Butler, Billy Dean

459 S.W.3d 595, 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 491, 2015 WL 1816933
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 22, 2015
DocketNO. PD-0456-14
StatusPublished
Cited by112 cases

This text of 459 S.W.3d 595 (Butler, Billy Dean) 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
Butler, Billy Dean, 459 S.W.3d 595, 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 491, 2015 WL 1816933 (Tex. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

Yeary, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which Keller, P. J., and Meyers, Keasler, Hervey, Alcala, Richardson and Newell, JJ., joined.

Appellant was convicted of the aggravated kidnapping of his girlfriend, Ashley Salas. On direct appeal, he complained that the trial court admitted certain text messages into evidence that Appellant claimed were not properly authenticated. The State introduced the text messages through Salas, who testified that she recognized Appellant’s phone number displayed on the text messages, that the text messages were from Appellant, and that Appellant even called her from that phone number at some point during the course of their text messaging back and forth.

Relying upon this Court’s opinion in Tienda v. State, 358 S.W.3d 633 (Tex.Crim. App.2012), the Corpus Christi Court of Appeals held that Salas’s testimony did not adequately serve to authenticate the text messages. Butler v. State, No. 13-12-00608-CR, 2014 WL 1272232, at *4 (Tex.App.—Corpus Christi Mar. 27, 2014) (not designated for publication). Finding that the trial court erred by admitting the text messages and that their admission into evidence was not harmless, the court of appeals reversed Appellant’s conviction. Id. at *4-6. Justice Perkes dissented. Id. at *6-7. We granted the State’s petition for discretionary review in order to examine the court of appeals’s application of our holding in Tienda, and we now reverse.

BACKGROUND

Salas testified that, as of August 18 of 2011, she and Appellant had been living together for four or five months in a house in Beeville. That morning Salas received a phone call from her grandmother in nearby Kenedy, who was undergoing cancer treatment and did not expect to live for long. Salas decided to drive to Kenedy to join other family members in visiting her grandmother.

Appellant was unhappy with Salas’s decision to visit her grandmother, and he began to harass her on her mobile phone, calling and texting her repeatedly from the time she left the house and continuing throughout the afternoon and into the evening. He accused her of using the family visit as a cover for infidelity. At about 9:00 o’clock, Salas heard her car start outside, and she saw Appellant drive it away. Appellant immediately sent Salas a text message to say that she could find her car on the side of the highway. When Salas later returned with her mother to Beeville, she found her car and drove it to her mother’s house, arriving at about 11:00 o’clock. Appellant found Salas there and apologized profusely, eventually persuading her to return to their home.

On the drive back to their house, Appellant once again accused Salas of infidelity and began to strike her. When she tried to exit the car, he restrained her by her hair. Once back at the house, Appellant pushed Salas inside and demanded to know the identity of her lover. He tore her clothes off and began to punch her and pull her hair. He would not let her leave *599 the house, and for the rest of the night he continued intermittently to interrogate, threaten, berate, smother, strangle, kick, and otherwise batter her until she eventually fell asleep at around daylight. When she awoke later that morning, Appellant acted as if he did not know what had happened to her. Salas’s mother came in the afternoon and called an ambulance to take her to the hospital. A police detective photographed the numerous abrasions and contusions on Salas’s face and body. Appellant was then arrested and charged with aggravated kidnapping. 1

Prior to trial, Salas gave a written statement to Appellant’s attorney in which she provided a different account of the beating she had endured. She explained that she had arrived back at the house by herself only to find one of Appellant’s friend’s girlfriends and another woman sitting on the couch. Suspecting Appellant of infidelity, she attacked the women but suffered the worse for the encounter. On cross-examination, Salas admitted to making the written statement, but she denied that it was truthful, explaining that Appellant had persuaded her to concoct this alternative story several months after the incident when she discovered she was pregnant with his child.

The week before trial began, Appellant and Salas shared an exchange of text messages in which, Salas believed, Appellant threatened “to come and hurt [her] or [her] family” should she testify against him. The State offered State’s Exhibit 57, encompassing a number of photographs of the text messages taken from Salas’s Blackberry. The text messages, spanning a period of about eight minutes, read: 2

3612153899: And add this cuz ur fon is taped that y u tex I’ll kill u myself bitch
3612153899: Pipe in ur mouth ho
3612153899: I can’t wait your teeth r going in ur throat
Salas: Ok I said it once versus u sayin it over 10 times ok mmm wat u Don’t b a pussy tell me
3612153899: Snithin ass bitch ur dead I hope u lived it out cuz ur scum snitching bitching ass
3612153899: I’ll start with ur mono first
Salas: Who I can’t understand ur writing
3612153899: Ur the pussy u run to the cops after u fuck me over
3612153899: Shut up bitch
Salas: And wat? ?
Salas: Have some balls & take responsibly for. your own ACTIONS
Salas: U did the crime
3612153899: They sent u in there to take pics of me
3612153899: U deserved it
Salas: I deserved wat
3612153899: Tiers need that
3612153899: Lmfao
3612153899:' Everyone counted

The trial court admitted this exhibit over Appellant’s objection that, among other things, the “proper predicate” was lacking.

The State offered the text messages after laying the following predicate through Salas’s testimony:

*600 Q. What is [Appellant’s] phone number?
A. 361-215-3899.
Q. Does that number appear on all the pages of the exhibit?
A. Yes.
Q. How do you know that that is [Appellant’s] telephone number?
A.

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Bluebook (online)
459 S.W.3d 595, 2015 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 491, 2015 WL 1816933, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-billy-dean-texcrimapp-2015.