James Christopher North v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 24, 2014
Docket11-11-00338-CR
StatusPublished

This text of James Christopher North v. State (James Christopher North 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 Christopher North v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Opinion filed January 24, 2014

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-11-00338-CR __________

JAMES CHRISTOPHER NORTH, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 350th District Court Taylor County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 9790-D

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury found James Christopher North guilty of the murder of Austin Dale David, and it assessed his punishment at confinement for seventy years and a fine of $10,000. The trial court sentenced him accordingly. We affirm. Appellant contends in two issues on appeal that the trial court (1) incorrectly charged the jury as to the law of self-defense and (2) abused its discretion when it refused to give the jury a “presumption of reasonableness” instruction. 1 The grand jury indicted Appellant for murder after he shot and killed Austin with a .40 caliber Glock pistol. A person commits the offense of murder if he intentionally or knowingly causes the death of an individual. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 19.02(b)(1) (West 2011). A person also commits the offense of murder if he intends to cause serious bodily injury and commits an act clearly dangerous to human life that causes the death of an individual. Id. § 19.02(b)(2). Appellant does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence. However, we provide an outline of the evidence presented at trial to provide context for our analysis of Appellant’s claims. Austin and his girlfriend, Stephanie Molina, were in her Ford Mustang. Austin was driving, and they were headed south on Sayles Boulevard in Abilene. They were on the way to a meeting of Stephanie’s college soccer team. Stephanie, who was in the front passenger seat, testified that she was late for her meeting but that Austin was neither driving recklessly nor in excess of the speed limit. Other witnesses, however, testified that Austin was driving in a dangerous and reckless manner and at speeds up to double the speed limit. As Austin and Stephanie traveled down Sayles, Appellant drove his pickup in the same lane as, and came up behind, Stephanie’s Mustang. As Appellant’s pickup approached the rear of the Mustang, Austin abruptly applied the brakes. Stephanie testified that Appellant then drove around them and that Austin “was flipping [Appellant] off.” After Appellant passed the Mustang, and when he came to the stoplight at Sayles and 14th, he abruptly stopped in front of the Mustang. Austin quickly applied the brakes to avoid hitting Appellant’s pickup from behind. 1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. §§ 9.31, 9.32 (West 2011).

2 There were more than a dozen witnesses who saw both Appellant and Austin stop their vehicles at the stoplight. Several eyewitnesses testified that the Mustang did not hit the rear of Appellant’s pickup. Other witnesses testified that they heard or assumed the Mustang had collided with Appellant’s pickup, but no witnesses testified that they saw a collision. A surveillance video from a Shell gas station at the corner of 14th and Sayles captured these initial events, and the video does not show that the Mustang collided with Appellant’s pickup. After Appellant stopped his pickup, he immediately got out and walked toward Austin and Stephanie, who were sitting in the Mustang behind Appellant’s pickup. Several eyewitnesses testified that Appellant threw his arms in the air and was angry, aggressive, and threatening toward Austin and Stephanie. No one testified that Appellant stopped and checked his pickup for damage. Several eyewitnesses thought that there would be a fight and that Appellant would attack Austin; they also said they would have felt threatened by Appellant’s actions. Appellant, who was 5'10" tall and weighed approximately 215 pounds, was larger than Austin, who was 5'8" tall and weighed less than 150 pounds. Stephanie testified that she felt very threatened by Appellant as he approached Austin and her. As Appellant walked toward Stephanie and Austin, he stopped at the front of the Mustang when Austin got out and pointed a nine millimeter, semiautomatic Ruger handgun at Appellant. With the handgun raised, Austin yelled at Appellant to get back in his pickup and leave. Appellant went back to his pickup and got in; Austin got back into the Mustang. Stephanie testified that Austin put his handgun back where it was originally kept in the vehicle. Witnesses differed on whether Austin remained standing next to the Mustang with the handgun pointed at Appellant until Appellant got back in his pickup or whether Austin walked Appellant back to the pickup with the handgun pointed at Appellant. Several 3 eyewitnesses testified that the encounter was over after Appellant got in his pickup and Austin got in the Mustang. However, although Appellant returned to his pickup, after a few seconds, he put his pickup in reverse and accelerated backward into the Mustang; Austin and Stephanie were still sitting in the Mustang. The Shell station video also recorded this action. Witnesses testified that Appellant “floored” the accelerator and “slammed” his pickup into the front of the Mustang. Appellant’s pickup pushed the Mustang north on Sayles, in the opposite direction of traffic, and caused the Mustang to collide with a van behind it. As Appellant pushed the Mustang and the van backward on Sayles, the van became dislodged from the Mustang. Appellant continued to push Austin, Stephanie, and the Mustang until Austin turned the steering wheel and the Mustang turned, went up onto the median, and came to a stop facing west. Appellant also backed his pickup onto the median and came to a stop facing southwest. Appellant had pushed Austin, Stephanie, and the Mustang approximately 172 feet from the intersection where he had initially “rammed” into the Mustang. When Appellant’s pickup came to rest, he immediately got out with his Glock .40 caliber semiautomatic handgun drawn. Appellant walked toward the Mustang and shot Austin in the head. Austin died as a result of the gunshot wound. There were numerous witnesses to the events that occurred after the point in time when Appellant backed into the Mustang and pushed it down Sayles, but their testimony differed as to the exact details of what they recalled. Except as the evidence relates specifically to Appellant’s issues on appeal, and in the absence of a sufficiency of the evidence challenge, we do not find it necessary to detail the testimony of each individual witness but, rather, will generally summarize the evidence. 4 Several witnesses testified that, after the vehicles came to a stop in the median, Appellant got out of his pickup first. Others testified that Appellant and Austin got out of their vehicles at approximately the same time. All of the witnesses, except one, testified that, when Appellant shot Austin, Austin had not fully exited the Mustang but still had one leg inside it. One witness testified that Austin was the first to exit a vehicle. There were witnesses who testified that Austin had his handgun drawn as he was getting out of the Mustang; others said that Austin did not have time to raise the handgun before Appellant shot and killed him. One witness testified that, before Appellant shot Austin, he told Austin to “put the gun down.” No other witnesses testified that they heard Appellant say anything until after Appellant shot Austin. There was a dispute as to the number of gunshots that were fired. Some witnesses said that they definitely heard two shots; some thought that the sound of the second shot was an echo; and others said that they heard only one shot. No one testified that Austin fired his handgun, and although inconclusive, forensic tests indicated that Austin had not fired his handgun. Stephanie testified that, after Appellant shot Austin, Appellant walked up to Austin’s body, smiled, and said, “[N]ext time learn not to pull a gun on someone.” Other witnesses testified that Appellant was calm and that his demeanor surprised them.

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James Christopher North v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-christopher-north-v-state-texapp-2014.