Joslin v. State

722 S.W.2d 725, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 1, 1986
Docket05-85-01222-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 722 S.W.2d 725 (Joslin 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
Joslin v. State, 722 S.W.2d 725, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9398 (Tex. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

DEVANY, Justice.

Wallis Joslin, Jr., appeals his conviction for murder. The case was tried before a jury and appellant was sentenced to life imprisonment and fined $10,000. Appellant presents six points of error complaining *727 that the circumstantial evidence was insufficient and that the court should not have submitted jury instructions at the punishment phase of the trial regarding eligibility for parole and good time credit. Because we disagree with appellant’s contentions, we affirm the judgment of conviction.

THE INSUFFICIENCY QUESTION

In his first point of error, appellant complains that the evidence is insufficient to support a verdict of guilty. The evidence presented by the prosecution was quite detailed. On March 31, 1985, the victim, twenty-nine-year-old Darla Taylor, was preparing omelettes for dinner with her father. Needing more eggs and bacon, she went to the local Safeway store, which was just two minutes away. She told her father where she was going and left her home at about 6:35 p.m. She drove a new maroon Lincoln Town car that belonged to her father.

At about 7:00 p.m., Darla Taylor was seen in the Safeway store near her home by a Mr. Burleson. He subsequently remembered her after a picture of her appeared in a newspaper account of her murder. While Mr. Burleson was in the store, his wife was waiting outside in their brand-new Chrysler New Yorker. While she was waiting for her husband, Mrs. Burleson observed the appellant standing outside the Safeway store, “pacing back and forth ... like a caged animal.” Appellant was watching people inside the store. As each person left, appellant watched. He did not go into the store during the entire twenty minutes that Mrs. Burleson was watching him. At one point, appellant approached Mrs. Burleson’s car, and she “got scared ... locked the car and turned on the ignition.” Appellant then stared at her, turned his back, and walked away. When Mr. Burleson returned to the car, she said to him, “He [appellant] scared me. He doesn’t go into the store, and he keeps looking at people, Joe. I’m afraid he’s going to rob somebody. That man is fixing to hurt somebody or something.” Appellant was wearing a pair of jeans, tennis shoes, a cloth jacket, and a black cap. Mr. and Mrs. Burleson later reported this story to the police and each identified appellant from a photographic lineup.

Darla Taylor did not return home from the Safeway store. The sun set at 6:47 p.m. on March 31, making it totally dark by 7:45 p.m. Shortly before dark, the appellant was seen driving a maroon Lincoln Town Car with tinted windows identical to the one driven by Darla Taylor. He drove in and later out of the Willow Tree apartment complex where he lived, and waved at his friend Sherry Riddle. Kenneth Riddle, the brother of Sherry Riddle, also saw the maroon Lincoln Town car parked directly outside appellant’s apartment for a few minutes at about the same time. The testimony revealed that no other car of this type had ever been parked in front of appellant’s apartment before. After the car left the complex, it was not seen again until it was found burning in the parking lot of the Tree Top Apartments, which were very close to the Willow Tree Apartments where appellant and the Riddles lived. The car was found at 2:46 a.m., about six or seven hours later burning from the inside. No personal items of any kind were found inside the car except a sack of groceries containing two bottles of Coca Cola, a carton of Lucerne eggs, which is a Safeway brand, and some bacon. Appellant did not return home to the apartment where he lived with his sister and brother-in-law until 1:30 a.m., just prior to the discovery of the car burning.

Earlier during the day of the murder, appellant’s brother-in-law had discovered his .22 caliber pistol, which he kept in a camouflaged holster, was missing. Appellant knew where the pistol was kept. The camouflaged holster was later found in the wooded area between the Tree Top and Willow Tree Apartments. A butane cigarette lighter, similar to the one used by the appellant, was also found in the wooded area. On April 5,1985 Darla Taylor’s body was found in a wheat field eight to eleven minutes driving time away from the Safeway store where she was last seen alive. *728 She had been shot once in the chest and once in the head. The blood stains, gunshot residue, and other medical evidence indicated that she had first been shot in the chest from a distance of six to twelve inches, had run from her assailant for some 240 yards, and had then been shot in the head from a distance of three to four feet. Two bullet fragments were recovered from Darla Taylor’s body. No other physical injuries were apparent.

Testimony revealed that after the news of the murder appeared, appellant was smoking marijuana and watching the news with friends. According to Sherry Riddle, he was cheerful and talkative until a news story about the murder came on television. She said that everyone else was talking about the murder, but appellant suddenly grew pale and quiet and had nothing to say.

Appellant was arrested on April 8, 1985 at 9:20 p.m. After being tipped off by appellant’s brother-in-law, the police found appellant hiding in a built-in clothes hamper of a vacant apartment that was adjacent to the apartment where appellant lived with his sister and brother-in-law. Appellant had cut a hole in the wall of a bedroom closet in order to gain access to the vacant apartment.

Earlier in the evening of the arrest, appellant’s brother-in-law had talked to appellant through the wall and tried to convince him to give himself up. Appellant told his brother-in-law that he was too scared of the police to turn himself in. Appellant’s brother-in-law told him that the police believed appellant was armed and dangerous. Appellant asked his brother-in-law to get him some women’s clothes so he could disguise himself and escape. Appellant’s brother-in-law denied the request and then phoned the police to inform them of appellant’s whereabouts.

When appellant was arrested, the police found an empty package of Saratoga cigarettes in the trash at the vacant apartment. Darla Taylor’s mother, who smoked Sarato-gas, often kept a package of Saratoga cir-garettes in the Lincoln Town Car.

The police later searched the apartment where appellant had lived with his sister and brother-in-law. In the living-room desk where appellant kept some of his personal belongings, the police found a box of cartridges containing copper-coated .22 caliber bullets. The appellant’s brother-in-law had mixed two different kinds of bullets in the box. The box contained twenty-seven hollow-point bullets and fifteen round-nosed lead bullets. Among the hollow-point bullets in the box were four distinct elemental groups. From these four groups, one group matched one bullet fragment found in Darla Taylor’s body and another group matched the other bullet found in her body. The expert witness testified that “it would be very unlikely that you could ... find another box of ammunition that had those two [different elemental] compositions in it.” The expert explained that whenever his laboratory conducts a lead analysis the results are listed in the FBI computer. He testified that the computer contained between 7,500 and 8,000 listings. The bullets taken from Darla Taylor’s body matched none of the other listings contained in the FBI’s computer.

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Bluebook (online)
722 S.W.2d 725, 1986 Tex. App. LEXIS 9398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joslin-v-state-texapp-1986.