James Ollie Meadows v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 22, 2010
Docket01-09-00443-CR
StatusPublished

This text of James Ollie Meadows v. State (James Ollie Meadows 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 Ollie Meadows v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 22, 2010

In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas

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NO. 01-09-00443-CR

NO. 01-09-00444-CR

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James Ollie Meadows, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 184th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1143853 & 1143854

MEMORANDUM OPINION

          James Ollie Meadows was charged by indictment with committing aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon against complainant Thomas Welsh (trial court cause number 1143853) and complainant Christian Chudleigh (trial court cause number 1143854).  These cases were tried together.  A jury convicted Meadows of aggravated robbery in both cases and assessed punishment at thirty years’ confinement in prison.  In his sole issue, Meadows contends that the trial court reversibly erred by incorrectly describing the State’s burden of proof during voir dire and by permitting the prosecutor to do the same.  Because Meadows failed to raise these objections at trial and because we conclude these complaints do not constitute fundamental error, we affirm.

Background

A few weeks before Christmas 2007, Brandi Moerbe spent an evening with friends Christian and Cindy Chudleigh, celebrating Cindy’s birthday.  Just before midnight, the Chudleighs drove Brandi to her car, which she had parked near their townhouse.  Moments after Brandi began to drive home, a vehicle bumped her car from behind, pushing the front of her car into a ditch and the rear wheels off the ground.  Brandi immediately called Cindy and Christian, who met her several minutes later and parked their car across the street from the ditch. 

A dark-colored sedan drove up and parked near Brandi’s car.  Meadows got out of the car and offered to help in exchange for money.  Meadows was accompanied by another man and a woman.  Although his offer of assistance was initially declined, Meadows insisted on helping, getting into Brandi’s car and trying to move it.  While the men worked to move Brandi’s car, Brandi and Cindy moved Brandi’s personal belongings from her car to the Chudleighs’ car across the street. 

Meadows told the group that he was going to get a rope from his car.  Instead, he returned with a sawed-off shotgun.  At trial, Brandi, Cindy, Christian, Thomas, and a neighbor who watched the robbery from her nearby apartment all testified consistently about what happened next.  Meadows stood in the middle of the street and ordered all of them to get on the ground and give him their money.  He ordered Thomas, who was calling a tow truck, to get off of the phone.  He held the men at gunpoint and demanded money; then he walked across the street, held the women at gunpoint, and demanded money and personal items.  The man who accompanied Meadows stayed with the men while Meadows robbed the women. 

Meadows and the other man returned to their car and attempted to leave, but their car would not start.  Meadows again held Cindy at gunpoint and threatened to kill her if she did not give him the keys to her car.  Cindy did not have the keys.  Fearing for his wife’s life, Christian yelled to Meadows that he had the keys to the car.  While Meadows was distracted, Brandi and Cindy ran to the safety of a neighboring townhouse, where the neighbors called the police.  Christian did not have the keys to his car, either, but Thomas gave Meadows the keys to his truck instead.  Meadows fled, using Thomas’s truck to push his car away from the scene of the robbery.

When the police arrived, Thomas described his truck and gave them his license-plate number.  The police apprehended Meadows and his accomplice after a high-speed car chase followed by a foot chase.  Meadows and his accomplice were found with Thomas’s truck and the money and belongings taken during the robbery.  Within approximately 20 to 30 minutes of the robbery, the police brought the men back to the scene of the robbery for a show-up identification.  Brandi, Cindy, Christian, and Thomas separately looked at Meadows and positively identified him as the man who had just robbed them at gunpoint.  Each testified that he or she had had a good opportunity to see Meadows’s face earlier because the area was well-lit by both streetlights and holiday lights and because of the time that he spent ostensibly trying to help move Brandi’s car.  Each witness testified that he or she was positive that Meadows was the robber at the time of the show-up identification; each also positively identified him as the robber at trial.  For example, Cindy testified that she was so certain it was Meadows at the time of the show-up identification, “I would have put my life on the line for it.  I mean I’m just that certain.”  She testified that she was equally certain in court.

In addition to the testimony from the complainants, a neighbor, who watched the robbery from her bedroom window, testified consistently about the robbery.  She also positively identified Meadows at the show-up identification and in court as the man who held the gun.

At trial, Meadows denied any involvement in the crime.  Meadows testified that he was walking around Houston looking for a bus stop because he had taken the wrong bus and gotten lost.  He said he rented Thomas’s stolen truck from a man whose name he did not know, who had solicited him for illegal drugs.  Meadows said the alleged “drug rental” was for an unspecified amount of time and that he had planned to drive up and down the street where he encountered the unknown man to see if he would show up to claim the truck. 

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James Ollie Meadows v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-ollie-meadows-v-state-texapp-2010.