Jimmy Dee Wilson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 3, 2005
Docket06-04-00100-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmy Dee Wilson v. State (Jimmy Dee Wilson 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.

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Jimmy Dee Wilson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana


______________________________


No. 06-04-00100-CR



JIMMY DEE WILSON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee




On Appeal from the 8th Judicial District Court

Hopkins County, Texas

Trial Court No. 0317304





Before Morriss, C.J., Ross and Carter, JJ.

Opinion by Justice Carter



O P I N I O N


            Jimmy Dee Wilson was convicted of murder for killing Butch Monday, the husband of the woman with whom Wilson had been having an affair for at least five years. Wilson was sentenced to sixty years' imprisonment. On appeal, he complains of various statements made by the State during closing arguments and the trial court's rulings on Wilson's objections to such statements; failure of the court to exclude witness testimony; the sufficiency of the evidence; the trial court's charge to the jury; and the admission of evidence of bad acts or extraneous offenses. We affirm.

I.         FACTUAL BACKGROUND

            Wilson had been having an affair with Terri Monday for, in his estimation, seven years; in hers, five. Terri was experiencing problems with her husband, Butch, whom Terri said, "wasn't there emotionally." At first, Wilson and Terri tried to keep their affair secret from Butch, but within a year or two, he became aware of it; from that point, Wilson and Terri did not attempt to keep their relationship secret from Butch, and there were numerous instances of cross words and aggressive behavior between Wilson and Butch. Terri also testified that Wilson, on several occasions, talked about what their life would be like were Butch not "in the picture." There was some evidence Wilson coveted Butch's income-generating chicken houses. Terri also said Wilson wanted a job driving a truck for Terri's father's company.

            On August 25, 2003, Terri was at Wilson's home in Hopkins County. As he had many times in the past, Butch arrived and parked his truck in front of Wilson's house, and Terri went out to talk to Butch. Butch had been drinking beer (his autopsy showed a blood alcohol content of 0.12). Although Terri testified explicitly that Butch had never struck her or been physically abusive, on this date, Butch grabbed her, threw her to the ground, kicked her, slapped her, called her a whore, and pushed her, and Terri struck her eye on the mirror of her car.

            Observing this, Wilson made a 9-1-1 call to local law enforcement. He had made calls to report Butch as trespassing on previous occasions. According to Wilson, he stood in front of a window watching Butch assault Terri. Wilson said he feared for his safety and that of Terri, and held a shotgun. Terri testified that, despite Butch's pushing and kicking her, and abusive language toward her, she did not fear for her safety. Butch, still outside Wilson's house, approached a window to Wilson's bedroom, through which Wilson was watching Butch. Wilson testified Butch came to the window and slapped the window or frame, and shouted "Boo." Wilson claimed the shotgun accidentally discharged when Butch startled him. Butch was found on the ground beneath the window in a large pool of blood. Wilson's shotgun discharged through the window and screen, and caused a fatal wound in Butch's neck.

II.       STATE'S ARGUMENT—REQUIREMENTS OF SUDDEN PASSION

            In Wilson's first point of error, he complains the trial court erred in failing to sustain an objection Wilson made to the State's closing argument at the punishment stage of Wilson's trial. Wilson claims that, because of such alleged error, the State was able to misstate the law on the issue of sudden passion. Wilson also claims this purported misstatement by the State was contrary to the law set forth in the trial court's charge. Regarding his claimed punishment defense of sudden passion, the jury was required to find, by a preponderance of the evidence, whether Wilson killed Butch while under a "passion directly caused by and arising out of provocation" from Butch or another acting with him, and said passion arose "at the time of the offense and [was] not solely the result of former provocation." See Tex. Pen. Code Ann. § 19.02(a)(2) (Vernon 2003).

            During the State's closing argument at punishment, the State drew objections by saying that, in considering the issue of whether Wilson had acted under "sudden passion," such a finding must be based on intentional or knowing acts, and not merely accidental.

            In Wilson's brief, after providing background information on the availability of the sudden passion issue as mitigation at the punishment phase, he asserts, "[t]he argument was incorrect and a statement of law contrary to the court's charge which is recognized as error." Wilson provides no authority or analysis for this point.

            Wilson appears to complain the State misstated the law and the court's charge by arguing that any finding of sudden passion had to be found by the jury to be intentional or knowing, and could not be accidental. As the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has stated, with "sudden passion as a punishment issue, the defendant's intent to kill has already been affirmatively resolved by the jury and is no longer relevant. Since the defendant killed intentionally, the issue at punishment is whether he did so in sudden passion." Trevino v. State, 100 S.W.3d 232, 240 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003).

            The portion of the court's charge relative to this issue contained the definitions of "adequate cause" and "sudden passion" provided in the Texas Penal Code.

            As in Trevino, when Wilson was convicted of murder, the issue of his intent to kill Butch was finally resolved. The jury, having already found the defendant acted intentionally and knowingly, that issue was resolved and, therefore, it was irrelevant at the punishment stage. Id. However, there was no objection the argument was irrelevant. The objection was "that is a misstatement of the law . . . and that there is nothing in the charge that requires an intentional and knowing act when acting in sudden passion." During the proceeding, the State correctly stated that sudden passion is only submitted to a jury "because there's a finding that it was intentional and knowing." The jury had resolved the matter of intent at the guilt/innocence phase; there was no matter of intent before it during the punishment phase.

            Even if the argument was irrelevant and if a proper objection had accompanied the argument, it could not be harmful to Wilson because the issue of Wilson's acting intentionally and knowingly was already established. See id.; see also Tex. R. App. P. 44.2.

III.      

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