Linda Marie Coolbaugh v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 27, 2023
Docket03-22-00318-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Linda Marie Coolbaugh v. the State of Texas (Linda Marie Coolbaugh v. the State of Texas) 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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Linda Marie Coolbaugh v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-22-00318-CR

Linda Marie Coolbaugh, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 1 OF COMAL COUNTY NO. 2017CR2052, THE HONORABLE RANDAL C. GRAY, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Linda Marie Coolbaugh of the misdemeanor offense of

driving while intoxicated. See Tex. Penal Code § 49.04(b). Punishment was before the district

court, which sentenced Coolbaugh to 180 days in jail but suspended imposition of the sentence

and placed her on community supervision for ten months. In her sole issue on appeal,

Coolbaugh contends that the trial court erred in refusing to instruct the jury on her defense of

necessity. On this record and on these facts, we conclude that Coolbaugh was entitled to the

instruction and suffered some harm from its absence from the jury charge. Accordingly, we will

reverse the judgment of conviction and remand for a new trial.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that at approximately 3:30 a.m. on April 22, 2017, a 911

caller reported a vehicle on southbound I-35 in Comal County that was failing to maintain a single lane of traffic. Officers with the New Braunfels Police Department initiated a traffic stop

on the vehicle and began investigating the vehicle’s driver and sole occupant, later identified as

Coolbaugh, for driving while intoxicated. The police stopped Coolbaugh south of New

Braunfels, and they learned that she had been coming from Austin.

Officer Terry Flugrath testified that during the investigation, he asked Coolbaugh

“what took place that night,” and Coolbaugh told him that she had gone out to a club with her

boyfriend. She admitted that she had been drinking while they were out. When they returned

home later that night, she went to bed, but her boyfriend went through her phone and “found an

Instagram message from another male.” “At that point he became physical, so she needed to get

in her vehicle and get out of there.” On cross-examination, Flugrath testified to more details that

Coolbaugh had relayed to him regarding the assault: the boyfriend had choked her, pulled her out

of bed, and pulled her by her hair. Flugrath also testified that Coolbaugh appeared upset and was

crying during the investigation and that he observed that she had blood in one of her eyes and

bruising on one of her cheeks. Copies of photographs showing those injuries were admitted into

evidence. Also, in a video recording of the traffic stop taken from Flugrath’s patrol car dash

camera, which was admitted into evidence, Coolbaugh can be heard crying and describing

the assault.

After conducting field sobriety tests on Coolbaugh, Officer Flugrath arrested her

for driving while intoxicated and transported her to the Comal County Jail, where Coolbaugh

provided a breath sample for testing. The test, which a forensic scientist testified “involve[d]

two analytical results for the subject,” showed that Coolbaugh’s blood-alcohol level was 0.123

and .119 grams of alcohol for 210 liters of breath. The legal limit was .08 grams.

2 Coolbaugh testified in her defense. Coolbaugh recounted that she lived in Schertz

and that on the night of the incident, she was dating a man who lived in South Austin, close to

I-35 and “one exit off of Riverside.” She testified that after a night of drinking, she and her

boyfriend arrived at his house, where she immediately fell asleep on his bed. The next thing she

remembered, she was awakened by her boyfriend choking her and grabbing her by the back of

her hair. She explained, “I was laying in the bed face down, and he had grabbed my hair and

pulled me back, and then he started choking me.” Coolbaugh woke up confused by the assault

and did not know what time it was or for how long she had been asleep. She recalled losing her

breath as her boyfriend continued choking her and screaming at her about a message on her

phone from another man. After her boyfriend stopped choking her, Coolbaugh tried to catch her

breath while he “grabbed [her] shoes and keys on the ground, and he grabbed [her] hair and he

dragged [her] out of the house and just kept hitting [her] with shoes and just kept dragging [her]

to the sidewalk.” She added, “He had the back of my hair. He just kept screaming at me, and I

kept telling him he was hurting me and he wouldn’t stop.” The boyfriend then hit Coolbaugh in

the face, and she “went down and blacked out.”

When she regained consciousness, Coolbaugh found herself laying on the street

and saw her boyfriend “sitting on the porch” of his house. Coolbaugh “thought that was her way

to get out,” so she grabbed her car keys, shoes, and phone, which her boyfriend had “thrown

down on the ground,” and “got in [her] car,” which was “parked right at the street where [she]

was laying.” When she got in the car, her boyfriend “came running back at [her], and he was

jumping on the car and hitting the windows really hard.” Coolbaugh “thought he was going to

break the windows, screaming at [her] that this wasn’t over, it’s not over till he says it’s over,

3 that he was coming for [her].” At that point, Coolbaugh “started the car and [she] backed up

really fast and went out.”

Coolbaugh testified that her phone was intact, but “the screen was cracked” and

“[i]t was very hard to use [her] phone” as she was driving. She “was trying to use it, but it was

cracked and [she] couldn’t push things correctly on the phone.” As she drove, she tried to use an

app on her phone to lock her credit cards, as she did not know if her boyfriend “had them or not,”

but the app “wasn’t working,” and she had not been able to use her phone at all during the drive.

When asked on cross-examination if she had made any calls on her phone, Coolbaugh testified,

“I couldn’t really use my phone. It was so cracked I couldn’t push any of the buttons.” She

added, “I’m not sure anybody would have answered my call at 3:00 in the morning.” Despite

being unable to use her phone, Coolbaugh was able to see incoming calls and texts on her phone,

and her boyfriend “was constantly calling” her “every time [she] tried to look at the phone.”

There were also “text messages coming through from him.”

Coolbaugh further testified that her goal while driving was “[t]o find somewhere

safe.” She “thought he was going to kill [her], so [she] didn’t know what else to do.” When

asked to identify the “safe spot” to where she was driving, Coolbaugh testified, “My house.”

She explained that she believed her home would be a safe place for her because it was in a gated

community and she had an alarm system there. Coolbaugh testified that she made no stops along

the way before she was stopped by the police. She did not know of any other safe places to stop

between South Austin and her home in Schertz at 3:30 in the morning and did not know

“anybody that lives in between those places.” Coolbaugh also testified that she began to feel

safe “[w]hen she started driving in the car and knowing [she] was headed home.” She explained,

4 I really wasn’t feeling safe just driving. I felt safe when I was going to be able to be home to be safe because he kept saying that he was coming after me, and so I didn’t know technically where he was at that point, if he was close by or anything on the highway.

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