Davis, Donny Kevin

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 2009
DocketPD-0613-08
StatusPublished

This text of Davis, Donny Kevin (Davis, Donny Kevin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis, Donny Kevin, (Tex. 2009).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



No. PD-0613-08
DONNY KEVIN DAVIS, Appellant


v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS



ON APPELLANT'S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

IN CAUSE NO. 07-07-0025-CR FROM THE SEVENTH COURT OF APPEALS

POTTER COUNTY

Holcomb, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Keller, P.J., and Meyers, Price, Womack, Johnson, Hervey, and Cochran, JJ., joined. Keasler, J., concurred in the result.

The court of appeals rejected appellant's claim that he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel at trial. We affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

In August 2006, a Potter County grand jury returned an indictment charging appellant with burglary of a habitation under Texas Penal Code § 30.02(a)(2). (1) The indictment also alleged, for purposes of punishment enhancement, that appellant had two prior felony convictions.

Trial under the indictment was had before a jury on appellant's plea of not guilty. At the guilt stage of the trial, the State presented five witnesses: Justin Schimpf, appellant's accomplice; (2) Clifford Schraag, the complainant; Phyllis Thomas, Schraag's next-door neighbor; Thomas Miller, an assistant manager of an Amarillo pawn shop; and Marvin Hill, an Amarillo police officer.

Schimpf testified that, on June 22, 2006, at around noon, he and appellant burglarized an Amarillo apartment and stole, among other things, a black, slimline Sony "PlayStation 2" video-game player. Immediately after the burglary, according to Schimpf, he and appellant went to a "Cash America" pawn shop, where appellant pawned the video-game player.

Schraag testified that, on the afternoon of June 22, 2006, when he returned to his Amarillo apartment following work, he found that his apartment had been burglarized. He testified further that one of the items stolen was a black, slimline Sony "PlayStation 2" video-game player. Schraag's testimony continued:

Q: Did you notice [appellant] around your apartment on or about the 22nd of June 2006?

A: Yes. He had been pretty much lurking there all evening. I kept peeking out my window. I'd see him go about-the steps are right in front of my peephole, to upstairs. I'd see him go halfway up the steps. This was in the middle of the night, when I woke up, and then I couldn't go to sleep.

I would watch him go around the back, so I'd try to peek to see what he was doing out in the back in the dark. There was no reason for him to be back there, anyway. Then I'd see him come back in front of mine, kind of looking, trying to look in my windows, and then he'd go over to Phyllis and try to look in her windows.

* * *

Q: Once you saw Mr. Davis, and there was this behavior that you described as going on all evening, did you see anything else after that, or no?

A: When I left for work in the morning, he was still out there.

Q: He was-by "still out there," where did you see him?

A: Wandering in the parking lot of the apartments.



Thomas testified that she was acquainted with appellant and that she had "seen him . . . around the apartments" on a few occasions.

Miller testified that, on June 22, 2006, appellant entered the "Cash America" pawn shop that he managed and sold to him a black, slimline Sony "PlayStation 2" video-game player.

Finally, Hill testified that the pawn shop that Miller managed was "in [the] same neighborhood as where the burglary occurred." He testified further that, during the course of his investigation of the burglary, he had asked Thomas, her neighbor Betty Sellers, and Jacob Pantoya, a maintenance worker at the apartment complex, "what they had seen that morning," and all three of them had told him "that they had seen [appellant] at the complex." Hill also testified that, during his investigation of the burglary, he had interviewed appellant. His testimony continued:

Q: And . . . what did [appellant] have to say to you [about the burglary]?

A: He stated that he had been in the area where the burglary had occurred. He had met up with a white guy that he knew just from around the neighborhood. They walked to the area where the burglary had occurred, but he stated that he did not commit the burglary. That he had gone to a different location, and a short time later the white guy that he had been with came and found him and asked him to go pawn a PlayStation that the white guy had in his possession at this time.

Q: And who [did appellant say] was this white guy?

A: That was Justin Schimpf.



Although Schimpf was obviously an accomplice witness (3) whose testimony was important to the prosecution, appellant's trial counsel did not request an instruction on accomplice-witness testimony. See Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 38.14. (4) Nor did the trial court, on its own motion, instruct the jury on accomplice-witness testimony.

After hearing all the evidence at the guilt stage, the jury found appellant guilty as charged in the indictment. After hearing additional evidence at the punishment stage, the jury assessed appellant's punishment, enhanced by two prior felony convictions, at imprisonment for 67 years.

Appellant later filed a motion for new trial, in which he argued that: (1) the trial court erred in failing to instruct the jury on accomplice-witness testimony and (2) he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to the effective assistance of counsel because his trial counsel failed to request an accomplice-witness instruction. With respect to his ineffective-assistance claim, appellant, citing Strickland v. Washington, 466 U.S. 668 (1984), argued that "trial counsel's failure to request an instruction on accomplice witness testimony was not the result of any plausible, sound trial strategy but rather, was [the result] of neglect." He argued further that he was prejudiced by trial counsel's deficient performance:

"Schimpf's testimony was essential to the State's prosecution . . . . Because the outcome [of the guilt stage] depended so heavily on the accomplice testimony alone, defense counsel's failure [to request an instruction on] accomplice witness [testimony] allowed the jury to . . . base its verdict on Schimpf's testimony alone, without regard to the sufficiency of the corroborating evidence. Thus, trial counsel's failure . . . rendered counsel's performance . . . prejudicial to the point that . . . [t]here is a reasonable probability that the result of the proceeding could have been different but for this deficiency."



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Davis, Donny Kevin, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-donny-kevin-texcrimapp-2009.