Douglas Ray Mitchell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 2013
Docket05-12-00876-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Douglas Ray Mitchell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed July 26, 2013.

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas

No. 05-12-00876-CR No. 05-12-00877-CR No. 05-12-00878-CR

DOUGLAS RAY MITCHELL,1 Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 2 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause Nos. F11-56332-I, F11-56331-I, F11-71127-I

OPINION

Before Justices FitzGerald, Francis, and Lewis Opinion by Justice FitzGerald

A jury convicted appellant Douglas Ray Mitchell of evading arrest or detention and two

offenses of harassment of a public servant. Appellant raises four issues on appeal. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

The only witnesses during the first phase of appellant’s trial were several police officers

and one deputy sheriff.

1 In cause number F11-71127-I, appellant was indicted as “Douglas Mitchell.” In cause numbers F11-56331-I and F11-56332-I, he was indicted as “Douglas Ray Mitchell.” We refer to him as Douglas Ray Mitchell in this opinion. Dallas police officer Shane Owens testified as follows. On June 8, 2011, Owens was on

duty until 11:00 p.m. At about 11:30 p.m., he was driving home from work through the Deep

Ellum area of Dallas when he saw appellant standing next to a parking-lot pay box. Appellant

was making a kind of stabbing motion while looking over his shoulders, which seemed

suspicious to Owens. Owens pulled into the parking lot and could clearly see appellant stabbing

something into the holes in the pay box. Owens got out of his car and said, “[H]ey, what are you

doing?” He was wearing his full police uniform at the time. He also used his radio to report that

someone was breaking into the pay box at his location. Appellant ran away, and Owens

followed him in his car. Owens briefly lost appellant, then found him in a parking lot standing

against a wall. Owens shined his bright lights on appellant, called in his location, and got out of

his car. When he told appellant to step forward and lie on the ground, appellant cursed at him

and ran at him. Owens took him to the ground and sat on top of him so that he could not move.

Police officers Timothy Payovich and Leonard Garza, who were on bicycle patrol, then arrived

on the scene. Owens stayed on appellant until they were able to handcuff appellant. A squad car

pulled up, and Owens and Garza walked over to it. Owens then heard appellant “mouthing off,

using curse words,” and Garza and two other police officers went to assist Payovich. Owens did

not participate in this activity, and he did not testify to any further involvement in the case.

Dallas police officer Leonard Garza testified as follows. He and officer Payovich

responded to the call to assist Owens. Two female officers arrived at the scene soon after Garza

and Payovich did. Payovich handled appellant, and Garza talked with Owens about what had

happened. Then Payovich maced appellant, which Garza heard but did not see. Paramedics

were called, and they treated appellant at the scene. Then Payovich and Garza escorted appellant

to the squad car. Appellant was still belligerent and cursing. When Payovich attempted to fasten

appellant’s seat belt, appellant spat at Payovich, and some of the spittle got on Garza’s arm as

–2– well. When asked if “it was a little bit of spit,” Garza answered, “No. It was one of those where

you dig it from real deep.” Payovich got “a lot” of spit on his face. When asked whether the

spitting was an intentional act, Garza testified, “I would assume so.”

Dallas police officer Timothy Payovich testified as follows. He confirmed that appellant

had already been subdued when Payovich and Garza arrived at the scene. Payovich handcuffed

appellant. Appellant was belligerent, kicking his feet and cursing at Payovich. Appellant began

to spit, although not in Payovich’s general direction at this time. Payovich told appellant not to

spit, but he continued to do it. Payovich then sprayed appellant with a short burst of pepper

spray, and appellant stopped kicking and spitting at that point. The paramedics arrived at the

scene and treated appellant by washing his face off. Police sergeant Gorka arrived at the scene

and told Payovich to put appellant in the back of the police car. Payovich and Garza escorted

appellant to the police car. Garza helped appellant into the back seat on the driver’s side of the

car, while Payovich went to the passenger’s side of the car and leaned into the car to fasten

appellant’s seat belt. Appellant was cursing at Payovich, and then he cleared his throat and spit

at Payovich. The spittle covered the left side of Payovich’s face.

Deputy sheriff Margaret Brown testified for the purpose of proving that appellant had

previously been convicted of evading arrest. During Brown’s testimony, the trial judge admitted

into evidence documents concerning a 2009 conviction of Douglas Mitchell for evading arrest,

including a certificate with a thumbprint. Brown testified that she took a fingerprint from

appellant, compared it to the thumbprint associated with the 2009 conviction, and found that they

were the same.

B. Procedural history

Appellant was charged in three indictments with evading arrest or detention after a prior

conviction for the same offense, and two offenses of third-degree-felony harassment of a public

–3– servant, namely officers Garza and Payovich. Each of the two harassment indictments included

two enhancement paragraphs alleging that appellant had previously been convicted of assaulting

a public servant and delivery of a controlled substance. Appellant pleaded not guilty in all three

cases, and all three were tried simultaneously. The jury found appellant guilty in all three cases.

Appellant elected for the jury to assess punishment and pleaded not true to the two

enhancement paragraphs in the harassment cases. The State called deputy sheriff Brown to

testify during the punishment phase of the case in order to prove up the two enhancement

paragraphs included in the harassment indictments One paragraph alleged a 2007 conviction for

assault of a public servant, and the other alleged a 1993 conviction for delivery of a controlled

substance. The evidence introduced through deputy Brown, however, showed that appellant’s

1993 conviction was actually for possession of a controlled substance. The State also introduced

evidence that appellant had four burglary convictions from 2001 and 2002. Appellant testified

during the punishment phase of the trial that he had schizophrenia and that he had had

schizophrenia all his life. He also testified that he felt “[c]razy” and that he was not taking any

medication. On cross-examination, the State asked appellant whether he had been convicted of

various crimes under various cause numbers, including many burglaries. He admitted some of

the convictions and not others.

For the evading-arrest conviction, the jury assessed punishment at two years’

confinement in a state jail and a $10,000 fine. With respect to the conviction for harassment of

officer Garza, the jury found both enhancement paragraphs true and assessed punishment at

twenty-five years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary. With respect to the conviction for

harassment of officer Payovich, the jury found both enhancement paragraphs true and assessed

punishment at fifty years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary.

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