Charles Lee Gallamore v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 2016
Docket05-14-01591-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Charles Lee Gallamore v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed April 20, 2016.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-01591-CR

CHARLES LEE GALLAMORE, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 1 Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 001-85499-2013

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Fillmore, Stoddart, and Schenck Opinion by Justice Fillmore

A jury found Charles Lee Gallamore guilty of misdemeanor family violence assault. See

TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.01(a)(1) & (b) (West Supp. 2015). The trial court assessed

punishment of confinement for one year and a $500 fine, suspended imposition of the sentence,

and placed Gallamore on community supervision for a period of fifteen months. In two points of

error, Gallamore asserts (1) the trial court’s evidentiary rulings prohibited him from adequately

asserting a defensive theory and (2) his counsel was ineffective by waiving recording of voir dire

of the jury panel, failing to invoke rule of evidence 614 prior to the testimony of trial witnesses,

and failing to retain an expert or request that an expert be appointed by the trial court prior to

trial. We affirm the trial court’s judgment. Factual Background

Gallamore and Angela Ryan had been in a dating relationship for several years and were

living together in a home they leased. On July 7, 2013, Gallamore and Ryan went to a

neighborhood swimming pool at approximately 11:00 a.m. Gallamore and Ryan drank wine at

the swimming pool before they returned home about four hours later. A recording of a 9-1-1

telephone call placed by Ryan was admitted into evidence and played for the jury. In that

recording, Ryan stated Gallamore grabbed her by the neck and threw her into a mirror, he was

intoxicated, and he had left their home in his Camaro.

Wylie police officers Mark Howeth and Jeff Callan were dispatched to Gallamore and

Ryan’s home in response to Ryan’s 9-1-1 telephone call. A videotape recording from a camera

in Callan’s police vehicle was admitted into evidence and shown to the jury. On that recording,

Ryan stated she and Gallamore had been fighting in the closet of their home and that Gallamore

grabbed her by the neck with his right hand, pushed her against the wall, and threw her around

the bathroom. The recording contains Ryan’s statement that when Gallamore grabbed her

around the throat, she could hardly breath and, in trying to fight back, her fingernails scraped

“across [Gallamore’s] face” and her complaint of pain in her wrist from trying to push Gallamore

away.

Howeth testified Ryan was crying frantically and told him that Gallamore had assaulted

her before leaving their home in his Camaro. He testified that Ryan described the alleged assault

as having occurred in the master bedroom closet where Gallamore pushed her against a mirror on

the wall. Howeth observed a smudge on the mirror consistent with Ryan’s description. There

was redness around the top of Ryan’s chest and slight redness on her throat which was consistent

with what she claimed had occurred.

–2– While Howeth was speaking with Ryan, Gallamore drove by the home in his Camaro,

and Howeth and Callan pursued him in their police vehicles. After Gallamore’s vehicle was

stopped, Gallamore refused field sobriety tests and ultimately was arrested for driving while

intoxicated and transported by Callan to the police station. On the videotape recording from the

camera in Callan’s police vehicle, Gallamore told Callan that he “was in a fight with [his]

girlfriend down the street,” and Callan indicated that he saw scratches on Gallamore’s face.

After Gallamore’s arrest, Howeth returned to Gallamore and Ryan’s home where he took

statements and photographed the master bedroom closet area and Ryan’s injuries. Those

photographs were admitted into evidence. There were red marks in the center of Ryan’s neck

and on her mid-chest. Ryan claimed Gallamore lifted her off the ground. Ryan’s wrist had

begun to bruise and a photograph showed what appeared to be a bruise on Ryan’s arm.

According to Howeth, Ryan’s statements about the alleged assault matched both his observations

and the evidence he gathered at the home. Ryan’s injuries and the smudge on a mirror were

consistent with Ryan’s claim that Gallamore pushed her into the mirror hanging on a wall. In her

written statement, Ryan stated she had never been physically abused by Gallamore prior to this

incident. Howeth did not believe Ryan’s version of the events was fabricated.

In Howeth’s experience, the type of injuries sustained by Ryan, such as the redness to her

neck area, the other physical evidence, such as the smudge on the mirror, and Ryan’s account of

the altercation between her and Gallamore, suggest that Ryan was not the aggressor in this

incident. Howeth acknowledged that a man is permitted to defend himself by using reasonable

force against a woman who is hurting him. Howeth did not discern evidence that Gallamore was

defending himself from Ryan. Rather, his investigation indicated Ryan was defending herself

from Gallamore, although Howeth acknowledged that events described to him by Ryan could

have a different and equally logical explanation.

–3– Callan testified regarding his observations and interactions with Ryan after arriving at

Gallamore and Ryan’s home on July 7, 2013. Ryan claimed Gallamore grabbed her by the throat

and pushed her against a mirror. Callan noted redness in the area of the base of Ryan’s throat

which was consistent with events described by Ryan. Ryan also stated she was experiencing

pain in an arm and in both hands. Ryan communicated to Callan that she scratched Gallamore’s

face during the altercation. In Callan’s opinion, the locations of the injuries Ryan sustained were

consistent with the rendition of the altercation recounted by Ryan and were not consistent with

Ryan being the aggressor in the altercation.

Callan testified that when Gallamore drove by his home, both Callan and Howeth

pursued him in their police vehicles and Gallamore’s vehicle was stopped by Callan. When

Callan handcuffed Gallamore, he smelled an odor of alcoholic beverage and noticed Gallamore’s

eyes were watery, glassy, and red. Gallamore told Callan he had consumed three large glasses of

wine since 11:00 a.m. Callan believed Gallamore was intoxicated. A cooler in the backseat of

Gallamore’s Camaro contained a bladder from a box of wine containing two to three ounces of

wine. Gallamore was arrested for driving while intoxicated, and he was later charged with

family violence assault.

Callan observed Gallamore had a “little” scratch on the side of his face. Gallamore told

Callan that he and Ryan had gotten into an argument, Ryan hit him multiple times, and he left

their home. Callan took photographs of Gallamore after he was taken to the police station, and

those photographs were admitted into evidence. In Callan’s opinion, the scratches on

Gallamore’s face and to one of his arms were wounds inflicted by Ryan in defending herself.

On July 8, 2013, Ryan brought to the Wylie police station a note from her physician

detailing her injuries and showed Callan bruising that had developed since the previous day.

Additional photographs Callan took of Ryan at the police station were admitted into evidence

–4– showing discoloration around Ryan’s throat where she claimed to have been grabbed by

Gallamore and bruising on her left wrist.

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