James Larue Harralson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 2012
Docket01-10-00795-CR
StatusPublished

This text of James Larue Harralson v. State (James Larue Harralson 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 Larue Harralson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 1, 2012

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NOS. 01-10-00793-CR, 01-10-00794-CR, 01-10-00795-CR, 01-10-00796-CR

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James Larue Harralson, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 10th District Court

Galveston County, Texas

Trial Court Case Nos. 09CR3854, 09CR3855, 09CR3856, 10CR0382

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury convicted appellant James LaRue Harralson in three cases of burglary of a habitation and in one case of felony theft.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. §§ 30.02, 31.03 (West 2003 & Supp. 2009).  After Harralson pleaded true to one enhancement, which alleged that he was previously convicted of the felony offense of aggravated robbery, the court assessed his punishment at 17 years in prison on each burglary count and two years in prison for felony theft, with all periods of confinement to run concurrently.  In his first three issues on appeal, Harralson contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain his three convictions for burglary of a habitation because there was no evidence that he entered the three complainants’ trailers and because he was not responsible under the law of parties.  In his fourth issue, he challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support his theft conviction, individually or under the law of parties, claiming there was insufficient evidence that he committed the offense or that the value of the stolen golf cart exceeded $1,500.  In his fifth and sixth issues, he argues that the evidence is insufficient to support his burglary convictions because it did not show that the trailers that were burglarized were “habitations.”  In his seventh, eighth, and ninth issues, Harralson argues that the trial court erred by not charging the jury on the lesser-included offense of theft in each of his three burglary cases. 

          Because we find that the evidence is sufficient and that the court properly charged the jury, we affirm.

Background

          Jamaica Beach Police Department Officer M. Todaro was working the midnight shift, patrolling the highway, residential areas, and beachfront in Galveston County.  At approximately 3:00 a.m. on September 3, 2009, he saw a tan-colored Ford Explorer speed past him driving more than 80 miles an hour in a 35 miles-per-hour zone.  As the car turned, Todaro saw its headlights come on.  Todaro chased the vehicle, and when he caught up to it, he found it stopped in a ditch.  When Todaro approached the vehicle, the front passenger door was open and a man later identified as Willy Davis was sitting in the driver’s seat, holding his hands out the window.  Inside the vehicle, Todaro saw “lots of articles, like you would see in someone’s garage, kind of just thrown . . . between the seats, front two seats and into the back of the truck that didn’t appear to have been stacked neatly.”  Todaro suspected there had been another person in the car because he saw two drinks covered in condensation.  After Davis was arrested, Todaro assisted another law enforcement officer in searching the neighboring state park for a second suspect. 

          Galveston Police Department Officer B. Johnson was also working the midnight shift, patrolling the west end of Galveston Island.  At 3:18 a.m., he received a report about a burglary in progress on Shaman Road in Indian Beach, which is just west of Jamaica Beach.  The police dispatcher informed Johnson that the concerned neighbor who had reported the burglary was following the suspects.  Officer Johnson came upon Officer Todaro and the stopped Ford Explorer.  He later learned that the neighbor who reported the burglary stopped following the Explorer when he saw Officer Todaro begin to chase it.  Johnson helped Todaro arrest Davis, and then he went to the house on Shaman Road.  The Shaman Road house, which appeared unoccupied, was on stilts, and “there was a lot of property” under the house.  Officer Johnson helped Galveston Police Department Officer Atchley identify and collect the property that had been stored beneath the house.

          Officer Atchley, who was trained as a field identification officer, was about a mile away from the Shaman Road house when he overheard the report of a burglary in progress, so he went there to assist the other officers.  The neighbor who had made the report and followed the Explorer until the police began chasing it saw Officer Atchley and showed him to the house on Shaman Road.  Atchley saw property under the house and two golf carts alongside it.  He thought it was unusual for the property to be left under the house “because nobody would leave that stuff out.”  Atchley testified that he regularly patrolled this neighborhood and that he had never before seen property under the house or golf carts beside it.  Atchley said, “That house was usually vacant.”

          Atchley took photographs of the property at the Shaman Road house and the inside of the Ford Explorer.  He also spoke with Joe Raley, who reported that someone had burglarized his trailer and shed at a nearby Jamaica Beach trailer park called “Texas Campgrounds,” which was located across a vacant field from the house at Shaman Road.  Atchley also photographed Raley’s trailer and shed. 

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