Margie Clark Percival v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 2005
Docket12-03-00333-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Margie Clark Percival v. State (Margie Clark Percival 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
Margie Clark Percival v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

                     NO. 12-03-00333-CR

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT


TYLER, TEXAS


MARGIE CLARK PERCIVAL,                         §     APPEAL FROM THE 273RD

APPELLANT


V.                                                                         §     JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT OF



THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                  §     SABINE COUNTY, TEXAS

APPELLEE





MEMORANDUM OPINION

            Appellant Margie Clark Percival pleaded guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. A jury sentenced her to imprisonment for twenty years and assessed a $10,000 fine. In three issues, Appellant asserts that the trial court abused its discretion in permitting testimony by two witnesses who Appellant contends violated the Rule and also urges that she was denied effective assistance of counsel. We affirm.


Background

            Appellant was charged by indictment with the attempted murder of Michael Nethery. On September 9, 2003, she pleaded guilty to the lesser included offense of aggravated assault without an agreed punishment recommendation from the State. A hearing was held on punishment.

            At the punishment hearing, 51-year-old Nethery testified that he and Appellant had dated and lived together for approximately eighteen months, but had broken off their relationship. Approximately three weeks after the breakup, on November 17, 2002, Nethery was at his trailer vacuuming, when he turned around to see that Appellant had come in the back door of the trailer. He got them soft drinks and then sat down in the living room with Appellant. After they talked a few minutes, Appellant accused him of going out with other women. When Nethery denied it, Appellant jumped up from her chair and pulled a pistol, saying that he “was going to be a dead man.” She said that she “had ten shells and all of them were for [Nethery].” Nethery turned in the swivel chair he was sitting in and ran for the bathroom.

            Appellant followed him and shot him in the back as he entered the bedroom. She then shot him a second time in the back as he entered the bathroom. Nethery fell between the toilet and the outer wall of the bathroom, and Appellant shot him a third time. She left the room, but returned a few seconds later and shot him a fourth time in the back. She walked away a second time, but returned to shoot him again. This time, the bullet hit the back of his left arm and traveled through his arm, striking one of his fingers. Appellant told Nethery that “Ginger” was going to be next and then left the bathroom.

            Nethery managed to get up from the floor. Appellant heard him moving and ran back toward the bathroom. Nethery slammed the bathroom door in her face and locked it. He grabbed a .357 pistol he kept in the bathroom closet and fired it through the back of the closet. He shot again through the wall near the door, aiming toward the living room. Then, Nethery pushed the screen from the bathroom window and fired shots into the air, hoping to get a neighbor’s attention.

            After firing the shots, Nethery opened the door and saw that Appellant was gone. His phone was missing from its usual place and a recliner had been placed against the front door. After moving the chair, he got outside and fell to the ground. He crawled to the main road where someone stopped to help him.

            Pineland Police Chief Jamie Brashear testified that he responded to the call for help. Upon arriving at Nethery’s home, he saw Nethery lying at the end of the driveway. Nethery told Brashear that Appellant had shot him and that she might be on her way to Ginger White’s house to shoot her. Brashear found Nethery’s .357 revolver on the driveway. He examined the house and made photos of bullet holes in the house. Brashear also found the charger cord for the telephone outside on the ground near the back door, but did not find a phone. He did not find any shell casings in the house to match the bullets and bullet holes.

            Texas Ranger Danny Young interviewed Appellant, who admitted shooting Nethery. However, she claimed that Nethery pulled his weapon first. Appellant said that Nethery threatened to kill her and her sons and that Nethery fired two shots and ran toward the bedroom. She also said she fired two or three shots and followed him to the bedroom door. She told Young that she shot Nethery one more time when he went into the closet where she knew he kept guns. Young testified that the physical evidence at the scene supported Nethery’s account and not Appellant’s.

            Appellant testified on her own behalf. She stated that she had no felony convictions, she had family in the area, and she was sixty-nine years old. Although she claimed that she had not committed any violent acts in the past, she testified that a man whom she had dated previously, Ottis Melton, had twisted her arm and torn her rotator cuff. Appellant said that Melton is the reason she illegally carried a gun with her. She said he was trying to kill her and was “in the courtroom today.”

            Appellant claimed to have a fuzzy memory about the shooting. She denied having amnesia, but contended she was in a state of shock and could not recall exactly what had happened. Appellant had no explanation for the discrepancies between her account and the physical evidence. She admitted she did not call for help and that she told her niece she might have killed him.

            Various character witnesses testified that Appellant’s reputation for truth, veracity, and peacefulness was good. Among those witnesses was her granddaughter, Marissa Taylor. Taylor testified that she had talked to Nethery four times since the offense. She claimed that Nethery told her he had gotten what he deserved and wished to drop the prosecution of Appellant. To rebut that claim, the State recalled Nethery to the stand. Defense counsel objected because Nethery, who was subject to the Rule, had been in the courtroom during the defense’s case. The trial court allowed Nethery to testify, but limited his testimony to rebuttal of Taylor’s unforeseen testimony. Nethery denied having the conversation described by Taylor.

            

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