Mitchell v. State

321 S.W.3d 30, 2010 WL 547398
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2010
Docket01-08-00785-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 321 S.W.3d 30 (Mitchell 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
Mitchell v. State, 321 S.W.3d 30, 2010 WL 547398 (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION

LAURA CARTER HIGLEY, Justice.

A jury found appellant, Clinton Mitchell, guilty of criminally negligent homicide. 1 The jury also found, in a special issue, that appellant used a deadly weapon, namely, a motor vehicle, during the commission of the offense. The trial court assessed punishment at five years in prison. 2 In two points of error, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction.

We affirm.

Background

It is undisputed that, while driving a dump truck for his employer, the City of Houston, appellant ran over and killed the complainant, Adam Knetsar. As a result of the incident, a grand jury indicted appellant for the offense of criminally negligent homicide. The indictment alleged that appellant had caused Knetsar’s death by criminal negligence.

At trial, the State presented eight witnesses, who were at the scene of the incident. Chief among them was Chandra Kelly, appellant’s co-worker, who was in the passenger seat of the dump truck at the time of the incident.

Kelly and appellant were laborers employed by the City of Houston. On the morning of October 24, 2006, she and appellant had left one job site and were en route to another in a city dump truck. To reach the job site, appellant and Kelly traveled south down Atascocita Road toward Will Clayton Parkway. Where it intersects Will Clayton Parkway, Atascoci-ta Road has four lanes: two middle lanes for traffic going straight, a left turn lane, and a right-turn lane. The route to the next job site required appellant to drive straight through the intersection.

Kelly testified that, as they were approaching the intersection, the dump truck was in the “middle lane.” But as they drew closer, the dump truck veered into the “right lane.” On questioning, Kelly stated that she was positive that, as they approached the intersection, the light was red; she noted that “[a]ll the cars [were] at a standstill.” Kelly testified that she knew they were about to have an accident because she saw a stationery Jeep Cherokee in the right-turn-only lane and noticed that appellant was accelerating. To avert the impact with the Jeep, Kelly testified *33 that she called appellant’s name three times, to no avail. Kelly closed her eyes immediately before the dump truck struck the back of the Jeep. She kept her eyes closed until the truck came to a stop across the street. She testified that she never heard or felt appellant apply the brakes.

Other scene witnesses described how, after the impact with the dump truck, the Jeep went “airborne,” with all four of its wheels leaving the pavement. The Jeep struck a traffic light pole and then landed on its driver’s side.

After striking the Jeep, the dump truck continued across the intersection toward a group of workers who were installing new traffic signals. Adam Knetsar was among the workers. The dump truck ran over Knetsar, killing him. The truck also struck another worker, who sustained multiple fractures, including two broken legs. After striking the workers, the dump truck continued to roll through a ditch onto a grassy area. It came to a stop at the edge of a Walgreen’s parking lot.

With respect to the details preceding the chain of events that resulted in Knet-sar’s death, the State offered other scene-witness testimony, which corroborated Kelly’s account. A number of witnesses commented on the speed of appellant’s dump truck as he approached the intersection. One witness noticed in her side mirror that appellant was approaching from behind “very fast.” Another driver, who was stopped at the light on Ataseocita, saw appellant to his right driving past “at a considerable rate of speed.” He believed appellant that was traveling 35 to 45 miles per hour. Yet another witness, who was in a van stopped at the intersection, looked in her rear view mirror and saw appellant approaching from behind in the right-turn-only lane. She observed that he was traveling at “a high rate of speed.” The witness recalled that she knew that “something terrible was going to happen” because she had seen a vehicle stopped in the right lane. She knew that appellant was going too fast to either stop for the red light or to make the turn.

In addition, one other witness testified that the Jeep was stopped in the right-turn-only lane before the impact. Two othér witnesses, who were at a gas station at the intersection, each unequivocally testified that the light for traffic on Atascoci-ta for southbound traffic was red. Other witnesses, who were in vehicles at the intersection, confirmed that the southbound traffic on Ataseocita was stopped at the time of the impact. None of the witnesses, when questioned, heard appellant apply his brakes at any point during the incident.

Only one witness, who was driving behind appellant, testified that appellant’s light was green. That witness also testified that appellant was not in the right-turn-only lane when he hit the Jeep. She could not tell where the Jeep was before appellant hit it. The witness also stated that the dump truck was traveling less than 45 miles per hour.

The State also presented the expert testimony of two officers from the Harris County Sheriffs Department. Each officer has specialized training in accident investigation. The first to testify, Sergeant S. Parker, arrived at the scene 45 minutes following the incident.

Sergeant Parker told the jury that he had observed that the right-turn-only lane on Ataseocita had a very large gouge mark, indicating the spot of the collision. Sergeant Parker stated that the gouge mark had not weathered and appeared to be freshly made. The sergeant also testified that he found no evidence of braking, such as skid marks, at the scene. Sergeant Parker also observed that the tire *34 marks on the grassy area, over which the dump truck had traveled before coming to a stop, indicated that the truck’s tires had been rolling, not skidding. Sergeant Parker further explained that the truck had rolled through a ditch before stopping and stated that it was natural forces, not braking, that had made the truck finally stop.

Sergeant Parker further testified that the greatest amount of damage to the Jeep was at its rear, indicating that it was hit with the greatest force from behind. On further questioning, Parker explained that damage to the front, left side of the Jeep was caused when the Jeep struck the traffic light pole after being hit from behind.

The State also presented the testimony of Deputy D. Pearson, who testified that he has received advanced accident investigation training. Through the training, Deputy Pearson has learned how to apply different formulas to determine the speed at which a vehicle was traveling at the time of a collision. In this case, Deputy Pearson explained to the jury that he had applied two different formulas to determine the speed of appellant’s vehicle at the time of the impact with the Jeep.

Deputy Pearson told the jury that the Jeep had traveled 73 feet before it hit the traffic light pole. Applying the “conservation momentum formula,” Deputy Pearson testified that he calculated that the dump truck was traveling at a minimum speed of 37 miles per hour when it struck the back of the Jeep.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
321 S.W.3d 30, 2010 WL 547398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-state-texapp-2010.