James Boyd Harris v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 2011
Docket01-10-00319-CR
StatusPublished

This text of James Boyd Harris v. State (James Boyd Harris 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
James Boyd Harris v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 19, 2011

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

————————————

NO. 01-10-00319-CR

———————————

James Boyd Harris, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 232nd District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Case No. 1223792

 MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, James Boyd Harris, guilty of the offense of possession with intent to deliver cocaine weighing at least 400 grams by aggregate weight.[1]  After finding true the allegations in two enhancement paragraphs that appellant had been twice previously convicted of felony offenses, the trial court assessed his punishment at confinement for twenty-five years.  In two issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. 

          We affirm the judgment as modified.

Background

          Houston Police Department (“HPD”) Officer C. Aranda testified that at approximately 2:30 p.m. on June 17, 2009, while on patrol with a “Differential Response Team,” he and HPD Officer E. Pierson drove to the 2300 block of Kirk Street after receiving several complaints about the area.  He observed a woman approach a house in an area that he knew was a “possible” “area of illegal activity.”  After he and Pierson exited their patrol car, Pierson followed the woman to the back of the house, where a door was open, and Aranda went to the front of the house, where he saw two men open the door.  Aranda explained that one of the men, who he later identified as appellant, “took off running.”  Although Aranda pursued the man for approximately twenty-five to thirty yards, he was unable to apprehend him.  When Aranda returned to the house, he heard the other man “in the bushes or next to [the] house,” but was unable to find him.  Aranda then entered the house, which “smelled of urine and feces,” and saw “lots of marijuana,” “some crack cocaine and some powdered cocaine,” three weapons, scales, razor blades, and baggies containing white powder.  He opined that the house was “a cook house,” where people go to “cook up their dope.”  Aranda then spoke with Lisa Evans, the woman they had seen approaching the house, and “Mr. Manning,” Evans’s husband and “lookout.”  Evans provided a statement in which she described the man that Aranda had pursued, and her description matched the appearance of appellant.  Manning also identified appellant as the same man, who is known as “Man.”  Aranda explained that he had “no doubt” that appellant is the person that he had seen run out of the house.  Aranda also found two cellular telephones at the house, one belonging to a “Man” and one belonging to “E.”  Aranda explained that based on the witness statements, he was able to identify “Man” as appellant. 

          Officer Pierson testified that on June 17, 2009, while on patrol with Officer Aranda, after he had seen a woman approach two houses, he exited the patrol car and followed her to the back of the house.  The door to the house was open, and this allowed Pierson to see two African-American males standing at the kitchen counter.  Pierson noted that one of the men was wearing a “muscle shirt,” had a “slim, muscular” build, and had “extensive tattoos on [his] chest and arm,” and Pierson identified this man as appellant.  Pierson did not have the opportunity to see appellant’s face at the house that day because he was initially looking at the men’s hands, and the men, in “a split second,” noticed Pierson, turned around, and headed towards the front door.  Pierson noted that the build and height of the man that he had seen at the house was consistent with appellant’s appearance.  On the kitchen counter, Pierson found everything necessary for “cooking illegal narcotics,” including scales, razors, whisks, beakers, containers, bags with substances, white substances, and “cookie formed” crack cocaine packaged ready to sell.  He also found marijuana, a pistol, a shotgun, and a rifle.  Pierson detained Evans, did a quick “sweep” of the house, and waited for Aranda to return.  Shortly after, LaShanda Cambric knocked on the front door of the house, and, when the officers opened the door, they saw her standing there with money in her hand, which she “very furtively stuck” in her pants.  Pierson opined that the quantity of cocaine along with the paraphernalia found at the house indicated a “high-level operation,” in which the seller was not just someone “selling it on the street[,] but somebody making it [and] putting it together to distribute to others who are then going to sell it on the street.” 

On cross-examination, Officer Pierson admitted that “from looking at the faces,” he could not identify anyone at the house, and he, in his report, stated that he was “unable to positively identify” appellant as a “suspect.”  The officers did find at the house two cellular telephones, “one number going to E, and one number going to Man.”  Pierson explained that the officers, through Evans and Cambric, were able to determine that the individual known as “Man” was appellant.  Evans’s “boyfriend,” who had “made a phone call,” corroborated that appellant is “definitely the man known as Man,” who “had been at the house for a long time cooking” and selling narcotics. 

Amanda Phillips, a criminalist with the HPD crime lab, testified that she performed an analysis on the substances found in the house.  She determined that one substance was cocaine weighing approximately 572 grams. 

Evans testified that she went to the house to purchase some crack cocaine when an officer arrived.  She explained that two people were inside the house, “Man” and “E.” 

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James Boyd Harris v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-boyd-harris-v-state-texapp-2011.