Nisbett, Rex Allen

552 S.W.3d 244
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2018
DocketNOS. PD–0041–17 & PD–0503–17
StatusPublished
Cited by247 cases

This text of 552 S.W.3d 244 (Nisbett, Rex Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nisbett, Rex Allen, 552 S.W.3d 244 (Tex. 2018).

Opinion

Keller, P.J., delivered the unanimous opinion of the Court.

Appellants Rex Allen Nisbett and George Delacruz were convicted of murder in unrelated trials. Although the cases are factually unrelated, there are many factual similarities between the two, including that, in each case, the victim's body and the murder weapon were never recovered. In Nisbett's case, the court of appeals held the evidence to be insufficient to support the conviction and rendered a judgment of acquittal. In Delacruz's case, a different (but overlapping) panel of that court affirmed the conviction. 1 We granted review and consolidated these cases to address the appropriate analysis when the victim's body and the murder weapon are not found. We ultimately hold that the evidence was legally sufficient to support both convictions. Consequently, we reverse the court of appeals's judgment in Nisbett's *247 case and affirm the judgment in Delacruz's case.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Nisbett

Nisbett and his wife Vicki had a troubled relationship and were getting a divorce. Vicki had moved to an apartment with their three children, but she allowed Nisbett to live with them during the days leading up to Christmas of 1991. On December 14, Vicki had plans to attend a company Christmas party with a co-worker. Vicki and Nisbett argued about Vicki going to the party, and at some point during the altercation Nisbett choked her. Vicki did not meet the co-worker as she had planned to do, and she never showed up at the party. In fact, after December 14, 1991, Vicki was never seen or heard from again. Nisbett had previously made statements suggesting a wish to murder his wife, he engaged in suspicious activity and made suspicious statements to law enforcement and others on or after the date of Vicki's disappearance, he wrote a check on Vicki's bank account after her disappearance, there was circumstantial evidence linking him to Vicki's car after her disappearance, and there was physical evidence indicating that Vicki had been killed. Her body, however, was never recovered, and law enforcement never located a possible murder weapon.

We set forth the facts developed at trial in further detail below.

1. Nisbett and Vicki's Troubled Relationship

Nisbett and Vicki were high school sweethearts. They married shortly after high school and they had three sons together. Around ten years later, on November 15, 1991, Vicki filed for divorce and moved with the children to a new apartment. Nisbett opposed the divorce. He wanted to stay near the boys during the holidays, so Vicki allowed him to stay with them, with the understanding that it was a temporary situation and that she was still moving forward with the divorce.

Jerry Fryer, the Nisbetts' pastor, testified that he had developed a relationship with Nisbett and Vicki through the Trinity Christian Center and that part of his ministry included helping couples who were experiencing difficulty in their relationships. Fryer had been counseling Vicki and Nisbett together, and he also counseled Vicki individually. During his last meeting with Vicki, two or three days before she disappeared, she was crying and appeared to be "extremely fearful." She declined Fryer's offer to help arrange a different place for her to stay during this troubled period.

2. Nisbett's Statements Suggesting Desire to Murder Vicki

Nisbett once told Vicki's brother that he would kill Vicki before he let her divorce him and take his three boys. Nisbett told a co-worker that he had caught his wife cheating on him and thought about killing her, but "that wouldn't be the Christian thing to do." Nisbett had also previously gone to his brother Mike's property with Vicki's brother Mark. Nisbett showed Mark excavation holes that had been dug and said, "You could throw a body in there and no one would ever find it."

3. Suspicious Circumstances on the Day Vicki Disappeared

On Saturday, December 14, 1991, Vicki had plans to attend her company Christmas party with co-worker Julie Coen Tower. Tower spoke with Vicki several times throughout the day to confirm their plans. When Tower first called Vicki at around 2:30 p.m., she overheard Nisbett and Vicki *248 arguing. Vicki was agitated and upset, and she explained that she wanted to keep her plans with Tower but that she was arguing with Nisbett because he did not want her to go to the party. When Tower called a few hours later, at 5:00 p.m., the arguing had not abated. Vicki told her that Nisbett had choked her and left bruise marks on her neck and throat. Vicki sounded "pretty hysterical" during that phone conversation, and Tower told Vicki to get her stuff and come to Tower's apartment immediately and they could get ready for the party there. When Vicki failed to show up after thirty or forty-five minutes, Tower called her again. Nisbett answered the phone and said that Vicki had just left and was headed to the party or to Tower's place. Thirty minutes later, around 6:00 or 6:30 p.m., after Vicki still had not arrived, Tower called again. This time, Nisbett told Tower that Vicki had told him that Tower had "slowed her down a little bit and she just went ahead and went straight to the party." 2 Vicki was not seen at the Christmas party.

Wayne Castleberry also spoke with Vicki on that Saturday. Wayne had met Vicki at a local nightclub, and they had exchanged numbers. They later met for lunch and talked during the week on the phone. Vicki had explained to Wayne that she was going through a divorce but would like to see more of him after Nisbett moved out. When Wayne called Vicki's apartment the afternoon of December 14, Nisbett picked up another phone extension to eavesdrop. In a harsh tone, Nisbett accused Vicki of talking about him and told her to hang up the phone. Vicki's demeanor changed and she responded suddenly with, "I have to get off the phone," and hung up. Wayne and Vicki had planned to meet after the Christmas party, but he never heard from her again.

Morris "Bubba" Smith lived in the same apartment complex as Vicki with his sister, Lana Faye Reed. Bubba recalled that Nisbett came over late one afternoon in December and asked to borrow his car, a 1969 Nova. Nisbett also asked Bubba to watch his three boys. Nisbett returned the car to Bubba the next morning, but it was damaged-there was damage to the chrome rims around the headlights and "the trunk lock was knocked out." 3 Bubba could not recall the exact time or date that Nisbett borrowed his car, but his sister Lana remembered because she rented movies for the children when they were asked to babysit. Lana corroborated these details by providing investigators with a receipt for the movie rentals dated December 14, 1991. Bubba had never babysat for the boys before.

Between 9:30 and 9:35 p.m. on December 14, a police officer saw a car traveling northbound on South Bell Road (also known as highway 183) in Cedar Park.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
552 S.W.3d 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nisbett-rex-allen-texcrimapp-2018.