Hanley v. State

921 S.W.2d 904, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 1706, 1996 WL 210721
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 1, 1996
Docket10-95-252-CR, 10-95-251-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 921 S.W.2d 904 (Hanley 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
Hanley v. State, 921 S.W.2d 904, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 1706, 1996 WL 210721 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

VANCE, Justice.

Denis Hanley (“Hanley”) and his son, Denis Hanley, Jr. (“Denis”), were convicted by a jury of misdemeanor assault. Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 22.01 (Vernon 1994 & Supp. 1996). The court assessed punishment at twelve months in jail, probated for twenty-four months. The appellants were tried together, and we will address their points of error in a single opinion.

Each appellant asserts two points. Both assert an identical point that the court erred in “suppressing evidence which would have impeached the testimony of the complaining witness.” Hanley complains that the court erred in denying his requests to recuse the district attorney’s office based on the appearance of impropriety. Denis complains that the court improperly instructed the jury on “provoking the difficulty.” We will affirm the judgment.

EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

Portions of the testimony concerning events of February 5,1993, are fairly consistent. That night Angela Hanley and her boyfriend, Jason Hardwick, were driving around in West. Angela, Hanley’s daughter and Denis’ younger sister, was fifteen and a half years old. Patrick Wright, a seventeen-year-old whom Angela had previously dated, was also driving around West with friends. Some time before midnight, Wright “flashed” *906 the headlights in his vehicle, signaling Hard-wick’s vehicle to stop. Hardwick and Wright exchanged words and agreed to meet later at the parking lot of the West Bank and Trust.

Angela asked Jason to take her home. She entered the house crying and upset. Angela told her father and brother that Wright had told Hardwick that he was going to “whip [Hardwick’s] ass.” Hanley testified that Angela told him that Wright “was coming after her again.” Hanley and Denis left the house around midnight to meet Wright at the bank parking lot. They took a baseball bat with them.

The testimony concerning the events in the bank parking lot varied substantially among the witnesses:

JASON HARDWICK

Hardwick testified that the appellants arrived at the parking lot and told him that they were there “making sure nothing was going to happen.” When Wright arrived, he exited his car and walked towards Hardwick. The appellants stepped in between Wright and Hardwick “and then yelling broke out between them three.” The argument escalated between Hanley and Wright as Denis stood behind his father. Hardwick testified that Wright did not make any aggressive move towards Hanley. Denis then hit Wright “more than once.” Wright stumbled and fell off a two- to three-foot ledge onto the asphalt on the lower level of the parking lot. Denis followed Wright to the lower level. Hardwick saw Denis make a kicking motion, but did not know whether Denis made contact with Wright. A crowd of approximately fifty people had gathered, and the crowd then began attacking Denis. As Denis made his way back to his car, Hanley grabbed the baseball bat. Hardwick and a friend took the bat away from Hanley and returned it to his vehicle.

MATTHEW EUBANKS

Matthew Eubanks testified that he is a good friend of Wright. When he and Wright arrived at the parking lot, he remained in the car with the windows down while Wright began walking towards Hardwick. Hanley approached Wright “and just started putting his finger in [Wright’s] face.” According to Eubanks, Hanley initiated the argument and then “shoved” Wright, causing him to jump down to the lower level of the parking lot. Denis hit Wright, causing him to fall down, and then kicked Wright in the face three times. Eubanks testified that, prior to the attack, Wright had not made a fist or an aggressive move towards Hanley. The crowd, which Eubanks estimated at fourteen people, then scuffled with Denis. Eubanks saw Hanley with a baseball bat, but stated that Hanley did not use it.

PATRICK WRIGHT

Wright testified that he was walking towards Hardwick in the parking lot when he encountered Hanley. He stated that Hanley was yelling and pushed him down a step. Hanley told Wright that he was “screwing up his life and his daughter’s life and his family’s life.” Wright saw Denis, who was standing behind Hanley, clinching his fists. He did not see who hit him. He testified that he suffered a broken nose and that his eye was swollen shut.

DENIS HANLEY, SR.

Hanley testified that he was watching movies with his wife, son, and daughter-in-law when Angela returned from her date with Hardwick. He and Denis spoke with Angela. She told Hanley that Wright was “coming after her again.” Hanley stated that he and Denis went to meet Wright “to remind [him] of the promises that he and his mother had made, that he would stay away from my daughter.” Hanley and Denis drove to the parking lot and remained in the car until they saw Wright exiting his vehicle “at a very fast walk” “hollering” at Hardwick. Hanley intercepted Wright asking him, “Do you know who I am?” Wright answered, Wes.” Hanley asked, “Do you know why I’m here?” to which Wright responded, Wes.”

According to Hanley, “statements were made back and forth.” Wright was leaning over Hanley, cursing him. 1 According to *907 Hanley, Wright was “beginning to pivot on his feet and his arm was coming up in a clinched fist.... He was completely focused on me and he was about to hit me, punch me.” Denis hit Wright twice in the face. Wright, who was “obviously unconscious,” fell “face first into the asphalt.”

Hanley testified that he did not push or shove Wright nor did he throw any punches. When asked why he had taken the baseball bat, he stated, “Because I knew who these people were, I was concerned that we would be attacked by a large group of people when we went down there.” He stated that there were forty or fifty people in the parking lot that night. Hanley testified that he did not go to the parking lot to defend Hardwick; rather, he “wanted Pat Wright to do what he said he would do, and that is to stay out of [Angela’s] life.”

DENIS HANLEY, JR.

Denis testified that Wright and Hanley “squared off’ about three feet from each other in the parking lot. Hanley told Wright, “You’re ruining my life.” Wright pointed at Hardwick and said, “He’s f — ing your daughter.” Denis, who was about two feet behind his father, saw Wright’s fingers “twitching,” saw his hand close, and saw him begin to turn. Denis testified, “[T]hen without even — almost like a reflex, I came out and I hit him approximately somewhere around the eyes.... His head kind of snapped back ... and then it went forward ... and then by that time I had brought my arm back again, and I followed through again.” The second punch landed in Wright’s temple area and he fell “like a wet noodle,” rolling over the ledge onto the pavement below. Denis stated that his momentum carried him over the ledge and that one of his feet probably landed on Wright’s back. Denis denied that he had gone to the parking lot with the intention to “beat up” Wright.

DR. SMITH

Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
921 S.W.2d 904, 1996 Tex. App. LEXIS 1706, 1996 WL 210721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanley-v-state-texapp-1996.