Edward Lamar Porter v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 7, 2022
Docket05-19-00194-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Edward Lamar Porter v. the State of Texas (Edward Lamar Porter 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
Edward Lamar Porter v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

Modified and Affirmed and Opinion Filed November 7, 2022

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-19-00194-CR

EDWARD LAMAR PORTER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 283rd Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1800712-T

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Molberg, Nowell, and Goldstein Opinion by Justice Molberg Appellant Edward Porter was indicted for aggravated robbery, found guilty of

lesser-included aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, and sentenced to ten years’

confinement. In fourteen issues, appellant argues the trial court abused its discretion

by admitting evidence of six prior convictions. The State raises six cross-points,

arguing the judgment should be modified to reflect the proceedings as they were

conducted in the trial court. We modify the trial court’s judgment and otherwise

affirm in this memorandum opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4. I. Background

We limit our discussion of the record to facts pertinent to the evidentiary

issues before us. Prior to trial, the State filed a rule 404(b) notice1 listing extraneous

offenses committed by appellant “that the State would possibly present during its

case-in-chief or the punishment phase.” These offenses included theft, committed

in 1975; assault, committed in 1975; aggravated assault, committed in 1975;

aggravated assault of a jailer, committed in 1989; theft, committed in 1995; and

assault, committed in 2017.

At trial, evidence showed that appellant and the complainant, Glenn Hanlon,

resided in the same apartment building and became friends. In 2017, they got

together for Christmas dinner. A few days later, on New Year’s Eve, Hanlon

testified appellant came over and told him he owed appellant ten dollars. Hanlon

testified appellant then attacked him and struck him with an iron bar in the face, arm,

and leg. The attack lasted for “probably about twenty minutes.” Hanlon sustained

numerous injuries, including an injury to his leg severe enough to expose the bone.

While Hanlon was on the ground, Hanlon said appellant rummaged around for

money and took between sixty and eighty dollars and a watch. The building security

guard found Hanlon and called the police; he described Hanlon’s bleeding as

profuse. Police eventually recovered a metal “pry bar” from appellant’s apartment.

1 “On timely request by a defendant in a criminal case, the prosecutor must provide reasonable notice before trial that the prosecution intends to introduce [404(b)(2)] evidence—other than that arising in the same transaction—in its case-in-chief.” TEX. R. EVID. 404(b)(2). –2– Appellant was interviewed by the police, and he acknowledged being involved in an

altercation with Hanlon.

During the State’s case-in-chief, the trial prosecutor informed the court it

wanted to have a 404(b) hearing to determine the admissibility of appellant’s 2017

assault. The State argued it was “the exact same modus operandi that we see here”:

in each case, appellant approached another resident in the building, told them they

owed him money, started a verbal altercation, produced a weapon and used it,

directed the police to the weapon in his apartment, and claimed self-defense. The

State also argued the prior assault went “to the state of mind of the defendant and

first aggressor.” Appellant objected, arguing the prior was “irrelevant and highly

prejudicial,” and he disputed the similarities alleged by the State. But before the

trial court held the requested hearing, the State abandoned its request for a hearing,

telling the court, “I’m not going to pursue that at this point.”

Appellant, who represented himself at trial, testified in his own defense.

Among other things, he said he called Hanlon “Nino on some occasions because of

. . . the movie New Jack City and a drug dealing kingpin.” Appellant stated, “I’m

62 years old and I have never been accused of robbery. I have worked my whole

life.” He reiterated, “Just telling you a little bit about myself so that you know, I

work and I make money.” Appellant said Hanlon befriended him “because he knew

that I was a working person and I always made money.” Their relationship, appellant

said, “was really based on drugs or him being able to supply me with drugs and

–3– things, or whatever, and not really a friendship in the true sense of a friendship.”

Appellant then stated, “Even though I still tried—I mean, I strive to be at peace with

everyone, you know. As the Bible says, peace with all men.” Appellant said he had

dinner with Hanlon despite a prior falling out because appellant “had really still tried

to believe that there was -- that [Hanlon] wasn’t just totally incorrigible, even though

[Hanlon] sold drugs. I had tried to witness to [Hanlon]. Not that I’m a saint, but we

had talked about the Bible and the Word of God and just, you know, faith and stuff.”

Appellant said that, at their Christmas dinner, he and Hanlon used drugs.

Appellant stated, “[Hanlon] tricked me into getting high,” and said he later noticed

he was missing money orders. Appellant was unsure whether Hanlon took them or

appellant “misplaced them in this drug thing.” Appellant went to the store and tried

to use a gift card Hanlon had given him, but it did not work. So, after he could not

reach Hanlon on the phone, appellant went to Hanlon’s apartment and asked him

about the money. Appellant said Hanlon became upset, and as appellant was

leaving, Hanlon said something “explicit” and tried to slam the door on him.

Appellant testified the door hit him on the shoulder and foot and then bounced back

on Hanlon, knocking him to the floor. Appellant stated that Hanlon possibly fell

over or fell on top of a bicycle. When appellant went to check on him, appellant said

Hanlon reached for a pry bar and then ran at appellant. Hanlon swung at appellant,

who “miss[ed] it and [caught] it”; they wrestled over the pry bar. Appellant got the

bar from Hanlon and then “swung to try to clear the space between” them. Appellant

–4– “didn’t feel the bar hit [Hanlon] at all.” Appellant said he did not understand how

Hanlon got the injury he had but suggested he might have fallen on the bicycle

positioned near the door. They wrestled again, and appellant told Hanlon, “please

give me my money and let me get out of here and, you know, give it to me when you

can.” Appellant broke free from Hanlon, and when he was on his way out the door,

Hanlon threw money at him.

Appellant stated he thought Hanlon made up his version of what happened

because appellant “told him at one point in that discussion, that if [Hanlon] didn’t

give [appellant his] money, [appellant] was going to tell on [Hanlon] about all the

drug dealing and all the stuff that [Hanlon] was doing.” Appellant stated Hanlon

was a drug dealer and had threatened appellant and others previously.

Later in his testimony, appellant again reiterated, “I work every day that I can.

I don’t rob people. I never robbed anybody in my life. I never robbed anybody in

my life. I am 62 years old. That’s why I am so offended. That’s why I am willing

to put my life on the line sitting here to tell you all, I never robbed anybody.”

After appellant’s testimony, the State asked to approach the bench, and the

trial court conducted a hearing about the admissibility of prior-conviction evidence

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