Dewayne Paul Hindman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 2012
Docket07-10-00243-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Dewayne Paul Hindman v. State (Dewayne Paul Hindman 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
Dewayne Paul Hindman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NO. 07-10-00243-CR

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

AT AMARILLO

PANEL B

JUNE 22, 2012

DEWAYNE PAUL HINDMAN, APPELLANT

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE

FROM THE 251ST DISTRICT COURT OF POTTER COUNTY;

NO. 55,551-C; HONORABLE ANA ESTEVEZ, JUDGE

Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Dwayne Paul Hindman of capital murder and the trial

court assessed the mandatory sentence of life in prison without the possibility of

parole.1 On appeal, appellant argues insufficient evidence supported his conviction and

because of his continuing indigence the trial court erred by taxing as court costs his

court-appointed attorney‟s fees, investigator fees, and witness fees. The State agrees

1 Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a)(2) (West Supp. 2011) (capital murder); § 12.31(a)(2) (West 2011) (punishment of life without parole when State does not seek death penalty). the judgment should be modified to delete these fees as costs assessed against

appellant. We will modify the judgment accordingly and affirm it as modified.

Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant was indicted for the April 1, 2007, capital murder of Huong Thi Rowlett.

The indictment alleged he killed Rowlett in the course of committing or attempting to

commit robbery. At trial in June 2010, the court‟s charge gave the jury the options of

finding appellant not guilty, guilty of capital murder or guilty of the lesser offense of

murder. As noted, the jury found him guilty of the more serious offense. On appeal,

appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence he intentionally killed

Rowlett. He confessed to killing her. He challenges only the evidence supporting the

finding he did so in the course of committing robbery.

Rowlett, who immigrated from Vietnam in 1975, sometimes worked at an

Amarillo convenience store owned by one of her daughters. During the late afternoon

of April 1, 2007, Rowlett was the clerk at the convenience store. Witness McCray, a

regular customer, and his friend Sain testified they stopped at the convenience store

that afternoon. Outside the store, McCray heard a noise he described as “like a help

scream. Trouble. Getting hurt.” Opening the door, he noted the scream grew louder.

Behind the store‟s counter McCray saw someone “maybe robbing the place.” Both saw

the man standing over a woman. McCray made eye contact with the man before

McCray and Sain fled the store.

Once outside, McCray called police. McCray and Sain then drove around the

block. According to appellant, “possibly 30 to 40 seconds” after leaving the store, 2 McCray saw a man running between streets about a block from the store. Appellant

concedes he was the man.

McCray and Sain stopped again at the store, and McCray briefly entered. He

checked on the woman, and found her “completely quiet.” A police officer shortly

arrived, and McCray told the officer the woman in the store was dead. Inside the store,

in the area around the cash register, the officer found Rowlett on the floor, bleeding.

She was not breathing and had no pulse. The officer began applying CPR, and noted

Rowlett had several puncture wounds.

The officer found the cash register drawer open and empty of currency. He

described the counter area of the store as a “mess,” with items knocked over and

cigarettes on the floor.

A second officer also noted Rowlett suffered several wounds to the chest,

abdomen and arms. She lay in a large pool of blood. Blood was splattered on the

counter and a wall. On the store‟s counter police found a styrofoam cup. Subsequent

analysis showed thirteen of eighteen latent fingerprints on the cup matched appellant‟s.

Rowlett was pronounced dead at the hospital. The forensic pathologist testified

to his opinion the cause of her death was a stab wound to the chest by a knife or knife-

like implement.

Trial testimony indicated two to three hundred dollars was missing from the cash

register. The store owner explained it was store procedure when the cash register was

full to place extra cash in paper bags under the counter. Sometimes Rowlett placed

3 extra cash in her pockets. According to the owner, her mother usually used a key to

open the cash register. The register could also be opened by pushing a button.

Although the register was empty of currency after Rowlett‟s murder, a sack containing

cash remained under the counter. Police eventually found over $1,600 hidden about

the store, some $350 of it in Rowlett‟s pockets.

Other testimony showed that late in the afternoon of April 1, when an

acquaintance of appellant‟s gave him a ride, appellant gave the acquaintance two packs

of cigarettes for his assistance.

Tanya Ballin, with whom appellant lived during several months before Rowlett‟s

murder, testified appellant held two jobs during those months, a position with a

restaurant that lasted “for a while,” and a carpet-laying job that “wasn‟t very long.”

Although appellant had moved out of Ballin‟s residence on March 27, 2007, he

spent the night of March 31 with Ballin. She testified they stayed up late, talking, to see

if they could “work things out.” The next day, April 1, around noon she drove appellant

to a pizza restaurant where he had a job interview.

Appellant contacted Ballin about 7:00 p.m. with a borrowed cell phone, asking

her to do his laundry. The following day, April 2, Ballin and appellant went to a Wal-

Mart store where he gave her $30 to buy a paint-ball gun for him. He spent the majority

of that week with Ballin.

After identifying appellant‟s fingerprints on the styrofoam cup found on the store

counter, police began looking for appellant. On April 9, Ballin and appellant were in her

4 car when it was stopped for a traffic violation. Ballin and appellant were separated and

both went to the police station for questioning.

During the questioning, Ballin was allowed to speak with appellant. Ballin

recalled asking him if he committed the crime. She testified his response was “he didn‟t

go in there for that,” but to buy a Coke. She continued, “he remembers [Rowlett] yelling

or something. He just snapped and then he didn‟t remember.”2 According to Ballin,

appellant apologized saying “he just wanted to make me happy.”

After refreshing her memory with a summary of her conversation with appellant,

Ballin added, “I had asked him what had happened and he said she was yelling--the

lady was yelling at him. I asked him why. He said he didn't know. He had got a soda

and drank half of it and filled it up again. And that he just lost it. And he said he should

have been on his meds. And he said he was crazy. If he was on his meds, he would

never have left me. I had asked him about the money that he had put in my purse, if

this was from there and he said yes.” Ballin noticed the money in her purse, about $50,

and believed it was from appellant but said nothing to him about it. When Ballin asked

appellant why he did not tell her of committing the crime he responded, “He didn‟t have

a choice.” In later conversations with Ballin, appellant denied committing the crime.

Appellant‟s recorded statement to police was played before the jury. He

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