Daniel Lynn Easter v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 30, 2016
Docket01-14-00450-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel Lynn Easter v. State (Daniel Lynn Easter 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
Daniel Lynn Easter v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion issued August 30, 2016

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-14-00450-CR ——————————— DANIEL LYNN EASTER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 506th District Court Waller County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 13-02-14323

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Daniel Lynn Easter, guilty of the felony offense of

attempted theft by deception from a non-profit organization.1 The trial court

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 15.01(a), (d) (Vernon 2011) (criminal attempt), 31.03(a) (Vernon Supp. 2015) (theft); see also id. § 31.03(f)(3) (offense of theft assessed his punishment at confinement for six months, suspended the sentence, and

placed him on community supervision for two years. In four issues,2 appellant

contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction and the

trial court erred in denying his motion for new trial and overruling his objections to

portions of the State’s closing argument.

We affirm.

Background

Archie Glenn Hashaw, Jr., executive director of Waller County Emergency

Medical Service (“Waller County EMS”), a non-profit organization and the

complainant in this case, testified that Waller County EMS provides “9-1-1

ambulance service” for the county. It shares “a building in downtown Monaville,”

designated as Fire Station Number 2, with the Monaville Volunteer Fire Department

(the “Monaville VFD”). And appellant serves as fire chief for the Monaville VFD.

“increased to next higher category of offense” if owner of appropriated property was non-profit organization). 2 In his first issue, appellant contends that this Court “lacks jurisdiction on appeal because [his] motion for arrest of judgment was GRANTED and the State did not appeal the trial court’s ruling.” Prior to the submission of appellant’s case, we granted the State’s “Motion to Abate Appeal and Remand Case to Trial Court for Clarification of Order and For Correction of Record Nunc Pro Tunc.” We noted that the trial court’s order on appellant’s “Motion in Arrest of Judgment” did not make clear whether it “intended to arrest the judgment or merely intended to suspend imposition of the sentence until the resolution of any appeals.” The trial court subsequently clarified its order and denied appellant’s “Motion in Arrest of Judgment.” Thus, we need not address appellant’s first issue and will limit our review to his remaining four issues. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.1.

2 Hashaw explained that Waller County EMS, pursuant to a “joint venture

agreement,” built Fire State Number 2 “jointly” with the Monaville VFD, with the

intention that the two entities would jointly “share the building for the common good

of the community.” Fire Station Number 2 is a “metal building” with “living

quarters,” “a couple of bedrooms,” “common living area,” “bathrooms,” “some

bays” for the fire trucks, and “a spot” for Waller County EMS to use.

Although Waller County EMS and Monaville VFD originally intended to

“share the expenses” related to the building “50/50,” not all expenses, in reality, are

shared equally between the two. In regard to the electric bill, for example, Hashaw

noted that Waller County EMS pays one-hundred percent of the bill and then sends

an invoice to the Monaville VFD for approximately twenty-five percent of the

electricity cost. The Monaville VFD in turn “send[s] EMS the money” that it owes

for its portion of the bill.

Hashaw further testified that the relationship between Waller County EMS

and the Monaville VFD has not been “smooth[]” during the time that they have

shared Fire Station Number 2. They have had “disagreements” and “issues” “getting

along.” Specifically, the Monaville VFD “wants the building for [its] own. [It]

wants [Waller County EMS] out. [It] ha[s] threatened to evict [Waller County

EMS].” And the Monaville VFD has sent Waller County EMS “demand letters”

“asking [it] to leave the premises” and “threatening” to hire an attorney “to evict [it]

3 out of the building.” Waller County EMS has also “endured actual person to person

harassment [of its] EMS crews at the station.”

In regard to Fire Station Number 2’s parking lot, Hashaw, “[a]t some point,”

“learn[ed] that [it] . . . had been improved or had new pavement put on it.” On

January 5, 2012, Rhonda Becvar, Waller County EMS’s office manager, received an

invoice, the “first” “formal[]” request for payment, from the Monaville VFD related

to the parking lot improvement. The invoice, dated December 22, 2011 and admitted

into evidence as State’s Exhibit 1, requests payment of $2,500 “[d]ue upon receipt.”

And the “Description” portion of the invoice states: “Pro-Line Materials Invoice

#4264 redo parking lot station 2 required payment in full upon completion your half

to be reimbursed to” the Monaville VFD. Hashaw explained that the invoice

essentially “ask[ed] for [Waller County EMS] to pay 50 percent of what [the

Monaville VFD] s[aid] [it] paid for some work done” on Fire Station Number 2’s

parking lot. According to Hashaw,

the first time [he] knew about [any] parking lot improvement[,] or as the invoice says [“]Pro-Line Materials, Invoice 4264, redo parking lot at Station 2, required payment in full upon completion; your half to be reimbursed to [the] Monaville [VFD”] . . . was when [Waller County EMS] w[as] asked to pay for it[.]

A second invoice, dated December 22, 2011 and admitted into evidence as

State’s Exhibit 2, is from ProLine Materials, Inc. (“ProLine”) to the Monaville VFD,

requesting payment of $5,000. The “Description” portion of the invoice states:

4 “Completely re-do parking lot at Station 2.” At the top of the invoice is the notation,

“PAID By Check.” And included with the invoice, in State’s Exhibit 2, is a

photograph of the front portion of a check written by the Monaville VFD to ProLine

for $5,000.

After receiving State’s Exhibit 1, Waller County EMS asked the Monaville

VFD “for a copy of the cancelled check” because it did not have “any previous

knowledge” of “ow[ing] anybody [the] money” for the parking lot improvement. In

response, the Monaville VFD provided Waller County EMS with State’s Exhibit 2.

Hashaw explained, however, that the Monaville VFD never “produce[d] a cancelled

check” to evidence its payment to ProLine. Instead, the Monaville VFD only

“produced” a check “written” to ProLine but which “never went to the bank.”

On November 7, 2012, the Monaville VFD sent to Waller County EMS

another copy, admitted into evidence as State’s Exhibit 3, of the ProLine invoice to

the Monaville VFD for $5,000. Hashaw explained that this constituted “another

request” by the Monaville VFD for reimbursement from Waller County EMS for the

parking lot improvement.

Hashaw noted that he did not personally have any direct dealings with

appellant about the parking lot improvement or the Monaville VFD’s repeated

requests for payment of $2,500. However, he explained that neither he, nor “any

representative of Waller County EMS,” was ever “told don’t worry about th[e]

5 $2,500, it was not paid for, it was a donation.” And, “as far as [he] knows,” “to this

day” Monaville VFD is “still requesting the $2,500” from Waller County EMS.

Appellant also never told Hashaw that the Monaville VFD’s invoice, in which it

requested payment of $2,500 from Waller County EMS, was a “mistake” or Waller

County EMS should not “worry about [paying] it.”

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