Hugh Edward Turner v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 16, 2018
Docket05-17-00015-CR
StatusPublished

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Hugh Edward Turner v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Affirmed as Modified and Opinion Filed July 16, 2018

S In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-17-00015-CR

HUGH EDWARD TURNER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 194th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F15-75929-M

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Fillmore, and Whitehill Opinion by Justice Whitehill

A jury convicted appellant Hugh Edward Turner of murdering Andrew Johnson. The trial

court assessed punishment at sixty years’ imprisonment. Appellant raises two issues, each

asserting jury charge error. The State raises one cross-point concerning mistakes in the judgment.

We overrule appellants’ issues, sustain the State’s cross-point, modify the judgment, and affirm

the judgment as modified.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Facts

The trial evidence supported the following facts: The complainant, twenty-one year old Andrew (“Drew”) Johnson, was fatally stabbed at

around 12:45 a.m. on July 4, 2015. The stabbing took place outside a 7-Eleven store in northeast

Dallas.

Two witnesses to the incident testified at trial. One was Johnson’s friend Shawn Williams,

who testified to the following facts: On the night of July 3–4, 2015, Williams was hanging out

with Johnson, Williams’s girlfriend Phantazia Garrett, and Williams’s infant daughter. After going

to see fireworks, the four of them went to the 7-Eleven in Garrett’s car.

Several other people were hanging out in the 7-Eleven parking lot, and Williams’s group

joined them. Williams, Johnson, and Garrett were drinking vodka. Johnson had a “silver and

black .9 millimeter” gun, and at Williams’s suggestion he threw it into the car. Williams also had

a gun, which he also left in the car.

Appellant walked into the parking lot from a nearby apartment complex, physically

bumped into Johnson and a few other people, and walked away towards the 7-Eleven. Then

appellant came back and said he wanted to fight Johnson. Appellant tried to punch Johnson, who

told Williams to intervene. Appellant hit Williams, and Williams hit appellant back and knocked

him to the ground. Then appellant got up and walked away while Johnson started talking to a

woman.

Williams got back into Garrett’s car and was counting his money when he looked up and

saw appellant take a swing at Johnson. Johnson took a swing at appellant and then walked towards

Williams holding his side. Johnson passed out, and Williams caught him. Williams saw blood

gushing out of Johnson.

As appellant was walking towards Williams and Johnson, Williams grabbed both guns out

of the car and started shooting at appellant, who then ran away.

–2– Williams, however, also testified that he had prior convictions for theft, refusing to identify

himself to a police officer, and drug offenses. Furthermore, in exchange for his testimony, he was

receiving immunity for possession of illegal drugs that were found in Garrett’s car, for the

shootings he committed, and for other punishable offenses such as tampering with evidence.

Garrett also testified. She confirmed that she was at the 7-Eleven with Johnson, Williams,

and Williams’s baby. She said the first thing she saw related to this case was that Johnson “had a

small tussle with a guy.” She went to the car to get her phone so she could record it, but by the

time she got her phone it was over and the other person had walked off. Later she saw Johnson

talking to a woman. Then she saw “the guy” come back. She called out, “Drew,” when she saw

the guy getting closer to Johnson, who stood up when he heard her.

Garrett’s testimony about what happened next was unclear:

Q Did you see this guy swing at Drew?

A No.

Q You didn’t see him swing, no?

A Like when he got up, yeah, he swung; but I didn’t know what he was doing.

Q I want to be clear, Phantazia, the person that you saw swing, was it Drew or the guy that had just walked up to him?

A It was the guy that had just walked up.

Q And did you see him hit [D]rew when he swung?

Q What did Drew do after that guy swung?

A He had came to the car.

Q And did he walk—did he walk from where he had just stood up . . . over to your car?

A Yeah. He walked to the car and leaned over and that’s when two blood drops had dropped in my car.

Then Williams said that Johnson had been stabbed. Johnson fell down, and Garrett called 911. –3– A security guard named Cody Welch also testified. He drove through the 7-Eleven parking

lot just before the incident, saw a large group of people there, and specifically saw Johnson walking

towards the 7-Eleven. About ten seconds later, he heard gunshots. He saw a black male with his

shirt draped over his shoulder walking towards some nearby apartments. Then he saw someone

else running towards him and firing a gun in his direction. The shooter then ran away, and Welch

called 911. He also rendered first aid to Johnson, whom he described as being “[u]nconscious, not

responding, but still attempting to breathe.”

Other evidence showed that police officers found a suspected blood trail leading away from

the crime scene to an apartment complex. The trail led the police up a stairway to an apartment

door. The police knocked on the door, and the man who answered said that (i) the police were

looking for his brother, whom he identified by name as appellant, (ii) appellant was bleeding from

his hand, and (iii) appellant had gone to the hospital with his mother.

The police then located appellant at Presbyterian Hospital. He had checked in there at

about 2:30 a.m. with no injuries except a 2.5 centimeter cut on his right index finger. He told

medical personnel that he had been in a fight “with several guys” at a 7-Eleven and that his injury

was “gang related.” Appellant was arrested at the hospital.

Investigators found an aluminum can at the crime scene with appellant’s fingerprint on it.

A handgun—apparently a 9mm handgun recovered from the crime scene—was subjected to DNA

testing, and DNA samples matching Johnson’s DNA profile were recovered from it. Johnson’s

blood was also found on the gun. Both appellant and Williams were excluded from the DNA

samples.

A medical examiner testified that Johnson died from a stab wound to the chest. The

examination also revealed small abrasions on his body, including some that could have been

–4– caused by a fall to the ground or by a fight. Testing showed that Johnson’s blood–alcohol level

was .219. Marijuana constituents were also found in his blood.

Appellant offered and the trial court admitted an excerpt from a hearing transcript in which

Johnson’s mother testified about a conversation she had with Williams after Johnson’s death:

Q So [Williams] told you that he was sorry. And [Williams] told you that [Johnson] said, I am going to go play with him, talking about [appellant]?

A Yes. He kept egging him on. Not [Williams], but the guy wanted to fight my baby. And then [Williams] said that [Johnson] had already knocked him out and he wanted to fight again. And he said, okay, I am going to play with him now.

Q Okay, okay. So that [Johnson] had already knocked him out, and then he said I am going to go play with him?

A Cause he kept coming up there trying to fight him some more.

But at trial, Johnson’s mother testified that on the night of the incident, Williams did not tell her

about Johnson’s knocking appellant out.

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