Mendenhall v. State

15 S.W.3d 560, 2000 WL 92101
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 22, 2000
Docket10-98-109-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 15 S.W.3d 560 (Mendenhall 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
Mendenhall v. State, 15 S.W.3d 560, 2000 WL 92101 (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinions

OPINION

REX D. DAVIS, Chief Justice.

A jury convicted Craig Emmett Men-denhall of assaulting a public servant. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 22.01(b)(1) (Vernon Supp.2000). Mendenhall pleaded true to two prior felony convictions alleged to enhance his punishment to that for an habitual offender, and the jury sentenced him to sixty-five years’ imprisonment. He claims in three issues that the trial court erred by: failing to charge the jury on involuntary intoxication; failing to correctly charge the jury on “the specific intent element of aggravated assault”; and decreeing in the written judgment that his sentence run consecutively with a prior sentence without having made a proper oral pronouncement that the sentence would run consecutively. In an additional [563]*563issue, Mendenhall asserts that the statute which permits trial courts to order consecutive sentences constitutes an improper delegation of this authority to the judiciary because it does not provide adequate guidelines for exercise of this alleged “legislative function.” See Tex.Code Crim. PROC. Ann. art. 42.08 (Vernon Supp.2000).

BACKGROUND

Mendenhall’s former wife sued for divorce while he was incarcerated in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. TDCJ officials returned him to Freestone County for the divorce trial. At the conclusion of the trial, the presiding judge, the Honorable H.D. Black, Jr., pronounced how he intended to divide the marital estate. Men-denhall became “agitated,” and three deputies had to restrain him. He made an obscene remark to Judge Black who had the deputies bring him to the bench where the following occurred:

THE COURT: Mr. Mendenhall, I need to inform you that I will be certifying this record and we will send it to the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. This will go on your record.
MENDENHALL: This will go on my record?
THE COURT: This will go on your record.
(Mr. Mendenhall spit on Judge Black. Each deputy simultaneously pressed their free hand over Mr. Mendenhall’s mouth. The deputies began removing Mr. Mendenhall from the courtroom.)
THE COURT: Okay. Let the record reflect that Mr. Mendenhall has just spit at me, and that will go—
MENDENHALL: Bitch! God damn whore!
THE COURT: Let the record also reflect that Mr. Mendenhall is resisting arrest. He has three deputies out in the hall who are trying to restrain him.

Julie Morrison was one of the three deputies attempting to restrain Menden-hall. Morrison was holding him from behind. When the deputies got Mendenhall to the door of the courtroom, he “locked his feet into the door frame and he threw himself back trying to break free.” As a result, Mendenhall pinned Morrison’s right hand against the door frame. This action cracked one of the bones in Morrison’s right hand.

At trial, Mendenhall sought to establish that he committed these acts while under the influence of hypoglycemia, a condition brought on by an abnormally low blood sugar level. He had been diagnosed with diabetes five and one-half weeks before the divorce trial. A jailer testified that he gave Mendenhall his insulin shots according to the schedule provided by TDCJ. The jailer also stated that Mendenhall received a special diet because of his diabetes.

According to a TDCJ physician, hypoglycemia can cause “mental confusion” and can lead to conduct such as that demonstrated by Mendenhall at the conclusion of the divorce trial. The physician explained that a normal blood sugar level is between 80 and 120. However, if a diabetic receives insulin but does not “receive anything to eat,” his blood sugar level will go down. Hypoglycemia occurs when the level reaches 60 or below. The physician agreed that emotional stress “like a very disagreeable divorce” can also contribute to this condition.

On cross-examination by the State, the physician testified that Mendenhall’s blood sugar level would have to have been between 40 and 50 to cause the outburst demonstrated at his divorce trial. Medical records from Mendenhall’s emergency room visit following this outburst reveal a blood sugar level of 113. After reviewing these records and a transcript of Menden-hall’s final argument at the divorce hearing (before the outburst), the physician gave his opinion that Mendenhall was not hypoglycemic at the conclusion of the hearing.

[564]*564Mendenhall testified that he usually received his insulin shot between 3:00 and 3:30 in the morning while at TDCJ and that he was fed immediately thereafter. On the morning of the divorce trial, he received his injection at 7:00. Mendenhall testified that jail officials gave him an apple, oatmeal, donuts, coffee and juice for breakfast that morning. He tried the oatmeal, but “it was cold and tasted horrible, and [he] drank [his] juice and coffee.” He recalled feeling “queasy” during the morning of the divorce hearing, though he could not “contribute it definitely to [his] diabetes.” He did not recall what was served for lunch, but he “ate only a couple of bites of it.”

Mendenhall testified that he “kind of blacked out” at the conclusion of the divorce trial that afternoon:

It was like passing out. I could hear people outside around me. I remember being grabbed. I remember coming being [sic] then I was standing in front of the bench and Judge Black was — was telling me something and I couldn’t understand it.
And you know, later everybody told me what happened, and I’m going to be honest with you, I feel real bad about what happened to Judge Black. That is not my normal demeanor. And I’ll be honest with you, it scared me; I mean it scared me. I remember seeing my wife standing in the courtroom with my stepdaughter, and I remember I couldn’t breathe.

In rebuttal, the State called the physician who treated Mendenhall in the emergency room after his outburst in Judge Black’s courtroom. This physician stated that “many times [a] hypoglycemic reaction is thought to be drunkenness.” He explained that the symptoms of hypoglycemia do not generally manifest themselves in a short period of time. Rather, the symptoms usually manifest themselves over a period of between 30 and 60 minutes, although they could begin to appear in as little as five or ten minutes. He testified that an overdose of insulin can lead to hypoglycemia. He explained that, once insulin is administered, food must be eaten to maintain an appropriate blood sugar level. After reviewing Mendenhall’s medical records, this physician observed that Mendenhall has “chronically high blood sugar” rather than the low blood sugar level associated with hypoglycemia. Based on portions of the transcript of Mendenhall’s divorce trial and his emergency room records, this physician expressed his opinion that Mendenhall was not suffering from hypoglycemia at the conclusion of the divorce trial.

Mendenhall later provided additional testimony about his diabetic condition. He described the education he received from prison officials about his then newly-diagnosed condition as follows:

This incident in the courtroom with low blood sugar scared the hell out of me, and I’ll, state for the record that TDC really didn’t do too much as far as education on diabetes.

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Bluebook (online)
15 S.W.3d 560, 2000 WL 92101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendenhall-v-state-texapp-2000.