Jaray Tyrell Mims v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2020
Docket11-18-00314-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jaray Tyrell Mims v. State (Jaray Tyrell Mims 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
Jaray Tyrell Mims v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion filed December 31, 2020

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-18-00314-CR __________

JARAY TYRELL MIMS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 142nd District Court Midland County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CR46716

MEMORANDUM OPINION In a three-count indictment, the grand jury indicted Jaray Tyrell Mims, Appellant, in Count I for the offense of burglary of a habitation with the intent to commit aggravated assault with a deadly weapon upon Elishia Holloway. The grand jury indicted Appellant in the second count for the offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon upon Stanley Moss. Finally, in the third count of the indictment, the grand jury indicted Appellant for the offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon upon Dextric Hawkins. The jury found Appellant guilty on all three counts, found the enhancement allegations to be true, and assessed his punishment on each count at confinement for twenty-five years. The trial court sentenced Appellant accordingly and ordered that the sentences were to run concurrently. We modify the trial court’s judgments to delete the assessment of court-appointed attorney’s fees as costs, but we otherwise affirm the judgments of the trial court. Appellant presents us with five issues on appeal. In his first issue on appeal, Appellant claims that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction for burglary of a habitation. Similarly, in his second issue on appeal, Appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. Appellant maintains, in his third issue on appeal, that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. In his fourth issue on appeal, Appellant argues that the trial court erred when it failed to grant Appellant’s request for a mistrial. Finally, in his fifth issue on appeal, Appellant takes the position that the trial court erred when it assessed court-appointed attorney’s fees against him. In the early morning hours of January 21, 2016, a man identified as Appellant entered a house on Madison Street in Midland. The house was occupied by Dextric Hawkins, Litsandra Hawkins, Stanley Moss, Elishia Holloway, and Elishia’s four children. The evidence shows that Appellant made his entry by knocking or kicking down a door to the house. Prior to the date of this offense, Appellant and Elishia had been in a dating relationship for approximately seven years. Elishia and Appellant had three children together. The oldest of the children was six at the time of trial, and the other two, twins, were four years old at the time of trial. Elishia had one other child, her eldest, who was seven at the time of trial. Appellant was not the father of this child. Appellant’s relationship with Elishia ended in October 2015. Appellant and Elishia continued to communicate about matters that involved the children. That situation changed in December 2015 when Elishia refused to allow Appellant to visit 2 with the children; he became angry. Also, after the relationship ended, Elishia began seeing someone else, and Appellant was angry about that too. Appellant had texted Elishia and had also harassed the “guy” that Elishia was seeing. About 1:30 a.m. on the date of the offense, Elishia left a friend’s house to return to her own house. Elishia received a text from Appellant to the effect that she “was slick”—meaning that she “was supposed to be hiding it.” The text apparently led her to believe that Appellant was following her. When Elishia got home, she put a plate of food in the microwave, had a phone conversation with a friend, changed into her pajamas, and sat on the couch in the den where she and her four children normally slept. The children were asleep there. Meanwhile, Varrick McDonald had been at a nearby location “getting high” and was walking by the Madison Street house where the shooting occurred. McDonald knew Appellant. Around 2:00 a.m., he saw Appellant drive into an alley behind the house. McDonald testified that another man was with Appellant. The two got out of Appellant’s vehicle, went up to the house, and kicked the door in. McDonald heard Appellant say something like, “Y’all thought I was playing. I told you I was coming.” McDonald heard three gunshots and ran away. As he ran away, he heard one more gunshot. At the time that McDonald was watching this scenario begin to unfold, Elishia was eating and watching television when she heard a “kick on the back door” and “automatically knew that it was [Appellant].” Appellant’s last text message to Elishia that morning came at 1:58 a.m.; Elishia heard the first kick on the door some ten minutes later. When Elishia heard another kick, she got up and ran to the room where her great-uncle, Stanley Moss, slept; her then three-year-old daughter ran with her. As they ran to Moss’s room, Elishia heard Appellant yelling, “Where’s Poo?” “Poo” was Elishia’s nickname. Then she heard six or seven shots being fired. Elishia first 3 heard a shot when Appellant “kicked in the door. He came in shooting.” Elishia and her daughter hid in the closet in Moss’s room. Elishia testified that it was Appellant who was inside the house at the time of the offense. Elishia’s father, Dextric Hawkins, testified that he and his wife, Litsandra, were asleep in their room when he was awakened by a “hard hit on the door and some hollering and gunfire.” Dextric heard three “hits” like someone was kicking in the door. Dextric heard Appellant say something like, “Where’s Poo?” Eventually, Appellant shot three holes in the door to the Hawkinses’ room and knocked down the door. Once inside the room, Appellant stood over Dextric, said “Yeah, bitch,” and pulled the trigger twice. Dextric testified, “How it missed me, I do not know.” Dextric then testified that Appellant left their room and “went and shot my uncle.” Dextric knew that the shooter was Appellant because he “[l]ooked me right in my eyes.” Dextric also had “no doubt” that the voice he heard was Appellant’s voice. Appellant had lived in Dextric’s house before, and Dextric had known him for eleven years. Appellant did not have permission to come into Dextric’s home at the time of the offense. The only person that Dextric saw was Appellant. Without unduly prolonging this opinion, suffice it to say that Litsandra Hawkins basically confirmed Dextric’s testimony. She, too, identified Appellant as the shooter who was in the house. Elishia testified that she knew when Appellant left because her oldest son started “running through the house going, ‘My daddy gone, my daddy gone.’” Dextric and Litsandra also testified to like statements that were made by Elishia’s eldest son. While Elishia was hiding in the closet, she called 9-1-1. Several members of law enforcement came to the scene. EMS personnel also came to the scene. They transported Moss to the hospital to be treated for a gunshot wound. By the time of trial, Moss had died from causes unrelated to the gunshot wound. 4 Marisa Payne, with the Midland Police Department Crime Scene Unit, took various photographs and gathered various pieces of evidence. Payne photographed the broken door that led into the house. She also photographed the broken door to the Hawkinses’ bedroom. The photographs showed three bullet holes in the door. There were also bullet holes in a closet door located in the Hawkinses’ bedroom. Photographs were also taken that reflected bullet holes in clothing inside the closet. Bullet holes were also found in a dresser in the bedroom. The bullet that left that bullet hole had traveled through the dresser into the wall behind the dresser. Payne also found three projectiles in the Hawkinses’ bedroom. An additional bullet hole was found under the bed; the projectile apparently went through the subfloor and ended up under the house. Payne also photographed some blood transfers on the floor outside Moss’s door.

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