Devan Curtis Meeks v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 2011
Docket01-10-00905-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Devan Curtis Meeks v. State (Devan Curtis Meeks 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
Devan Curtis Meeks v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 6, 2011.

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-10-00905-CR


DEVAN CURTIS MEEKS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 344th District Court

 Chambers County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 14969


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury convicted Devan Curtis Meeks of murder, and the trial court assessed his punishment at sixty years’ confinement.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b) (West 2003).  On appeal, Meeks contends the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction.  We affirm.  

Background

In the summer of 2008, Meeks, then nineteen years old, was dating Melina Perry, then age sixteen.  That summer, Perry moved into David Davis’s house.  Perry’s father had died two years earlier, and Davis had been Perry’s father’s best friend.  Davis had agreed to care for Perry because her grandmother could not control Perry’s behavior.  Meeks also lived at Davis’s house for a period that summer, but Davis evicted him because Meeks refused to find a job.  Davis believed that Perry was too young to date Meeks.  He contemplated calling the police about their relationship.  As a result, Davis and Meeks did not get along with each other.  On numerous occasions, Meeks had threatened to kill Davis. 

In a letter dated July 1, 2008, Perry wrote:

Can I live wit[h] this for the rest of my life?? Is [Meeks] the only one who knows about it, always going to stick wit[h] me and be [with] me forever?  Should I have told him??  Can I just slit [Davis’s] throat and walk away??  Yes to all of those.  [H]onestly I am a cold hearted person.  I think that I really can just walk up to him and slit his throat[,] watch him bleed to death[,] turn around and walk out of the house and run to my baby’s arms and yeah I’ll probably cry about it [for] a [little] while but hey life goes on right.  [H]e deserves to die . . . . [Davis] is a horrible person[,] and he is trying to ruin everything  I have going [for] me and [Meeks].  [H]e is trying to put [statutory] rape charges on the person I want to spend [for]ever wit[h] . . . .  So either tonight while he is [sitting] in his chair or tonight in his bed I will close his eyes [for] him for[ever].  RIP [D]avid [D]avis . . . .  David [D]avis is a walking dead man.

Four days after Perry wrote the letter, Meeks attacked Davis and choked him.  Meeks stopped when Perry fled the scene.  Davis called the police from a neighbor’s house.  A friend then picked up Meeks and Perry and drove them to Meeks’s grandfather’s house.  Once there, Meeks stole his grandfather’s truck.  According to the friend, Meeks took the truck because he and Perry intended to “get away from everyone.” 

          In the early morning hours of the following day, Meeks and Perry drove to Davis’s house.  Perry entered the house and then returned outside to Meeks to tell him that Davis was awake.  She told Meeks that it was time to kill Davis, and she urged him inside the house.  But Davis then came outside, brandishing a hedge clipper.  Meeks blocked it with the handle of a near-by shovel.  Meeks and Davis exchanged punches on the steps to the house.  According to Meeks, while he fought Davis, Perry repeatedly stabbed Davis in the back with a pocket knife.  In an attempt to get away from Meeks and Perry, Davis stumbled into the house.  Meeks admitted to the police that he then “knocked [Davis] out cold on the living room floor,”  but he later recanted stating that he did not knock Davis out, and only knocked Davis backward when he approached him with the hedge clipper.   According to Meeks, once Davis was inside the house, Perry retrieved a knife from the kitchen and cut Davis’s throat.  She also stabbed Davis countless times in the chest, including in the heart.  The blade of the knife broke off inside of Davis’s body.  Meeks told police that Perry also hit Davis three times in the head with the hedge clipper. 

Davis died. Meeks then collected all the weapons he could find, including the hedge clipper and some knives.  He wrapped the weapons in a shirt and placed them in his truck, along with Perry’s clothing.  In addition, Meeks stole one of Davis’s dresser drawers because it contained marijuana.  According to Meeks, Perry grabbed a gas canister, splashed gasoline around the house, and started a fire with Meeks’s lighter.  Perry placed the gas canister in the back of the truck.  Meeks and Perry fled to Meeks’s father’s house in Oklahoma.  On the way, Meeks threw the weapons and shirt into the woods somewhere off the highway. 

The police apprehended Perry and Meeks shortly after they arrived in Oklahoma.  Upon his arrest, Meeks told Perry, “Baby, please don’t say anything for me.”  He told the police that he never stabbed Davis, did not plan to kill Davis that night, and protested when Perry said it was time to kill him.  The police found blood on the steering wheel of the truck, the driver’s seat, and the gas canister.  The police also found a pocket knife on the front porch of Davis’s house.  The knife appeared to be one that Meeks had carried with him, but Meeks told the police that he had lost his knife before Davis’s death at a friend’s house.

         

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Devan Curtis Meeks v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devan-curtis-meeks-v-state-texapp-2011.