Courtney Cortez Hall v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 20, 2024
Docket14-23-00222-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Courtney Cortez Hall v. the State of Texas (Courtney Cortez Hall v. the State of Texas) 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
Courtney Cortez Hall v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed August 20, 2024.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-23-00222-CR

COURTNEY CORTEZ HALL, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 179th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1666728

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Courtney Cortez Hall appeals his conviction for capital murder. In his first two issues, appellant argues that the trial court erred in allowing a prosecution witness to discuss appellant’s “bad character” as well as an extraneous offense. In his final three issues, appellant contends that his trial counsel provided ineffective assistance by eliciting this extraneous offense and character evidence and by failing to request an instruction to disregard the evidence. We overrule appellant’s first two issues because we conclude that the admission of the evidence, even if error, was harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. We overrule appellant’s remaining issues because appellant has not established prejudice for his ineffective-assistance claim.

We affirm.

Background

The State indicted appellant for murder in the course of committing robbery, a capital offense. See Tex. Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2). The victim/decedent was Magdaleno Ramos, who owned and operated a scrap metal business. One morning, while customer Willie Terrell was loading scrap metal onto a scale, he heard a gunshot. Someone had shot Ramos in the chest. The bullet, after perforating Ramos’s skin, went through his ribs, his heart, a portion of his liver, and his aorta, and then entered his spine. The wound was immediately fatal. When officers responded to the scene, Ramos’s bank bag was found empty. Ramos usually had about $5,000 on hand to pay customers in cash.

After hearing the gunshot, Terrell immediately attempted to leave in his car. Then, as Terrell testified, “[s]omeone got in the backseat of [his] car with all black on.” The person had a mask over his face and wore gloves. Terrell described the suspect as a Black male, wearing a black hoodie with the hood up over his head, blue jeans, and a cloth face covering. Terrell did not identify appellant as the shooter.

Surveillance video from a nearby gas station showed “a male kind of walking fast, dressed all in black.” Video from a nearby residence showed a person who “dropped something on the side of the street.” Police later recovered a black ski mask from the area. Forensics did not match any DNA to appellant.

2 The investigating officer, Detective Jack Ferrell, did not have a suspect after the shooting, but he received an anonymous Crime Stoppers tip approximately a year later, giving the officer appellant’s name and phone number and the name of appellant’s ex-girlfriend, Taleana Kelley, who Detective Ferrell interviewed. Appellant and Kelley began dating in 2017 and were dating at the time of the offense. The morning of the shooting, Kelley dropped appellant off at a gas station near the scrap yard. She believed he was wearing blue jeans and a gray hoodie. She went back home and went back to sleep. Appellant later called her to come pick him up from a friend’s apartment. He was sweaty and was no longer wearing the gray hoodie. They returned home, where appellant asked Kelley for a trash bag, which he took with him into the bathroom. He came out of the bedroom, wearing different clothes, and disposed of the trash bag without Kelley seeing what was inside.

While watching television, the couple saw a news report of Ramos’s shooting, and appellant kept saying, “I hope he okay. I hope he okay.” Appellant told Kelley that he “walked to the man and that he shot the man. He said, ‘It was going to be him or me.’ He thought the man had a gun.” She heard appellant tell his cousin Chris about the shooting. Kelley also saw appellant with a large amount of cash.

Kelley’s cell phone records corroborated much of her story regarding her movements on the morning of the shooting. Additionally, appellant’s cell phone records showing his location on the day of the shooting were consistent with the location of the gas station and the scrap yard, as well as with the location of the suspect shown on a surveillance video walking through the surrounding neighborhood and making a phone call at the same time that Kelley received a call

3 from appellant. Appellant’s cell phone data was also consistent with his place of employment, but appellant denied being at work the day of the shooting.

Appellant’s cousin, Johnathan Wallace, testified. Wallace spoke with appellant the day before the murder. Appellant wanted Wallace to go with him to the scrap yard. According to Wallace, appellant planned to rob the owner of the scrap yard. Wallace refused to go because he “had parole the next day.” When Wallace saw the news story, he called appellant, who confessed to shooting Ramos. Although Wallace never reached out to police, Detective Ferrell spoke to Wallace eighteen months later, and at that point Wallace felt as though he did not have any choice but to tell what he knew.

When asked why he never contacted the police, Wallace said it “blew [his] mind” that appellant could do something like that:

Because my mind was blown because in the family, we -- we don’t make moves like that. You know, we smart. We better than that. So that’s why my mind was blew at the time, because we don’t make decisions like that. We make wise decisions. Appellant’s counsel then asked, “And it’s not a wise decision to go out and murder somebody?” Wallace said, “No, that’s not a very wise decision.” Counsel continued, “Because that’s well beyond what Courtney usually does, right?” Wallace answered, “Yeah, yeah.” Counsel asked, “Courtney’s never been violent?” Wallace did not answer before counsel approached the bench for a conference.

At the bench, the State argued that appellant’s counsel had opened the door to the fact that appellant was on parole for aggravated robbery at the time of Ramos’s murder and that appellant and Wallace had attempted to commit an aggravated robbery a few weeks prior to the offense.

4 Appellant’s counsel explained that he was “only trying to elicit [Wallace’s] opinion of Courtney.” The judge said that his questioning opened the door:

If the question is you’re seeking his opinion about whether he was violent in nature with that question, if the State has information that he, along with Mr. Hall, have engaged in activity that one would consider violent, they’re entitled to -- I would -- it would be the Court’s position they will be entitled to ask him because that, too, is a part of his opinion that you were seeking to elicit.

The court admonished the State, however, that it could not elicit the fact that appellant was on parole:

If what the State intends to do is offer evidence that -- based on what [defense counsel’s] question was, about whether he would go beyond that, and in his representation to the Court that he was intending to elicit from this witness his opinion as far as whether he would engage in violent conduct, you may ask those – you may ask questions to respond to that; but the fact that he was on parole is of no moment. Following the bench conference, the State developed testimony from Wallace about a planned, but unconsummated, robbery a few weeks before the charged offense: “Well, we supposed to hit a scrap yard, some kind of metal place. But . . . we didn’t go through with it.” Wallace admitted that the plan was to use guns during the robbery. Wallace also testified that appellant committed an aggravated robbery of a “beauty supply or something” with his brother a few years prior but he did not provide any additional details.

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Bluebook (online)
Courtney Cortez Hall v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/courtney-cortez-hall-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2024.