Gregory Charles Gorman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 17, 2008
Docket03-07-00416-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Gregory Charles Gorman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-07-00416-CR

Gregory Charles Gorman, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 2 OF WILLIAMSON COUNTY NO. 06-4495-2, HONORABLE TIMOTHY L. WRIGHT, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Gregory Charles Gorman guilty of serving alcoholic beverages

to a minor. See Tex. Alco. Bev. Code Ann. § 106.06(a) (West 2007). Gorman was sentenced to

confinement for 365 days, suspended for a period of 24 months, and a $4,000 fine, half of which was

probated. On appeal, Gorman argues that the trial court erred in allowing the State to introduce

evidence of extraneous acts of providing alcohol to a minor. Because we have determined that the

trial court did not err in admitting evidence of extraneous acts, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

BACKGROUND

The events giving rise to Gorman’s conviction—the facts of which are largely

disputed—took place on February 11, 2006. At that time, Gorman was employed as the manager

of the Brooklyn Pie Company, a restaurant in Georgetown, Texas. The victim in this case, L.F., a

seventeen-year-old employee at the restaurant, testified that on the night in question, she stayed at the restaurant after closing to help Gorman clean up. She further testified that Gorman offered her

an alcoholic drink, which she accepted, and that she then watched Gorman pour different types of

alcohol into a bucket, creating a mixture that was light green in color and that she thought “was

supposed to be like a margarita.” L.F. testified that she dipped a cup into the bucket and drank from

it periodically while cleaning the restaurant, noting that the last thing she remembers from the

evening was “sitting on the stool listening to music, talking to [Gorman].”

Todd Wagner, L.F.’s boyfriend at the time of the incident, testified that he had made

plans with L.F. for that particular evening, and that after several unsuccessful attempts to contact her

through phone calls and text messages, he became concerned and drove to Brooklyn Pie Company.

When he arrived, Wagner observed L.F.’s car parked outside and heard loud music playing from

inside the restaurant. According to Wagner, he knocked on the door and windows of the restaurant

for approximately five to ten minutes, but received no response. He then called some friends,

including Chris Sharp, also a witness at trial, for assistance. Sharp and the other boys arrived on the

scene approximately ten to fifteen minutes later and they continued to knock until Gorman answered.

In response to the boys’ questions about L.F.’s whereabouts, Gorman insisted that she was not in the

restaurant and that she had been picked up by friends in a black SUV earlier in the night. Gorman

acknowledged in his testimony that he lied to Wagner and his friends about L.F.’s presence in the

building, stating that he had been concerned about the boys’ intentions.

Wagner testified that he then placed a phone call to Joan Surko, L.F.’s mother, and

passed the phone to Gorman, who told Surko that L.F. was not inside the restaurant, and that she had

been picked up by friends in a black Lincoln towncar.

2 Both Sharp and Wagner testified that as they were talking to Gorman, L.F. came to

the door in the nude for a few brief moments before withdrawing into the restaurant and closing the

door. They further testified that Gorman insisted that the woman they had seen was his girlfriend,

who was visiting for Valentine’s Day weekend. One of the boys called the police and then,

according to Wagner and Sharp, Gorman reentered the restaurant.1

Officer Robbins of the Georgetown Police Department was the first officer to arrive

on the scene in response to Wagner’s call, and several officers followed. According to Robbins’s

testimony, Gorman informed the officers that no one else was inside the building.2 Gorman agreed

to allow a search of the building and during the search, Robbins discovered L.F. “tucked down”

behind a freezer, in the space between the freezer and the wall. Robbins testified that the freezer

“had been moved out where somebody could get in there,” and that he did not believe L.F. could

have gotten herself behind the freezer because “[s]he would have had to climb on top of the chest

freezer and then climb back down, and then get in that position. I don’t think she would have been

capable of doing that.” Robbins further testified that because L.F. was intoxicated and unresponsive,

he was forced to physically lift her from behind the freezer. Robbins also noted that he did not

1 There is some dispute regarding whether Gorman reentered the restaurant prior to the arrival of the police. Gorman testified that he remained outside, while both Wagner and Sharp testified that Gorman went back into the restaurant. Officer Robbins, the first officer to arrive on the scene, testified that he could not recall whether Gorman was outside when he arrived, stating, “I don’t remember if he was standing right there in the front door, or if I actually knocked on the door. Seems like I knocked on it, but I’m not—I’m not a hundred percent on that.” Robbins further testified, after reviewing his incident report, that the report implies that Gorman was outside the restaurant when the police arrived. 2 After reviewing his incident report, Robbins testified on cross-examination that the report indicated that Gorman refused to respond to questions regarding whether anyone was inside the restaurant.

3 believe L.F., who was fully clothed when Robbins found her behind the freezer, was capable of

dressing herself in her intoxicated state.

Surko, L.F.’s mother, testified that by the time she got to the scene at some point after

the arrival of the police, L.F. was no longer unresponsive but had become aggressive and violent,

“[f]lailing her arms and her hands, screaming and hollering.” EMS transported L.F. to Georgetown

Hospital, where it was determined that she had a blood-alcohol level of .247.

Gorman’s testimony regarding the events on the night in question differed

significantly from L.F.’s testimony. According to Gorman, L.F. did not remain at the restaurant to

help clean up after closing, but instead left with friends and returned some time later, appearing

“twitchy and nervous.” Gorman testified that when L.F. returned, he gave her a cup of citrus soda

from the restaurant soda fountain, while he continued to drink from a bucket of margaritas that he

had prepared earlier in the day.3 Gorman further testified that he sat and talked with L.F. in order

“to find out what was going on,” until Wagner and his friends arrived. He also explained that there

were two cups containing alcoholic beverages at the scene because he had inadvertently added too

much salt to his drink, and was using a second cup to dilute the first. Gorman maintained that he

did not offer or provide alcohol to L.F. at any time on the night in question.

3 Several witnesses, including police officers and fellow employees who returned to the restaurant after learning that emergency vehicles were on the premises, testified that they had observed cups at the scene, containing what appeared to be an alcoholic beverage. The number of cups, the contents and temperature of each cup, and whether or not lipstick marks were present on the side of any particular cup was disputed at trial.

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