Jennifer H Zarnfaller v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 31, 2018
Docket01-15-00881-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jennifer H Zarnfaller v. State (Jennifer H Zarnfaller 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
Jennifer H Zarnfaller v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 31, 2018

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-15-00881-CR ——————————— JENNIFER H ZARNFALLER, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 179th District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1370846

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant, Jennifer H. Zarnfaller, guilty of the felony offense of

injury to a child,1 and the trial court assessed her punishment at confinement for

eighty years. In thirteen issues, appellant contends that the evidence is legally

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.04(a)(1), (b)(1), (e) (Vernon Supp. 2017); TEX. FAM. CODE ANN. § 151.001 (Vernon 2014). insufficient to support her conviction and her trial counsel provided her with

ineffective assistance.

We affirm.

Background

Veronica Parga-Lopez, formerly the assistant property manager and a tenant

at the Wimbledon Apartments in Spring, Texas (the “apartment complex”),

testified that in July 2010, appellant lived with her mother in an apartment near

Parga-Lopez. Appellant would often come to see Parga-Lopez in the leasing

office, “boo-hooing, . . . always crying, always depressed, always, . . . hysterical.”

Parga-Lopez would listen to appellant, who would confide in her. At one point,

appellant, while pregnant with the complainant, told Parga-Lopez that “[s]he didn’t

want the [complainant].”

After the complainant’s birth, appellant again told Parga-Lopez that “she

didn’t want the [complainant].” And she specifically asked Parga-Lopez to “take”

the complainant. This caused Parga-Lopez “a lot of concern,” particularly about

appellant’s “ability to mother” the complainant. Parga-Lopez opined that appellant

did not “enjoy[] having [the complainant],” who, she felt, “was a bother” to

appellant.

Parga-Lopez noted that the complainant “was sometimes dirty and smelled

like smoke, like cigarettes.” Appellant “constantly drank” and smoked cigarettes

2 inside her apartment. She was not employed. Her mother, Rona Landon, was the

“only provider” for the family. And appellant and her boyfriend, Vikas Sharma,

spent “most of the time” at home in the apartment with the complainant.

Parga-Lopez explained that she and her daughter, Dora, would occasionally

babysit the complainant. The last time that they watched her, Dora noticed that the

complainant was “not her usual self” and “just laid [sic] there.” 2 She was also

“fussy,” “irritable,” and not smiling. And she “didn’t want to eat” or play. When

Parga-Lopez sought to comfort the complainant by massaging her head, she

noticed that her head was “real soft on the side,” “kind of like how [a] breast feels,

like just a gel.” Alarmed, Parga-Lopez tried to reach appellant and Landon, but

appellant “never came to get” the complainant. When Landon came to pick up the

complainant later that night, Parga-Lopez expressed her concern about the

complainant’s head and demeanor.

Parga-Lopez further testified that thereafter, her concern for the complainant

grew when she noticed that appellant “didn’t come over anymore, didn’t go to the

[leasing] office, . . . [and] just stayed inside.” When Parga-Lopez later spoke to

appellant about the condition of the complainant’s head, appellant responded that

2 Parga-Lopez also noted that on another occasion, appellant “bang[ed]” on the door to her apartment. When Parga-Lopez opened it, appellant screamed, “I don’t know what happened.” The complainant “had blood” on her and a cut inside her mouth and appellant told Parga-Lopez that the complainant had been “crawling . . . and [then] stood up and fell.”

3 she would “take [the complainant] to the doctor.” Parga-Lopez did not see the

complainant that day, and she opined that appellant was “hiding something.”

Parga-Lopez explained that on the day of the complainant’s death, July 28,

2010, she, while away from her apartment, received a telephone call from the

apartment complex’s property manager, who told her that “something had

happened to” the complainant. When Parga-Lopez arrived home, Dora, who was

crying, told Parga-Lopez that she had been “looking out the window” and heard

appellant “outside screaming,” “My Baby, my baby, my baby.” Dora then saw

emergency medical personnel arrive and take the complainant to a hospital.

Harris County Sheriff’s Office (“HCSO”) Deputy M. Newcomb testified

that on July 28, 2010, he was dispatched to the apartment complex for “a CPR in

progress.” When he arrived, appellant, Sharma, and the complainant were present.

Vivien Miller, a paramedic for Cypress Creek EMS, testified that on July 28,

2010, she was dispatched to the apartment complex in response to a call about a

“cardiac arrest” of an infant. When she arrived, the scene was “complete chaos,”

and she had great difficulty in “determin[ing] if any type of compressions [had

been] done prior to [her] arrival, which is very vital.” According to the

complainant’s family members, she “had been feeling ill all day and . . . resting in

a swing carrier.” When the family members “went to check on her . . . and picked

4 her up,” they discovered that “she was unresponsive and not breathing,” and they

telephoned for emergency assistance.

Miller explained that her examination of the complainant revealed that she

had “no pulse” and was not “breathing whatsoever.” Miller noted that the

complainant had “bruises on her face,” her “little legs” were “so dirty,” and her

“rectum did not look normal.” The complainant’s body temperature was

ninety-four degrees, indicating that she was in “a state of septic shock,” which

would have occurred “over [a period] of days.” This constituted a “red flag” to

Miller because it “indicated that the [complainant] couldn’t have been recently ill

as reported” by her family members.

Miller further testified that despite extensive lifesaving measures

administered by emergency medical personnel, the complainant remained “in

asystole,” meaning “there [was] no -- absolutely no activity of [her] heart, no

muscles in [her] heart [were] moving, . . . [and] no cells in [her] heart muscle itself

[were] working at all.” The complainant, who showed no “signs of life,” was then

transported by ambulance to a hospital, where Miller saw appellant’s mother

“yell[]” at “mak[e] comments toward” appellant.

Dr. Douglas Kasper, the attending physician in the emergency room at the

hospital where the complainant was treated, testified that on July 28, 2010, he

examined the complainant. She was unresponsive, had “no respirations,” had no

5 pulse or “evidence of cardiac activity,” had severe hypothermia, and was dead.

Because the complainant had “no signs of life,” Kasper opined that “nothing else

could be done” for her.

Dr. Kasper noted that when he informed appellant of the complainant’s

death, her “affect was blunted” and “strange.” And she did not seem to “want to

be involved.” Kasper opined that the “story” that appellant had provided to

emergency medical personnel about what happened to the complainant was “not

congruent” with “th[e] massive amount of trauma[]” that the complainant had

sustained. He also stated that he did not believe that whatever had happened to the

complainant was “accidental.”

After he had pronounced the complainant dead, Dr. Kasper ordered a full

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