Chaisson v. State

761 S.W.2d 77, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 3122, 1988 WL 134475
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 2, 1988
Docket09-88-056 CR
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 761 S.W.2d 77 (Chaisson 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
Chaisson v. State, 761 S.W.2d 77, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 3122, 1988 WL 134475 (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

OPINION

BURGESS, Justice.

Appellant was convicted by a jury of the offense of aggravated robbery. The jury assessed punishment at forty years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections. Appellant has perfected appeal to this court urging five points of error.

Shortly before midnight on October 30, 1987, Joann Bean, assistant manager of a Diamond Shamrock service station was preparing to close the station. Ms. Bean noticed a maroon, two-tone Pontiac pass through the station several times. Becoming somewhat concerned for her safety, she wrote down the license number. This same car then parked at the gas pumps. The black male driver of the vehicle entered the service station and paid for one dollar’s worth of gasoline. She believed that the other occupant of the vehicle, who remained inside the car, was also a black man. The vehicle then left the station. A few minutes later, a black male wearing a beige shirt wrapped around his face entered the station with a knife in his hand. He grabbed Ms. Bean around the neck and held the knife to her throat. The assailant instructed her to open the cash register, and he took all the money from the register. At this time, a van occupied by Robert Henry and his wife, Cathy, pulled in and parked within six feet of the door to the service station. Mrs. Henry was sitting on the passenger side of the van, the side nearest to the door into the station. Mrs. Henry saw that the station was being robbed even before the van came to a complete stop. The robber fled from the station, which was well lighted, through the door, within three feet of where Mrs. Henry was seated. As he exited the station, he removed the shirt from his face, and Mrs. Henry got a good look at him. Mr. Henry initially tried to chase the robber down on foot, but he quickly gave up and returned to the station to pursue the robber in his van. Upon entering the roadway Mr. Henry saw a black man running down the road. The man had his shirt in his hand and was wearing dark pants and tennis shoes. Mr. Henry saw no one else in the vicinity. The black man ran into a parking lot and was out of Mr. Henry’s sight for no more than five seconds. As Mr. Henry entered the parking lot he saw a red Pontiac leaving the parking lot. There were two people in the car. There were no other cars on the lot, and Mr. Henry stated there was no other place the robber could have gone except into the red Pontiac. Mr. Henry followed the Pontiac and eventually wrote down its license plate number which matched the license number of the Pontiac Ms. Bean had seen pass through the station earlier.

Ms. Bean phoned the Orange Police Department and reported the robbery and gave a description of the Pontiac which she *79 had seen earlier. Mr. Henry also gave the police a description of the car after returning to the station. This description included the license plate number both witnesses had noted and the fact that the car was occupied by two black males. Captain R.D. Waddell of the Orange Police Department was on patrol in the vicinity of the Diamond Shamrock station when he heard the police dispatch report of the robbery and the description of the car thought to be involved. Within a few minutes, Waddell spotted a Pontiac with the license plate number given in the dispatch call. Waddell called for assistance and continued to follow the suspect vehicle.

Subsequently Waddell stopped the maroon Pontiac in which appellant was a passenger and another black male was the driver. The driver of the Pontiac seemed to have some kind of leg injury and used crutches when he exited the vehicle. Appellant, the passenger, met the description of the robber given by the witnesses. Officer Hinton of the Pinehurst Police Department searched the passenger side of the vehicle and found a knife under a piece of carpet under the seat. Joann Bean testified that this knife’s blade was approximately the same length as the one used by the robber. She also stated that the handle of the knife found by Officer Hinton had the same “darkish” handle as the knife wielded by the robber.

Both appellant and the driver of the car were arrested. Detective Materne searched the trunk of the vehicle and found a white plastic bag containing a beer can and $48.01 in bills and change. An audit of the cash register at the Diamond Shamrock station indicated that some $47.30 was missing from the register after the robbery. Joann Bean’s testimony indicated that such audits were usually fairly accurate. The knife and money were introduced in evidence before the jury.

Before going to the scene of appellant’s arrest, Detective Materne had asked Mr. and Mrs. Henry and Joann Bean to go to the Orange Police station to make formal statements. Officer Breshears transported appellant to the police station. When Mr. and Mrs. Henry arrived at the police station, they entered a long hallway. Mrs. Henry saw a black man sitting on a bench in the hallway. Officer Breshears was standing nearby. Mr. Henry stated that this man was handcuffed. Mrs. Henry could not remember whether the man was wearing handcuffs. Mrs. Henry recognized the man on the bench as being the same man whom she had seen fleeing from the service station a short time earlier and told her husband so. The man on the bench was wearing the same color shirt as that worn by the robber. When the Hen-rys told the police that they were witnesses from the Shamrock robbery, Officer Bresh-ears immediately escorted them to another part of the building. Mrs. Henry testified that only about fifteen minutes passed from the time she and her husband arrived at the Shamrock station until they arrived at the police station.

Officer Breshears testified that he brought appellant to the police station. At one point he had appellant sit on the bench in the main hallway. He also testified that a man and a woman entered the hallway while appellant was sitting on the bench and identified themselves as potential witnesses to the robbery. He directed the witnesses to another room immediately upon learning that they were witnesses to the robbery. Upon cross-examination, Breshears testified that the encounter between Mrs. Henry and appellant at the police station was just an accident. He never asked Mr. or Mrs. Henry if appellant was the robber or otherwise directed their attention to him.

When Detective Materne returned to the police station, Mr. and Mrs. Henry were already in another part of the office and appellant was no longer in the hallway. Mrs. Henry then told Materne that she had seen the robber in the hallway. Materne then took Polaroid photographs of appellant and the driver of the car in which appellant had been found. Joann Bean was also present in the room with the Henrys when Materne showed them the photographs of the two suspects. Before showing the photographs to the witnesses, Ma-terne had told the witnesses that the police *80 had the two men who committed the robbery and that they had found the missing money and the maroon Pontiac.

Materne then showed Mrs. Henry the photographs he had just taken and asked her, in effect, which of the two men was the one she had seen in the hallway. Mrs. Henry identified the photograph of appellant as representing the man she had seen in the hall. At approximately the same time and in Mrs. Henry’s presence, Joann Bean identified the other photograph as the driver of the maroon Pontiac who had previously entered the Shamrock station and paid for gas. Ms.

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835 S.W.2d 142 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1992)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
761 S.W.2d 77, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 3122, 1988 WL 134475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaisson-v-state-texapp-1988.