Bryan Ray Parrack v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 2004
Docket07-02-00355-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bryan Ray Parrack v. State (Bryan Ray Parrack 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
Bryan Ray Parrack v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

NO. 07-02-0355-CR


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL D


FEBRUARY 11, 2004

______________________________


BRYAN PARRACK, APPELLANT


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE


_________________________________


FROM THE 222ND DISTRICT COURT OF DEAF SMITH COUNTY;


NO. CR-01D-058; HONORABLE H. BRYAN POFF, JR., JUDGE


_______________________________


Before QUINN and REAVIS and CAMPBELL, JJ.

ORDER

On October 22, 2003, Kent Birdsong, appointed counsel for appellant Bryan Ray Parrack, submitted to the Court a motion to withdraw and substitute counsel, requesting that Vaavia Rudd Edwards be substituted as counsel for appellant. The motion did not meet the requirements of Rule 6.5(b) or (d) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure in that it did not reflect delivery of the motion on appellant. By letter dated October 29, 2003, the Court advised Mr. Birdsong of the failure of the motion to meet that requirement, and directed him to file a complying motion. Despite the letter and several telephone conversations between personnel in the office of the Court's clerk and counsel, no complying motion has been submitted.

Although the requirement of Rule 6.5(a)(4) that appellant be notified in writing of the right to object to counsel's motion to withdraw does not apply here since substitution of counsel is requested, Rule 6.5(b) and (d) require delivery of the motion to appellant, and the Court requires the motion to state that has been accomplished in the manner required by Rule 6.5(b), by means of a certificate of service or by means of a statement within the motion itself.

Both appellant's and the State's briefs have been filed. Oral argument in the case was set in October 2003, but counsel's submission of his motion to withdraw caused argument to be postponed. The interests of justice require that this appeal be heard and determined without further delay.

Accordingly, Kent Birdsong is directed to prepare and submit to the Court a motion to withdraw and substitute counsel, in accordance with the requirements of Rule 6.5 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure, as discussed in this order. The motion shall be submitted so as to be received by the clerk of the Court no later than February 23, 2004. Should counsel fail to comply with this order by that date, the Court will consider such other and further measures as may be necessary to insure compliance.

It is so ordered.

Per Curiam

Do not publish.

ime, and that David was then on his knees and bleeding from his head. She also said that "to her knowledge" appellant had struck David with the bat before she came out. She did not see David with any weapon.

Under cross-examination by defense counsel, she said she had seen David three times the day of the occurrence. The first time was in the morning when he was so drunk that he passed out on the couch. She averred that David was belligerent, rude, and cussing that morning. In the afternoon, she and appellant saw David at his aunt's house and, she said, he was drunker than he had been that morning, and he was still cussing and being belligerent and rude. David told them that he had been drinking about three or four days.

Catina Brock testified that she was David's girlfriend. On the night of the occurrence, she said, she went to appellant's residence looking for David. As she approached the front door of the residence, she heard "yelling and like breaking and things." Seeing that the front door was partially open, she entered the house. As she did so, she saw David on his knees bleeding from his head. There was blood on the floor and David was covered in blood. She saw appellant with a baseball bat and, she averred, "Troy drew back, hit David on the head and it grounged [sic] down and hit him on the shoulder." She averred that she saw appellant hit David several times with the bat and then, he started "hitting things. . . [c]offee table, anything in the house. " Brock told appellant that if he would calm down, she would get David out of the house. Appellant did so, and Brock, with the assistance of Ronnie Eisenman, removed David from the house.

Upon cross-examination, Brock said that David had been at her house before he went over to appellant's house. When she went to appellant's house, she noticed that he too was drunk. She recollected a prior occasion when the police had to be called because David was drunk. However, that was over a year before. She also said that the relationship between David and appellant was good when they were sober.

David took the stand and testified that he was appellant's cousin and had worked for him once before. He acknowledged that their relationship might be characterized as "fighting cousins" and their disagreements included both verbal and physical confrontations. Although he admitted passing out at appellant's house, he averred that incident occurred the day before the occurrence giving rise to this prosecution. On the day in question, he said he went over to appellant's house three times. The first time, he averred, was to socialize and to ask about a job, and appellant offered him a job. He had not been drinking at that time. David admitted that he drank too much and on a regular basis. David also admitted that he had "violated the law quite a bit growing up" and that at the time of his testimony, he was in jail awaiting transportation to the Department of Criminal Justice and had been confined there before.

The second time he went to appellant's house on the day in question was in mid-afternoon and was again to see about a job. He admitted that he had had over a six-pack of beer by that time and that he and appellant got along fine then. He left there and went over to his aunt's house. At that time, he was drunk and "maybe" obnoxious. He and the others there were all drunk and were "cussing some" but there were no physical confrontations. He was at that place about an hour or an hour and a half and then went home.

While he was at home, he received a call from another individual which caused him to change his mind about going to work for appellant. He continued to drink until later that evening when he returned to appellant's house. At that time, he, appellant, and Ms. Risewig were all drunk. Appellant offered him a beer and David told him that he had been offered another job and he was going to take that job instead of the one appellant had offered him. Then, he said, appellant "just blew up," and accused him of not taking the job because of his girlfriend's influence. He and appellant were so close to each other during that exchange that appellant's saliva was hitting him in the face.

David averred that appellant then used an expletive, got his baseball bat from another room, used another expletive in telling David to get out of his house, started swinging the bat and hit David on the arm twice and on the head. After that last blow, David did not remember anything until he awoke in an Amarillo hospital. David denied that he ever had a weapon during the occurrence or that he ever attempted to strike appellant. He admitted that he had pushed appellant when appellant spit on him and that was when appellant got the bat.

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Bryan Ray Parrack v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bryan-ray-parrack-v-state-texapp-2004.