Jimmy Horace Oakley v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 24, 2006
Docket06-06-00015-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jimmy Horace Oakley v. State (Jimmy Horace Oakley 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
Jimmy Horace Oakley v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-06-00015-CR



JIMMY HORACE OAKLEY, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 188th Judicial District Court

Gregg County, Texas

Trial Court No. 33,128-A





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

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Carter



MEMORANDUM OPINION



A Gregg County jury found Jimmy Horace Oakley guilty of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and assessed punishment at seventy-five years' imprisonment. He challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction and contends the sentence was disproportionate to the offense. We affirm the trial court's judgment.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The jury heard the following evidence: On February 27, 2005, Oakley had been dating Carmilla Anderson for six to eight months. The two lived together in the home of Oakley's sister. Oakley picked up Anderson from her job early in the day, and the two went to visit Anderson's daughter, Amanda Bridges, with whom Oakley did not get along. Oakley, Anderson, Bridges, and Thomas Martin, Bridges' boyfriend, all seemed to be getting along extraordinarily well that day and decided to have a barbeque. Before the barbeque got underway, Oakley and Anderson went to their home, changed clothes, and drank a large amount of gin. The couple returned, and Martin began to grill the food.

Before the food was finished, however, Oakley became ill. Anderson brought him home, where Oakley passed out in bed. Anderson decided to return to her daughter's house, but was unable to relay that information to the sleeping Oakley.

Anderson was in the back bedroom playing video games with Bridges. Martin was in the bedroom as well. In the early morning hours, a friend and neighbor named Michael Balker joined them, and Anderson and Bridges continued to play video games. According to Anderson, Bridges, and Martin, someone began to pound loudly on the door a few minutes after Balker arrived. Martin went to the door and asked the person to identify himself. There was no response, and the person again pounded on the door and began to yell and curse.

Anderson recognized the voice as Oakley's and sensed that he was very angry. She testified that Oakley very rarely let her go anywhere alone and that, in a panic, she hid in a makeshift closet in the bedroom. Martin let Oakley into the house and directed him to the bedroom where he could talk to Bridges. In response to Oakley's question regarding her mother's whereabouts, Bridges lied and said that she had dropped off Anderson in nearby Easton to visit a friend. Oakley then demanded the keys to Anderson's car, and Bridges refused. It was then, according to Anderson, Bridges, and Martin, that Oakley pulled a gun from his pants and pointed it at Bridges.

From her hiding spot, Anderson was able to hear the confrontation and was able to see the gun in Oakley's hands. When she saw the gun, she lunged out of the closet in an effort to grab the gun. When she did, Oakley hit her with the gun and continued hitting her in the head with the gun several times and chastising her about lying to him. As he beat her with the gun and Anderson begged him to stop, the gun discharged at least twice, perhaps more. Bridges was able to hit Oakley twice with the small television with enough force to knock him through the bedroom door into the living room. When Bridges hit Oakley with the television the second time, Oakley grabbed Anderson by the throat, pulled her into the living room with him, and continued to beat her. Bridges then directed her mother to duck, and Bridges hit Oakley with a portable heater. This allowed Anderson to make it to the front door and unlock the locks. As Anderson held on to the doorknob, Oakley pulled her by the back of her shirt, and the door opened.

Longview police officers, who had responded to the report that shots had been fired, were already outside. Anderson, bloody and dazed, fell out of the door and crawled out of the house, followed shortly by Oakley. Anderson was taken to the emergency room, as was Oakley, who claimed to have suffered a seizure in the back of the squad car following his arrest at the scene. Anderson received forty-nine sutures in her head and testified that her vision and memory have been adversely affected by the beating. The doctor who attended to Anderson at the emergency room testified to the several lacerations and contusions, as well as the swelling Anderson suffered as a result of the beating.

Oakley testified at trial and communicated a different version of events. He claims that he returned to Bridges' house to remind Anderson that the two had to get up early for church on Sunday morning. He denied having pounded on the door and having brought a gun to the house. When Bridges told him that Anderson was in Easton, Oakley explained that he was "disappointed," apparently suspecting that Anderson was unfaithful. He claims only to have cursed at Bridges after he heard the news and that, at that point, someone attacked him from the closet. The assailant, according to Oakley, first kicked him and then hit him with an object. He was able to wrestle away the object, discovered it was a gun, and was mindful to make sure that it was fully discharged before continuing the altercation. He then continued to beat this unidentified person with the weapon he had taken. Throughout the incident, he maintained, the person made no sound from which he might have recognized that it was Anderson. He claimed that the darkness in the house and his near blindness in one eye prevented him from knowing who the assailant was until he saw Anderson as she stumbled out the door. When Oakley realized who had attacked him and whom he had beaten in the head with a gun, he testified, he was "hurt" that she would do such a thing to him. At the trial, Oakley claimed he acted only in self-defense. The jury was instructed on self-defense, but, in returning its guilty verdict, rejected Oakley's version of events.

II. LEGAL AND FACTUAL SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE

A. Applicable Law

1. Aggravated Assault

A person commits aggravated assault if the person commits assault as defined in Section 22.01 of the Texas Penal Code (1) and the person: (1) causes serious bodily injury to another, including the person's spouse; or (2) uses or exhibits a deadly weapon during the commission of the assault. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.02 (Vernon Supp. 2006). Here, Oakley was convicted of aggravated assault using or exhibiting a deadly weapon. See Tex. Penal Code Ann.

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