In The
Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-12-00540-CR ____________________
MARK THOMAS FONTENOT, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee _______________________________________________________ ______________
On Appeal from the 163rd District Court Orange County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-120155-R ________________________________________________________ _____________
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury found Mark Thomas Fontenot guilty of felony theft. The jury
assessed punishment, and the trial court sentenced Fontenot to eighteen months of
confinement in state jail. We conclude the evidence is sufficient to support the
jury’s verdict.
THE EVIDENCE
James Owens, a trooper with the Texas Department of Public Safety, was
patrolling the Sabine River bridge area in Orange County in his marked vehicle.
He exited the interstate to take the turnaround under the bridge and noticed a man, 1
identified at trial as Fontenot, walking along the “marsh area next to the highway.”
Fontenot was carrying a roll of copper wire. When they made eye contact,
Fontenot dropped the wire and ran into the marsh.
Owens called the Orange Police Department. He surveyed the area with
responding officers and then went back to his routine duties in the area while the
officers waited to see if the suspect would come out. According to Owens, utility
poles above and in the vicinity where he saw Fontenot had wires hanging down as
if they had been cut.
Owens took Caleb Davis, a police officer for the City of Orange, to where
Fontenot dropped the roll of wire. They laid logs across the muddy area to get to
the wire. According to Davis, the wire was not muddy but was laying on top of the
mud. The roll of wire and photographs of the wire were admitted into evidence.
According to Davis, he saw the roll of wire directly under a path of utility
poles of the interstate and there was a “freshly beaten” path in the area. The beaten
path was located directly under and between the poles and made it appear that
someone had walked from pole to pole to roll the wire up. Davis testified the path
seemed freshly made and made by a human rather than an animal. He could see
wire that appeared to have been cut, hanging from the poles, and the wire was the
same type of wire that was recovered. Davis explained that the area of the beaten
path under those poles was not an area used by people to catch bait as there was
not sufficient water for bait.
Law enforcement officers searched the area where Fontenot fled and
photographed the area around the utility poles where the wire was cut. Davis and
another officer searched the woods and the marshy area for signs of anyone in the
area, tools, or anything else that someone might have dropped. Davis drove his
vehicle to the boat ramp, which was about half of a mile from where he met
Owens. Davis was looking for boats, trucks, or any signs that people had been in
the area. According to Davis, the parking lot was empty and there were no signs
that anyone had been there that day. Davis did not see any fishing poles or tackle
boxes. He and the other officer searched the area for an hour while looking for
evidence.
The Orange Police Department asked Randy Hairston, a service man for
Entergy, to come to the Sabine River turnaround. According to Hairston, as he
neared the turnaround, he observed “somebody coming up out of the swamp[.]”
When he got to the turnaround, he asked the officers if they were looking for a
“guy wearing a plaid shirt[,]” and Hairston told them where he had seen the
suspect. Officers detained Fontenot a short time later, more than a mile away. Law
enforcement officers showed Hairston the wire they recovered; Hairston
recognized it immediately as Entergy’s wire. After Trooper Owens identified
Fontenot as the man he had seen earlier carrying a roll of copper wire, the police
took Fontenot to jail.
Michael Swope, a utility foreman for Entergy, testified that he did not give
anyone permission to take Entergy’s copper wire from that area. He testified that
Entergy does not abandon copper wire at its job sites, and that Entergy took unused
wire to use elsewhere. Swope explained that someone could get to Entergy’s wire
by climbing up and cutting it down or the person could cause the wire to sag so it
could be reached.
Fontenot testified at trial and explained why he was in the area and had the
wire. According to Fontenot, his daughter’s boyfriend dropped him off that day to
fish. Although Fontenot stated that he fished often, he did not have a Texas or
Louisiana fishing license. Fontenot testified that he was fishing that day at the boat
launch. He went to a swamp area, about half a mile from underneath the bridge and
just off the river, and used his dip net to catch bait. He described the depth of the
water in that area as anywhere from two feet deep to waist deep, depending on the
tide. He had a five-gallon bucket and tackle box with him. He left his rod and reel
at the boat launch.
According to Fontenot, while seining for bait, the copper wire snagged on
his net, and he pulled the wire out of the water. He washed the wire off and rolled
it up. He assumed that storms over the years caused the wire to fall in the water. He
did not attempt to find the owner because there were no people, houses, or
businesses in the vicinity. Fontenot admitted that he was carrying the copper wire
when Owens saw him coming out of the marsh, but he denied that he intended to
steal the wire. Fontenot agreed that he planned to sell the copper wire. According
to Fontenot, he ran from the police because he did not have a fishing license and
because he believed he had unpaid tickets. He explained that he did not have a
ladder, rubber gloves, or any tool he could have used to cut the wire or to climb a
utility pole. Fontenot admitted he had “scrapped” copper for the last six or seven
years, as well as aluminum cans. There was also evidence that less than two
months before this incident, Fontenot had been convicted for possessing stolen
goods with a value of less than five hundred dollars.
Karla Rogers, who was initially appointed as Fontenot’s counsel, also
testified for Fontenot. She withdrew as counsel after she disclosed that she could
be called as a witness. According to Rogers, during her representation of Fontenot,
he told her about a tackle box he had with him that she later found at the scene.
Rogers also located a little carrying case, but did not find a five gallon bucket, dip
net, or fishing rod. Fontenot subsequently identified the tackle box as his. Rogers
explained that the tackle box looked like it had been there “a long time” because it
was very dirty. Rogers’s bill, though, did not indicate that she incurred any
expense related to Fontenot’s case on the day she located the tackle box that
Fontenot claimed belonged to him.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Fontenot argues the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction. When
examining the sufficiency of the evidence, an appellate court reviews all of the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution to determine whether any
rational trier of fact could find the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt. Jackson v.
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In The
Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-12-00540-CR ____________________
MARK THOMAS FONTENOT, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee _______________________________________________________ ______________
On Appeal from the 163rd District Court Orange County, Texas Trial Cause No. B-120155-R ________________________________________________________ _____________
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury found Mark Thomas Fontenot guilty of felony theft. The jury
assessed punishment, and the trial court sentenced Fontenot to eighteen months of
confinement in state jail. We conclude the evidence is sufficient to support the
jury’s verdict.
THE EVIDENCE
James Owens, a trooper with the Texas Department of Public Safety, was
patrolling the Sabine River bridge area in Orange County in his marked vehicle.
He exited the interstate to take the turnaround under the bridge and noticed a man, 1
identified at trial as Fontenot, walking along the “marsh area next to the highway.”
Fontenot was carrying a roll of copper wire. When they made eye contact,
Fontenot dropped the wire and ran into the marsh.
Owens called the Orange Police Department. He surveyed the area with
responding officers and then went back to his routine duties in the area while the
officers waited to see if the suspect would come out. According to Owens, utility
poles above and in the vicinity where he saw Fontenot had wires hanging down as
if they had been cut.
Owens took Caleb Davis, a police officer for the City of Orange, to where
Fontenot dropped the roll of wire. They laid logs across the muddy area to get to
the wire. According to Davis, the wire was not muddy but was laying on top of the
mud. The roll of wire and photographs of the wire were admitted into evidence.
According to Davis, he saw the roll of wire directly under a path of utility
poles of the interstate and there was a “freshly beaten” path in the area. The beaten
path was located directly under and between the poles and made it appear that
someone had walked from pole to pole to roll the wire up. Davis testified the path
seemed freshly made and made by a human rather than an animal. He could see
wire that appeared to have been cut, hanging from the poles, and the wire was the
same type of wire that was recovered. Davis explained that the area of the beaten
path under those poles was not an area used by people to catch bait as there was
not sufficient water for bait.
Law enforcement officers searched the area where Fontenot fled and
photographed the area around the utility poles where the wire was cut. Davis and
another officer searched the woods and the marshy area for signs of anyone in the
area, tools, or anything else that someone might have dropped. Davis drove his
vehicle to the boat ramp, which was about half of a mile from where he met
Owens. Davis was looking for boats, trucks, or any signs that people had been in
the area. According to Davis, the parking lot was empty and there were no signs
that anyone had been there that day. Davis did not see any fishing poles or tackle
boxes. He and the other officer searched the area for an hour while looking for
evidence.
The Orange Police Department asked Randy Hairston, a service man for
Entergy, to come to the Sabine River turnaround. According to Hairston, as he
neared the turnaround, he observed “somebody coming up out of the swamp[.]”
When he got to the turnaround, he asked the officers if they were looking for a
“guy wearing a plaid shirt[,]” and Hairston told them where he had seen the
suspect. Officers detained Fontenot a short time later, more than a mile away. Law
enforcement officers showed Hairston the wire they recovered; Hairston
recognized it immediately as Entergy’s wire. After Trooper Owens identified
Fontenot as the man he had seen earlier carrying a roll of copper wire, the police
took Fontenot to jail.
Michael Swope, a utility foreman for Entergy, testified that he did not give
anyone permission to take Entergy’s copper wire from that area. He testified that
Entergy does not abandon copper wire at its job sites, and that Entergy took unused
wire to use elsewhere. Swope explained that someone could get to Entergy’s wire
by climbing up and cutting it down or the person could cause the wire to sag so it
could be reached.
Fontenot testified at trial and explained why he was in the area and had the
wire. According to Fontenot, his daughter’s boyfriend dropped him off that day to
fish. Although Fontenot stated that he fished often, he did not have a Texas or
Louisiana fishing license. Fontenot testified that he was fishing that day at the boat
launch. He went to a swamp area, about half a mile from underneath the bridge and
just off the river, and used his dip net to catch bait. He described the depth of the
water in that area as anywhere from two feet deep to waist deep, depending on the
tide. He had a five-gallon bucket and tackle box with him. He left his rod and reel
at the boat launch.
According to Fontenot, while seining for bait, the copper wire snagged on
his net, and he pulled the wire out of the water. He washed the wire off and rolled
it up. He assumed that storms over the years caused the wire to fall in the water. He
did not attempt to find the owner because there were no people, houses, or
businesses in the vicinity. Fontenot admitted that he was carrying the copper wire
when Owens saw him coming out of the marsh, but he denied that he intended to
steal the wire. Fontenot agreed that he planned to sell the copper wire. According
to Fontenot, he ran from the police because he did not have a fishing license and
because he believed he had unpaid tickets. He explained that he did not have a
ladder, rubber gloves, or any tool he could have used to cut the wire or to climb a
utility pole. Fontenot admitted he had “scrapped” copper for the last six or seven
years, as well as aluminum cans. There was also evidence that less than two
months before this incident, Fontenot had been convicted for possessing stolen
goods with a value of less than five hundred dollars.
Karla Rogers, who was initially appointed as Fontenot’s counsel, also
testified for Fontenot. She withdrew as counsel after she disclosed that she could
be called as a witness. According to Rogers, during her representation of Fontenot,
he told her about a tackle box he had with him that she later found at the scene.
Rogers also located a little carrying case, but did not find a five gallon bucket, dip
net, or fishing rod. Fontenot subsequently identified the tackle box as his. Rogers
explained that the tackle box looked like it had been there “a long time” because it
was very dirty. Rogers’s bill, though, did not indicate that she incurred any
expense related to Fontenot’s case on the day she located the tackle box that
Fontenot claimed belonged to him.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Fontenot argues the evidence is insufficient to support his conviction. When
examining the sufficiency of the evidence, an appellate court reviews all of the
evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution to determine whether any
rational trier of fact could find the essential elements of the crime beyond a
reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979). We must give
full deference to the fact-finder’s responsibility to fairly resolve conflicts in the
testimony, to weigh the evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic
facts to ultimate facts. Hooper v. State, 214 S.W.3d 9, 13 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)
(citing Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319).
CONCLUSION
A person commits theft if he “unlawfully appropriates property with intent
to deprive the owner of property.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 31.03(a) (West Supp.
2013). “Appropriation of property is unlawful if . . . it is without the owner’s
effective consent[.]” Id. § 31.03(b)(1). Unexplained personal possession of recently
stolen property will support an inference of guilt. See Sutherlin v. State, 682
S.W.2d 546, 549 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984), Jackson v. State, 12 S.W.3d 836, 839
(Tex. App.—Waco 2000, pet. ref’d). If a defendant offers an explanation for his
possession of recently stolen property, the record must demonstrate that the
defendant’s explanation at the time his possession is called into question is either
false or unreasonable before the evidence will support the conviction of theft.
Jackson, 12 S.W.3d at 839. The falsity of the explanation may be shown by
circumstantial evidence. Id. at 840. Whether an explanation is true or reasonable is
a question of fact. Dixon v. State, 43 S.W.3d 548, 552 (Tex. App.—Texarkana
2001, no pet.). Fontenot argues it is reasonable to believe that the copper wire was
abandoned, and he contends that his and Ms. Rogers’s testimony created
reasonable doubt that he committed theft.
The jury could reasonably believe Davis’s testimony that the area of the
beaten path under the poles with the cut wire was not an area someone would go to
catch bait. The State presented the jury with evidence that, after Fontenot fled from
the police, the police searched the area but did not find Fontenot’s fishing rod, five
gallon bucket, tackle box, or dip net. Flight is a circumstance that indicates guilt.
Hardesty v. State, 656 S.W.2d 73, 78 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983). Even if the jury
could reasonably believe that the tackle box Rogers recovered was Fontenot’s, the
jury could reasonably disbelieve Fontenot’s testimony that he found the
“abandoned” copper wire in the water while he was fishing, as well as his
testimony that he did not intend to steal the copper wire. We give deference to the
jury’s responsibility to fairly resolve conflicts in the testimony, to weigh the
evidence, and to draw reasonable inferences from basic facts to ultimate facts.
Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 13. In this case, the jury was presented with sufficient
evidence to permit them to infer Fontenot’s possession of recently stolen property
as a circumstance of guilt. See Hardesty, 656 S.W.2d at 77. Considering the record
as a whole, we hold that the evidence is sufficient to support the jury’s verdict. We
overrule Fontenot’s issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
AFFIRMED.
________________________________ CHARLES KREGER Justice
Submitted on October 29, 2013 Opinion Delivered November 27, 2013 Do Not Publish
Before McKeithen, C.J., Kreger and Horton, JJ.