Gouldsby v. State

202 S.W.3d 329, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 6857, 2006 WL 2165635
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 3, 2006
Docket06-05-00242-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 202 S.W.3d 329 (Gouldsby 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
Gouldsby v. State, 202 S.W.3d 329, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 6857, 2006 WL 2165635 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice ROSS.

Melvin Wayne Gouldsby, Jr., pled guilty before the trial court, without a plea agreement, to two counts of possession of controlled substances, four grams or more but less than 200 grams of cocaine, and four grams or more but less than 400 grams of 3,4 methylenedioxy methamphetamine, alleged to be offenses arising out of the same criminal episode. 1 Punishment was assessed on each count at twelve years’ imprisonment, and the sentences were ordered to run concurrently. 2 Gouldsby appeals, alleging, in a single point of error, that the trial court erred in overruling his motion to suppress evidence. We affirm.

Background

Two police officers testified for the State at the hearing on Gouldsby’s motion to suppress. Longview police officer Doug Brinkley testified that, on January 9, 2004, at 2:30 a.m., he was patrolling a “heavy narcotic area” of his beat when he observed the front door of a house standing open at 704 South 12th Street. Because he had not observed any activity around this house, Brinkley considered it a vacant house. On observing the front door standing open, he stopped to make a “[w]elfare check,” “[m]aking sure no one has used the vacant house for prostitution or anything like that, vagrant, transients living inside it or anything like that.” As Brinkley approached the front door, he yelled his identity and entered the house. There was no other person inside the house, but Brinkley observed a television set and VCR in the living room and a mattress on the floor in a bedroom. In the kitchen, he observed marihuana “trimmings” on one countertop, and on another countertop, he observed a plastic bag of thirty to thirty-five clean small jars. Brinkley testified these jars were like those he had seen on the street used to sell liquid codeine. Because there was “[n]o food, no clothes, no everyday supplies for the house, such as toilet paper and things like that,” Brinkley concluded no one was living at the residence. Because of the marihuana residue and the bag of jars he observed, he concluded this house was “a cut house where narcotics are cut up to be sold on the street.”

At the end of Brinkley’s shift, around 6:00 a.m., he advised his sergeant, Richard Spruill, and the officer who worked the same area on the day shift, John Ross, 3 *333 about what he had observed at 704 South 12th Street. Ross told Brinkley the owner of that property had told him that he (the owner) would file trespassing charges against anyone caught on the property.

Late the next evening, when Brinkley was patrolling on his regular night shift, he again passed by 704 South 12th Street and observed two persons standing on the front porch. Brinkley called Spruill and advised him that he (Brinkley) wanted to get the people standing on the porch identified. Spruill met Brinkley near the house, and the two then approached the house on foot. The two people whom Brinkley had observed standing on the porch were no longer there. Brinkley went to the front of the house, and Spruill went to the back. As Brinkley approached the front door, a person, later identified as Gouldsby, opened a small peephole door in the bigger door, and Brinkley said, “Hey, I want to talk to you, will you open the door up?” Gouldsby responded, “Okay,” but then shut the peephole door, pulled out the doorknob to the bigger door, threw the doorknob to the floor, and started running toward the back of the house. Brinkley alerted Spruill by radio and then heard Spruill yelling at Gouldsby. Being unable to enter the house by turning the doorknob, Brinkley pushed the door open with his shoulder. As he went through the door, he saw Gouldsby coming back toward him. Brinkley pointed his firearm at Gouldsby, whom Brinkley then recognized as a person he knew, called Gouldsby by name, and told him to get on the floor. As Gouldsby was getting down on the floor, he pulled “baggies” of narcotics out of the inside of his jacket and threw them on the floor. Gouldsby then put his hands up, and Spruill approached him from behind and put handcuffs on him. No one else was in the house. A search of Gouldsby’s person revealed a small quantity of marihuana, a set of digital scales, alcohol pads, a cell phone, and $578.00 in cash. 4 Brinkley filed charges against Gouldsby for possession of controlled substances, with intent to deliver, and for criminal trespass.

The next morning, Brinkley told Ross what had happened at 704 South 12th Street and learned for the first time that the information Ross had previously given Brinkley for that address was actually for the residence next door at 702 South 12th Street.

Brinkley testified on cross-examination that, when he first encountered Gouldsby that evening, he “was simply wanting to know who he was and why he was in the house.” Brinkley said the basis of his initial contact was to detain Gouldsby to see if he was a trespasser. Brinkley further testified, “My basis for the detention at the point of handcuffs was the fact that Mr. Gouldsby tried to run out the back door and evade detention.”

Spruill testified that, while he was at the back door at 704 South 12th Street on the evening in question, and after Brinkley made contact with Gouldsby at the front door, Spruill heard running footsteps coming through the house and observed Gouldsby exit the back door. Spruill ordered Gouldsby to stop, but instead of stopping, Gouldsby started looking for a way off the back porch. Spruill then “gave him a short burst of pepper spray” and Gouldsby then turned and ran back inside the house. Spruill followed him into the house, identified himself, and once again ordered Gouldsby to stop, which or *334 der Gouldsby ignored until he again came into contact with Brinkley.

Gouldsby called two witnesses, Guillermo Arreola and Marlon Skinner, at the hearing on his motion to suppress. Arreo-la testified that, on January 10, 2004, he was the owner of the house at 704 South 12th Street, and on that date, the house was rented to Amanda Williams and Skinner. On cross-examination, Arreola testified that, on the occasion in question, the house was not leased to Gouldsby and that he never gave Gouldsby permission to five in the house. He acknowledged that it was all right for his tenants to have friends in the house, but he further testified that his tenants were the only ones authorized to five in the house.

Skinner testified that, on January 10, 2004, he was “staying” at the residence located at 704 South 12th Street and that he had been leasing that residence from Arreola for two or three years. Skinner further testified that he and Gouldsby had been friends since middle school and that Gouldsby visited him at 704 South 12th Street from time to time. Skinner said that, on January 10, 2004, Gouldsby was at his residence with his permission, and that, at the time the police came, Skinner had left to run an errand. Skinner reaffirmed he was living at that residence and disputed that it was a vacant house, stating “we had legal water, legal electricity, cable was on, we had furniture, had bed, stove, icebox, pots, pans.” When asked on cross-examination where Gouldsby would call home, Skinner said Gouldsby called a number of places home, including Skinner’s residence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
202 S.W.3d 329, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 6857, 2006 WL 2165635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gouldsby-v-state-texapp-2006.