Michael Walker Crouch v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2003
Docket02-02-00007-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Michael Walker Crouch v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Crouch v. State

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO. 2-02-007-CR

MICHAEL WALKER CROUCH APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 355 TH DISTRICT COURT OF HOOD COUNTY

OPINION

I. Introduction

A jury found Appellant Michael Walker Crouch (“Crouch”) guilty of  driving while intoxicated, and the trial court assessed his punishment at fifty years’ confinement.  In two points on appeal, Crouch challenges the legal sufficiency of the evidence supporting his conviction and complains he was not given the opportunity to present a defense.  We will affirm.

II. Background Facts

On July 23, 2000, at approximately three o’clock in the morning, Chief Deputy Fred Bauer of the Hood County Sheriff’s Department was dispatched to a one-car accident.  At the scene, Bauer found a red Ford pickup that had run off the road and into a fence.  Bauer approached Crouch, who was standing by the truck, and asked what had happened.  Crouch said that he had been chasing after his girlfriend’s car, but was unable to negotiate a turn at the intersection.  Bauer noticed that Crouch had slurred speech, slightly bloodshot eyes, and smelled of alcohol.

Bauer requested assistance from the Texas Department of Public Safety, and DPS Troopers Kenneth Zacharias and Steve Tuggle arrived and took over the investigation.  Bauer remained on the scene and conducted an inventory of Crouch’s pickup before releasing the truck to a towing service.  The items listed on the vehicle inventory included: (a) one cold, unopened, twelve-ounce can of Miller Natural Lite beer; (b) one cold, opened, twelve-ounce can of Miller Natural Lite beer on the driver’s side floorboard; (c) another cold, opened, twelve-ounce can of Miller Lite beer in the cab; (d) a cooler in the bed of the truck containing three cold twelve-ounce cans of Miller Lite beer; and (e) three empty twelve-ounce cans of Miller Lite beer in the truck-bed.

As DPS Trooper Zacharias pulled up at the scene, he noticed skid marks through the turn at the intersection, leading into a bar ditch.  The front of the truck was into the fence, and the back of the truck was in the bar ditch.  He estimated that the skid marks began about seventy-five feet from the truck’s location in the ditch, and surmised that the driver had been going too fast and locked the brakes before reaching the intersection.

When Zacharias asked Crouch what had happened, Crouch stated that his wife, Rafflia Smeltzer, did not know how to drive a standard and had wrecked the truck.  Crouch claimed his wife had gone to work after the accident, but he could not provide her work telephone number.  Apparently confused, Zacharias asked how Crouch’s wife had gotten from the accident scene to her workplace.  Crouch replied that Smeltzer had driven her car. Realizing the inconsistency of this statement with his representation that his wife was driving the truck, Crouch then admitted that the story he had told Zacharias was untrue.  He told the officers he had been following his wife’s car, but that her car was too fast for him, and he ran the truck off the road.

Zacharias testified that Crouch’s eyes were glassy, his speech was slurred, and a strong odor of alcoholic beverage emanated from his person. Crouch said he had consumed two Budweiser tallboys, and asked the officers if two was too many.  Zacharias administered the horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) test to Crouch.  Crouch exhibited a lack of smooth pursuit in both eyes, nystagmus at maximum deviation in both eyes, and onset of nystagmus prior to forty-five degrees in both eyes, indicating intoxication.

Several months prior to the accident, Crouch had suffered a broken leg. This injury prevented Zacharias from conducting the usual one-leg stand and walk-and-turn field sobriety tests.  Instead, Zacharias asked Crouch to perform a finger counting test.  Crouch missed his ring and middle fingers and counted his index finger twice.  Crouch was unable to recite the alphabet in order, but then said he could not read or write.  Zacharias concluded that Crouch “had voluntarily introduced alcohol into his body and had been operating a motor vehicle and was intoxicated.”  Zacharias placed Crouch under arrest for DWI and transported him to the Hood County Jail.  At the jail, Crouch refused to provide a breath sample.

After receiving his Miranda warnings, Crouch engaged in a recorded interview in which he first denied having driven a vehicle and having had any alcohol to drink, then admitted to drinking two tallboys.  Crouch also mentioned taking Vicodin on a daily basis for pain, but claimed he had not filled his prescription for the medication in seven weeks.  Finally, while Zacharias stood with his back to Crouch, completing the necessary paperwork to book him into the jail, Crouch spit at Zacharias’s legs.

Crouch’s girlfriend, Rafflia Smeltzer, testified that she was driving the truck when difficulty with the standard shift or manual steering caused her to lose control.  She explained, “Some food had fell into the floor.  I kind of did the little jerk, and that jerk made me go into a ditch, and that’s where the truck got stuck.”  She could not pinpoint the exact time of the accident, and would only say that it occurred “in the evening, between the evening and the morning.”

After the truck ran off the road, Smeltzer testified that she caught a ride from a passing motorist and went for help, leaving Crouch with the truck.  When she returned to the scene some time later, Crouch and the truck were gone.  Smeltzer said that she had not been drinking when the accident happened, and agreed that there was no reason for Crouch to lie and say he was driving to protect her.  She testified that Crouch lied and said he had been driving the truck “[b]ecause he felt threatened” by the officers and was told to “[m]ake it easy on [himself] and say that [he was] driving.”

Smeltzer, who is a licensed vocational nurse, explained that she was driving because “[Crouch] is on a suspended license, plus he has a broken leg. It is a standard truck.  He has a compound fracture of one of his legs.  It would be impossible for him to drive safely or even an automatic car with that kind of an injury.”

She estimated that Crouch had broken his leg about four months before the charged offense and described the accident at trial:

[Crouch] had climbed up in a tree that was overlooking a pond.  He was cutting down the branch.  The branch was out.  We expected the branch to fall down, but I guess the wind or a freak accident.  I don’t think how it happened.  The branch stood up and came down.

And when it did, it was either going to crush his chest or leg.  And with his chain saw he hit it because he’s a pretty strong guy, and it wound up landing on his leg, blowing the two bones of the lower leg out the skin on the side.

We had to shimmy him down the tree, up a bank, and to the truck.  I had to take off my shirt and tie up his leg there.  If he would have been alone he would have bled to death.

According to Smeltzer, Crouch underwent five surgeries as a result of the compound fracture of his leg.

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Michael Walker Crouch v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-walker-crouch-v-state-texapp-2003.