Montrell Washington v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 9, 2012
Docket03-11-00677-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Montrell Washington v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-11-00677-CR

Montrell Washington, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LEE COUNTY, 21ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT NO. 7179, HONORABLE TERRY L. FLENNIKEN, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Montrell Washington, of the offense of aggravated assault

with a deadly weapon for setting his uncle on fire, causing seriously bodily injury. See Tex. Penal

Code Ann. §§ 22.01, .02 (West 2011). Punishment was assessed at eight years’ imprisonment. In

one issue, appellant asserts that the evidence is legally insufficient to sustain his conviction. We will

affirm the judgment.

BACKGROUND

The jury heard evidence that on February 18, 2010, Austin Police Department Officer

Duane Williams was working off duty providing security services at Brackenridge Hospital in

Austin. On that day a hospital social worker reported to him that two men had brought

Donald Washington to the hospital with severe burns that initially were believed to have been

accidental. The social worker informed Williams that she had received a phone call from a person claiming to be a member of Donald’s family who told her that the burns may not have been

accidental.1 After learning that the incident had occurred in Lee County, Williams contacted the Lee

County Sheriff’s Department. A Lee County deputy asked Williams to talk to the two men who had

brought Donald in to try to determine what had happened. When the two men, appellant and

Jonathan Jackson, returned to the hospital several hours later, Williams interviewed them separately.

Appellant told the officer that Donald had burned himself while using lighter fluid to start a fire in

a wood burning stove in his house. Jackson told Williams a similar version of the events. Williams

was not able to speak to Donald, who was in critical condition and was intubated at the time. Donald

was subsequently transported to Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio.

Frank Washington, Donald’s brother and a resident of the house where Donald was

burned, testified that he got home from work around 5:00 on the evening of February 18. Appellant,

Donald, and Jackson were sitting around the dining room table. Frank stated that he went to his

room and was sleeping when he heard someone screaming. He ran out of his room and saw Donald

with his t-shirt on fire. Frank and appellant pulled the shirt off Donald. Frank testified that Jackson

was in the kitchen and appellant was standing by the doors leading into the kitchen. Frank testified

that he dialed 911 but “couldn’t get anyone.” Frank testified that he asked appellant what happened

and appellant said that Donald was trying to start a fire in the stove. He then called his sister,

Patricia Ward, and another of his sisters, Marilyn Washington Alexander.

1 Because the appellant and several of the witnesses share the same surname, we use first names where necessary for clarity.

2 Alexander, Donald’s sister and appellant’s aunt, testified that she received a phone

call from her brother Frank on the evening of February 18. After receiving the call, Alexander went

to the house. Frank was at the house when she arrived. Alexander stated that Frank was upset

because Donald had been burned. There were burn spots on the carpet and on the floor. Alexander

saw a bottle of rubbing alcohol sitting on a table and observed that there was no fire burning in the

wood stove. Alexander testified that she called appellant and asked him what had happened at the

house and that appellant told her “it was a prank that went bad” and that he was taking Donald to the

hospital. Alexander remained at the house until 11:00 that evening. When she returned to the house

the following day, appellant and Jackson were there. When she again asked him what happened,

appellant repeated that “it was a prank that went bad,” and “[Donald] told us to say that he was

making a fire in the stove, and that’s what I’m going to say.” When Alexander told him that he

needed to tell the truth, appellant replied that he was going to stick to the story that Donald had been

making a fire in the stove, and that “they’re going to have to prove that he did it.” Alexander

testified that appellant said “I did it,” and then looked at Jackson and said “We did it. They’re going

to have to prove we did it.” Alexander told appellant and Jackson that they needed to tell the truth

because Donald was seriously injured and had been flown to a burn center. Appellant told her that

they had been “playing” with Donald by putting alcohol on his hand and foot and lighting it.

Alexander stated that she noticed the alcohol bottle was gone, and things that had been on the table

the night before were missing. Later that night, appellant called Alexander and told her that he

didn’t do it, but that he had said he did in order to protect Jackson because he didn’t want the family

to be mad at Jackson. Alexander testified that she told him he needed to tell the truth.

3 Patricia Washington Ward, Donald’s sister and appellant’s aunt, testified at trial that

on the evening of February 18 she received a phone call from her brother Frank. According to Ward,

Frank asked her where he should take a person who has been badly burned and said to her “Montrell

is sitting up here and set Major on fire.2 He thinks it’s a Goddamn joke.” Ward advised Frank to

take Donald to Brackenridge Hospital in Austin and gave him directions to the hospital. During that

conversation, Frank also said to Ward: “It’s a damn shame how they done burned this man up. It

don’t make no damn sense. If I had a gun, I’d bust a cap in Montrell’s ass, and Jonathan’s.”3 Later

that evening, Ward called her sister, Cassandra Fonteneaux, and informed her that Frank had said

that appellant had set Donald on fire, that Donald was badly burned, and that appellant and Jackson

were laughing but that it “wasn’t no goddamn joke.” Ward also testified that she spoke to appellant

on the phone and asked him why he set his uncle on fire, to which appellant responded “I didn’t do

a damn thing. I want a m— f— to prove that I did it. I’ll just say I was in another damn room. I’ll

say I was in the room cooking.”

Another of Donald’s siblings, Richard Washington, testified that in the early morning

hours of February 19, appellant knocked on his door. Richard said he talked to appellant and asked

him what happened. Appellant said that Donald had set himself on fire when building a fire in the

wood stove. Richard, who had been at the house shortly after Donald was taken to the hospital and

had observed that the wood stove was cold, told appellant that the evidence would not support his

2 Ward had previously testified that Donald went by the nickname “Major.” 3 Frank testified at trial that he did not say this to Ward. Rather, he stated that he told her what he would do if he thought appellant had set Donald on fire. He also testified that he did not remember telling Ward how appellant reacted to the fact that Donald had been burned. Frank also denied that appellant told him the burning was the result of “a prank gone bad.”

4 story and that he should tell the police the truth. According to Richard, appellant stated that he was

going to stick with the story about the wood stove. However, appellant also told Richard that “it was

a prank that went bad.”

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