David Lee Morales v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 6, 2020
Docket05-18-00761-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
David Lee Morales v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

AFFIRMED as modified; Opinion Filed January 6, 2020

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-18-00761-CR

DAVID LEE MORALES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 2 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F15-56719-I

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Schenck, and Carlyle1 Opinion by Justice Carlyle

Following appellant David Lee Morales’s open plea of nolo contendere to aggravated

assault with a deadly weapon, the trial court heard punishment evidence and sentenced him to

twelve years’ imprisonment. In his sole issue on appeal, Mr. Morales contends his trial counsel

provided ineffective assistance regarding punishment because trial counsel “did not investigate or

present evidence of [Mr. Morales’s] many mental health issues” or “address [Mr. Morales’s] clear

and evident habit of self-medication with alcohol, marijuana, and cocaine.”

1 Justice Carlyle has substituted on the submission panel and has reviewed the briefs and record in this case. The State asserts in a cross-issue that the trial court’s written judgment erroneously shows

a “guilty” plea and therefore should be modified to reflect the correct plea. We affirm the trial

court’s judgment as modified in this memorandum opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.

Background

During the punishment hearing, Mr. Morales testified he was diagnosed with ADHD at age

six. From that time, he was “consistently on some medication or other” until he chose to stop

taking medication at age fifteen. In early 2015, at age twenty-one, he decided to “try seeing a

doctor again” because his mental health “was in absolute shambles.” The doctor diagnosed him

with bipolar disorder and “moderate to severe anxiety” and recommended “trying different

medications to see what fit me best,” including “[a]ntidepressants, antipsychotics, antiseizures,

[and] mood stabilizers.”

In August 2015, Mr. Morales had recently begun dating Mary, a 41-year-old woman he

worked with. He stated that relationship began “right before I got my medications properly

stabilized and also while I was still doing a lot of drinking and drugs,” and “[t]he road for me

getting cleaned up was long and difficult and for a while it didn’t really click that the drugs were

making the medication not work properly.” At the time he started dating Mary, she was living

temporarily in an apartment with her adult son, Christian George, and his girlfriend, Karalee

Goodson.

On August 5, 2015, Mr. Morales overslept and was late for work because he “had been up

with some friends” the night before and “had drank too much, smoked some weed, did a little coke,

and I went to bed around three.” His employer fired him that day and he returned home. He stated

he took the prescribed medication he was on at that time, which was “making me very paranoid”

and “giving me like mild auditory hallucinations.” At lunch time, he drank a beer and “smoked a

little weed.” He testified his recollection of what happened after that “fails me to a degree.” He

–2– stated, “I remember a lot of things but they don’t—they’re like pieces to a puzzle that’s not all

there, they don’t fit properly.” He can recall “the front door to Chris and Kara’s apartment” and

“that scream.” Several hours later, as he was leaving his home for a job interview, police pulled

him over and “started jumping out of SUVs and pointing guns in my face.” He testified “that’s

when things started to make sense and I started to become aware that I must have done something.”

He was arrested and charged with shooting Ms. Goodson.

After being released on bond, Mr. Morales broke up with Mary and completed drug and

alcohol treatment. He also continued “working with my doctors to develop a very well-defined

medication regimen to keep me stable.” He stated he “was able to fully get away from drugs and

alcohol as a crutch.” He is now on medication that works well for him and has stable employment.

He began dating a different woman in 2016 and has been married for a year.

Ms. Goodson testified that on the date of the shooting, she was alone in her apartment at

around noon and heard someone trying to open the door. The person began kicking at the door and

she “started to panic.” She looked through the peephole and recognized Mr. Morales, who had

been at the apartment several times before with Mary. He had a bandana covering the lower half

of his face. She opened the door and screamed, “What the F are you doing?” He raised a gun to

her face. She grabbed his hand and struggled to angle the gun away from her and push Mr. Morales

out the door. He pulled the trigger, shooting her in the abdomen. She let go of him and he

immediately ran off. She began yelling for help and called 911. As a result of the shooting, she

required several major surgeries and was in severe pain for months. She was told at the hospital

that “if I had shown up five minutes later I would not have made it, I would have died.”

Ms. Goodson stated that within a month before the shooting, Mary and Mr. George had an

argument regarding Mary’s car, which she kept parked in the apartment’s parking lot. According

to Ms. Goodson, the car “was no longer functioning so we unfortunately had to report it to

–3– management so that we would not get in trouble, and management immediately had it towed.”

After the towing, Mary moved out of the apartment and sent Mr. George a Facebook message

“sounding really, really angry and threatening him.” At the time of the shooting, Mary was living

with Mr. Morales.

Dr. Michael Pittman testified he is a medical doctor specializing in forensic psychiatry.

The trial court appointed him to examine Mr. Morales after the shooting. Dr. Pittman concluded

Mr. Morales suffers from “bipolar I disorder” and was sane at the time of his alleged offense. Dr.

Pittman stated (1) he believes “[Mr. Morales’s] drug ingestion had more to do with his criminal

actions on August 5th, 2015 than the fact that he was off of his medication or didn’t have properly

calculated medication” and (2) Mr. Morales’s treatment records show he told hospital staff “he

didn’t recall the events and that he had shot someone accidentally while drinking and taking new

meds,” but he told another healthcare provider that “he had been off his medicine” at the time of

the shooting.

Veronica Morales, Mr. Morales’s mother, testified that at the time of these events, he was

living in an apartment attached to her house. In February 2015, he told her “I think I need to get

back on meds.” According to Ms. Morales, “in April of 2015, when they had diagnosed him with

bipolar, they were changing his meds like every other week.” She stated “that’s when I noticed

that he was acting quite erratic” and “seemed quite psychotic, actually.”

Ineffective assistance of counsel

To prevail on an ineffective assistance of counsel claim, an appellant must show by a

preponderance of the evidence that (1) counsel’s representation fell below an objective standard

of reasonableness based on prevailing professional norms and (2) the deficient performance

prejudiced the defense—that is, but for the deficiency, there is a reasonable probability that the

result of the proceeding would have been different. Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668, 687

–4– (1984); Lopez v.

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