James Oliver Charles Junior v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 23, 2019
Docket14-17-00749-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
James Oliver Charles Junior v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 23, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals NO. 14-17-00749-CR

JAMES OLIVER CHARLES, JR., Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 405th District Court Galveston County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 17-CR-0273

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant James Oliver Charles, Jr. appeals his conviction for robbery. After a jury found appellant guilty, the trial court assessed his punishment at eight years’ imprisonment. Appellant’s appellate counsel contends that appellant’s trial counsel provided ineffective assistance of counsel by failing to object to evidence of extraneous offenses allegedly perpetrated by appellant against the complainant. Appellant has additionally filed a pro se appellate brief in which he also primarily complains of alleged ineffective assistance of counsel. Because appellant does not present any meritorious grounds for reversal, we affirm.

Background

Appellant and complainant Georgia Logan previously had a dating relationship with one another and have a child together. On November 4, 2016, Logan called 911 and reported an altercation that she had with appellant. After an investigation, appellant was charged with robbery for knocking Logan down and forcibly taking her cell phone from her.

Before trial, defense counsel filed a motion in limine requesting, among other things, that before any pending charges or alleged extraneous offenses by appellant were mentioned, a ruling on their admissibility would first be obtained from the judge. During a pretrial conference, the judge and counsel discussed the parameters of what extraneous offenses might be admissible during trial. The judge adamantly stated that no pending charges should be discussed, but the judge indicated that evidence of certain offenses involving appellant and complainant might be admissible as relevant contextual or background evidence. The judge encouraged defense counsel to raise objections whenever he thought such evidence would be inadmissible. During trial, defense counsel objected to some evidence of extraneous offenses, particularly if they involved pending charges, but did not object to other evidence of extraneous offenses.

At trial, Logan testified that she and appellant began a romantic relationship in June 2014 and had a daughter together in 2015. She said that things eventually “started going downhill,” and they began having fights and arguments, sometimes physical fights in which “he would put his hands on [her] and . . . take [her] things . . . and throw them away.” She described a pattern of harassment in which appellant allegedly knocked on her apartment door “at all times of night,” damaged 2 her car, and followed her. She also claimed that he had gone into her apartment when she was not there, had thrown bricks through her windows, and had threatened her friends.

Logan further explained that from time to time, appellant would demand to see his daughter. She said that there was no formal visitation arrangement regarding the girl, but appellant’s family did get to see the child occasionally. On the day of the alleged robbery, Logan said that appellant came to her work and yelled at her as she was leaving that he wanted to see his daughter. He then followed her as she drove to a police station to report him, but after waiting fifteen minutes at the station, she left without making a report.

Logan then took her son to school, where appellant drove up and again yelled that he wanted to see his daughter. Later, appellant knocked on the wall of Logan’s apartment but then ran away when she threatened to call police. Appellant subsequently came back, “beat on the door,” and said, “I got you.” Logan explained that she thought this meant appellant had put sugar in her gas tank, as he had done this before, so she went outside to check her car. Appellant drove by and Logan called 911. Appellant then came back, got out of his vehicle, knocked Logan down, stepped or “stomped” on her, and snatched her phone. She said that they struggled briefly over the phone, but she let it go because she wanted him to stop stepping on her. Appellant then left in his vehicle with Logan’s phone, and Logan called 911 again using her neighbor’s phone.

Logan said that she called the police at least 28 times to report appellant in November 2016. She denied, however, that she had been asking appellant for money or using one of his vehicles during that time. Logan further alleged that appellant returned later on the day of the robbery, and that on the next day, she discovered that her car windows had been broken out, the tires were flat, and there

3 was sugar in the gas tank. Defense counsel objected to testimony regarding “some sort of extraneous offense about criminal mischief to a vehicle.” The trial judge denied the objection but told the prosecutor that anything relating to a later, similar incident would not be admissible.

On cross-examination, Logan acknowledged that she had previously been convicted of robbery herself, there was a pending family court case regarding the couple’s daughter at the time of the altercation, and she had kept appellant’s family from seeing the child at times. Logan further admitted that she told appellant while he was in jail that she loved him and that he was a good man, but she said that this was a lie to try to get him to pay for the damage to her car. Logan also acknowledged telling a police officer that she had dropped previous assault charges against appellant because appellant’s mother asked her to; Logan said that in reality, she just inferred that appellant’s mother wanted her to drop the charges. Defense counsel further questioned Logan regarding several additional inconsistencies between her testimony and her statements to police.

Logan’s neighbor, Melody Howard, generally testified in support of Logan’s account of events, although she did not observe the actual altercation. Howard stated that immediately after the altercation, Logan ran up to her saying that appellant had broken her phone and she, therefore, needed to use Howard’s phone to call the police. The investigating police officer also testified. During cross- examination, he acknowledged that the officer who had originally responded to the scene had put in her report that the account provided by Logan was not consistent with the reported severity of the attack.

Appellant’s mother testified that she never asked Logan not to press charges against appellant for previous alleged assaults, that Logan had been keeping them from seeing the child, and that Logan had been driving appellant’s vehicle within a

4 couple of weeks of the altercation. Appellant’s stepfather testified that he had known appellant for 20 years and had never known him to steal.

During closing argument, defense counsel urged the jury that the evidence presented might substantiate the lesser-included assault charge but did not support a finding that appellant committed robbery. Counsel additionally argued that based on where contemporaneous photographs showed dirt on Logan’s person after the altercation, her phone was likely broken during the encounter. He emphasized various discrepancies and inconsistencies in Logan’s testimony and that Logan had told Howard that appellant had broken her phone. Counsel again noted that Logan had reportedly been using appellant’s vehicle within a couple of weeks of the altercation, lied about not previously reporting assaults because appellant’s mother asked her not to, and lied to appellant at the jail in order to try to get him to fix her car.

In the jury charge, the trial court queried the jury alternatively regarding robbery and the lesser included offense of assault.

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James Oliver Charles Junior v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-oliver-charles-junior-v-state-texapp-2019.