Mickey Ray Perkins v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 28, 2020
Docket11-18-00037-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Mickey Ray Perkins v. State (Mickey Ray Perkins 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
Mickey Ray Perkins v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Opinion filed February 28, 2020

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-18-00037-CR __________

MICKEY RAY PERKINS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 35th District Court Brown County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. CR24903

MEMORANDUM OPINION

The grand jury indicted Mickey Ray Perkins for the first-degree felony offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon against a family member. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.02 (West 2019). The jury found Appellant guilty of the offense and assessed his punishment at confinement for twenty-seven years and a fine of $5,000. The trial court sentenced him accordingly. We affirm. On appeal, Appellant raises three issues. First, Appellant claims that the trial court committed error when it allowed the State to present extensive details of an extraneous offense in the guilt/innocence phase of trial although Appellant had offered to stipulate to the offense. In his second issue on appeal, Appellant claims that the evidence was legally insufficient to establish serious bodily injury. Finally, in his third issue on appeal, Appellant claims that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. On the date of the offense, Appellant and Lana Hyles met at the Brownwood Regional Medical Center. Appellant and Hyles had been in a relationship prior to this date. The reason that they met at the medical center is disputed. Hyles claimed that Appellant wanted to borrow her vehicle and that he was going to take her to her apartment after he met her at the medical center. Appellant, on the other hand, claimed that Hyles had called him and wanted Appellant to drive her around to run some errands. In any event, Appellant was the one who drove Hyles’s vehicle away from the medical center. When Appellant did not turn in the direction of Hyles’s apartment, Appellant and Hyles began to argue. Hyles claimed that she asked Appellant where he was going and that Appellant then “pushed [her] head into the console of the [vehicle]” and caused her to start bleeding. She testified that Appellant grabbed her by the neck and held her down. In contrast, Appellant testified that Hyles became upset after Appellant told her that he had told Hyles’s ex-husband that he believed that Hyles was doing drugs. Appellant claimed that at this point, while the vehicle was still in motion, Hyles put the vehicle into either reverse or park as Appellant simultaneously applied the brakes and that Hyles hit her face on the console of the vehicle. Appellant testified that Hyles had “a gash in her nose and she was bleeding.”

2 Subsequently, Hyles got out of the vehicle. After Hyles was out of her vehicle, Carrol Weathermon, a stranger to both Hyles and Appellant, pulled up behind Hyles’s vehicle to assist after she saw “blood in the air.” Weathermon testified that she saw Hyles “crumpled on the ground” and Appellant standing over Hyles. She testified that Appellant had Hyles by the hair and was trying to pull Hyles back to her vehicle. However, Hyles testified that she did not recall that Appellant pulled her hair to drag her back to her vehicle. After Hyles noticed Weathermon, Hyles got into Weathermon’s vehicle and Weathermon took Hyles to the emergency room at the Brownwood Regional Medical Center. Appellant drove ahead of them in Hyles’s vehicle in the direction of the hospital. On the way to the hospital, Weathermon called 9-1-1 and reported the license plate number of Hyles’s vehicle. She also reported that she was taking Hyles to the emergency room; officers were sent to the hospital as a result of the 9-1-1 call. Hyles did not stay at the hospital very long and left against medical advice. In fact, she testified: “I bet I wasn’t even there an hour.” She did not allow the hospital personnel to put stitches in her nose. At trial, at a hearing outside the presence of the jury, the State told the trial court that it wanted to introduce testimony about an unadjudicated extraneous offense of assault. The State sought to admit the testimony of Appellant’s former girlfriend, Sarah Rogers. The State announced that Rogers would testify to an alleged assault committed by Appellant against her. The State argued that, under Article 38.371 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, this type of evidence would be relevant. See TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 38.371 (West Supp. 2019). The State further argued that the testimony would be admissible under Rule 404(b) of the Texas Rules of Evidence to rebut the defensive theory that Hyles caused her injury herself when she shifted the vehicle into either reverse or park while the

3 vehicle was still in motion. The State also argued that Rogers’s testimony would show motive and absence of mistake or lack of accident. Appellant’s trial counsel argued that Rogers’s testimony about the extraneous offense should not be allowed because Appellant offered to stipulate to the assault. Appellant’s counsel also argued that the testimony would be more prejudicial than probative and would confuse the jurors. The trial court ultimately allowed Rogers to testify to the extraneous assault to show intent and motive, to rebut a defensive theory, and to show absence of mistake. The trial court ruled that the State was not required to accept Appellant’s offer to stipulate, and it also found that the probative value of the testimony outweighed its prejudicial nature. The trial court also provided a limiting instruction to the jury in which it instructed the jury that Rogers’s testimony could only be considered if the jury believed beyond a reasonable doubt that Appellant committed the extraneous offense and, if so, that it could only consider her testimony to determine intent, motive, absence of mistake or lack of accident, or to rebut a defensive theory “in connection with the offense alleged against [Appellant] in the indictment.” First, we will discuss Appellant’s claim that the trial court should not have allowed Rogers to testify to the extraneous offense. At trial, Rogers testified that she first met Appellant on social media when both she and Appellant lived in Arkansas and that, in 2015, she eventually moved to Texas with Appellant. Appellant, Rogers, and Rogers’s son lived together. Rogers testified that, on one occasion, she and Appellant had been out drinking and later went home and went to bed. During the night, for reasons that she could not remember, she awakened Appellant. She testified that Appellant woke up “[v]ery mean” and that an argument ensued. Rogers said that Appellant struck her with a closed hand because “[she] wouldn’t stop talking” and that Appellant 4 “started punching [her] wherever he could.” She also testified that, during the assault, she lost consciousness but that, when she woke up, she was on the floor and Appellant was still hitting her. Rogers told the jury that the assault ended when Appellant dragged her, by her hair, from the bedroom to the living room. After she put on her clothes, she got her son, went outside, locked herself and her son in the car, called 9-1-1, and waited for law enforcement to arrive. Rogers also testified about her injuries. She stated that, as a result of the assault, she sustained bruises around her neck, a black eye, scratches on her face, and two broken ribs. She also testified that the results of a CT scan revealed that she had suffered a brain bleed. Appellant argues that the trial court committed error when it allowed Rogers to testify to the details of the extraneous assault in the guilt/innocence phase of the trial even though Appellant offered to stipulate to the offense. Absent circumstances not relevant here,1 the State was not required to accept Appellant’s offer to stipulate. Rodriguez v. State, 373 S.W.2d 258, 259 (Tex. Crim. App.

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Mickey Ray Perkins v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mickey-ray-perkins-v-state-texapp-2020.