Jerry Neill Sharpe v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2022
Docket03-21-00437-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jerry Neill Sharpe v. the State of Texas (Jerry Neill Sharpe v. the State of Texas) 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
Jerry Neill Sharpe v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-21-00437-CR

Jerry Neill Sharpe, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW OF BURNET COUNTY NO. M33653, THE HONORABLE LINDA M. BAYLESS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The jury found Jerry Neill Sharpe guilty of assault with bodily injury and family

violence based on his spanking of his teenaged daughter with his belt. See Tex. Penal Code

§ 22.01(a)(1). The court assessed sentence consistent with the jury’s verdict at 365 days in jail

suspended for a two-year term of community supervision. Sharpe contends on appeal that the

trial court erred by omitting an instruction he did not request regarding parental duty to discipline

children and the law prohibiting state agencies from violating parents’ fundamental duty to direct

the upbringing of their child. Sharpe further contends that the court erred by refusing to instruct

the jury as he requested that “the fact that a child is spanked on its own does not evidence family

violence.” He also contends that legally insufficient evidence supports the guilty verdict. We

will affirm the judgment. BACKGROUND

Sharpe admits that he spanked his then-fifteen-year-old daughter, D, by hitting

her with his firefighter’s uniform belt while attempting to discipline her. Photographs show

bruises on several parts of D’s body that witnesses testified were consistent with belt strikes.

The contested issue at trial and here was whether his use of force was reasonable. We will

summarize the testimony to provide context for the reasonableness determination, focusing

primarily on testimony by D and Sharpe because they were the only occurrence witnesses.

D—twenty years old at the time of trial—testified as did Sharpe. Other witnesses

included Department of Family and Protective Services investigator Kristin Cantu, Burnet

County Sheriff’s Deputy Brian Richey, Burnet County Sheriff’s Investigator Kathy Sievers, and

Sharpe’s sister, who lived with Sharpe and D until a few weeks before the incident and was

telephoned during the incident.

Sharpe and D had a confrontation on October 5, 2016, followed by a tense two

weeks and leading to the October 19, 2016 interaction at issue in this case. Sharpe did not

approve of D spending time with an almost-eighteen-year-old boy. On October 5, 2016, D

forged Sharpe’s signature on a note requesting release from school for a non-existent doctor’s

appointment and telephoned Sharpe to ask permission to study then to stay overnight at a

friend’s house, when instead she spent that time with her boyfriend; as part of the scheme, D had

her boyfriend impersonate the grandfather on the phone with Sharpe. When Sharpe suspected

something was amiss and drove over to speak to the “friend’s” grandfather about the sleepover,

D met Sharpe outside of a dark, locked house, lied that she was going to the back of the house to

get the grandfather, and fled to her boyfriend at his grandparents’ house without the

grandparents’ knowledge. Sharpe called the sheriff’s office for help in finding D, and the next

2 morning the boyfriend’s grandmother took D to the sheriff’s office. While there, D reportedly

yelled at Sharpe, “I hate you, I will do any and everything I can to get away from you.” She was

upset when she was forbidden to see her boyfriend.

Kathy Sievers interviewed D after the October 5 incident while working as a

Burnet County Sheriff’s Investigator. Sievers testified that the boyfriend’s grandmother brought

D in because she claimed Sharpe had punched, hit, and kicked her, knocked her down, and sat on

her. But Sievers saw no marks on D consistent with that claim. She said that, when D yelled at

Sharpe in the office, he responded calmly at first, raising his voice to try to be heard. Sievers

testified that D’s mother denied the complainant’s allegation that she had seen Sharpe strangle

the mother; the mother described the complainant as a “drama queen.” The investigator testified,

however, that the pictures from after the October 19 incident did not reflect appropriate

disciplinary action by a parent against a fifteen-year-old girl.

On October 19, 2016, D went to school early for basketball practice, took the

PSAT, had tutorials over her lunch period instead of eating, then had basketball practice after

school until about 6:30 or 7 p.m. Sharpe picked her up from school, they got food at Sonic, and

they went home. She sat on the living room floor to watch television and eat. Sharpe told her to

change the channel, but she did not like his programming choices. He told her again to change

the channel, and she tossed the remote when he asked for it—she and Sharpe differed only on

whether she tossed it to him or out in front of herself; she admitted that tossing the remote was a

bit “snotty” and “defiant” with a little “teenage attitude.” He yelled at her to stop eating and to

go to bed. As she tried to take another bite, he shoved her hamburger in her face and then into

her hair as she turned her face. She testified that she then tried to go to her room, but he testified

that she continued to defy him by trying to get food from the kitchen. D testified that Sharpe

3 grabbed her by the throat such that she could barely breathe. She pushed his arm away and made

what she testified was a “snotty” comment to get away from him.

D went to her bed, and Sharpe told her to get up and put her arms around a pole in

the middle of the room; she did not comply because she did not want to get hit. He told her he

was going to hit her three times and that, if she moved, she would get three more. She tried to

escape, but was trapped. She testified that Sharpe sometimes hit her with the belt and buckle on

her backside, her arms, legs, chest, feet, and hands. She said she was on her back, curled into a

ball with her feet up trying to kick him away. She asked him to stop, but he told her he was

doing it out of love not anger; D testified, however, that his whole body was tense and almost

shaking and his face was red. She said, “It was rage.” She asked him to look in the mirror and

see if he looked like love or rage; he stopped for a second, then continued to yell at her, tried to

get her to stand at the pole, and kept trying to hit her. Eventually, he picked her up and tossed

her on her back and she curled into a defensive posture on her back. At the time, she weighed

110 pounds. Sharpe was a firefighter. She estimated that the spanking took about an hour and

estimated that he hit her between thirty and forty times; she said that the welts and red marks

from some of the swats dissipated by the next day when pictures were taken. She said the

spanking hurt a lot.

D testified that Sharpe then wrapped her finger because he thought he might have

broken it and gave her ice for her legs. He told her to go to bed, then told her to come and watch

a debate on television with him. She watched it for about an hour and a half then went to bed

without having eaten more. After she went to bed, he came and got into bed with her, which did

not make her feel better.

4 D testified that Sharpe took her to school the next morning and told her not to tell

anyone. A friend saw a bruise on her wrist then took her into the locker room, made her strip,

took pictures of the marks on her body, then made her go to the counselor’s office. She

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