Hollis Lane Willingham v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 3, 2023
Docket13-22-00162-CR
StatusPublished

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Hollis Lane Willingham v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-22-00162-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

HOLLIS LANE WILLINGHAM, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 369th District Court of Leon County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

A Leon County jury convicted appellant Hollis Lane Willingham of the 2007 capital

murder of Jim Craig Martin. As the State did not seek the death penalty, Willingham was

sentenced to life imprisonment without parole. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 12.31(a)(2),

19.03(a)(2). On appeal, he argues: (1) the evidence was insufficient to corroborate

accomplice and inmate testimony; (2) the trial court failed to submit a proper accomplice witness instruction in the jury charge; (3) the trial court failed to submit a jailhouse

informant witness instruction in the jury charge; and (4) the judgment assessed

unauthorized costs and fees. We affirm as modified. 1

I. BACKGROUND

An amended indictment alleged that, on or about August 7, 2007, Willingham

intentionally caused Martin’s death by shooting him with a firearm, while in the course of

committing or attempting to commit robbery or kidnapping. See id. § 19.03(a)(2). Trial

took place between March 29 and April 4, 2022.

A. McDougald

Andrea McDougald testified that she dated Willingham in the summer of 2007, at

which time she was five or six months pregnant from a prior relationship. She recalled

that her car broke down in Vidor around the beginning of August, but when she called

Willingham for help, he was not able to come because “[Martin] had not given him the

money that he owed him so he could drive down there to get me.” She explained that

Martin owed Willingham about $150, and Willingham was mad because he could not

come pick her up.

McDougald stated that Willingham picked her up from her father’s house on August

6, 2007. Willingham was driving Martin’s silver Honda Accord, and Martin was a

passenger. McDougald said this was the first time she met Martin in person. They went

to McDougald’s friend’s house, where Willingham and Martin used drugs. Later, they went

1 This appeal was transferred to this Court from the Tenth Court of Appeals in Waco by order of the

Texas Supreme Court. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001. Accordingly, we “must decide the case in accordance with the precedent of the transferor court under principles of stare decisis if [our] decision otherwise would have been inconsistent with the precedent of the transferor court.” TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3.

2 to a residence in Bryan belonging to David Greer, where Willingham and Martin continued

to use drugs into the early hours of the morning. Willingham, Martin, and McDougald

eventually left in Martin’s car to return to Normangee, where Willingham lived.

Around dawn, as Willingham drove the group in Martin’s car along State Highway

OSR, 2 “somehow the conversation turned to the money that [Martin] had owed

[Willingham], and [Willingham] started to get angry.” As Martin showed McDougald photos

of “buff[] guys” on his cell phone, Willingham grabbed Martin’s phone and “crushed it into

little pieces.” McDougald recalled that the car then “took a right onto a country road pretty

hard.” She said it was a dirt road through a heavily wooded area which “got more rural by

the second.” At some point, the car passed over a large culvert which “had water running

through it,” and it eventually came to a point where it “couldn’t go any further” because

“there was water over the road.” McDougald testified:

[Willingham] got out of the car and went around to [Martin]’s side of the car, opened his door, and made him get out. . . .He made [Martin] get out of the car, and he got [Martin] turned around, and got him in a headlock, . . . and . . . tr[ied] to choke him down. . . . And he told him there was no point in fighting it, and [Martin] stopped fighting him, and he choked him down to the ground. And the next thing I hear is a gunshot by my window.

She did not directly see Willingham shoot Martin, but she saw that Willingham had a “.22

long rifle revolver.”

According to McDougald, Willingham instructed her to tear pieces of duct tape off

of a roll which was lying on the rear floorboard; she could not recall whether this was

before or after she heard the gunshot. McDougald said she complied with Willingham’s

2 OSR, which stands for “Old San Antonio Road,” is the only state highway in Texas with a

completely alphabetical designation. See TEX. DEP’T OF TRANSP., Highway designations, https:// www.txdot.gov/projects/planning/highway-designations.html (last visited June 14, 2023).

3 request because “it didn’t seem like a good idea” to disobey him “at that current time.”

She testified that she handed the pieces of tape to Willingham, and Willingham “bound

[Martin]’s hands and feet” and “push[ed] him off the culvert . . . into the rushing water.”

McDougald said Willingham “previously had made a comment about put[ting

Martin] in a potato cellar” a week or two earlier, but she took it as a joke and did not know

Willingham planned to rob or harm Martin. She said she was afraid that if she challenged

Willingham, she “was going to end up pushed off the culvert like [Martin].”

After the shooting, Willingham drove Martin’s car to a storage facility in

Normangee; McDougald did not know why they went there. At some point, a woman “on

a bicycle came up from the side” and Willingham “ran her down.” McDougald said the

woman was “underneath the tires” for a “good amount of time” and was screaming. She

recalled that Willingham said something to the effect of, “[s]he has a big mouth.” Later,

Willingham drove to a place “where there [were] tall blood weeds” and said “he wanted to

cover [the car] up,” so he placed a “stick” on the back of the car.

Willingham and McDougald then walked back to Willingham’s residence. When

they got there, Willingham’s associate Orval Hixon was waiting there to give them a ride

back into town. According to McDougald, Hixon gave Willingham .22-caliber shells. Also,

Willingham “burned all of his clothes” in a “fire pit” on his front lawn. Hixon then drove

Willingham and McDougald to Willingham’s grandmother’s house. While they were there,

McDougald asked Willingham to “retrieve the duct tape off of [Martin]” because “[her]

fingerprints were all over [it]” and she thought she “would go to prison for the rest of [her]

life.” Willingham left, but when he came back, he told McDougald that he did not retrieve

the duct tape; McDougald then hit Willingham with a package of cookies that she had

4 been eating. In response, Willingham “immediately flipped [her] over” and “[s]lamm[ed]

[her] on [her] head.” She said her eyes were bruised the next day. She did not see

Willingham again until she visited him in jail the following year.

B. Greer and Gross

Greer testified that Willingham, McDougald, and Martin came to his house on

August 7, 2007, and asked him to buy drugs for them. He took Martin’s car, went to obtain

methamphetamine, and brought it back to his house. At that time, Greer gave Willingham

a .22-caliber pistol and, in exchange, Willingham gave Greer a .380-caliber pistol. Greer

said he was arrested with the .380 two days later.

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