Cynthia D Willis v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 11, 2023
Docket01-21-00438-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Cynthia D Willis v. the State of Texas (Cynthia D Willis 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
Cynthia D Willis v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 11, 2023

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-21-00438-CR ——————————— CYNTHIA D. WILLIS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 208th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1584804

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Cynthia D. Willis of the first-degree felony offense

of murder and sentenced her to fifty years’ imprisonment. See TEX. PENAL CODE

§§ 19.02(b)(1), (2), (c), 12.32(a). Willis raises three issues on appeal. First, she argues that her trial counsel provided ineffective assistance. Also in her first issue—

which we construe as her second issue—Willis complains that the trial court erred

by not sua sponte instructing the jury on the lesser-included offense of manslaughter.

In her third issue, Willis argues that the trial court erred by admitting evidence of an

extraneous offense. We affirm.

Background

Willis was married to Eric “Mickey” Willis, and they had three children

together. Mickey had other adult children from prior relationships, and Willis also

had a child from a previous relationship. Willis, Mickey, and their three children

lived in a rental house in Spring. Willis’s child from a prior relationship would stay

there from time to time as well.

The last time anyone saw Mickey alive was on March 9, 2018. He recently

had begun having an extramarital affair with a woman he had known since middle

school. On the evening of March 9, Mickey had dinner with his girlfriend, picked up

his son from a friend’s house just before midnight, and returned home and went to

bed.

Early in the morning on March 10, Willis woke up her children, told them to

pack a bag with some clothes, and drove them to Humble. She did not explain why

they were leaving, and Mickey did not go with them. Willis and the children stayed

in a hotel in Humble for a couple of nights before she took the children to her sister’s

2 house in Humble on March 12. Willis stayed at her sister’s house for a few nights,

but the children stayed there for several weeks.

On March 19, one of Mickey’s grown daughters contacted the police and

requested a welfare check for Mickey. Neither Mickey’s children nor his father, who

worked with him, had heard from Mickey since March 9, and he had not shown up

to work since then. Someone also contacted Mickey’s landlord, who had keys to the

Mickey’s rental house. Before officers arrived at Mickey’s house for the welfare

check, Mickey’s father met the landlord at the house. The landlord unlocked the

front door and immediately smelled a noxious odor. Fearing the odor might be gas,

the landlord shut the door and called the gas company. A representative of the gas

company arrived but did not believe the smell was gas.

Shortly thereafter, Deputy Shawanna Mosley-Banks with the Harris County

Sheriff’s Office arrived at Mickey’s house to conduct the welfare check. Upon

entering the residence, she smelled the odor and recognized it as a decaying body.

Mosley-Banks, Mickey’s father, and the landlord entered the house. They first

checked the three secondary bedrooms, finding no one occupying them. Upon

reaching the closed door of the primary bedroom, they heard a loud noise coming

from a television inside the bedroom. When Mosley-Banks opened the door, she saw

a silhouette of a body lying on the bed covered by a blanket. She approached the

bed, pulled back the covers, and discovered Mickey’s body in a state of decay. She

3 ushered Mickey’s father and landlord out of the house and called for additional

officers. The officers determined that there was no sign of forced entry into the

house. The investigation and a later autopsy revealed that Mickey died from a single

gunshot wound to the head. Police never located the firearm.

A Harris County grand jury indicted Willis for murder. See TEX. PENAL CODE

§ 19.02(b)(1), (2). She was arrested in Houston on March 24.

Trial occurred over seven days. Mickey’s children and coworkers testified that

Mickey owned a construction company and had a reputation for a good work ethic.

He was also an attentive father both to his children and to Willis’s child. Mickey’s

absence from work and his failure to call his coworkers and children after March 9

were unusual, eventually prompting the request for the welfare check.

Family and coworkers also testified about problems in Mickey and Willis’s

marriage. One of Mickey’s coworkers testified that he saw Willis stab Mickey with

a knife in 2000 or 2001 outside the couple’s home after the coworker dropped

Mickey off after work. The coworker called the police, but police were unable to

find Mickey or Willis at the house by the time they arrived. Consequently, no

charges were filed against Willis.

Coworkers also testified that they knew Mickey recently began dating another

woman, and text messages Willis sent to Mickey before his death showed that she

was aware of the affair. Mickey had contacted a lawyer about divorcing Willis. He

4 had paid the lawyer a partial retainer and obtained some documents to start the

divorce proceeding, but he had not filed for divorce before his death.

The trial evidence included cell phone records showing that Willis’s and

Mickey’s cell phones travelled together on the morning of March 10, 2018, from the

house to the hotel in Humble, indicating that Willis took Mickey’s cell phone with

her. Although Willis had called or texted Mickey numerous times before that

morning, the records showed that she never contacted him again afterwards. She also

texted a friend on the morning of March 9 discussing problems she was having with

Mickey and telling her friend, “Putting my plan into motion.”

Willis called in sick to work for several days beginning on March 9, and she

never went to work again after March 9. Willis’s sister, however, testified that while

Willis and the children stayed at her house for a few days after March 12, Willis did

not appear to be sick. Text messages Willis sent to her children around this time also

conflicted with her excuse for missing work due to illness. At some point, Willis left

her children at her sister’s house.

After the State rested during the guilt-innocence phase of trial, defense

counsel made a motion for directed verdict, which the trial court denied. After the

defense rested, both sides gave closing arguments. The jury returned a verdict of

guilty.

5 During the punishment phase of trial, Willis testified about Mickey’s

character. She expressly refused to accept the jury’s guilty verdict, denying her

involvement in the murder. She testified that Mickey had “always cheated” on her,

but she nevertheless stayed with him “to keep the family together.” She testified that

Mickey had been a drug dealer, had been in and out of prison, and owed money to

people at various times, including in 2018, for which he had received threats. She

also testified that Mickey had pulled a gun on her in 2003, but the charges were later

dropped. She denied having ever stabbed Mickey.

After both sides rested and presented closing arguments, the jury sentenced

Willis to fifty years’ imprisonment. Willis filed a motion for new trial arguing that

her trial counsel was ineffective. The trial court did not hold a hearing on the motion

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