Jack Warren Davis v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 1992
Docket03-90-00118-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jack Warren Davis v. State (Jack Warren Davis 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
Jack Warren Davis v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Davis v. State
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT OF TEXAS,


AT AUSTIN




NO. 3-90-118-CR


JACK WARREN DAVIS,


APPELLANT



vs.


THE STATE OF TEXAS,


APPELLEE





FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT


NO. CR89-251, HONORABLE ROBERT T. PFEUFFER, JUDGE




A jury convicted Jack Warren Davis, appellant, of capital murder. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.03(a), (b) (1989). After the jury was unable to answer the first special issue on punishment (deliberateness), the court sentenced him to life imprisonment pursuant to 1985 Tex. Gen. Laws, ch. 44, § 2, at 434 (Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 37.071, since amended). Davis appeals, bringing sixteen points of error. We will reverse the judgment of conviction and remand the cause for a new trial.

On November 17, 1989, at approximately 10:15 p.m., appellant, a maintenance worker at the New Braunfels Oaks Apartments, reported to Carolyn Toth, the manager of the apartment complex, that he had found the body of Kathie Balonis in her apartment. The police were called. At some point after their arrival, the on-scene investigators became suspicious of appellant when they observed blood on his clothing and a cut on his left hand. Detective Felix Roque, New Braunfels Police Department, questioned appellant at the department. After this interview, the police took him to his apartment, allowed him to change clothes, and then seized the clothes he had been wearing. They returned him to the police department and fingerprinted him. The district attorney's office then requested that he be booked for the offense of murder.



SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

Appellant contends, in point of error one, that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction. The evidence in the case consisted of various accounts of the evening's events, forensic evidence such as the analysis of blood found at the scene, and expert testimony on the type of crime and possible characteristics of the offender (e.g., that it was possible for a person who had not displayed violent tendencies to, in essence, "explode").

Discovery of the Body/Description of the Crime Scene

The apartment building in which Kathie Balonis lived, one of several buildings in the complex, is a two-story structure with three sets of stairs: east and west at either end of the building, as well as a middle staircase. Kathie's apartment was the westernmost apartment on the second floor. Marci French, another resident in the complex, lived in the apartment east of, and adjacent to, Kathie Balonis. Appellant lived on the ground floor in the apartment second from the east end of the building. On the day of the murder, he was wearing jeans, a tan maintenance uniform shirt, and a blue insulated-type vest. Appellant was described as having a medium heavy build, with medium-length brown hair and sideburns.

Appellant testified that on the night of the murder, at about 10:00 p.m., he went onto the porch outside his apartment to smoke a cigarette. He heard a sound, like somebody saying, "Hey." He looked toward the west end of the building, in the direction of Kathie Balonis's apartment, but saw nothing. A minute or two later, he saw a man coming hurriedly, but not running, down the stairs. Appellant followed the man to the parking lot and saw him get into a small car (a Chevrolet Vega, he thought) and drive away rapidly.

Appellant stated he returned to the building and went up the west stairs. He saw people in Marci French's apartment, and everything looked all right. He went to Kathie's apartment, knocked three times, got out his passkey, but tried the knob and found the door unlocked. He entered and announced "maintenance" several times, but got no response. He saw the bed in front of the doorway, saw Kathie's body on the floor, kneeled beside her, put his arms underneath her shoulders, shook her, and shouted her name. He got no response, put her back down, and went to the apartment of Carolyn Toth, the apartment-complex manager, for help.

Carolyn Toth testified that appellant knocked at her door at about 10:15 p.m., telling her, "The girl in 202, it's horrible, it's horrible, she might be dead, you've got to come, it's horrible." Appellant was wearing blue jeans, a tan maintenance uniform shirt, a baseball hat, and a blue vest. She noticed what appeared to be blood on his clothing. He later said it was pizza sauce.

Toth said that appellant told her he had been watching television with his stepson, went out on the porch, heard a noise like a "herd of elephants" coming down the west staircase, and saw a man with shoulder-length dark hair wearing a white shirt. Appellant had said he followed the man as the man ran to the parking lot and left in a Vega. Toth told her mother to call the police, and the two of them and appellant went outside, where they encountered Karen Balonis, Kathie's sister, who also lived in the complex.

Karen Balonis had been doing laundry on the night of the murder. She left her apartment to attend to the laundry sometime after 10:00 (after the news had started, but before the weather came on). She saw Carolyn Toth, Toth's mother, and appellant standing at the entrance to the laundry room looking up. Toth told her that Kathie had been stabbed.

Karen ran to Kathie's apartment. She looked around the living room, then headed for the bedroom. The bed was blocking the entrance to the bedroom, so she had to climb over it. She saw her sister on the floor with the top of her head under the bed. As she pulled Kathie out from under the bed she did not see a lot of blood on her. She did, however, notice blood on the pillow case. She found no pulse, but started CPR anyway. At that point Marci French, a neighbor, and French's guest Shelly Flynn entered the apartment.

French saw Karen Balonis as she ran up the stairway. French said Karen paused, looked in her window, and ran over to Kathie's apartment. French then heard Karen scream that Kathie had been stabbed. She and Flynn ran to Kathie's bedroom. The bed was in front of the bedroom door and appeared to be in disarray. French told Flynn to call the police, then returned to her apartment to call the police herself because Flynn, her visitor, did not know the address of the apartment complex. When French saw that police were already arriving, she returned to Kathie's apartment. She did not notice the apartment being in disarray, other than the bed being in the wrong place. She moved an ironing board and a chair so that EMS personnel could get through the apartment more easily, and she put a sheet over Kathie's body.

As Karen was performing CPR on Kathie she told Flynn to apply pressure to an abdominal wound so that the CPR would not force more blood out of the wound. Karen said that at no time did she get more than a spot of blood on her pants leg--no blood was on her hands, mouth, or any other part of her body.

Officer Scott Lange, New Braunfels Police Department, responded to the call reporting a stabbing. When he arrived, he heard a scream.

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