Louis v. State

329 S.W.3d 260, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9854, 2010 WL 5099593
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 2010
Docket06-09-00127-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 329 S.W.3d 260 (Louis 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
Louis v. State, 329 S.W.3d 260, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9854, 2010 WL 5099593 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*263 OPINION

Opinion by

Justice MOSELEY.

This is an appeal by Corey Don Louis of his Fannin County jury conviction for capital murder in the death of two-year-old Teddy Lawrence. 1

Because there was legally insufficient evidence that Louis intentionally or knowingly caused the death of the child, we reverse the capital murder conviction and acquit him of that charge. Due to jury charge error, we remand the case to the trial court for trial on the lesser-included offenses included in the jury charge.

I. Facts of the Case

The story of the death of the child had its genesis when Teddy and his four-year-old sister, Beth, rose during the night and made a very big mess in the kitchen of their home, spreading food (including mustard), dog food, and household chemicals on the floor. This was not the first time the two children had performed these acts of domestic vandalism..

The children resided with their mother, Danielle Cuba, and her boyfriend, Louis, the appellant here. Also living in the house were Louis’ son, John (fourteen at the time), and Cuba’s infant son. At the time of the incident here, Louis’ six-year-old daughter, Meg, was staying with them during spring break.

On the Saturday of Teddy’s death, Cuba arose quite early in the morning, being the first of the adults to awake. Upon discovering the mess the children had made during the night, she woke up Louis and asked him to deal with the children as she commenced cleaning. Although Cuba did not say she explicitly told Louis to discipline or beat the children because of their offense, there seemed to be a tacit understanding to that effect. Thus began what can only be described as a horrendous and excessive discipline session to punish the two children for their misconduct.

Louis engaged in three rounds of beatings of the children with a belt, primarily on their buttocks. First, he whipped the children shortly after he and Cuba awoke. Cuba testified that at some point, Louis sat down next to her, then said he was not yet tired, and so he got up and resumed his beatings. Louis then left for work, instructing that the children were to stand up facing a wall until he returned. However, having apparently forgotten something he expected to take, Louis returned inside the house to discover that Teddy was not standing and facing the hallway wall as instructed (the child was lying on the floor and appeared to be asleep). Seeing that Teddy was not standing against the wall as instructed, Louis whipped Teddy a third time. According to the testimony of the child, Meg, during this last beating, Louis said, “You should have been sleep [sic] when you was [sic] making that big mess. Don’t try to be sleep [sic] now.” When Louis finally did leave for work, he instructed Cuba to make the children continue standing and facing the wall until he returned, when he would resume beating them.

Meg also described some of Louis’ beatings of the children as “hard” and some as “soft.” Her description of the beatings corroborated Louis’ own description of holding the children by an arm and beating them on their posteriors with a belt. Meg, further testified that Louis called them very coarse names during this time and said, “I’m [not] going to stop whipping you until I go to work.” Meg said that Teddy and Beth both had difficulty staying on their feet and kept falling down.

*264 After Louis left for work, Teddy continued to be unable to stand. At some point, he hit his head; there is conflicting evidence on how this happened. Meg said that the boy was crying and trying to hold on to Cuba’s leg; in a move to disengage the child, she flung the boy away, causing him to hit his head “hard.” John, Louis’ fourteen-year-old son, said that when Cuba whipped Teddy, the boy fell back and hit his head on a board on the floor. Cuba, for her part, admitted kicking the child in the head. Meg also said that Cuba held a hot curling iron next to Teddy’s skin, but Cuba denied having done this and the medical examiner found no evidence of burns on Teddy’s skin.

Cuba’s disciplinary acts culminated in tying Teddy’s wrists to a clothes rod and hanging the boy in a closet when he was unable to remain standing. Meg said that Teddy’s feet struggled to find a stool in the closet and that he kicked about while trying to get his feet on the stool. Cuba initially denied hanging him so high his feet did not touch the floor, but eventually she conceded that he might have been in such a position. Cuba maintained that she only left the boy hanging in the closet for five minutes at most, then let him down and put him to bed and that Teddy was still breathing when she put him to bed. Cuba also admitted that although Teddy suffered from asthma and was supposed to receive treatments for the malady twice per day, she had not given him his medication or treatment the two days prior to the incident date. After Cuba removed Teddy from the closet, she put the children to bed and laid down herself. Sometime around 8:30 that morning, Cuba awoke and found Teddy stiff in bed — rigor mortis had set in. She called Louis at work, then called 9-1-1. When emergency medical technicians (EMT) arrived, they determined that the child was already dead and took his body to the local (Bonham) hospital. When one EMT heard Cuba say she thought the children may have ingested some “blue stuff,” he suggested they return to the house for the rest of the children as a precaution against possible poisoning. By this point, Louis had returned from his job in Sherman back to the house in Bonham, where he was met by a Bon-ham police officer, who refused to allow Louis in the house.

In a video-recorded statement to law enforcement, although Louis first maintained that he had only spanked the children with his hand, he later admitted during the interview that he had employed a belt in the beatings. Nevertheless, he was adamant he did not beat the children sufficiently hard to cause the extensive subcutaneous hemorrhaging suffered by Teddy and the injuries (later diagnosed as rhab-domyolysis 2 ) presented by Beth’s wounds.

At the hospital, Louis told a Child Protective Services (CPS) investigator, “God knows we didn’t do nothing [sic] wrong.” The investigator, Dana Mangess, said she attributed this statement to a grieving parent. He was heard telling another CPS supervisor there was no foul play involved and that God does not make mistakes. Later in the day, Louis consented to a search of the home and cooperated with police. Two officers did remark they *265 thought Louis had exhibited nervousness when they examined a belt found at the residence. 3 In the days after the death, Louis remarked to a co-worker that he had spanked the child and asked the co-worker, “[Y]ou don’t think that killed him?”

CPS investigators and case agents arrived at the hospital. In following the agency’s protocol when there has been a child’s death in a home, they removed the remaining children to foster care. They discovered that Beth was in significant pain in her buttocks area; due to that pain, she could not sit, even to use the toilet.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
329 S.W.3d 260, 2010 Tex. App. LEXIS 9854, 2010 WL 5099593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louis-v-state-texapp-2010.