Christie Osborne v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 2011
Docket02-11-00010-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Christie Osborne v. State (Christie Osborne 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
Christie Osborne v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

02-11-010-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00010-CR

Christie Osborne

APPELLANT

V.

The State of Texas

STATE

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FROM County Criminal Court No. 6 OF Tarrant COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

          Appellant Christie Osborne appeals her conviction for assault causing bodily injury,[2] contending in three points that the evidence is insufficient to disprove her self-defense claim, that the evidence is insufficient to support the trial court’s restitution order, and that numerous alleged violations of evidence rules, which appellant did not raise at trial, cumulatively prejudiced her defense.  We affirm.

Background Facts[3]

          Appellant and Joey Sansom dated each other for several years.  More than a year after appellant and Sansom broke up, Sansom began dating Kristina Aaron.  Appellant and Sansom, however, remained close because of Sansom’s interactions with appellant’s daughters, whom Sansom had helped raise.  In 2008, according to Aaron, appellant sent her a scolding text message stating that Aaron was selfish and manipulative.  Aaron testified that appellant also sent Sansom a text message stating that she was going to “beat [Aaron’s] ass.”  According to Aaron, appellant was upset because Sansom began refusing to see appellant’s daughters.

          In December 2009, appellant and her daughters went to Sansom’s mother’s house, where Sansom was staying.  Sansom was planning to spend time with the girls that day, but he had expected appellant to arrive later in the afternoon instead of about 11:30 in the morning.  While Aaron watched the children play a computer game, appellant became agitated; according to Aaron, appellant was “mad that [Aaron] was coming between the girls and [Sansom].Sansom told appellant to leave, but appellant moved closer to Aaron, called her a “bitch,” and grabbed her left arm, which did not cause Aaron pain but “felt, like, a force.”  Aaron then grabbed appellant’s hair; Aaron says that she did so in self-defense.  Appellant, who is larger than Aaron, reciprocated by grabbing Aaron’s hair, pulling her to the ground on a hard floor (which hurt Aaron’s left shoulder), and hitting her in the face with a closed fist several times.[4]  Sansom eventually separated appellant and Aaron, and appellant said, “She started it.”

          Sansom and Aaron asserted that appellant was the aggressor in the fight.  When asked at trial to describe what appellant did physically to Aaron, Sansom said,

Mainly just grab her by the hair and swing with her fist and try and hit her in the head, about the shoulders, that kind of stuff.  A whole lot of hair pulling.  I mean, they basically held on, you know, each party.  And I tried to come in and break it up physically, you know, put my arms between the two of them and pry them apart.  And I walked around and tried to pull [appellant] off of [Aaron] and I guess that wasn’t working too well, I just couldn’t pull both of them at the same time.  I went back to trying to split them apart.  At that time all three of us fell to the ground and [appellant] was kind of in a kneeling position over the top of [Aaron] so I kept trying to pry them apart, get them apart and use some physical activity to get them apart.

          Aaron called the police.  An ambulance arrived and took Aaron to the hospital, where medical personnel diagnosed her with a dislocated shoulder.  Aaron’s injury required her to have surgery and to attend physical therapy for approximately six months.

          Appellant eventually turned herself in to the police and stated that she had been assaulted first.  The State charged appellant with assault.  Appellant pled not guilty and waived her right to a jury trial.  After hearing testimony from four witnesses, the trial court found appellant guilty.  The court sentenced appellant to ninety days’ confinement, suspended that sentence, placed her on community supervision, and ordered her to pay restitution for Aaron’s medical expenses.  Appellant filed notice of this appeal.

Sufficiency of the Evidence to Disprove Appellant’s Defense

          In her first issue, appellant argues that the evidence is insufficient to disprove her self-defense claim.[5]  First, appellant contends that Aaron’s testimony and version of the altercation supports, rather than precludes, appellant’s self-defense theory because Aaron testified that appellant had only grabbed her left arm, and had not caused pain, when Aaron grabbed appellant’s hair.  Appellant seems to contend, therefore, that her response to having her hair pulled under Aaron’s version of the facts (pulling Aaron’s hair, forcing Aaron to the ground, and hitting Aaron in the face several times with a closed fist) was justified as self-defense.

          A person commits assault by intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly causing bodily injury to another.  Tex. Penal Code Ann.

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Christie Osborne v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christie-osborne-v-state-texapp-2011.