David Clifton Spurk v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2006
Docket03-04-00459-CR
StatusPublished

This text of David Clifton Spurk v. State (David Clifton Spurk 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
David Clifton Spurk v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-04-00459-CR

David Clifton Spurk, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BASTROP COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 10,393, HONORABLE TERRY L. FLENNIKEN, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant David Spurk was arrested for assault while under community supervision

for the offense of intoxication manslaughter. Shortly after Spurk’s arrest, the State moved to revoke

his probation. At his probation revocation hearing, the district court found that Spurk had violated

the conditions of his probation that required him to abstain from the use of alcohol and to make

monthly payments for his fine, court costs, and probation supervision fee. In two issues, Spurk

asserts that the evidence is insufficient to support revocation of his probation and that the district

court’s restitution order denied him due process of law. We affirm the district court’s order.

BACKGROUND

Spurk was convicted of intoxication manslaughter on April 8, 2003. The district

court assessed a ten-year sentence and placed Spurk on community supervision for ten years. It also ordered Spurk to pay a $20,000 fine, spend 180 days over ninety consecutive weekends in jail,

complete 400 hours of community service, and pay restitution “in an amount to be determined.” The

court imposed twenty-one conditions of probation, including conditions that Spurk (1) not commit

any new offense, (2) abstain from the use of alcohol and other intoxicants, (10) pay his fine and

$211.25 court costs in $200 monthly installments, and (11) pay a probation supervision fee of $40

per month.

Spurk appealed his conviction and sentence on May 7, 2003, but on June 25, 2003,

he withdrew his appeal. Also on June 25, the court issued an order modifying the conditions of

Spurk’s community supervision. The order prohibited Spurk from operating any motor vehicle

without an alcohol-detecting interlock system and set the amount of restitution at $26,891.89, to be

paid in installments of $244.50 per month (Spurk’s fine, costs, and supervision fee required a

combined monthly payment of $484.50). The order also recited that Spurk had waived his right to

a revocation hearing. Spurk had 90 days from June 25, 2003, to appeal the modification order.

Because he did not do so, we do not have a record of the evidence that the court heard in reaching

its decision on the amount of restitution.

Spurk was arrested at his home on May 10, 2004, and charged with assaulting his

girlfriend. The arresting officers testified that they smelled alcohol on Spurk’s breath. The State

filed a motion to revoke Spurk’s probation, alleging that Spurk had violated conditions (1) and (2)

of his probation by assaulting his girlfriend and consuming alcohol on May 10. It also alleged that,

before May 10, Spurk had violated conditions (10) and (11) by failing to make monthly payments

as ordered.

2 The court held a revocation hearing on July 1, 2004. The court heard testimony from

several witnesses, including Spurk, his girlfriend, his ex-girlfriend, his probation officer, two of the

arresting officers, and his girlfriend’s mother.

Spurk’s girlfriend, Melyssa Carroll, testified that she drank beer at the home of

Spurk’s brother on May 10 and became very intoxicated, but Spurk did not drink that night. Carroll

stated that she insisted on driving home, over Spurk’s protests. After arriving home, Carroll recalled

pouring a beer for herself in front of Spurk, “just to upset him.” Spurk told her that if she was going

to drink, she had to leave or he would leave. When Spurk started to take her keys to the house and

the mailbox, Carroll testified that she threw her cup of beer at him, splashing it on his chest. She

said that she attacked Spurk in an attempt to retrieve her keys and he fended her off. During the

altercation, both of them sustained minor scratches and Carroll was bruised. Carroll testified that

she took two knives from the kitchen, trapped Spurk in the bedroom, and soon after, heard knocking

at the door. Carroll “hurried” to the kitchen, returning the knives while Spurk answered the door—to

the police. Fearing that she would go to jail, Carroll stated that she did not tell the police about the

knives or give an accurate account of the altercation. While the police were still at the scene, she

completed an “assault victim statement,” identifying Spurk as the aggressor and alleging that he had

choked her and held down her wrists. Carroll recalled giving another statement two weeks later, at

the request of Spurk’s counsel. In that second statement and during the revocation hearing, Carroll

contradicted her initial version of the May 10 incident, claiming that the information in her assault

victim statement was incorrect.

3 Spurk testified that he did not drink alcohol on May 10 and denied telling the

arresting officers that he had been drinking. He corroborated Carroll’s testimony that she had been

intoxicated and that she had thrown a cup of beer at him.

Spurk’s ex-girlfriend, Chelsea Graham, testified that she was also at the home of

Spurk’s brother on May 10. She stated that Carroll drank beer, became intoxicated, and passed out,

but Spurk had not been present while Carroll was drinking. Graham testified that Spurk did not

allow her to drink when she was with him because he could not “be around alcohol.”1

Cindy Parker, Spurk’s probation officer, testified that Spurk was delinquent in

payment of his fees, fines, and restitution. She stated that Spurk paid a total of $740 but none of his

payments were for the full monthly amount of $484.50. Based on his delinquent payments and the

assault offense, Parker opined that Spurk was not a good candidate to continue on probation.

Officer Patricia Bruggeman testified that she and two other police officers responded

to the May 10 domestic disturbance call from Spurk’s neighbor that culminated in Spurk’s arrest.

Once inside Spurk’s apartment, Bruggeman spoke with Carroll, who did not show any signs of

intoxication. Bruggeman recalled Carroll identifying Spurk as the aggressor and stating that he

“started hitting her in the head with his fingers” and choked her. Bruggeman also testified that, “in

a round-about way,” Carroll said that Spurk made her drive him home because he was intoxicated.

When Bruggeman spoke with Spurk, he denied choking Carroll. Bruggeman noted that his breath

1 Spurk’s parents and his neighbor testified that they had not seen Spurk drink since he began his probation.

4 smelled slightly of alcohol. Bruggeman denied that Spurk’s clothing or any part of the rug was wet,

contrary to Carroll’s testimony that she had thrown beer on him. When Bruggeman told Spurk that

he “was under the age to be drinking” and asked him why he was drinking, Spurk replied that “he

did not know,” but did not deny drinking.

Officer Axel Goldman testified that he also participated in Spurk’s May 10 arrest.

Goldman denied detecting any signs of intoxication on Carroll, but he said that Spurk had a “pretty

strong odor” of alcohol coming from his breath and his eyes were “relatively bloodshot and glassy.”

Goldman stated that he was “absolutely certain” that the odor of alcohol came from Spurk’s breath.

Goldman further testified that Spurk “said he had been drinking.”

Debra Williams, Carroll’s mother, testified that Carroll had a drinking problem.

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