Jamel McLelland Fowler v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 27, 2017
Docket06-16-00038-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jamel McLelland Fowler v. State (Jamel McLelland Fowler 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
Jamel McLelland Fowler v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-16-00038-CR

JAMEL MCLELLAND FOWLER, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 196th District Court Hunt County, Texas Trial Court No. 30456

Before Morriss, C.J., Moseley and Burgess, JJ. Opinion by Justice Moseley OPINION Jamel McLelland Fowler was convicted of theft of a Kawasaki mule all terrain vehicle

(ATV) valued at $1,500.00 or more, but less than $20,000.00.1 On appeal, 2 Fowler challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence, claims error in the admission of extraneous offense evidence, and

claims reversible error by the trial court in admitting an unauthenticated video exhibit into

evidence. While we find the evidence sufficient to sustain Fowler’s conviction, we also find that

the trial court reversibly erred in admitting an unauthenticated video exhibit into evidence;

consequently we reverse the trial court’s judgment and remand to the trial court for a new trial.

I. Trial Court Proceedings

In 2014, Fowler was charged by three separate indictments with three separate crimes. In

the indictment which led to the conviction on appeal in this matter, Fowler was accused of stealing

the ATV from Paul Blassingame. The other two indictments alleged burglaries of buildings. In

one of the other charges, Fowler was accused of breaking into a building owned by William Martin

and stealing various items (Burglary Case No. 1);3 in the other, Fowler was charged with

burglarizing a building and stealing a trailer (Burglary Case No. 2). 4 All three indictments were

1 See Act of May 29, 2011, 82d Leg., R.S., ch. 1234, § 21, 2011 Tex. Gen. Laws 3302, 3310 (amended 2015) (current version at TEX. PENAL CODE § 31.03(e)(4)(A) (West Supp. 2016)). 2 Originally appealed to the Fifth Court of Appeals, this case was transferred to this Court by the Texas Supreme Court pursuant to its docket equalization efforts. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2013). We are unaware of any conflict between precedent of the Fifth Court of Appeals and that of this Court on any relevant issue. See TEX. R. APP. P. 41.3. 3 After the jury returned a guilty verdict in Burglary Case No. 1, Fowler moved to set aside the jury’s verdict, and the trial court granted that motion. Fowler subsequently amended his request to a motion for new trial, which the trial court also granted. The trial court ultimately entered a judgment of acquittal in Burglary Case No. 1. 4 The State dismissed Burglary Case No. 2 after three days of testimony.

2 returned in Hunt County. The State moved to try the cases together, alleging that they

“constitute[d] the same criminal episode because they [were] the repeated commission of similar

acts.” Fowler did not oppose consolidation of the three cases.

II. The Evidence

The facts of the three alleged offenses are intertwined and will have some bearing on the

issues Fowler presents in this appeal. As previously stated, this appeal is of Fowler’s conviction

of the theft of the ATV. Blassingame testified that the ATV had been located on property he

owned in Hunt County, which he visited often. In November 2014, he went to that property, where

he discovered that the ATV was missing, a fact that he duly reported to the Hunt County Sheriff’s

Office as a theft. Law enforcement officers in Royse City of neighboring Rockwall County found

the ATV on December 6, 2014, while investigating a burglary at a concrete supply business. The

ATV was identified by its vehicle identification number and returned to Blassingame.

The ATV was found hidden in a wooded area beyond a field on property owned by

Lattimore Materials,5 a ready-mix concrete business that had suffered a series of burglaries over

the months preceding the discovery of the ATV. While investigating one of the burglaries that

occurred at Lattimore Materials in December 2014, Royse City policemen noticed tire tracks

(which they believed were made by an ATV) which led from the building that had been burglarized

to a tree line; just beyond the tree line was the copse of trees in which the ATV was hidden. There

was trash scattered on the ground around the ATV, among which was a receipt from a Family

5 At the time of the burglaries, the Lattimore Materials facility located on the subject property was non-operational. Duane Wetteland, the area manager for Lattimore Materials, described other facilities owned by the company and explained that business needs determined whether the facility on the property at issue was operational or not. Wetteland testified that he periodically checked on the facility when it was non-operational. 3 Dollar store that included the time and date of its issuance. Further, within fifteen feet or so of the

ATV, the policemen found packaging in which a box cutter had been located, and a box cutter was

one of the items listed on the Family Dollar store receipt. Royse City Police Officer Jaime Torrez

took the receipt to the store that had issued it and was able to view the store’s surveillance video

recording showing what appeared to be the purchase memorialized by the receipt. The store was

unable to duplicate the recording or render it to a format Torrez could take with him, so he and an

officer he was training used Torrez’ department-issued camera to record the surveillance footage

as it played on the store’s video monitor. The footage’s date and time information corresponded

generally to the date on the receipt. Particularly of note to the State’s case, the recording showed

a man entering the store then completing a purchase, and it was the State’s theory at trial that that

man was Fowler.

In addition to those circumstances, in the weeks leading up to the December discovery of

Blassingame’s ATV, officers had found a blue Nissan Xterra vehicle in the area under suspicious

circumstances. On November 3, 2014, at about 1:45 a.m., Royse City Police Sergeant Ryan Curtis

and Rockwall County Deputy Brad Dick found the truck parked on a dirt road behind some

industrial businesses in a poorly lit area.6 Virginia Cox (eventually named as a co-defendant with

Fowler in one or more of his indictments) was sitting in the Xterra. Cox’s explanation to the law

enforcement officers of her whereabouts was that she and her boyfriend had run out of gasoline

and that he had gone back to a gas station for fuel. Because one of the businesses (Four Brothers,

6 Curtis described the area where the Xterra was parked as “a dirt road that you really can’t even travel through.” He continued, “I mean, I’m unaware of any vehicles being able to travel through it for years.” 4 a mower and tractor dealer) behind which Cox’s vehicle was parked had been the victim of

multiple burglaries in the past, Curtis was suspicious of Cox. Curtis saw several sets of bolt cutters

in the Xterra7 and got another police officer to go to the nearest gas station. That officer

encountered no one purporting to be in search of gasoline for a stalled vehicle. When Curtis asked

Cox to attempt to start the vehicle, it started with no problem (thereby casting doubt on Cox’s story

that it had no fuel).

At about 6:00 a.m. that same day, Royse City Police Officers William Potter and Tim West

observed the same blue Xterra in another part of Royse City parked on the side of a local county

road. As previously, the vehicle was occupied only by Cox, and when she was questioned by the

policemen, she made reference once again to a male companion.

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