James Corey Hicks v. State
This text of James Corey Hicks v. State (James Corey Hicks 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.
Opinion
James Cory Hicks was convicted for injury to a disabled individual by omission. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(a) (Vernon Supp. 2007). We affirmed. (1) The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has reversed our decision and Hicks' conviction and remanded the case to us to weigh the evidence in light of that court's construction of Section 22.04(d) of the Texas Penal Code, defining how one can be found to have caused injury to a child, elderly individual, or disabled individual, by omission. Because, under that construction of Section 22.04(d), the evidence is legally insufficient to support Hicks' conviction, we reverse his conviction and render an acquittal on that charge.
This case had its inception in late September 2003, when Billy Ray Johnson, a forty-two- year-old, mentally retarded black man, was invited to a drinking party in rural Cass County, ostensibly to provide the young (2) white revelers some "entertainment" with his dancing. But the revelers faced a dilemma when, after a dispute over the type of music being played, Colt Amox punched Johnson once in the face and knocked him unconscious. Johnson remained unconscious for hours but did not get medical assistance until the next day. Instead, evidence suggested that, at Hicks' direction and at some point during the evening, the unconscious Johnson was loaded into the back of a pickup truck, deposited on the side of a rural road, and left there alone. As a result of the evening's events, Hicks was charged with and convicted of injuring the disabled Johnson by omission within the meaning of Section 22.04(a)(3) of the Texas Penal Code.
A person commits an offense if he or she "by omission causes to a . . . disabled individual . . . bodily injury," and "(1) the actor has a legal or statutory duty to act; or (2) the actor has assumed care, custody, or control of . . . [the] disabled individual." Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 22.04(a)(3), 22.04(b) (Vernon Supp. 2007). Since the State does not allege that Hicks had any independent legal or statutory duty to act on Johnson's behalf, the question in this case is whether Hicks "assumed care, custody, or control" of Johnson under Section 22.04(b)(2). That question is addressed by subsection (d):
[T]he actor has assumed care, custody, or control [of the victim] if he has by act, words, or course of conduct acted so as to cause a reasonable person to conclude that he has accepted responsibility for protection, food, shelter, and medical care for a child, elderly individual, or disabled individual.
Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.04(d) (Vernon Supp. 2007). Hicks claims that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to prove he assumed care, custody, or control of Johnson on the night in question. Hicks argues that no "care, custody, or control" can be assumed within the meaning of the statute unless the actor has, by word or deed, acted in such a way that it would make reasonable people believe that he or she has accepted responsibility for the victim's "protection, food, shelter, and medical care." (Emphasis added.) In our original opinion, we disagreed with Hicks and affirmed his conviction. The Texas Court of Criminal Appeals' subsequent ruling construed Section 22.04(d) in the manner urged by Hicks, reversed our decision, and remanded this case to us to weigh the evidence in light of that statutory construction.
In our original opinion we interpreted Section 22.04(d) as a bright-line rule that, once someone has become, in essence, a caretaker--even informally--for one of the listed vulnerable individuals, he or she cannot then escape responsibility for the individual by arguing he or she has not assumed that individual's care, custody, or control. We interpreted the statute to provide that a criminal defendant--even if he or she did not come within subsection (d) by acting or speaking in such a way that reasonable people would believe that he or she had assumed responsibility to provide protection, food, shelter, and medical care for such a vulnerable person--could have assumed custody or control of someone, within the terms of subsection (b)(2) and the ordinary meaning of the words "custody or control," and thus be potentially responsible for injuring that vulnerable person by omission.
The construction of subsection (d) by the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals establishes a different meaning for the statutory scheme. In light of that construction, a defendant cannot properly be convicted under Section 22.04(a), by assuming "care, custody, or control" of a listed vulnerable individual, unless the defendant "by acts, words, or course of conduct acted" in such a way that a reasonable person would conclude he or she "has accepted responsibility for protection, food, shelter, and medical care" for the individual in question. (3) In other words, assuming (as is true here) that the defendant was not alleged to have any legal or statutory duty to act as provided by subsection (b)(1) and therefore could be responsible only under subsection (b)(2), if that defendant merely takes physical control of a disabled individual--as the jury apparently believed Hicks had done--and then fails to provide needed medical care for that individual--again as the jury believed Hicks had done--those facts alone would not establish a violation. Unless that defendant also satisfied subsection (d), he or she would not have "assumed care, custody, or control" of the disabled individual within the meaning of the statutory scheme and therefore would not have subjected himself or herself to possible criminal liability under Section 22.04 of the Texas Penal Code.
This Court is bound by controlling authority from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals. See Mapes v. State, 187 S.W.3d 655, 666 (Tex. App.--Houston [14th Dist.] 2006, pet. ref'd); Sierra v. State, 157 S.W.3d 52, 60 (Tex. App.--Fort Worth 2004), aff'd, 218 S.W.3d 85 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007). The higher court's
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