Novell Quintin Woods, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 2004
Docket01-03-00380-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Novell Quintin Woods, Jr. v. State (Novell Quintin Woods, Jr. 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
Novell Quintin Woods, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 8, 2004







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


                                              NOS. 01-03-00380-CR     01-03-00381-CR

____________

NOVELL QUINTIN WOODS JR., Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 337th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 909704 and 928529


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          In two separate cases, which were tried together, the trial court found appellant, Novell Quintin Woods Jr., guilty of the first degree felony offense of burglary and the second degree felony offense of aggravated assault. The trial court then made an affirmative finding that appellant had used a deadly weapon during the commission of the aggravated assault, assessed appellant’s punishment at confinement for 18 years in each case, and sentenced appellant accordingly, with the sentences to run concurrently.

          In four points of error, appellant contends that the evidence was factually insufficient to support his conviction for aggravated assault, the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction for burglary, and the trial court erred in denying his motions for a new trial, which were filed in each case, without first holding hearings on the motions.

          We affirm.

Factual Background

          Julia Dominguez testified that she had met appellant in 2000 and, although he was married to another woman, they had begun a romantic relationship. Appellant eventually moved into her apartment and lived with Dominguez until early April 2002, when she “thr[e]w him out” following an argument.

          On April 12, 2002, while Dominguez was spending the evening at her apartment with her boyfriend, Charles Mulkey, her 10-year-old daughter, Amanda, and Amanda’s 10-year-old friend, Courtney McRae, appellant knocked on the front door of Dominguez’s apartment. When Dominguez looked through the “peephole” in the door and saw appellant, she became alarmed and upset because she had not invited appellant to come to her apartment that evening and she did not want appellant to know that Mulkey was at her apartment because Mulkey hated appellant. While appellant stood outside the apartment, Dominguez called him on his cellular telephone “to ask him to just go away so there would not be a confrontation between him and [Mulkey].”

          Dominguez explained that, after Mulkey learned that appellant was outside the apartment, Mulkey retrieved, from Dominguez’s bedroom, a .25 caliber handgun that Dominguez had borrowed from a friend. Mulkey then told Dominguez, “I’m going to get that MF [sic]. He’s got to go down.” Dominguez and Mulkey then struggled over the gun, and Amanda yelled either “Stop!” or “No, Jackie, no!” During the struggle, Dominguez noticed that the gun had “jammed,” but she did not know if it had jammed during the struggle or sometime earlier.

          Appellant then broke down the door of Dominguez’s apartment, came into her bedroom, “leaned across” the bed, and began fighting with Mulkey, who was on the opposite side of the bed from the bedroom door. Although it was undisputed that, during his intrusion into the apartment, appellant had stabbed Mulkey twice, had also stabbed Dominguez in the stomach, arm, and shoulder, and had cut off part of Dominguez’s ear, Dominguez testified that she did not see whether appellant had a knife and did not recall being involved in the struggle. Dominguez explained that, after she had seen appellant fighting with Mulkey, her next memory was of being in the hospital and that she did not remember receiving any of the injuries that she had sustained.

          When the State asked Dominguez whether she had given appellant “permission to kick [her] door in,” Dominguez stated that she was confused by the question, refused to answer, and then invoked her Fifth Amendment right not to testify. In response to a question by appellant’s counsel concerning whether appellant had entered the apartment with her consent, Dominguez responded, “I would say it would be with it, because I believe he was trying to help us.”

          Dominguez further testified that, although she had known Mulkey for most of her life, she had become “reacquainted” with him in June 2001, when they had begun a romantic relationship. During their relationship, Mulkey had choked and hit Dominguez and had threatened to kill her and to hurt appellant. Dominguez believed that appellant was aware of Mulkey’s prior violence and threats because, prior to the incident in question, appellant had gone with Dominguez when she had obtained a protective order against Mulkey while he was in jail in San Antonio. Although the protective order was in effect on the night of the stabbings, Dominguez admitted that she had invited Mulkey to visit and to stay with her and, a day or two earlier, had purchased and sent him a bus ticket so that he could travel to Houston to see her.

          McRae testified that she had gone to Dominguez’s apartment that day to spend the night with Amanda and that she and Amanda were in Dominguez’s bedroom when appellant broke down the apartment door. When McRae saw appellant come into the bedroom and stab Mulkey with a knife, she, out of fear, ran into the hallway of the apartment and yelled for Amanda to come with her. McRae then saw Dominguez run backwards out of the bedroom, with appellant following her. When Dominguez reached the apartment’s patio door, McRae saw appellant stab her several times and heard Amanda yell at him to stop. After McRae telephoned for emergency assistance, appellant left, and McRae saw that Dominguez’s ear was “hanging off.” McRae further testified that, some time after the incident, either Amanda or Dominguez had told McRae that Mulkey had threatened to kill appellant.

          Mulkey testified that, beginning in August 2000, he had lived with Dominguez at her apartment for approximately one and one-half months. Mulkey moved out after he and Dominguez “began having some complications” because of appellant’s telephone calls to Dominguez’s apartment. Mulkey, who had been “on a monitor situation,” then returned to San Antonio, turned himself in, and spent six months in jail. Dominguez had visited Mulkey every Friday while he was in jail in San Antonio.

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Novell Quintin Woods, Jr. v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/novell-quintin-woods-jr-v-state-texapp-2004.