John Franklin Armstrong v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 22, 2003
Docket03-02-00211-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
John Franklin Armstrong v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-02-00211-CR

John Franklin Armstrong, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF COMAL COUNTY, 22ND JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. CR2002-009, HONORABLE FRED A. MOORE, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


Appellant John Franklin Armstrong was charged with the offenses of aggravated sexual assault (two counts) and aggravated kidnapping. A jury acquitted appellant of the aggravated sexual assault charges but found him guilty of aggravated kidnapping and assessed punishment at ten years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, both of which were probated. By four points of error, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction and complains of the trial court's admission of extraneous offense evidence. We overrule the points of error and affirm the conviction.



BACKGROUND

Appellant and the complainant, Janet Kay Armstrong, married in 1982. The couple had two daughters together, both teenagers at the time of trial. In August 2001, Janet filed for divorce and appellant moved out of their home. He initially moved in with his mother in Dickinson County, but later moved to a resort RV park in Comal County to be closer to his daughters; there he resided in a tent. Appellant also hoped to convince Janet to consider a reconciliation.

About a month after he moved out, appellant returned to the couple's home while Janet and their daughters were away and took Janet's wedding dress and some of her jewelry. Although he returned the items a few days later, Janet changed the locks on the doors to the house following the incident.

On October 3, Janet agreed to meet appellant at the RV park to discuss the divorce and arrange for appellant's visits with his daughters. Janet arrived at the park at about 8:30 p.m. Janet testified at trial that when she arrived, she and appellant initially sat outside at a picnic table and moved inside the tent shortly afterwards to flee from bugs. Appellant contended that Janet immediately went into the tent upon her arrival. According to Janet, appellant tried to persuade her not to follow through with the divorce, as he had on several previous occasions. When Janet informed appellant that she would not change her mind about the divorce, he became agitated. He then pulled out a gun from behind him, "unholstered it," "chambered a round," and told Janet that "he guesse[d] the children were going to be orphans." When Janet asked appellant if he was going to kill her, he responded, "If I can't have you no one else will." Janet tried to leave, but appellant grabbed her by her arms and threw her on the ground of the tent. He then sat on her abdomen and pinned one arm behind Janet's head and refused to let her up. Meanwhile, appellant's gun was on the nearby sleeping bag, an arm's length away. Janet shouted at appellant and demanded that he let her go, but to no avail. When Janet asked appellant what he wanted from her, he stated that he "needed to have sex with [Janet] one more time to have closure to the relationship, and he told [her] he would let [her] up if [she] would agree to that." When she refused, he slammed her down, causing her to hit her head on a rock underneath the tent. Appellant eventually allowed Janet to get up, although he continued to ask her for sex. She again refused and left the tent. At that point, appellant told Janet that she "better watch over [her] shoulder every minute of every day." Afraid of what appellant meant by his statement, Janet finally agreed to have sex with appellant. After the sexual encounter was over, appellant asked Janet for her panties, explaining that he wanted her "scent." She refused. She then returned home. Janet did not report the incident to anyone that night.

The following morning, as Janet arrived at work, she received a phone call from the owner of the landscaping service that she had employed to fix a lawn mower at her house. According to the owner, the lawn mower repairman who had been at Janet's house saw a man breaking into the house. The owner thought it might be appellant. Janet called the police and returned to her house. When she arrived, Comal County Sheriff's Deputy John Pruess was already there. Pruess had encountered appellant as he left the house. According to testimony at trial, appellant had "jimmied" the back door open to enter the house. Although appellant claimed that he only intended to pick up a few of his things, the only item Pruess found in appellant's possession were the panties that Janet had worn the night before. Nothing else was missing from the house. Pruess also found a gun inside of an overnight bag in the back seat of appellant's car. Appellant was arrested as a result of the break-in, and Janet applied for a protective order that same day, but she still did not report the events of the previous night to the police or anyone else.

It was not until October 12, nine days after the alleged sexual assault and kidnapping, that Janet first reported the events of October 3 to the police. Although the accounts differed during trial, Janet testified that on October 12, she arrived at work, parked her car in the parking garage, and as she exited her car, she saw appellant approaching her with a gun at his side. When he reached Janet's car, he pulled the slide back on the gun and pointed it into Janet's abdomen. Appellant told Janet to get in the car, that he "wouldn't be here after today," and he demanded sex from her. Just then, the building engineer, Pablo Galvan, Jr., walked into the garage, and Janet mouthed the word "help" to him. When appellant realized that someone was behind him, he swung around and pointed the gun at Galvan. Janet used this opportunity to try to get away, but when she did, appellant hit her at least once on the head with the gun. (Janet testified that she was hit three or four times; appellant stated he only hit her once.) Janet fell to the ground, began screaming, and appellant fled. Eventually, a woman approached Janet and helped her into the building. When San Antonio police officer Bruce Thomas Wilson arrived and interviewed Janet about the incident, he asked her if appellant had ever done anything like this before. Janet then recounted the events that took place in the tent on the night of October 3. Because the police officer was a San Antonio police officer and the October 3 incident took place in Comal County, the police officer only obtained the basic facts and then notified Comal County. Janet also secured a final protective order, barring appellant from having any contact whatsoever with Janet or their daughters.

Appellant was charged with two counts of aggravated sexual assault and one count of aggravated kidnapping based on the October 3 incident. A jury acquitted appellant of the aggravated sexual assault charges and convicted him for aggravated kidnapping. The jury assessed punishment at ten years' imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, both of which were probated.



DISCUSSION

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