Mullins v. State

173 S.W.3d 167, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 6992, 2005 WL 2044594
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 25, 2005
Docket2-04-161-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 173 S.W.3d 167 (Mullins 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
Mullins v. State, 173 S.W.3d 167, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 6992, 2005 WL 2044594 (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION 1

BOB McCOY, Justice.

I. Introduction

A jury found appellant, Henry Franklin Mullins, Jr. a/k/a Henry Franklin Mullins (Mullins), guilty of (1) the manufacture of one to four grams of a controlled substance, namely methamphetamine, and (2) possession of a precursor to methamphetamine, namely pseudoephedrine, with the intent to manufacture methamphetamine. The trial judge then sentenced Mullins to forty years’ imprisonment for each conviction to run concurrently. In five issues on appeal, Mullins challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions and argues that the jury was improperly charged on the law of parties. We affirm.

II. Background Facts and Procedural History

On December 27, 2002, there was an explosion and fire inside Apartment 9 at the Spring Oak Apartment complex located at 124 Roberts Cutoff in Fort Worth, Texas. At the time of the fire, Apartment 9 was leased to Mullins.

*170 Lori Duncan, the manager of the apartment complex, testified that on the day of the fire she was getting an apartment ready for a tenant when she was approached by Mullins, who indicated that he was making a cake and needed to borrow a blender. She testified that although Mullins had requested a blender, she handed him a mixer because he had said he was making a cake. She stated that when she handed Mullins the mixer he said, “well, I guess that will work,” to which she replied, “well, you said you’re making a cake.” The record then reflects that either Duncan or Mullins handed the mixer to a person accompanying Mullins, identified by Duncan as someone who occasionally stayed with Mullins and whom she knew as “Joe” or “Joe Don,” and that Joe Don took the mixer and left while Duncan and Mullins continued to talk.

Duncan testified that she and Mullins were standing by the stairs when “all of a sudden we heard this loud noise, and he just got this look on his face.” Duncan stated that Mullins then ran into his apartment and returned to request a fire extinguisher. Duncan testified that after she provided Mullins with a fire extinguisher, he went back into his apartment, and that is when he came back out and told her everything was okay, that the fire was out. When Duncan asked Mullins what happened, he stated, “it just caught on fire.” Duncan testified that when she told Mullins she was going to call the fire department he told her not to as the fire was already out. She testified that she told Mullins she was going to call the fire department anyway. She stated that while she was waiting for the fire department, Mullins and Joe Don came out of the apartment, told her they were leaving to “get some stuff to fix the bathroom,” and left, leaving the door of the apartment open.

After Mullins and Joe Don left, Duncan testified that she and another resident of the apartment complex, Gary Perkins, went inside Mullins’s apartment. Duncan testified that while inside Mullins’s apartment she observed thick black smoke, a patch of burned carpet in the entryway leading to the bedroom, and a melted bathtub. She testified that the carpet was new and that the bathtub was not melted when she leased the apartment to Mullins in September of 2002. Duncan also testified that based upon information she received from Perkins, she and Perkins went inside Apartment 6, a vacant apartment, where she observed “some gas cans or whatever in the bathtub in the apartment.”

Perkins testified that on December 27, 2002 he was a resident of the Spring Oaks Apartment complex and that on that date he “heard a bunch of commotion.” He testified that he observed smoke coining out of Apartment 9 and that he saw Mullins’s “roommate,” whom he indicated he knew as “Joe,” take a five-gallon can from the apartment to the dumpster. He also testified that he witnessed Mullins and Joe take “four more things out of the apartment” and put them into Apartment 6, which he believed to be vacant. He stated that he then saw both men leave in a pickup truck. Perkins testified that after Joe and Mullins left, he accompanied Duncan inside Mullins’s apartment where he observed that the carpet was “singed” and that the tub was “all black and melted.” Perkins also testified that on previous occasions he had noticed a “sulfur-type smell” coming from Mullins’s apartment.

Officer John Gottlob of the Fort Worth Police Department testified that on December 27, 2002 he executed a search warrant for Apartments 6 and 9 and that upon entering Apartment 9 he observed certain items that in his experience he had seen used in methamphetamine labs. He also *171 testified regarding the procedure or process for manufacturing methamphetamine utilizing the Nazi or Birch reduction method, the ingredients being pseudoephedrine, lithium or sodium metal, anhydrous ammonia, and hydrochloride gas. He testified that pseudoephedrine can be extracted from cold tablets, 2 lithium metal can be taken from batteries, anhydrous ammonia can be made from fertilizer using a lye-water solution, and that hydrochloride gas can be made from salt and a sulfuric-acid based drain opener. He then identified several items seized by police at the scene and depicted in photographs offered by the State as exhibits. In particular, he testified that police seized, in Apartment 9, certain material found in the bathtub, a bottle labeled Red Devil Lye, a box labeled to contain salt, a bag labeled to contain fertilizer, a coffee filter containing a brownish tan residue, a measuring cup containing a white residue, a Ziploc bag containing a powdery substance 3 and a receipt for dry ice purchased at Southwest Carbonics. In addition, Officer Gottlob identified items seized by police and depicted in photographs from Apartment 6, including, among other things, two five-gallon gas cans found in the bathtub with what appears to be fire extinguisher material on top of them and burn marks on the sides, a plastic bag containing plastic buckets and some hoses and funnels, a bucket containing a length of coiled up hose and some liquid, three glass jars, a can of camp fuel, 4 and a glass jar containing liquid. Officer Gottlob also testified that police seized some peeled batteries, i.e., batteries without the metal casing, and mail addressed to Mullins at 124 Roberts Cutoff Road, Apartment 9.

Max Courtney, a forensic chemist, testified that he collected samples and performed a chemical analysis on items found in Apartments 6 and 9, dusted all items found with printable surfaces for fingerprints, and dusted for fingerprints in Apartments 6 and 9. He testified that he obtained prints from a one gallon Crown camp fuel can and from three one-gallon glass jars. In addition, he testified that he found pseudoephedrine, some trapped ammonia, and a volatile hydrocarbon consistent with mineral spirits, which would be consistent with camp fuel, in the clumped material taken from near the drain of the bathtub of Apartment 9. Courtney testified that pseudoephedrine is an immediate precursor to methamphetamine and that this type of material was consistent with what is left over from the actual cooking of methamphetamine.

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Bluebook (online)
173 S.W.3d 167, 2005 Tex. App. LEXIS 6992, 2005 WL 2044594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-state-texapp-2005.