in the Matter of P. A. P., a Juvenile

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 23, 2006
Docket13-05-00400-CV
StatusPublished

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in the Matter of P. A. P., a Juvenile, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                             NUMBER 13-05-400-CV

                         COURT OF APPEALS

               THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                  CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

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                 IN THE MATTER OF P. A. P., A JUVENILE

___________________________________________________________________

   On appeal from the Juvenile Court of Live Oak County, Texas.

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                     MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

         Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza

                      Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez


This is an appeal of a judgment adjudicating appellant, P.A.P., a juvenile, delinquent based on a finding of true to the charge of assault causing bodily injury to a disabled person.  See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. ' 22.04(a) (Vernon Supp. 2005).[2]  Appellant was sentenced to a forty-five to sixty day program at Adam's House substance abuse treatment facility, intensive supervision probation with electronic monitoring for three to six months, and then probation until his eighteenth birthday.  By two issues, appellant complains of the sufficiency of the evidence.  We affirm.

I.  Facts

In this case, there is testimony that, at first, there was a "shoving match" between appellant and the victim, started by the victim.  Words were exchanged.  The victim testified that later, when he was asked to leave the trailer home where he was visiting friends, appellant "just started hitting me and stuff and started hitting me while I was on the ground."  Appellant hit him in the head and nose with his fists and started kicking him while he was on the ground.  He told appellant to stop, but appellant did not listen.  The victim testified that while being hit, he was trying to protect himself and did not fight back.

An eye witness testified that appellant was standing in the front yard telling the victim to come outside and calling him names "like retarded . . . disabled."  She testified that the victim was not trying to fight appellant.  After her brother asked the victim to leave their home, she saw appellant and the victim fighting.  The victim was hit in the head by appellant's knee, and appellant kicked the victim from his head to his waist.  The victim was lying on the ground crying and screaming "Stop! Stop! Stop!"  She testified that appellant kept kicking the victim until a neighbor arrived and helped the victim up and inside the trailer home.


The neighbor, a second eyewitness, testified that he ran outside when someone told him "they were beating up [the victim] outside."  He saw appellant and appellant's brother standing over the victim and punching and kicking him on his upper body, for a couple of seconds.  The victim was "crying, screaming, telling them to stop."  The eyewitness testified that he pushed appellant off the victim, picked the victim up, told him to get inside, and told appellant and his brother to leave.

Another neighbor testified that she saw the victim earlier that day and that he was arguing with appellant's brother and saying he wanted to "jump" appellant and his brother.  She also testified that when the victim left her house that afternoon, he went next door and started drinking.  She did not see the fight.

Appellant's brother testified that the victim hit appellant, that he saw the victim "push in between [appellant], and then [appellant] hit him back, and then it was just on."  According to appellant's brother, the victim was trying to bear hug appellant who was trying to get the victim off of him and that is when the victim fell to the ground.  Appellant's brother testified that at the end, the victim was saying he was sorry,  asking if appellant was okay, and claiming that appellant started the fight.  Appellant's brother also testified that they left so that appellant could go to work.  They did not call the police and did not seek medical assistance.


The eyewitnesses testified as to the following injuries:  "[i]t seemed like B like red marks everywhere on [the victim's] face"; the victim was bleeding "[f]rom his nose and his mouth;" and there were injuries "[a]round his eyes; a couple of bumps on his head."  The police officer who responded to the call for assistance testified that when he first observed the victim sitting on the couch, he noticed "blood around his mouth from both nostrils.  He had blood on one ear.  Both temples were swollen, and there were a couple of lacerations on his neck and on his head in his scalp area."

Evidence regarding the victim's disability included the victim's testimony that he was twenty-two years old, does not know how to read, lives with his family, is unable to provide himself with food, shelter, or medical care because of his disability, and has a mental disability.  The victim's father also testified that his son has always lived with one of his parents, has never lived on his own, and has been mentally disabled since birth.  He, too, testified that his son is unable to provide himself with food, shelter or medical care. 

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
Malik v. State
953 S.W.2d 234 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Adi v. State
94 S.W.3d 124 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2003)
Coleman v. State
131 S.W.3d 303 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2004)
Johnson v. State
23 S.W.3d 1 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 2000)
In re J.D.P.
85 S.W.3d 420 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2002)

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