Carolyn D. Kraft v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 19, 2006
Docket03-04-00355-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Carolyn D. Kraft v. State (Carolyn D. Kraft 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
Carolyn D. Kraft v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-04-00355-CR

Carolyn D. Kraft, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 6 OF TRAVIS COUNTY

NO. 630551, HONORABLE JAN BRELAND, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Appellant Carolyn D. Kraft was convicted by a jury of the misdemeanor offense of obstructing a passageway, see Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 42.03 (West 2003), and was sentenced to 180 days confinement and a $2,000 fine, both probated for two years. Appellant was required to undergo a mental health evaluation, pay supervision fees, complete community service, and avoid contact with several neighbors. We affirm the trial court's judgment of conviction.



Factual Background

Appellant and her neighbors, the Mabrys, have had an ongoing dispute since about 1999. The Mabrys accuse appellant of attempting to block them from using the alley that runs behind their and appellant's houses. Wanda Mabry, who was seventy-eight years old at the time of trial, testified that in July 2002 she was walking in the alley, picking up nails and other trash that had been causing flat tires when appellant cursed at her and sprayed her with a garden hose until she was soaking wet. Ms. Mabry testified that she had been sprayed by appellant at least six or seven times and that appellant frequently cursed at and insulted her. Ms. Mabry and her family members have reported the sprayings to the police several times, and Ms. Mabry said that after one report, appellant enlarged a picture of Ms. Mabry and hung it on appellant's fence with "evil, evil, evil, evil" written across it. On November 20, appellant again sprayed Ms. Mabry as she walked in the alley; Ms. Mabry knew it was appellant because she "could see her. She stands up on something and sticks her head over the fence." Ms. Mabry also testified that she frequently found roofing nails hammered through thin boards or plastic lids. Ms. Mabry has found "pieces of wood with these nails and screws under the tires of" her van or under leaves. She said, "One time I walked down the alley and there was a big rug . . . . I turned it over and it had nails under it so if a car or I had stepped on it, it would have stuck in my foot or a tire." Ms. Mabry has never seen appellant put nails in the alley, but has heard hammering in appellant's garage and believes it is appellant who is placing the nails.

Ms. Mabry testified that appellant had complained to the health department about trash on the Mabrys' property. Ms. Mabry, however, agreed that the trash was an eyesore that she had been asking her son to dispose of for a long time and said, "I don't blame her for turning me in. In fact, I thank her. I thank her because I wanted it moved and it got moved when we were ordered to move it." Ms. Mabry said she manages and maintains between forty and fifty rental properties, but denied running a business out of her home, saying, "All we do is they keep the van there and I answer the phone." Ms. Mabry said that the Mabrys did not have trucks coming up and down the alley, but admitted that workmen came to the house "to get paid and so forth."

Roy Mabry, Ms. Mabry's son, testified that on or about November 20, appellant placed in the alley a number of large rocks or pieces of concrete about four inches thick. He said the rocks were such that "you couldn't drive a vehicle over those. You'd have to stop and move them out of the way." Mabry also described what he called "nail traps," roofing nails nailed through pieces of wood or plastic lids and left with the nails facing up, "covered up with leaves," "hidden under old roofing shingles," or "set in the deep grass off to the side where one would, you know, drive over them." Mabry testified that broken glass was sometimes left under the wheels of the Mabrys' van and that appellant would place a long and sharp-ended steel bar along the edge of the roadway, "[n]ot up against her fence or not in her shrubbery, but out in the alley at the very edge of the tracks where you'd have to move to avoid it. . . . It was cut very sharply at each end." Mabry testified that in 1999 he saw appellant put an object on the ground and cover it with dirt and leaves. He said, "So you're the one putting the nails out," and she answered, "Hell, yes, you son of a bitch. You cannot use this as your own private road." Mabry testified that although it was not impossible to pass through the alley, appellant had made it "extremely inconvenient" and "dangerous at times." Mabry said he "wouldn't drive down [the alley] without walking through it first to make sure there is nothing like that in the way," nor did he believe it was safe to walk a dog down the alley.

Leonard Shelton, Ms. Mabry's son-in-law for the past thirty-seven years, testified that on the morning of November 20, he saw appellant placing two large rocks in the alleyway. He said the rocks were about fourteen inches by twelve inches by four inches, not something a vehicle could drive over without risking axle damage. Several garbage cans were also in the roadway, although it was not garbage day. Shelton testified that he walked down to clear the alley so his truck and trailer could get through. He moved the rocks to the side of the alley across from appellant's house and was moving the cans when appellant sprayed him in the eyes with a high-pressure hose and asked, "Who in the hell are you?" Shelton said that at the time, appellant had a chain link fence and he got a good look at appellant when she sprayed him. (1) Shelton called the police, who took a report and recommended that the Mabrys start documenting any incidents; the Mabrys then started taking pictures and videotapes of the condition of the alley, as well as saving items they found in the alley.

Shelton also testified that he often found broken glass in the alley where the Mabrys' van is usually parked. He said that although the Mabrys kept the alley behind their house clean, "There is consistently been [sic] broken Absolute vodka bottles in the alleyway over a long period of time, and I've swept up a lot of glass out of the alleyway." Shelton has heard "from Mrs. Kraft's garage someone breaking up glass." Shelton further testified that he has found paint stirrers or bottle caps with nails hammered through them in the alley, sometimes hidden in the grass or under leaves or placed under the tires of the Mabrys' van, although he has never seen appellant place broken glass or nail traps in the alley. Shelton said that he had seen appellant "on many occasions put her trash cans out in the roadway." Drivers would steer to the side to avoid them, causing them to drive over glass or nails covered by leaves. He said that he has found obstructions like broken glass, nails, or concrete pieces in the alley almost every day. Shelton testified that he and the Mabrys had incurred more than $1,000 in costs to repair tire damage over about a three-year time period.

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