Donald K. Emich v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 2019
Docket02-18-00059-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Donald K. Emich v. State (Donald K. Emich 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 K. Emich v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-18-00059-CR ___________________________

DONALD K. EMICH, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from Criminal District Court No. 2 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1486612D

Before Kerr, Pittman, and Birdwell, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Birdwell MEMORANDUM OPINION

Donald K. Emich appeals from his jury conviction and thirty-year sentence for

felony assault, enhanced from a misdemeanor by a prior family–violence assault, and

further enhanced to a first-degree felony because of two prior, final felony

convictions. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 12.42, 22.01(a)(1), (b)(2)(A). In three points,

he contends that (1) the State failed to prove his prior family–violence assault

conviction beyond a reasonable doubt, (2) the trial court abused its discretion by

admitting evidence over his hearsay objections: a fingerprint card on file with the

Tarrant County jail and a judgment and docket sheet from the prior family–violence

assault conviction, and (3) the trial court abused its discretion by admitting extraneous

offense testimony from the complainant over his rule 403 and 404(b) objections, see

Tex. R. Evid. 403, 404(b). We affirm.

I. Facts Adduced at Trial

Emich and the complainant, both drug users, had a history of domestic

violence during their approximately eighteen-month relationship. This prosecution

arose from one of those incidents in Glenwood Park, Fort Worth, where the

complainant was living in a tent among other homeless people. Emich had been

staying with her for at least a couple of days.

Around 8:30 a.m. on February 6, 2017, Officer Joshua Steger responded to a

911 call about a disturbance at Glenwood Park. He and another officer first met with

the 911 caller––a man also living in Glenwood Park––and then drove around to the

2 side of the park where they found Emich inside a tent. Emich was cussing and yelling,

and Officer Steger presumed that Emich was directing his ire at the complainant, who

was about twenty yards away by a creek embankment. She was crying. As the police

were taking Emich out of the tent, he said he and the complainant had just had a

verbal argument.

Officer Steger walked over to the complainant. She would not turn around and

talk to him at first, but when she finally faced him, he noticed she had a black eye.

The complainant told Officer Steger that Emich had given her the black eye the day

before but that on February 6, he had hit her in the jaw, causing pain. The other

officer took a picture of the complainant pointing to where she felt pain, and the trial

court admitted the photograph into evidence. The complainant went into the tent and

tried to pack a bag because she wanted to get away from Emich. She was fearful and

scared. Emich, on the other hand, was not only agitated but was also cussing and

yelling at the officers. The officers arrested Emich. Neither the officers nor the 911

caller witnessed Emich actually striking the complainant, and Officer Steger did not

see any evidence of injury on the complainant other than scratches and her black eye.

The trial court admitted the MedStar ambulance report of the incident into

evidence, and the prosecutor read this part of it to the jury:

MedStar 30 dispatched to an assault, EMS stage for P.D. EMS arrived on scene to find PT standing with Fort Worth Fire and PD.

PT stated that she didn’t want to go to the hospital. PT had black, purple left eye, scratches over the left shoulder and backside. PT said

3 that her left shin was hurting. EMS looked and there was bruising. EMS took manual vitals. PT’s vitals were stable.

EMS advised PT to go get checked out if she didn’t want to go with EMS. EMS explained to PT the risks of not going and PT understood. PT signed AMA.[1]

Roy Babbich also responded that day with the Fort Worth fire department. He

testified that the complainant “really didn’t want any help from us.” According to

Babbich, “she looked like she had been beat up. But she was also . . . living I guess in

the park or the woods, so she was also in pretty bad shape because of that too.” He

described the complainant that day as “[t]imid, beat down, worn out.” Emich, though,

was “[a]ggravated, angry, [and] seemed a little . . . crazy.” He was cussing the fire

department and police, and he was lurching at the police, who were restraining him.

Encarncion Perez testified that on February 6, 2017, he was living in Glenwood

Park with other homeless people. He called 911 that day because he was scared

Emich was going to kill the complainant. He passed by their tent a couple of times

that morning and heard “noise”; the complainant was yelling, “Help me, help me.”

Perez heard “a woman saying that somebody [was] beating her.” The complainant was

screaming, and he was afraid Emich would kill her. The trial court admitted a

recording of Perez’s 911 call, in which he told the operator that a man is beating a

woman, and he is tired of it.

1 AMA is an acronym for against medical advice. AMA, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).

4 The complainant first testified about prior incidents of abuse by Emich. When

questioned about how she got the black eye, she said that Emich “must have” hit her

with his hand but that “a lot of these incidents” were multi-day events. When asked

what happened February 6, she said, “He hit me with a log. What? I don’t remember.”

But she remembered that the police were called early on February 6, around 8:00 or

8:30 a.m. When the police arrived, she was in the creek bed, praying for help. She

could not remember what she told the officers. The complainant testified that she

thought the assault had started a couple days earlier when she ran into Emich at a

convenience store: “[t]hen a couple of days go by and you can’t get away.” She also

said, “It’s hard for me to keep it all straight. You’re talking about a lot of

concussions.” The complainant confirmed that she did not want medical attention

that day and was probably uncooperative because the police “had written me a ticket

last time they came out for fighting when I called them.”

On cross-examination, the complainant admitted that she had been

corresponding with Emich while he was in jail and that at the time of trial she was

also in jail for possession of methamphetamine, which she had continued to use after

Emich’s arrest. She also testified about her past drug use, drinking, and mental health

problems. She agreed that her drug use and concussions had affected her memory.

5 II. Evidence of Prior Conviction is Sufficient

Emich argues in his first point that the State failed to meet its burden to prove

beyond a reasonable doubt that he was previously convicted of family–violence

assault.

The State can enhance a class A misdemeanor assault to a third-degree felony

with proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant was previously convicted of

assaulting a family member, household member, or person with whom the defendant

had a continuing romantic or intimate relationship. Id. § 22.01(a)(1), (b)(2)(A); see Tex.

Fam. Code Ann. § 71.0021(b) (defining dating relationship), § 71.003 (defining

family), § 71.005 (defining household); Flowers v. State, 220 S.W.3d 919

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