Ex Parte: Raymond Taylor v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2003
Docket08-01-00252-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ex Parte: Raymond Taylor v. State (Ex Parte: Raymond Taylor 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
Ex Parte: Raymond Taylor v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Criminal Case Template


COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS





Ex parte: RAYMOND TAYLOR

,

Applicant

§


§







No. 08-01-00252-CR



Appeal from the



171st District Court



of El Paso County, Texas



(TC# 20010D02010)



MEMORANDUM OPINION

This is an appeal from the trial court's order denying Appellant's writ of habeas corpus. We affirm.

I. SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Applicant was previously convicted for three counts of attempted capital murder. In that trial, the State presented evidence that Applicant and his wife divorced in 1989. They were both named managing conservators of their two children. Applicants ex-wife, Josefina, married John Garmon and they had a son. On May 3, 1996, Applicant's children Jackie, age eleven, and Christopher, age ten, set the house of their mother and stepfather on fire. The three suffered injuries but survived the fire. During this trial, the State presented evidence in support of its theory that Applicant had utilized physical and psychological intimidation to goad the children into setting the fire. On appeal, this Court reversed the conviction based upon a then recent holding of the Court of Criminal Appeals which changed the law regarding the necessity to corroborate the accomplice witness testimony of juvenile witnesses. The Court of Criminal Appeals affirmed the holding of this Court.

The retrial of the case began in April of 2001. Both Christopher Taylor and Jackie Taylor testified. Christopher, age ten at the time of the offense, testified that Applicant told him to set the fire and gave him instructions as to how to proceed. Christopher was given a watch with its alarm set at two a.m. He and his sister were to arise and pile clothes and sheets in front of each bedroom door. Christopher was shown how to cut the wires on the smoke alarm. He was to turn on the gas on the stove and the fireplace. He was to start the fire with a lighter provided by Applicant. Applicant told Christopher to leave the garage open one foot and they were to escape through that opening. The child failed to start the fire on the first two occasions demanded by Applicant. Applicant went to his garage with Christopher and spanked him with his pants down. He then read Bible verses to the child. On the date of the fire, Jackie woke up Christopher. He cut the wires on the smoke detector. They both piled up clothes and sheets in front of the doors of each bedroom and closed the doors so the Garmons and their son would not awake. They started a fire in front of the Garmons bedroom door and fled through the garage door. Christopher testified that he knew that the occupants might not be able to escape and they could be killed. He stated that he set the fire because he was told to do so by Applicant and he feared another spanking by Applicant if he did not comply with his wishes.

Jackie Taylor testified that she was eleven-years-old at the time of the offense. She testified that she and her brother set the fire because they were told to do so by Applicant because he wanted the fire to kill his ex-wife. He gave Jackie a lighter and a watch with the alarm set for 2:40 a.m. She was instructed that when the alarm went off, she was to wake Christopher and he would cut the wires on the smoke detector. They were to pile clothes in front of the bedroom doors, close them, and turn on the gas. Jackie testified that Applicant threatened them with severe spankings if they did not set the fire.

The alarm went off and Jackie woke up Christopher. They piled up clothes in front of the bedroom doors and closed the doors. Jackie gave Christopher the lighter and he lit three fires. She had raised up the garage door previously and they left by going under the garage door. Upon cross-examination, Jackie testified concerning a confrontation she had with her father after the fire. He wanted to know why she had lied to a psychologist, Dr. Gold, that he was involved with the fire.

During the course of the trial, the State, outside the presence of the jury, proposed to offer the testimony of Dr. Karen Gold concerning Christopher's statements to her when she informed him that Applicant had been arrested. A hearing was held and Dr. Gold stated that she had performed evaluations of the children during the summer of 1996. Christopher had related to Dr. Gold why he had set the fire. During one session, she told Christopher that his father had been arrested. His version of the events then changed. The following exchange then occurred:

STATE: How did [Christopher] react when he was told that?

WITNESS: He became very upset. There was an initial shock. And then his demeanor changed and his physical behavior changed. He hurled himself at me physically.



STATE: And was he - obviously, he was upset, crying?



WITNESS: Yes.



STATE: What else?



WITNESS: He immediately opened up and started disclosing information to me that, up to that point, he had not said anything about.



STATE: Okay. Did he give you a version of the fire, of why he set the fire after you told-after he was told that his father was put in jail?





STATE: Was that different from the version that he was giving before he was-before he was told about his father's incarceration?





In response to the prosecutor's question about what Christopher told her about the fire after she told him about his father's incarceration, Dr. Gold responded:

WITNESS: The first thing that he did was ask me a question, which was, 'Does that mean I don't have to keep the secret anymore?' And I asked him, 'What secret?' And he proceeded to tell me that it was his-under his father's instructions that he had set the fire, which he had denied prior to that triggering event.



Over the course of the hearing, the prosecutor proposed that the child's statement was admissible under the excited utterance exception to the hearsay rule. Initially, the court held that the testimony was not admissible. However, after the weekend recess, the court announced that Dr. Gold's testimony would be allowed as an excited utterance. She testified before the jury that the Child Protective Services case worker for Christopher asked that Gold reveal to him that his father had been arrested. She related Christopher's reaction during the following exchange:

STATE: And what did you tell Christopher Taylor in regards to his father?



WITNESS: The relevant discussion began with my saying to him: Chris, I have something to tell you because we don't want you to find out from TV or somebody else.



STATE: And did Christopher ever have a response to that?



WITNESS: Yes. I saw a startled reaction, and he said, 'What's happened?'



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