Leroy P. Mitchell v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 2019
Docket01-18-00586-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Leroy P. Mitchell v. State (Leroy P. Mitchell 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
Leroy P. Mitchell v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 22, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00586-CR ——————————— LEROY PHILLIP MITCHELL, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 506th District Court Waller County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 15-04-15198

OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Leroy Phillip Mitchell, of murder1 and assessed

punishment at 55 years’ confinement. In two issues on appeal, appellant contends

1 See TEX. PENAL CODE § 19.02 that (1) the trial court abused its discretion when it allowed a State’s witness to

remain in the courtroom in violation of “The Rule” found in Texas Rule of Evidence

614 and (2) the evidence is legally insufficient to support the jury’s rejection of his

self-defense claim. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

On February 3, 2015, Tale Brisker was shot and killed in his Prairie View

apartment. At the time of the incident, several people lived in Brisker’s apartment,

including Devante Miller, William “Paco” Gongoria, and two individuals known as

“EO” and “Uncle Nick.” Aleshia Cooley, Brisker’s girlfriend, was visiting and

staying with Brisker at the time of the events. Appellant did not live in the apartment,

but he was “always there.” Miller admitted that he and Paco sold enough marihuana

out of the apartment “to live on.” The area was located in a “high-crime”

neighborhood, and the apartment had previously been robbed, so the occupants kept

a “house gun.” Brisker did not get along with his roommates, and he was described

by Miller as an “asshole” that “tried to big boy everybody, even though he was

younger.”

Cooley and Miller testified to the events surrounding Brisker’s murder, and

they each gave somewhat different versions of the event.

Cooley stated that she and Brisker intended to look for another apartment that

day because Brisker and his roommates’ “personalities weren’t mixing.” Cooley

2 claims that, on the morning of the murder, Brisker left her at the apartment to retrieve

shoes from his friend. While Brisker was gone, Cooley overheard Miller on the

phone calling Brisker a “show off” and saying that “he was going to have someone

come up there and make an example out of him.”

After Brisker returned to the apartment, Cooley claims that the two of them

left the apartment to go look for a new apartment. When Cooley and Brisker got into

their car, Brisker realized that he needed gas and his credit card to pay for it. Cooley

waited in the car while Brisker went back into the apartment to retrieve his credit

card. Cooley testified that, while waiting in the car and talking on the phone with

her brother, she heard a gunshot. She hung up the phone and then heard another

gunshot. Cooley jumped into the driver’s seat of the car because she was going to

drive away, but then decided to stay because Brisker was still in the apartment.

Cooley saw someone she did not know leave the apartment, then jog back in, and

then leave the apartment again. The person she saw met up with someone outside

and then ran away laughing. Several other people then came out of their apartments,

but Brisker did not.

The shooting itself was witnessed by Devante Miller, appellant’s friend and

Brisker’s roommate. Miller stated that, early that morning, he was sleeping on the

sofa when he awoke to the noise of Paco weighing marihuana in the kitchen. He

testified that Brisker came out of his room and confronted Paco about the noise,

3 which resulted in an argument. Afterwards, Miller went upstairs to continue

sleeping. Around noon, Miller came back downstairs, and appellant, who was

visiting, complained about Brisker slamming the front door. Appellant was annoyed

that he had to get up and close the front door after Brisker had slammed it.

A little after noon, both appellant and Miller were in the living area when

Miller heard a sound like the cocking of a gun coming from Brisker’s bedroom.

Appellant did not hear the sound of a gun cocking, and when Miller said something,

appellant responded that Brisker “ain’t about to do nothing.”

Miller testified that, when Brisker came out of his room, appellant confronted

him about slamming the door. Appellant said, “Hey man, you made me get up and

close the door after you slammed it,” to which Brisker responded, “Man, I didn’t

slam no door.” The argument became physical and “turned into wrestling.” Miller

testified that Brisker ended up on top of appellant and slammed appellant down three

times, “boom, boom, boom.” Brisker let appellant go and declared, “If he ain’t out

of this house by the time I get back, I’m shooting everybody in here.”

Miller testified that appellant then stood up, walked around the kitchen island,

picked up the house gun, aimed it at Brisker, and fired. The shot passed through

Brisker and hit Miller in the mouth. Miller ended up on the floor and began crawling

towards the kitchen. Miller heard another gunshot and saw that Brisker had been hit

in the stomach. Miller testified that he saw Brisker sliding on his back towards the

4 front door and that Brisker “told Paco that he couldn’t feel his legs.” Miller stated

that appellant fled the apartment after those two shots, but seconds later walked back

in and fatally shot Brisker at close range in the head.

A video on the exterior of the building corroborated Miller’s testimony and

showed appellant jogging out of the apartment, hesitating for a moment, then

walking back into the unit. During a police interview, appellant admitted to firing

three shots at Brisker, with the third shot to the head because Brisker “was moving.”

RULE OF EVIDENCE 614

In his first issue, appellant contends that “the Trial Court erred when it allowed

Texas Ranger J. Owles to remain in the courtroom during the testimony of [State’s

witness Devante] Miller,” in violation of Texas Rule of Evidence 614, known as

“The Rule,” which provides in part:

At a party’s request, the court must order witnesses excluded so that they cannot hear other witnesses’ testimony. Or the court may do so on its own. But this rule does not authorize excluding:

****

(c) a person whose presence a party shows to be essential to presenting the party’s claim or defense[.]

TEX. R. EVID. 614(c). The State responds that the trial court properly exempted

Ranger Owles from the Rule because his presence was essential to the State’s

presentation of its case.

5 Background

Here, the parties invoked The Rule before opening statements. At the first

break in the trial, during Cooley’s testimony, the State moved to exclude Ranger

Owles, from The Rule, arguing as follows:

The State would ask that Texas Ranger [J.] Owles be designated as our case agent for this particular case. We’ve worked with him extensively on this particular investigation. And we would ask him to be exempt from the Rule at least at a minimum for the next witness’s testimony, Devante Miller, because [J.] as the crime scene investigator is the one that spoke to the witnesses, the one that looked at all the crime scene evidence; and his understanding of what Devante testifies to will be critical in terms of his understanding of the evidence and the facts.

In addition, he’s also the one that interviewed the defendant and the defendant’s stories so I think he would need to have an understanding of that as well in relation to Devante’s testimony.

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