Jade Shantrell Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 2011
Docket14-10-00509-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jade Shantrell Williams v. State (Jade Shantrell Williams 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
Jade Shantrell Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed March 8, 2011.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-10-00509-CR

Jade Shantrell Williams, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Criminal Court at Law No. 1

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 164372701010

MEMORANDUM  OPINION

Appellant Jade Shantrell Williams appeals her conviction for possession of marijuana weighing less than two ounces[1] on the ground that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support her conviction.  We affirm.

Background

Appellant was indicted for possession of marijuana weighing less than two ounces on November 24, 2009.  A two-day trial was held beginning on April 28, 2010.  At trial, Harris County Reserve Deputy Anthony Jones testified that he and Harris County Deputy Max Martinez were on patrol between 4 a.m. and 5 a.m. on November 24, 2009 when they stopped behind a car at a red traffic light.  The light turned green and then red again, but the car remained at the light.  The deputies decided to check on the car’s driver — later identified as Yvonne Davis — and the passenger — later identified as appellant — to see if everything was all right.  They turned on the patrol car’s emergency lights and approached the car. 

Deputy Jones testified that the car was still in drive and the brake lights were on, but that Davis and appellant were asleep.  Deputy Martinez knocked on the driver’s side window trying to get Davis’s and appellant’s attention.  After four or five knocks, Davis woke up, looked at the traffic light, took her foot off the brake, drove for about a foot, stopped, and then rolled down her window.  Deputy Jones testified that, when Davis rolled down her window, he noticed a strong odor of burnt marijuana, even though he was standing at the passenger window.  The deputies asked Davis and appellant to step out of the car.  Deputy Jones testified that he asked appellant if she had smoked marijuana and appellant told him that Davis and she had smoked marijuana about three hours ago.  Deputy Jones testified that appellant seemed to be sleepy and under the influence of marijuana.

When Davis and appellant exited the car, Deputy Martinez showed Deputy Jones a bag of marijuana on the driver’s side door.  Deputy Martinez placed Davis in the back seat of the patrol car.  Davis made no statements regarding the bag of marijuana Deputy Martinez had recovered from the driver’s side door.  Deputy Jones testified that when appellant was asked for identification, she stated her identification was in her purse in the car.  Deputy Jones testified that appellant consented to the deputies retrieving her purse from the car.  After Deputy Martinez retrieved her purse, appellant identified her purse and then consented to the deputies taking her identification out of her purse.  Next to appellant’s identification, the deputies noticed marijuana wrapped in a bag; it was the size of a baseball.  Deputy Jones testified that appellant’s purse was small — about 12 inches by five inches — so that it would have been impossible for someone to look inside the purse and not notice the marijuana.

After the deputies found the marijuana in appellant’s purse, Deputy Jones took appellant to the back seat of the patrol car.  Deputy Jones testified that appellant did not act surprised when the deputies found the marijuana in her purse; never said the marijuana they found in her purse belonged to Davis; and made no comments about the marijuana.  When Deputy Jones took an inventory of the car, he found no other contraband in the car; however, he found marijuana ashes in an ashtray in “the middle console and just basically in the middle part of the vehicle.”  Approximately 45 minutes elapsed while Deputy Jones inventoried the car, tagged the evidence, and weighed it.  During that time, Deputy Jones could hear Davis and appellant speaking and yelling in the patrol car; both Davis and appellant were distressed.

When Deputy Jones came back to the patrol car, Davis told him several times that the marijuana belonged to her and not to appellant.  Deputy Jones testified that only after Davis and appellant had spoken for about 45 minutes did Davis tell him that the marijuana the deputies found in appellant’s purse did not belong to appellant.  Deputy Jones also testified that appellant did not say anything about the marijuana; she only cried.

Deputy Max Martinez also testified at trial.  He confirmed that he performed a traffic stop because Davis’s car remained at the traffic light after two light cycles.  Deputy Martinez testified that he saw Davis and appellant sitting slumped over in the car.  Both were asleep so he knocked on the driver’s side window with his baton for about three to four minutes until Davis woke up and opened the window.  Deputy Martinez testified that the odor of marijuana was so strong that “it just hit [him].  It just overwhelmed [him].  It was strong.”

Deputy Martinez asked Davis to step out of the car; he also asked her if she had narcotics or anything illegal in the car.  Davis denied having anything illegal in the car but, as she stepped out of the car, Deputy Martinez saw a clear plastic bag containing marijuana on the driver’s side door.  When Deputy Martinez inquired if Davis had any other narcotics in the car, she again denied having anything illegal in the car.  Deputy Martinez arrested Davis for possession of marijuana.

Deputy Martinez testified that appellant consented to his retrieving her purse from the car; he found her purse on the passenger seat.  Appellant also consented to the deputies opening her purse to retrieve her identification.  As soon as Deputy Martinez opened appellant’s purse, he recognized a bag containing marijuana in the purse; it had an “extremely strong” odor of marijuana.  Deputy Martinez testified that the size of appellant’s purse was smaller than a loaf of bread and that the marijuana was immediately noticeable.  He testified that appellant never stated that the marijuana was Davis’s and not hers; she “just stated that she couldn’t go to jail” and “just kept saying that.” 

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Bluebook (online)
Jade Shantrell Williams v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jade-shantrell-williams-v-state-texapp-2011.