Christopher James McDaniel v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 29, 2010
Docket14-08-01085-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Christopher James McDaniel v. State (Christopher James McDaniel 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
Christopher James McDaniel v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 29, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-08-01085-CR

Christopher James McDaniel, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1115328

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Christopher James McDaniel was convicted of murder and sentenced to eighteen years’ imprisonment.  In two issues, appellant argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction.  We affirm. 

                                                                                         I.            Factual and Procedural Background

            On January 8, 2006, Christopher Stallings and his girlfriend, Monica Foster, were lying in bed when they heard a loud kick at the front door of Stallings’s third-floor apartment.  Over Foster’s protestations, Stallings jumped out of bed and ran out the front door to investigate.  Foster heard Stallings yell “What’s up, bitch?” to someone outside the apartment; this was followed by a loud gunshot.  Foster then went outside and saw Stallings, covered in blood, dragging himself through the breezeway outside his door. 

            Foster called 911, and members of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department arrived at the scene within five minutes.  Stallings had suffered severe trauma to his head and was struggling to breathe.  Paramedics arrived shortly thereafter and transported Stallings to a local hospital.  Crime scene investigators searched the scene and found shotgun wadding[1] in a puddle of blood in the breezeway, as well as a bloody T-shirt belonging to Stallings.  Shotgun pellets were also found in the ceiling and in pieces of trim along the breezeway.  This evidence led investigators to conclude that Stallings had been shot with a shotgun.  Officers performed gunshot residue tests on Foster and another individual but found no evidence that either of them had recently fired a gun.  No fingerprint, blood, or DNA evidence belonging to anyone other than Stallings was recovered from the scene.  Additionally, no shotgun or shotgun shells were recovered.  Foster did not see who shot Stallings, and none of the apartment complex’s residents could provide a detailed description of the shooter. 

            In April 2006, Crime Stoppers received an anonymous tip that led officers to develop appellant as a suspect in the shooting.  The caller provided details of the incident that could only be known by a person who was present at the scene or had been told about the shooting.  Based on this tip, Sergeant Craig Clopton—the lead investigator in the case—obtained a warrant for appellant’s arrest.  Sergeants Clopton and Felipe Rivera transported appellant to a local sheriff’s office after executing the warrant at appellant’s mother’s apartment.  Appellant was informed of his rights and provided a written statement in which he admitted his involvement in the shooting.  He was subsequently indicted for aggravated assault.  On September 28, 2006, Stallings died as a result of his injuries.  The assault charges against appellant were dropped, and appellant was indicted for murder. 

At trial, Foster testified for the State about the night of the shooting.  She stated that Stallings was shot after leaving the apartment to investigate the loud kick on his front door.  Several members of the Harris County Sheriff’s Department testified about Stallings’s condition when they arrived on the scene.  They also outlined the collection of the shotgun pellets and wadding and other evidence obtained at the scene.  Lloyd White, a Deputy Medical Examiner for the Tarrant County Medical Examiner’s District,[2] testified about the cause of Stallings’s death.  An examination of Stallings’s body showed that he had been shot in the head with a shotgun.  As a result, he underwent major head surgery where a large portion of his skull had been removed and replaced.  Shotgun pellets were found inside Stallings’s scalp and brain, and his brain showed “a very large area of scarring” caused by surgery.  White concluded that Stallings suffered serious complications related to the shotgun wound and that these complications caused Stallings’s death. 

Appellant’s written statement was also entered into evidence.  Sergeant Clopton testified that appellant, after being informed of his rights on two separate occasions, waived his rights and voluntarily provided the statement.  In his statement, appellant admitted that he was at Stallings’s apartment complex on the night of the shooting.  He stated that he and a group of five friends[3] decided to kick on apartment doors and run away, and that the group was passing a Mossberg twelve-gauge shotgun between them at the time.  Appellant claimed he was on the ground floor when one of his friends kicked on the door of a third-floor apartment.  A man came out of the door, and appellant and one of his friends ran through the first-floor breezeway to the other side of the building.  The man saw the young men running away and yelled out “You punk bitch.”  One of appellant’s friends threw the shotgun down as they ran away.  According to appellant, he tried to catch the gun, but his finger “accidentally hit the trigger and the shotgun went off” as the butt of the gun hit the ground.  Appellant heard the man on the third floor scream in pain, but did not look up to see where he had been shot.  Appellant then picked up the empty shell casing, ran away, and threw the casing in a dumpster somewhere away from the apartment complex.  Appellant stated that the shooting was an accident and that he did not intend to shoot or hurt anyone. 

Sergeant Clopton testified that he did not believe appellant was completely honest while giving this statement because some of appellant’s facts did not match the evidence gathered from the scene.  Based on the investigation, Sergeant Clopton believed the shotgun was not fired from the ground floor.  He stated that the shotgun wadding and pellets would have had to travel through a slab of concrete to reach the third floor from the ground floor.  Sergeant Clopton additionally testified that Mossberg-brand shotguns are pump-action, meaning that a shell would not be expelled unless someone intentionally pulled the pump.

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Christopher James McDaniel v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-james-mcdaniel-v-state-texapp-2010.