Dudley Joseph Bernard v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 9, 2024
Docket01-22-00877-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Dudley Joseph Bernard v. the State of Texas (Dudley Joseph Bernard v. the State of Texas) 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
Dudley Joseph Bernard v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 9, 2024

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-22-00877-CR ——————————— DUDLEY JOSEPH BERNARD, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 122nd District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 19-CR-3701

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Appellant Dudley Joseph Bernard guilty of the felony offense of

murder and the trial court assessed his punishment at 30 years in prison. In two

issues, Appellant argues (1) the trial court erred in overruling his motion for directed

verdict because “the evidence is insufficient to prove he committed murder, rather than acting in self-defense,” and (2) the trial court abused its discretion in excluding

testimony from his forensic nursing expert concerning bullet trajectory.

We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Background

On Thanksgiving day, November 28, 2019, Appellant Dudley Joseph Bernard

shot his wife Chauntelle Bernard nine times, twice in the torso and seven times in

the head. Bernard was arrested and charged with Chauntelle’s murder. At trial,

Bernard argued he shot Chauntelle in self-defense.

A. Opening Statements

In its opening statement, the State told the jury that the evidence would show

that Bernard and Chauntelle hosted family and friends at their home on

Thanksgiving in 2019, including Chauntelle’s friend, Alison McDowell. Everything

was going well that day until 11 p.m. when Alison left and Bernard and Chauntelle

walked her outside. According to the State, Bernard gave Alison a goodbye hug that

made both Alison and Chauntelle “uncomfortable.” Trinell Merricks, Chauntelle’s

sister, was inside the house. She heard a “thud” and then Chauntelle and Bernard

burst through the back door of their home. Bernard grabbed his keys and went back

outside, while Chauntelle locked the back door and told their 8-year-old son to go

upstairs. Chauntelle told Trinell that Bernard was going to get his gun. Chauntelle

2 walked to the front door and looked out a front window at Bernard’s truck, which is

where Bernard kept his gun.

The State continued. After retrieving his gun, Bernard kicked down the back

door, pushed past Trinell “with a rage in his eyes,” and approached Chauntelle.

According to the State, Chauntelle, who “ha[d] gotten her gun at this point because

[she was] fearful” of Bernard, tussled with Bernard and “then gunshots start[ed]

going off.” Trinell ducked when she heard the gunshots and when she looked up,

she saw Bernard step back and shoot Chauntelle. According to the State, Bernard

shot Chauntelle in the left side of her arm, her left flank, and the left side of her head.

Chauntelle fell to the ground and Bernard stood over her and “just finishe[d]

unloading right into the back of her head with a 45-caliber Glock.” According to the

State, Chauntelle’s “gun [went] off during all this” because they found one casing

from her gun.

In his opening statement, Bernard’s counsel told the jury that Chauntelle and

Bernard had some sort of dispute outside after Alison left. After Chauntelle and

Bernard came back inside the house, Bernard grabbed his keys and went to his car.

Bernard intended to leave for the night, but he had to go back inside to retrieve his

wallet, which was in the master bedroom. Bernard, who could not open the back

door because it was locked, looked through the window and saw “Chauntelle and

Trinell in the front hallway, and Chauntelle [was] wildly waving around her gun.”

3 Defense counsel stated the evidence would show that Bernard burst in the back door,

which he had a legal right to do, and he tried to “de-escalate Chauntelle.” Chauntelle

and Bernard “g[o]t in a tussle because he [was] trying to disarm her” and “while he

[was] trying to disarm her, she fire[d]” her gun. Defense counsel stated that although

the police recovered only one casing from Chauntelle’s gun, “there [were] two shots

that the police believe she fired that ended up in the dining room wall.” According

to defense counsel, the evidence would show that Chauntelle “fired first, and that

when [Bernard] fired, he was firing in self-defense.”

B. Trial Testimony

1. Trinell Merricks

Chauntelle’s sister, Trinell Merricks, was the State’s first witness. Trinell

testified that Bernard and Chauntelle were married approximately ten years and had

two children. Their oldest son C.B. (“Charlie”) was eight years old when Chauntelle

was killed, and their youngest son L.B. (“Lucas”) was five years old.1 Chauntelle

worked for the United States Customs and Border Protection as a law enforcement

officer, and Bernard worked for the agency as an agricultural specialist.

1 We will use a pseudonym when referring to anyone who was a minor when the shooting occurred. See TEX. R. APP. P. 9.10(a)(3); see also Fernandez v. State, 597 S.W.3d 546, 551 n.4 (Tex. App.—El Paso 2020, pet. ref’d) (using minor party’s initials to protect her identity).

4 The morning of the shooting, Chauntelle and Bernard were hosting

Thanksgiving day festivities at their home for family and friends. Trinell, her 11-

year-old son K.M. (“Kenny”), and Trinell’s and Chauntelle’s mother, Myrna

Merricks, were at the Bernards’ home helping them prepare food and ready the home

for guests. Chauntelle’s friend from work, Alison McDowell, attended the holiday

gathering with her two children and her mother. The family and friends ate, played

board games, watched football, and talked to other family members using FaceTime.

In the late afternoon, Chauntelle, Trinell, and Alison went shopping to take

advantage of some of the Thanksgiving sales. After the trio returned to the home

that evening, Chauntelle’s and Bernard’s next-door neighbors Judy Jones-Vaughan

and her husband, Daryl Vaughan, came over with their son. The Vaughans brought

a bottle of champagne with them which they shared with Alison and Bernard. Judy,

Daryl, and their son left soon afterwards.

Alison and her family left around 11:00 p.m. According to Trinell, everyone

said goodbye to Alison and her family at the back door, including Chauntelle and

Bernard. After they said their goodbyes, Chauntelle and Bernard walked Alison and

her family to their car, which was parked in the driveway. Trinell testified that after

she told Alison goodbye, she went to the living room to watch a movie. Lucas, who

had dozed off earlier that night, was asleep in the downstairs master bedroom when

Alison and her family left and Myrna, Charlie, and Kenny were upstairs. After

5 Chauntelle and Bernard walked outside to walk Alison to her car, Charlie came

downstairs and went to the kitchen to get a glass of milk.

When Charlie was getting his glass of milk, Trinell heard a loud “thump” from

outside that sounded like something had hit one of the windows and then Chauntelle

and Bernard “burst through the back door.” Bernard immediately grabbed his car

keys, which were next to the back door, and walked back outside. Chauntelle

deadbolted the back door and told Trinell not to open it because Bernard was going

to get his gun from his truck, which was parked on the street in front of the house.

After she told Charlie to go upstairs, Chauntelle walked to the front foyer and

looked at Bernard’s truck through a window in the formal dining room which was

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