Gardner v. State

306 S.W.3d 274, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1441, 2009 WL 3365652
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 2009
DocketAP-75,582
StatusPublished
Cited by627 cases

This text of 306 S.W.3d 274 (Gardner v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. State, 306 S.W.3d 274, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1441, 2009 WL 3365652 (Tex. 2009).

Opinions

OPINION

COCHRAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which PRICE, WOMACK, JOHNSON, KEASLER, HERVEY, HOLCOMB, JJ„ joined.

Appellant was convicted of capital murder for shooting his wife, Tammy Gardner, in the course of committing or attempting to commit burglary or retaliation. Based upon the jury’s answers to the special punishment issues, the trial court sentenced him to death. On direct appeal to this Court, appellant raises eleven points of error, including the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction. After reviewing appellant’s points of error, we find them to be without merit. Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s judgment and sentence of death.

Factual Background

Appellant and Tammy Gardner had a [282]*282relatively short, but violent, marriage.1 Before Tammy married appellant in 1999, she was very outgoing and happy. After that marriage, she lost weight, became introverted, and lost her sparkle. Appellant dominated, threatened, and physically abused her. His name was tattooed on her inner thigh.

Jacquie West, Tammy’s best friend, testified that the one time she visited Tammy’s home after the marriage, she and Tammy’s daughter, Jessie, were sitting in the living room when appellant came in, pushed Tammy onto the bed, sat on her, choked her with his hand, and then put a gun to her head. Appellant said that if Jacquie didn’t leave, he would kill Tammy. Jacquie left and never returned. Shortly thereafter, Tammy sent Jessie to live with her natural father for her safety.

Both Jacquie and Jessie saw injuries on Tammy’s face on various occasions. Tammy told Jessie that one time appellant shoved her into a bookcase, then hit her and gave her a black eye. Jacquie said that Tammy once had a large bruise running diagonally across her face. When confronted, Tammy matter-of-factly admitted that appellant had hit her in the face with a hammer. Both had seen appellant “stalking” Tammy at different times.

Tammy told them that “she wasn’t getting out of there alive,” meaning that she would not get out of her marriage alive. Candace Akins, her boss at the Action Company, a wholesale horse-equipment company, said that Tammy was constantly fearful, nervous, and in extreme financial difficulties. Tammy said that “she wanted out of the relationship,” but she was afraid to leave, and she told Candace many times, “I can’t leave, he will kill me.”

Tammy eventually went to a neurologist complaining of vision loss, headaches, sleeplessness, anxiety, and depression. She told the doctor’s wife — who was assisting her husband and who had her own family counseling practice — that she was too embarrassed to tell the doctor that her migraines were caused by physical injuries from her husband. She said that appellant had pulled her hair and hit her both with his fists and with a gun. She was very frightened of him and kept crying, “The only way I’m going to get out of this relationship is by being dead.” She explained that appellant had threatened to kill her and her children if she left him.

Finally, in December 2004, Tammy borrowed money from her company to file for divorce. On Christmas day she told appellant to move out, so his parents came and took him and his belongings back to Mississippi. She “perked up” after she filed for divorce, and she began to see more of Jacquie and her daughter Jessie. At [283]*283work, Tammy marked her calendar for February 7, 2005, the day her divorce would become final, and she would go over to the calendar and say, “You’re almost there. You’re almost there.”

But she also told Jacquie, Jessie, and Candace that she didn’t think she would get to that day because appellant would kill her first. Jessie testified that appellant kept calling and leaving, phone and text messages: “Are you going through with the divorce or not?” When Jacquie and Tammy had lunch together at Apple-bee’s on January 20th, Tammy’s cell phone stai’ted ringing as soon as they got there. It rang constantly, making Tammy upset and scared. She told Jacquie, “He’s going to kill me” before the divorce becomes final.

On Sunday, January 23rd, Tammy was driving Jessie home after church when appellant kept text messaging about the upcoming divorce and asking “YES OR NO?” Jessie read the text messages to her mother, who became frantic, but Tammy did not reply to appellant’s question. The messages stopped about 5 p.m. Jessie stayed at her father’s home that night.

Tammy called David Young, her company’s vice-president, early that evening and asked him if she could come talk to him. She arrived around 7:00 p.m. and stayed about three hours, seeking his help in “disappearing” so that no one could track her. Mr. Young was concerned about Tammy’s safety, but he felt more comfortable when she called him after she returned home about 11 p.m. According to the phone records, they talked until 11:13 p.m.

At 11:58 p.m., Erin Whitfield, the 911 dispatcher for the Collin County Sheriff’s Office, received a 911 call from a woman who identified herself as “Tammy,” gave her address, and said she needed an ambulance. Her speech was very slurred and hard to hear, but she said that her husband had either slapped or shot her (Ms. Whitfield wasn’t sure until she replayed the tape that the word was “shot”). The woman said that she couldn’t hear the dispatcher because her ears were still ringing from gunshots and that her head hurt and “there was blood everywhere.” When Ms. Whitfield asked if the person who shot her was still there, the woman said, “No, he left in a white pickup truck with Mississippi plates.” She said his name was Steven Gardner. The dispatcher had to yell and repeat herself because the woman sounded like she was choking and vomiting. Then the line disconnected.

Ms. Whitfield dispatched police and paramedics, but it took the police about 25 minutes to arrive because, at first, they went to the wrong address, 3191 FM 2862 instead of 9191 FM 2862. As Deputy Armstrong drove there, he saw a white truck sitting in a ditch by a creek about two or three miles from Tammy’s home, but it was only later that he learned that they were looking for a white truck. He was the first to arrive at Tammy’s home. He knocked on the doors, but there was no answer, and he could not get in through the windows. He had to kick in the front door. He saw a light on in the bedroom, and, when he entered, he saw Tammy on the bed with a trail of blood leading into the bathroom. She was trying to sit up, but she was bleeding badly from her head and seemed to be in shock.

By the time the paramedics arrived, Tammy was spitting up a lot of blood and mumbling incomprehensibly. She was wearing a red robe. One of the paramedics, Stephanie Taylor, cut the bottom part of the robe off because she couldn’t properly assess Tammy’s condition while she was dressed. Tammy was flown by helicopter to Parkland Hospital, but she went into a coma, and her family took her off life support two days later. Tammy died [284]*284from a single gunshot to her head. The bullet had hit her in the front right temple, traveled downward through her brain, and exited below her left ear. Apparently, Tammy had been sitting up against a pillow in bed, and the exiting bullet went through the pillow and out the bedroom window. The bullet was never recovered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
306 S.W.3d 274, 2009 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1441, 2009 WL 3365652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-state-texcrimapp-2009.