical determination of the cause was made by way of laboratory tests, but “. . .he was in what appeared to be a real deep effective sedative drug, almost to the stage of anesthesia . . .” The doctor further testified that when he arrived at their home on April 12th he found that Vernon Batterbee had expired, “[t]here was no pupilary signs, no breathing, no heart motion, no heartbeats.” Dr. Holsomback had been treating Vernon for what he thought was narcolepsy, “a syndrome where you go to sleep more easily than usual.” On April 11, 1973, he prescribed an antidepressant drug, because “Mr. Batterbee seemed to be in a depressed, somewhat withdrawn mental state, worried about some difficulties, we didn’t know what the difficulties were”.

Dr. Jachimczyk testified that he had performed an autopsy on the body of deceased *14 at 3:40 p. m. on April 12, 1973. Laboratory tests which were run to test for the presence of barbiturates were positive, the level in the blood was found to be 1.6 milligrams percent of secobarbital, the trade name for that is Seconal, a type of sleeping drug. Dr. Jachimezyk stated:

“There will be certain amount present if the drug is used to induce sleep. There will be another amount required for a toxic level; that is one that might cause a person to have an overdose and show symptoms thereof; and then there’s yet another amount that would be termed lethal, that would be the amount necessary to cause death.”

He testified that in most people the level of 1.0 milligrams percent or higher will cause death, depending usually on the size of the individual and whether or not the patient was a drug addict, thereby allowing him to sustain a much higher level and survive. He testified that Vernon Batter-bee died as a result of secobarbital poisoning. He related that he had rendered three opinions as to the manner of death. The pertinent part of the first autopsy report of April 12, 1973, is as follows:

“It is our opinion that the decedent, Vernon Arnold Battarbee, came to his death as a result of acute barbiturate poisoning (Secobarbital), suicide.”

Then on May 17, 1973, the autopsy report contains the following:

“Subsequent to the initial investigation concerning the circumstances of death, it has come to our attention that the decedent’s wife admitted to have purposefully fed him a lethal amount of seconal capsules; accordingly, an amended death certificate has been issued stating the manner as homicide, instead of suicide as originally indicated.”

Finally, on March 15, 1974, a second amended opinion which appears in the record reads, in part, as follows:

“Subsequent to the deposition of March 8, 1974, and check of mathematics re seco-barbital, I am unable to determine the manner of death beyond a reasonable doubt as required by law; accordingly, it is our opinion that the decedent, Vernon Arnold Battarbee came to his death as a result of secobarbital poisoning, manner undetermined.”

Dr. Jachimezyk testified that his first amended opinion was based on the police offense report, written statements of witnesses including appellant’s statement. His subsequent amended opinion was issued as a result of mathematical errors made known to him during an oral deposition he gave on March 8,1974.

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Bluebook (online)
537 S.W.2d 12, 1976 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/batterbee-v-state-texcrimapp-1976.