Maurice Long-Edwards v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2008
Docket01-06-01191-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Maurice Long-Edwards v. State (Maurice Long-Edwards 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
Maurice Long-Edwards v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 20, 2008





In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas



NO. 01-06-01191-CR



MAURICE J. LONG-EDWARDS, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee



On Appeal from the 178th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1047750



MEMORANDUM OPINION



A jury found appellant, Maurice J. Long-Edwards, guilty of murder and assessed his punishment at confinement for life. In two points of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred (1) in refusing to instruct the jury on voluntary conduct and (2) in denying his motion for mistrial based on improper jury argument by the State.

We affirm.

Background

On November 19, 2005, appellant bought a cigar from a Valero convenience store. The store clerk, Hassan Elgharib, testified that appellant paid with coins that he took from his pocket. Approximately 45 minutes later, appellant returned to the store and told Elgharib that he had left his wallet. When Elgharib told appellant that he had not seen a wallet, appellant became angry and asked to use the store's phone to call 911. Elgharib allowed appellant to use the phone, but he noted that appellant did not call 911 because he dialed more than three numbers, then went outside to finish his call. Eventually, appellant returned to the store, threw the phone down on the counter, and left.

After appellant left the store for the second time, Johnny Ray Davis, the complainant, arrived at the store to help Elgharib arrange the beer cooler. Davis regularly worked at the store as a helper for the clerks. Approximately 20 minutes later, appellant returned to the store for a third time. Appellant, who was carrying a shotgun, walked up to Davis and demanded that Davis return appellant's wallet. Testimony regarding the exact statements varied slightly, but all accounts report that Davis denied having the wallet and that appellant threatened to kill Davis. Appellant then shot and killed Davis with the shotgun. The police did not recover appellant's wallet, and they did not find any wallet on Davis's body.

Elgharib was standing behind the counter during the exchange between appellant and Davis. He testified that at first he was too shocked to move, but when he saw that appellant had shot Davis, he decided that he had to "do what [he had] to do." He testified that the store had a .45 caliber handgun for the clerk to use if he ever saw a weapon or felt threatened. He got the handgun from under the counter, but it took "a little while" because it had to be loaded. He testified that he then shot over the counter in appellant's direction.

After hearing Elgharib's testimony, appellant's trial counsel responded, "All right. In fact, you shot the gun before [appellant] fired his shotgun, didn't you?" Elgharib answered, "No. After." Appellant established that Elgharib did shoot appellant in the arm and in the abdomen. While questioning Elgharib regarding his motivation for shooting appellant, appellant's trial counsel asked whether appellant had fired a shot at Elgharib where he stood behind the counter. Elgharib answered, "No. There was a person dead in front of me." Appellant's counsel replied, "I understand that. In fact, [appellant] was simply standing there asking all of you in the store to stay where you were until the police got there, right?" Elgharib answered, "Wrong." Elgharib's testimony was substantially corroborated by the testimony of another eyewitness, William Bibbs, a customer.

Delores Brown was a store patron who testified that she saw appellant enter the store with a shotgun as she drove up to the store. She and Bibbs both testified that appellant was holding the shotgun down by his side as he entered the store. Brown testified that she heard a louder first shot, which she thought was the shotgun, then she heard a second shot that sounded different. She also testified that she heard the glass on the front door of the store crack, and she heard another gunshot as she was driving away. On cross-examination, appellant's counsel elicited testimony from Brown that obstructions prevented a clerk at the counter from seeing someone approaching the store from outside.

Appellant also questioned Officer J. Wood, who investigated the crime scene, regarding how the .45 caliber casings landed on the rug in front of the counter if Elgharib was shooting from behind the counter. Officer Wood testified that it depended on how Elgharib was holding the handgun, but that the casings could bounce off of the counter itself or off of some other surface. Appellant's counsel said, "The position of the spent .45 casing shown in [in the crime scene photographs] is actually inconsistent with somebody crouching down below the counter and holding the handgun up just this far on the counter." Officer Wood answered, "If that was the purported position of the firearm, it's not impossible, but improbable that the [casings] would have ended up where they are." On re-direct examination, Officer Wood testified that if someone shot at an angle, as Elgharib testified that he did, then that would affect the direction of the shell casings and would be consistent with where they were found. After the State rested, appellant also rested without calling any witnesses.

During the charge conference that occurred just before both sides rested, appellant argued that he was entitled to an instruction on voluntary conduct. The State argued that there was no evidence on the record that appellant's actions were involuntary. Appellant responded:

I think there's ample evidence in the record from the witnesses[,] from the physical evidence. Particularly[,] I'm talking about the two bullet holes in [appellant]. There are hospital records . . . of [appellant] that have been admitted into evidence showing that he was transported and treated for two bullet holes received or administered by a gunshot. Those gunshots came from the pistol that was fired by [Elgharib]. [Elgharib] testified that he shot twice inside the store. . . .



The inference being that he armed--[Elgharib] arm[ed] himself[,] was ready when [appellant] came in the store. And when the gun or the shotgun [appellant] was carrying was raised, then shots were fired. Now, the jury would be free to believe that the first shot came from [Elgharib's] gun. If it did, and the jury so believed, then the reaction from [appellant] holding the shotgun may well have been an involuntary reaction, that is, he may have involuntarily pulled the trigger as he was pointing the shotgun at [the complainant], thereby caused it to discharge and kill [the complainant].



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Maurice Long-Edwards v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maurice-long-edwards-v-state-texapp-2008.