Donald Gill Delauder v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 16, 2010
Docket14-08-00926-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Donald Gill Delauder v. State (Donald Gill Delauder 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
Donald Gill Delauder v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 16, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-08-00926-CR

Donald Gill Delauder, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 268th District Court

Fort Bend County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 45886

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

Donald Gill Delauder appeals the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.  We affirm.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Appellant was charged by indictment with aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, alleged to have been committed on or about December 17, 2006.  After a two-day jury trial, appellant was convicted and subsequently sentenced to twelve years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division.

A.        State’s Evidence

Rayzale White testified that she and appellant had dated for a couple of years and by the time of the shooting, they had been living together at appellant’s house for about four months.  According to White, appellant left the house while she was preparing to go out to a club, and she was the first to return.  She stated that she changed clothes and was lying on the bed watching television when she heard appellant call to her from the bedroom doorway.  According to White, she looked at appellant, then turned away.  White testified that appellant called her name a second time, and when she looked at him, he was holding a “big gun” in his hand.  White stated that when she again turned away from him, appellant shot her in the back.  According to White, appellant then said, “this is how demonic I am.”  Although White testified at one point that appellant said nothing other than her name before he shot her, she later testified that she and appellant had been having an argument and she was ignoring him. 

Wounded, White then escaped the home through the back door, as appellant sat in a chair in the living room.  She then made her way to a Texaco gas station where she used a pay phone to call 911.  On cross-examination, White admitted that she had used cocaine the day before this incident.

Deputy Adam Cempa of the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Department was dispatched to White’s location at 4:15 a.m. on the day of the shooting and arrived at the gas station at 4:24 a.m.  According to Deputy Cempa, White told him appellant’s name and the name of the street where the shooting took place.  She additionally described the residence where the offense occurred and stated that a burgundy Ford Escape was parked in the driveway of the residence.  After paramedics arrived to care for White, Deputy Cempa drove to the street White named and located the residence and vehicle she described.  When no one responded to Deputy Cempa’s knock, he walked around the building, and through a partially-open window, he saw a bed covered with a bloody sheet.  Deputy Cempa then returned to his vehicle while a hazardous-entry team was dispatched to the scene.  Another officer, Sergeant Frank Cempa, Jr., testified that he was also at the scene and that officers knocked loudly at the door several times and even knocked on the windows but received no response.  He then called for the hazardous-entry team.  Sergeant Cempa further testified that he did not see a person sleeping in a chair in the house, and that he first saw appellant leaving the house in handcuffs.

Sergeant Carlos Castillo testified that he was a member of the hazardous-entry team that was sent to the same location and also examined the perimeter of the house.  Like Deputy Cempa, Sergeant Castillo looked through a bedroom window and saw blood on the bed.  He also saw blood on the back door, and through another window, he saw appellant asleep on a recliner.  A member of the hazardous-entry team knocked on the back door, and appellant walked to the door, opened it, and was immediately detained.  When Castillo entered the house, he found a pump-action shotgun and a box of ammunition next to the recliner where appellant had been seated. 

Lieutenant Lester Phipps testified that appellant’s hands were swabbed at the scene for gunpowder residue, but the samples turned over to Investigator Rick Waits were not tested.  According to Lieutenant Phipps, such samples are not tested unless requested by the investigating detective or the district attorney’s office.  Waits testified that he arrived at appellant’s residence at approximately 5:00 a.m., after appellant had been taken into custody and removed from the house.  Waits photographed the scene and collected evidence.  According to Waits, the shotgun had one shell in the chamber and three more in the cylinder.  Although the gun was dusted for fingerprints, none were successfully obtained.  Detective Russell Womble of the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office interviewed White at the hospital and accompanied Detective Josh Dale when the latter interviewed appellant.  Womble did not request that swabs of appellant’s hands be tested for gunpowder residue.

Dr. Joanne Oakes treated White at Memorial Hermann Hospital’s emergency room.  According to Dr. Oakes, White was wearing a nightgown and stated that her boyfriend shot her in the back while she was sleeping.  The entrance wound was approximately three centimeters in diameter, and according to Dr. Oakes, could not have been self-inflicted.  Dr. Oakes opined that White had been shot from a distance of less than ten feet.  She further testified that White tested positive for cocaine, which does not affect memory and could have been ingested days earlier; that White’s blood alcohol level of .05 was below the legal limit for intoxication; and that White was lucid, coherent, and cooperative.  According to Dr. Oakes, White’s injuries were life-threatening; multiple fragments of birdshot had penetrated her back, causing internal bleeding and deflating one of her lungs.  Medical records further show that a fragment lodged in or near White’s heart, and she sustained fractures to her eighth and ninth ribs and one of her vertebrae.  Although doctors reinflated White’s lung, they were unable to remove the birdshot from her body. 

B.        Appellant’s Evidence

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Donald Gill Delauder v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donald-gill-delauder-v-state-texapp-2010.