Ott v. State

627 S.W.2d 218
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 26, 1982
Docket2-81-028-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 627 S.W.2d 218 (Ott 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
Ott v. State, 627 S.W.2d 218 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

OPINION

JORDAN, Justice.

Gregory Arthur Ott was indicted in Den-ton County, Texas, for capital murder of a peace officer and on May 30, 1978, was found guilty by a jury of murder, a lesser included offense of the indictment. He was assessed punishment by the same jury at confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections for life. He appeals on thirty-five grounds of error.

We affirm.

On the late evening of February 20, 1978, six peace officers, accompanied by an informant, one James Leonard Baker, went to the residence of appellant near Argyle, Denton County, Texas, for the purpose of purchasing marihuana from appellant and arresting him for selling it. The peace officers included a captain of the Denton County Sheriff’s Department, two Denton County Deputy Sheriffs, two narcotic agents of the Texas Department of Public Safety, and Bobby Paul Doherty, a Texas Ranger. The officers had been informed by James Leonard Baker that appellant would sell them marihuana. After arriving at appellant’s residence narcotic agent Ben Neel of the Texas Department of Public Safety and Baker went in the house to talk to appellant and to arrange a marihuana buy. While they were inside the house with appellant, making the buy, the other five officers waited in the pickup truck in which they had arrived. A noise accidentally caused by one of the officers outside the house alerted Gregory Ott and gunfire ensued. The testimony was that there were two shots fired, one by agent Ben Neel and one by appellant which the state alleged killed Texas Ranger Bobby Paul Doherty. This alleged fact was proven by the State to the satisfaction of the jury, and appellant was convicted of the murder of Bobby Paul Doherty.

In his first two grounds of error appellant complains of the exclusion by the trial court of certain cross-examination testimony of Agent Ben Neel, offered for the purpose of showing bias and motive for testifying as he did. Such testimony would have shown first that at some unspecified time either before or after the February 20, 1978, incident, when Ranger Doherty was slain, Agent Neel was suspended by the Texas Department of Public Safety pending investigation of the disappearance of $9550.00 from the trunk of his car. The other testimony offered by appellant and excluded by the court concerned a 1973 drug arrest in Houston, Texas, where a suspect was shot and killed by Agent Neel.

It is appellant’s contention on appeal that both incidents would have shown bias on the part of Agent Neel and that his testimony against appellant about the shooting of Ranger Doherty was probably colored and biased because of Neel’s past difficulties. The contention is that because of these two incidents, Neel would be trying to make a better impression on, and to curry favor with, his superiors.

With respect to the suspension because of the $9550.00 missing from the witness’s car trunk, earlier in February, 1978, appellant was allowed to prove up a bill of exceptions when the trial testimony was concluded. On the bill of exceptions Neel testified that on February 2, 1978, it was discovered that $9550.00 of money belonging to the State of Texas, used for undercover narcotics work, was missing from the trunk of Neel’s car. An immediate investigation was launched, as a result of which Neel was suspended for five days from his job without pay. However, his testimony was that at the time of the February 20, 1978, incident when Ranger Doherty was killed, all he knew was that there was an investigation pending; as far as he could remember he had not, as of February 20, 1978, been notified of his suspension. The investigation into the missing $9550.00 was still pending at the time of this trial in June of 1978. There was no evidence of the reason for the suspension, other than that the money had been in *221 Neel’s car. There is nothing to indicate that Neel was accused of taking the money or whether he was suspended for negligence or for some other reason. He was never charged with any criminal offense as a result of this incident.

The proffered testimony relating to the 1973 drug incident when a suspect was shot and killed by Agent Neel was very brief and sketchy. It was taken on a bill of exceptions, but showed only that another police officer was wounded and that a person named Webb was shot and killed by Neel during a “drug incident in Houston” in 1973. Appellant’s counsel did not, on the bill of exceptions, elicit other testimony from Agent Neel which would have shed more light on the incident. No details about the “incident” nor about the shooting of Webb were elicited. There was nothing to show any similarity between that incident and the one involved here.

We do not believe there was any error in the trial court’s exclusion of any of this testimony, because all of it was on collateral matter, not material in any way related to the issues of this trial. If there was error it was not preserved for appeal. Appellant at no time objected to the action of the court in refusing both the testimony as to the suspension and as to the 1973 Houston “drug incident” where a person was shot and killed. He not only failed to state specific reasons for his objections to the actions of the court, but failed to object at all. Appellant attempted to show that Neel had been suspended at some time as a result of losing the money from the trunk of his car. The State’s objection to this line of testimony was sustained and appellant at that time neither objected to the ruling of the court or explained the materiality, importance and admissibility of this testimony. He later took a bill of exceptions relating to this testimony at which time Agent Neel testified that at some time he was suspended for five days without pay pending the investigation into the missing money. He was not sure, and he did not testify, as to whether he learned about this suspension before or after the February 20, 1978, incident involved in this case. He in fact said that he thought it was after the February 20, 1978, incident, sometime in March, 1978, that he learned officially about the suspension. He admitted that he knew on February 20 that he was under investigation. At the conclusion of Neel’s testimony on his 1978 suspension on the bill, counsel for appellant passed the witness and at that time never reoffered the testimony, objected to its exclusion, nor gave the court his reasons why the testimony was material and admissible for impeachment purposes.

With respect to the other proffered testimony on the 1973 Houston “drug incident”, appellant’s counsel asked Neel, “did you ever work with the Houston Police?” The State’s objection to this as irrelevant was sustained and appellant took a bill of exceptions on this line of testimony. Neel simply testified on the bill that in 1973 in Houston he was involved in a “drug incident” which resulted in two officers being wounded by gun fire and a man by the name of Webb being killed. Neel testified that he shot and killed Webb at this time. This was the extent of this testimony. There was no testimony as to the circumstances, whether Neel was acting illegally or improperly, or whether he was charged or accused of the killing of Webb.

When he was through with the witness, Mr. Jackson, counsel for appellant, said, “That’s all we have on the Houston incident, Your Honor.” He did not offer this testimony, made no objection whatever, specific or otherwise, to the exclusion of this testimony, and did not state any reasons for its admissibility.

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Bluebook (online)
627 S.W.2d 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ott-v-state-texapp-1982.