Patrick Evans v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 12, 2009
Docket08-07-00213-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Patrick Evans v. State (Patrick Evans 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
Patrick Evans v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ PATRICK EVANS, No. 08-07-00213-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. Criminal District Court No. 2 § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of Tarrant County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 0989458D) §

OPINION

Patrick Evans appeals his criminal prosecution for capital murder. A jury found him guilty

and sentenced him to life in prison. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

Melvyn Williams died of multiple gunshot wounds to the head. The forensic pathologist

testified that the manner of death suggested an execution-style murder. The significant facts in the

case are controverted.

Wanda Williams1 is the mother of Mercutio “Kee Kee” Howard and the sister of Shirley

Tolliver. She testified that Kee Kee and Appellant were long-time friends. Wanda had a house

located at 5416 Purington in Fort Worth, Texas, but she provided live-in care for her grandmother

at the City View Apartments. Wanda found Melvyn’s body in the storage shed at the Purington

address.

Wanda’s involvement began when she received a telephone call from Appellant informing

1 W anda W illiams is not related to the decedent. her that he was coming to Fort Worth. She told Kee Kee of Appellant’s plans. The next morning,

Wanda’s nephew, Joseph Tolliver, entered her bedroom at the City View Apartments and awakened

her. When he told her there was a body at her house, Wanda jumped up, grabbed her keys, and drove

to the Purington address. She noticed drops of blood on the sidewalk as she walked up the driveway.

She entered the house through the back door, walked into the backyard, and discovered the body.

She then contacted a United States Marshall who was a friend of her sister.

Kee Kee’s Version of Events

Kee Kee testified that he met Appellant in high school and they had known each other for

more than ten years. Kee Kee explained that Appellant had moved from Fort Worth to Houston, but

he would periodically travel to Fort Worth to visit his friends. When his mother related that

Appellant was coming to Fort Worth, Kee Kee thought it was odd because Appellant had been to

Fort Worth only a few days before. Kee Kee detailed his telephone conversation with Appellant:

When I walked in the house and the phone was ringing and I picked it up. And [Appellant] had told me that he was on his way down here and he had a dead body in the trunk. I said: Man, come on. I didn’t believe that right there. So then that’s when he told me that he was bringing his cousin down here from college. So I believed that. I told him: Well, just meet me at my house [5416 Purington].

Kee Kee and Appellant met at the Purington address. Kee Kee’s friend, Courtney Davis, was

with him when Appellant arrived in his black Intrepid. Appellant had marijuana, a big bag of

cocaine, prescription drugs, a revolver, and some type of handgun with a pearl handle. Kee Kee

testified that when he and Appellant were alone, Appellant described how he murdered Melvyn:

Q. While they [Joseph Tolliver and Courtney Davis] were gone who was left at the house?

A. Just me and [Appellant].

Q. What happened while they were gone? A. We was talking and that’s when he told me how he did it.

Q. What did he say?

A. He said he had -- he said he had went up there and it was unusual for whoever this guy is to be up in the house by his self. So some way he got him to come out and get in the car.

Q. What car?
A. In his black Intrepid.
Q. What happened?

A. He say he got him to come out there and get in the car. And the guy was sitting on the passenger’s side. And he asked him -- some way he got a gun. I don’t know where the gun, how Patrick got the gun or whatever. I don’t I don’t know that. But anyway he told the dude to get something out of the glove compartment. And he said when the dude reached to get something out of the glove compartment he shot him in the head.

Q. Did he say who this guy was?
A. He didn’t tell me no name.
Q. To this day do you know the guy’s name?
A. No. I don’t know what he looked like or nothing.
Q. Okay. Where did he say this happened?
A. In Houston in some apartment complex.
Q. Okay. How did he tell you that he ended up with all the guns and drugs?

A. Because he said he shot the guy and he went back up in the apartment and got everything and put it in the car.

Q. So the guns -- the guns and the drugs came from inside the apartment?2

2 According to the record, there were thirty pounds of marijuana and 156 grams of cocaine. A. Yes.

Q. Were they [Appellant’s] guns and drugs?
A. I’m assuming they was whoever that guy was up in there.

Appellant, Kee Kee, Courtney, and Joseph all participated in moving Melvyn’s body from

the trunk of Appellant’s car to the shed. They then consumed a considerable amount of the drugs

that Appellant had taken from Melvyn. The next morning, Kee Kee accompanied Appellant to a

local Home Depot where Appellant purchased a chain saw, gloves, and trash cans. Appellant

planned to dispose of Melvyn William’s body by dismembering it with the chain saw and throwing

away the body parts so they could not be identified. But Joseph told his Aunt Wanda about the body

and she contacted the authorities. The police arrived before the victim’s body was dismembered.

A police chase ensued, and Appellant, Joseph, Courtney, and Kee Kee were arrested.

Appellant’s Version of Events

Appellant denied killing Melvyn. He did know the victim, he knew Melvyn was a drug

dealer, and he had partied with him. At some point prior to the murder, Kee Kee, Wanda, and

Shirley Tolliver visited Houston. Appellant took Kee Kee around the music scene and introduced

him to Melvyn. Kee Kee and Melvyn talked privately for over an hour, but Appellant did not know

the details of the conversation.

Shortly before he disappeared, Melvyn asked Appellant for a ride to the Greens Point area

on the north side of Houston. Appellant last saw Melvyn talking to some guys in a blue Caprice.

Melvyn waved at Appellant to go ahead and leave. Appellant then went home, where he learned that

his grandmother had become very sick in Fort Worth. He then threw some clothes in a bag and left.

He arrived in Fort Worth around 4 or 5 p.m. that afternoon. He met Kee Kee at Wanda’s house, and

then allowed Joseph and Courtney to use his car. The two were gone approximately twenty to twenty-five minutes. Then Appellant, Kee Kee, Joseph, and Courtney drove to City View to his

grandmother’s apartment. Kee Kee asked to use Appellant’s car. Kee Kee, Courtney, and Joseph

left while Appellant stayed to visit his grandmother. Appellant testified that the three men were gone

about two hours and that when they returned, he noticed that they had all changed clothes.

At around 9 or 10 p.m., Appellant and Kee Kee drove to Teleishea’s house. According to

Appellant, Kee Kee pulled a gun out while they were sitting at the table. They went into a back room

to hide the gun, and Kee Kee revealed he had another gun and some prescription drugs. Appellant

grabbed the guns and placed them in a box in the closet. While Appellant was panicking over the

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Patrick Evans v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-evans-v-state-texapp-2009.