Mallard v. State

162 S.W.3d 325, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2005 WL 503198
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 3, 2005
Docket2-03-279-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 162 S.W.3d 325 (Mallard 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
Mallard v. State, 162 S.W.3d 325, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2005 WL 503198 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

SUE WALKER, Justice.

I. Introduction

Appellant Chante Jawan Mallard appeals her convictions for tampering with evidence and for murder. Mallard pleaded guilty to tampering with evidence but pleaded not guilty to murder. The jury found her guilty of both offenses and assessed her punishment at ten years’ confinement for tampering with evidence and fifty years’ confinement for murder. In five points, Mallard argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain her conviction for murder, that the trial court erred by defining transferred intent in the jury charge, that the trial court erred by charging the jury on concurrent causation, and that the trial court erred by overruling her motion for a mistrial based on the State’s alleged comment on her post-arrest silence. 1 We will affirm.

II. Factual Background

On October 25, 2001, in preparation for an evening at Joe’s Big Bamboo Club, Mallard and her friend Titilisee Fry 2 had a drink and split an ecstacy pill before smoking a marijuana joint on the way to the club. Mallard socialized, danced, smoked marijuana, and drank three or more drinks before leaving the club about 2:30 a.m. Mallard attempted to drive, but Fry could tell that Mallard was intoxicated; so, Fry drove. After they arrived at Fry’s house, Mallard decided to go home. She got in her car and drove away. Mallard’s statement, which was admitted into evidence, explained the events that followed.

*328 I drove my 1997 Chevrolet Cavalier toward home and that’s how I was on Frwy. 287.
I think when I was coming around the bend from Loop 820, before Village Creek, all of a sudden, bam, he was just there. I realized that it was a person I had hit and he had come through the right front windshield. I was scared and terrified and the car didn’t even slow down.... He was on my car and stuck through the right front windshield. I parked my car in the garage and I put the door down.... I wanted to take him to the hospital, but I was so scared....

Fry testified that Mallard called her at approximately 3:30 a.m. and whispered, “T, 3 come pick me up.” When Fry arrived at Mallard’s house, Mallard came running out, jumped into the car, and started screaming for Fry to drive. Mallard used Fry’s cell phone to call some friends named Terrence and Vaughn. Mallard and Fry tried to track down Terrence at his apartment and at his sister’s house, but they were unsuccessful and headed back to Mallard’s house.

Mallard then told Fry that she had hit “a white guy,” that she was sorry, that she did not mean to do it, and that she had tried to get him off the car near the Martin/Village Creek area, but that he was too heavy. Mallard admitted that the man was alive when she drove into her garage; she heard him moan.

When Fry and Mallard returned to Mallard’s house, Fry went into the garage and saw the back side of a body sticking out of the car’s windshield. Fry said that she told Mallard to call 911, but Mallard never did. Later, they both left and went to Fry’s house to sleep.

The next morning, Mallard borrowed Fry’s car and cell phone and attempted to locate Vaughn. 4 Cíete — a/k/a Vaughn— testified that Mallard met him at his grandmother’s house and that they drove to Mallard’s house. On the way, Mallard told him that “she messed up real bad.” When they arrived, she allowed him into the garage, and he saw a man hanging through the front windshield into the passenger side floorboard of the car. Cíete touched the man with a rake to see if he was alive, but the man did not move. He decided that they were not going to bury the body; instead, they were going to put it somewhere the victim’s family could find him and bury him. Cíete stated that he was not going to move the body by himself, so he called his cousin, Tyrone, to help. Cíete and Mallard borrowed a friend’s car and drove it to Mallard’s house, where Cíete shoveled the body into a blanket, tied up the blanket, put the blanket into the trunk of the car, and drove with Tyrone and Mallard to Cobb Park. Tyrone and Cíete removed the body from the trunk, laid it on the ground, and took off the blanket. After leaving the body in the park, Cíete, Tyrone, and Mallard went to a car wash and threw away the blanket.

On October 27, 2001, two older gentlemen stopped by a fire station where firefighter Todd Breedlove was getting off duty. The two men reported that there was someone who looked dead in Cobb Park. Breedlove drove to Cobb Park, saw the dead white male, and called 911. Brad Patterson with the Fort Worth Police Department arrived and completed a crime scene search. He noted that the victim’s shoes and socks were missing, which indicated to Patterson that a vehicle may have run into the victim. He also noted that *329 there was no blood at the scene; thus, Patterson concluded that the victim had been moved to the park and placed where he could be found.

An autopsy revealed that the victim, Greg Biggs, suffered a near total amputation of his left leg and that he bled to death from this injury. The medical examiner initially classified the autopsy results as “pending” but changed the status to “could not be determined” on January 7, 2002 when information concerning the victim’s death failed to surface. After police obtained information from one of Fry’s friends and arrested Mallard in March 2002, however, the medical examiner ruled Mr. Biggs’s death a homicide based on the new information.

III. Sufficiency of the Evidence

In her first and second points, Mallard argues that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain her conviction for felony murder. 5 See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b)(3) (Vernon 2003). The felony murder indictment alleges,

Chante Jawan Mallard hereinafter called Defendant, in the County of Tar-rant and State aforesaid, on or about the 26th day of October 2001, did then and there intentionally or knowingly commit or attempt to commit a felony, to-wit: failure to stop and render aid as proscribed in Texas Transportation Code § 550.021 which [is] captioned “accident involving personal injury or death,” and in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in immediate flight from the commission or attempt, she committed or attempted to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life, to-wit: transported Greg Biggs to her home when he was seriously injured and lodged in her car, or lodged in the windshield of her car, and she secreted him in her garage which prevented him from receiving medical care, which caused the death of Greg Biggs.

Mallard argues that the State failed to prove that she committed an act dangerous to human life; she claims that at most the State proved an omission and that an individual’s failure to act cannot constitute felony murder.

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Bluebook (online)
162 S.W.3d 325, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 1724, 2005 WL 503198, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mallard-v-state-texapp-2005.