Linder v. State

828 S.W.2d 290, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 859, 1992 WL 63144
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 1992
Docket01-90-00988-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 828 S.W.2d 290 (Linder 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
Linder v. State, 828 S.W.2d 290, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 859, 1992 WL 63144 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION ON MOTION FOR REHEARING

DUGGAN, Justice.

Our opinion issued in this cause on February 13, 1992. Appellant has called our attention to our inadvertent failure to address one subpoint of his sixth point of error that was not disposed of by the court of criminal appeals’ denial of relief in his habeas corpus proceeding. Accordingly, we grant the motion, withdraw our opinion dated February 13,1992, and substitute the following therefor.

Appellant was convicted by a jury on two counts of burglary of a habitation with intent to commit sexual assault. The jury assessed his punishment, enhanced by a prior conviction for burglary of a habitation with the intent to commit rape, at imprisonment for life and a $5,000 fine on each count. This appeal was taken after the Court of Criminal Appeals granted appellant an out-of-time appeal. We affirm. Factual Background, Count I

Rhonda Hollaway was at her home in LaPorte with her husband and four-year-old son on the afternoon of June 11, 1988. After dinner, she and her husband watched a baseball game, during which she fell asleep on the couch. While Hollaway was sleeping, her husband left the house to go to a nearby bar. He left the garage door open and the back door unlocked. Holla-way was awakened when someone picked her up from the couch. She could not see the man’s face because it was partially covered by black lace. She could tell, however, that the man was white, was wearing glasses, and had a moustache. He was tall and very strong.

When Hollaway screamed, the man told her to stop or he would have to hurt her. Hollaway’s son awakened and called out to her. The man carried Hollaway into her bedroom, and Hollaway’s son followed them. After he placed her on the bed, the man fondled and sucked her breasts, placed his finger in and licked her vagina, and had sexual intercourse with her. Hollaway did not resist for fear that the man would hurt her young son. The man then stood up to leave. Hollaway’s son was standing beside her, touching her arm and calling out to her.

Hollaway heard the man open and then close a dresser drawer. Then she heard a door shut. Thinking that the man had left the house, she got up, took her son to his bedroom, and dialed 911. Shortly afterward, the police arrived. One officer testified that Hollaway appeared to be in shock. When she returned to her bedroom to put on her clothes, Hollaway saw a piece of her lingerie on the dresser and realized that the man had used it to cover his face. Although she was able to give the police a description of her attacker, Hollaway was unable to identify him from the photo spreads developed by the LaPorte police.

The complainant, her husband, and her son stayed with her in-laws, her husband’s parents, for approximately one and one-half to two months after the incident. They then returned to their home.

Factual Background, Count II

On September 25, 1988, Hollaway was working outside and in her garage. After her husband left the house, she went inside, leaving the garage door open. She was sitting at her kitchen table, talking to a friend on the telephone, when her back *293 door opened and appellant entered the house. Hollaway immediately recognized appellant as her attacker. However, when the man asked, “Do you know who I am?” she replied that she did not because she was afraid he would kill her if he knew she recognized him. Appellant walked past Hollaway, looked into the living room where Hollaway’s son was watching television, and then looked down the hallway. Hollaway dropped the phone and ran out through the garage to the driveway screaming.

Appellant followed Hollaway through the garage, but, once she had gotten outside and had run for some distance, she turned around and saw that he had gotten on a motorcycle that had been parked in the alley behind her home. Hollaway was able to get part of appellant’s license plate number as he was driving away. After returning to check on her son, Hollaway dialed 911 and reported the incident to the police. She gave them a description of appellant and the partial license plate number. She identified the intruder as the same man who had raped her on June 11.

The LaPorte police checked possible combinations on the license plate number. The only possibility they found was one belonging to a 1980 Suzuki motorcycle registered to appellant. On September 27, Hollaway identified appellant from a photo spread. Appellant was arrested that same day. The next day, the police obtained permission from appellant’s wife to search appellant’s residence and photograph his motorcycle. Although appellant had shaved his moustache, Hollaway immediately picked him out of a line-up; she also identified his motorcycle from the photograph taken by the police.

Over objection at trial, 1 Officer Hueka-bee of the LaPorte police testified that during the search, appellant’s wife said that appellant had left home on his motorcycle around noon on September 25 and had returned around 4:30. She knew something was wrong because he was acting strange and immediately upon returning he took a shower. She could not remember where her husband had been on June 11. Every time she had asked her husband where he had been that day he became very angry. Officer Huckabee further testified that appellant’s wife appeared to be frightened and stated that she was afraid of appellant.

The extraneous offense

At trial, the following evidence of an extraneous offense was admitted. On June 6, 1981, appellant entered Martha Wild’s home and sexually assaulted her. Wild, who was seven months pregnant with twins at the time, had been sunbathing on her back patio and had gone inside. She was in her bedroom, brushing her hair when she looked up and saw the appellant standing in the doorway of her bedroom. When appellant grabbed her, Wild struggled to get away. He told her if she did not settle down he would kill her. He then threw her on the bed, fondled and sucked her breasts, placed his finger in her vagina and licked her vagina. However, when he attempted to penetrate her vaginally, Wild begged him not to hurt her babies. Appellant then forced Wild to perform oral sex. After he achieved orgasm by masturbating, he left the house by the back door. Wild called the police. Upon returning to her bedroom after the police arrived, Wild discovered that a black camisole had been removed from one of her dresser drawers and was lying on the floor.

When appellant left Wild’s house, he climbed her back fence, walked to his 1980 Suzuki motorcycle, got on the cycle, and drove away. These actions were observed by Pasadena Police Officer Gibson who, a short time earlier, had noticed the cycle parked in the street. Gibson followed appellant who was forced to stop and then arrested.

In his first point of error, appellant contends that, under the charge as given the jury, the evidence on count II is insufficient to establish that he entered Hollaway’s *294 habitation with the intent to commit sexual assault. The evidence on count II showed only that appellant walked into Hollaway’s kitchen, asked if she knew who he was, looked around, and fled when Hollaway ran outside screaming.

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Bluebook (online)
828 S.W.2d 290, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 859, 1992 WL 63144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/linder-v-state-texapp-1992.