Paul Edward Lammons v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 23, 2009
Docket06-09-00016-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Paul Edward Lammons v. State (Paul Edward Lammons 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
Paul Edward Lammons v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-09-00016-CR



PAUL EDWARD LAMMONS, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 173rd Judicial District Court

Henderson County, Texas

Trial Court No. B-15,975





Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Moseley



MEMORANDUM OPINION



After a Henderson County (1) jury found Paul Edward Lammons guilty of aggravated robbery, Lammons submitted the issue of punishment to the trial court. After a hearing on punishment, the trial court found the two enhancement allegations to be true, sentencing Lammons to forty-five years' imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and restitution of $10,320.75. On appeal, Lammons challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the conviction, and further complains that in closing arguments to the jury, the State was permitted to shift the burden of proof. We affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

During the day prior to the evening of the assault on him on August 7, 2007, seventy-six-year-old Mitchell Manning led a routine life set by the demands of his Shady Oaks Mercantile Convenience Store and his trucking company (a small enterprise mostly involved in transporting rocks, sand, and soil). The store opened at 7:00 a.m. and closed at 8:00 p.m. In addition to working in the store, Manning counted the money every night and placed it in a pouch for deposit the next morning. After completing his routine on August 7, Manning closed the store at about 8:10 or 8:15 and made the short, four-mile drive to his home in his white Dodge pickup truck.

Manning had the trusting habit of never locking the doors to his home. On August 7, this proved to be a bad habit. As he entered his front door, Manning discovered it to be partially blocked, a blocking which Manning initially believed to be caused by his dog, which stayed in the house. Instead of discovering the dog at the door, Manning was faced with a tall man in a ski mask, holding a gun. The masked man slammed the door into Manning, grabbed him, and then kicked him into a glass gun case. Shards of the gun case's shattered glass lacerated Manning's hands and abdomen, causing him to bleed. The intruder shoved his left knee onto Manning's back and placed a revolver to Manning's head. At that point, a second, smaller intruder donning a ski mask appeared in Manning's sight. Together, the intruders stood Manning up and told him they only wanted his money. They moved Manning to the den, laid him face down, grabbed his keys, pocket knife, passport, and wallet, and tied his hands behind his back with a phone charger cord and electrical tape. Holding the pistol to his head, the intruders threatened Manning's life, moved him into the master bedroom, and asked him whether he had any more guns in the home. Manning reported to them that there was a Smith and Wesson revolver under the pillow on the bed, a .12-gauge shotgun in the closet, and a shotgun, rifle, and pistol in the pickup Manning had been driving. The intruders tied Manning's feet with duct tape and forcefully pushed him backward into the closet, where his head was slammed into the rear wall, causing him to begin bleeding from an abrasion or cut suffered from the blow. The taller intruder informed Manning that "she" (referring to the other, smaller intruder) was going to start the truck and that he would shoot if he heard Manning trying to escape from the closet. Manning was left tied up, with blood running down his hands and arms, a shard of glass still embedded in his abdomen, and a bleeding, injured head.

When the house fell silent, Manning slipped the electrical tape off of his hands, crawled to the window, saw that his pickup truck was gone, and quickly inventoried the items missing from his home. He determined that the intruders had stolen his guns, pocket knife, billfold with his driver's license, social security and medicare cards, $600.00 in cash, and credit cards, in addition to his ostrich-skin boots, cell phones, money he had brought from the convenience store (including coins placed in a plastic bag), and a jewelry box containing wedding rings, necklaces, and silver dollars. Because the robbers had taken his cell phones, Manning had no means to report the incident from his home. He walked to one of his large trucks used for hauling rocks and gravel and drove from his home to the highway, where he hailed a passing pickup truck and had its driver call the police. The driver of the pickup truck took Manning to his home, where the good Samaritan and his wife cleaned Manning up. Manning's daughter (who had been contacted) retrieved Manning and returned him to his own home.

Officer Kevin Adair arrived and observed that Manning was shaken, scared, upset, and that he had blood on his hands and abdomen. At Adair's recommendation, an ambulance was called and Manning was taken to the hospital.

In an interview with investigator Wilford Gabbard, Manning described the tall intruder as being between six feet and six feet five inches tall, with a medium build, while the shorter intruder stood between five feet ten inches and six feet tall, having a skinny, petite build. Because Manning believed that his dog's behavior toward the intruders indicated that they were familiar to him, he initially suspected Jeremy Costlow, his former employee who had lived with Manning's daughter and tried to rob him once before, as being the shorter of the two assailants. (2)

A little over six hours after the robbery took place, off-duty Bell County deputy sheriff Curtis Nichols was performing security patrol work for a car dealership when he spotted a white Dodge pickup driving through the lot. Since the dealership was closed for the night, the presence of the vehicle aroused his suspicion, so he stopped it. Lammons was driving the truck, and Julie Rigsby was a passenger. In response to Nichols' request, Lammons produced a driver's license. When Nichols conducted a computer search of the license plate number on the truck, the results showed the vehicle as being reported stolen from Manning. This caused Nichols to look more closely at the driver's license which Lammons had produced and Nichols noticed that the photograph on the license was not a picture of Lammons; the license which Lammons had produced was one issued to Manning. When Nichols informed Lammons that the vehicle had been reported as stolen, Lammons attempted to explain the report away by representing "that he was a family member and they had had a fight, and they were upset, and that's why the truck was reported stolen." Nichols' search of the vehicle revealed the pistol, .12-gauge shotgun, and .22 rifle which had been in Manning's truck, together with a jewelry box, several credit cards issued to Manning, ski masks, (3)

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