Perry Andrew Pippillion v. State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 2008
Docket11-06-00151-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Perry Andrew Pippillion v. State of Texas (Perry Andrew Pippillion v. State of Texas) 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
Perry Andrew Pippillion v. State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion filed March 6, 2008

Opinion filed March 6, 2008

                                                                        In The

    Eleventh Court of Appeals

                                                                   __________

                                                          No. 11-06-00151-CR

                            PERRY ANDREW PIPPILLION, Appellant

                                                             V.

                                        STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                                On Appeal from the 252nd District Court

                                                       Jefferson County, Texas

                                                    Trial Court Cause No. 91244

                                             M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

The jury convicted Perry Andrew Pippillion of the first degree felony offense of causing serious injury to a child.  Tex. Penal Code Ann. ' 22.04(a)(1) (Vernon Supp. 2007). The jury found that appellant was a repeat offender and assessed his punishment at confinement for life in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  Appellant challenges his conviction in three issues:  ineffective assistance of counsel, legally and factually insufficient evidence, and error of the trial court in denying his requested jury instruction.  We affirm.


Background Facts

This case involved a two-month-old baby who starved to death.  Captain Eric Paul Chapman of the Beaumont Fire Department testified that he responded to a medical call from 2455 Hemlock in Beaumont on October 24, 2003.  When he arrived, the baby was not breathing and did not have a pulse.   He tried unsuccessfully to resuscitate the baby who looked malnourished.  Captain Chapman could see the baby=s ribs, Athe baby=s skin was hanging off of it,@ and A[t]he baby had sunken eyes.@  He determined that there was no Amechanism of injury, no phlegm.@  In answer to his questions, the mother told him that the baby had not been eating.

Officer Jerome D. Watkins, an officer with the Beaumont Police Department for eighteen years, said that he was dispatched to 2455 Hemlock to assist the E.M.S. with an infant who was not breathing.  He described the child as being very emaciated, a skeletal-looking child.  He talked to the mother who gave her name as Tamecca Henderson.  The prosecutor asked Officer Watkins the following questions:

Q:        Did you have contact with anyone in the house who identified himself as the father of the child?

A:         Yes, sir, I did.

Q:        Did he identify himself by the name as Perry Pippillion?

A:         Yes, sir, he did. 

Officer Watkins said that appellant accompanied him to a backroom where he spoke with both appellant and Tamecca.  Based on the information that they gave, he determined that the baby was approximately two months old.  Officer Watkins inquired of the parents if any medical care had been provided to the child up until he arrived at the house.  The mother said, with appellant present, that Ashe had not had a chance to take the child back to the doctor since she brought her home from the hospital.@


During cross-examination, Officer Watkins testified that appellant had lived at 2455 Hemlock for as long as he could remember.  Officer Watkins had dealt with the Pippillions since he first joined the police department eighteen years ago.  Officer Watkins did not know how long Tamecca and the baby had lived at 2455 Hemlock, but she introduced herself as the mother and appellant as the father.  In addition, Tamecca told Officer Watkins that Ashe resided there.@  Despite Officer Watkins=s earlier testimony that appellant had identified himself as the father, Officer Watkins on redirect said that he could not say whether appellant stated that he was the father but that appellant Awas standing right there when [Tamecca] said he was the father@ and that appellant did not dispute her statement.  Appellant did not state that he was not the father at any time.

Beaumont Police Detective Mark Hogge, a twenty-four-year veteran, testified that, when he arrived at 2455 Hemlock, the baby had been taken from the house.  He said that appellant identified himself as the father and identified Tamecca as the mother.  Appellant also told Detective Hogge that the name of the child was Monique Pippillion.  Tamecca apparently had left when the baby was taken to the hospital.  Appellant showed Detective Hogge the bedroom where he and Tamecca slept as well as where the baby had slept.  Subsequently, Detective Hogge went to the hospital to see the baby.  Detective Hogge had been working crimes involving children for seven years and stated that this was Aone of the most horrific things that [he] had seen.@

The next witness for the State was Ester Griffin, manager of the Southeast Texas Community Health Clinic in Beaumont, an indigent care clinic.  At the prosecutor=s request, she had searched their records to see if the baby had been a patient there.  There was no record of the baby as a patient, but the clinic had records for Azariah Henderson, Ashuntay Green, and Patyria Green as patients.  The clinic=s records reflected that Tamecca was the mother of these three children.  Earlier, Detective Hogge and Officer Watkins had stated that other children were living at 2455 Hemlock.

Dr. Uma Knojia specialized in pediatrics and adolescent medicine and was on duty when the baby was born at St. Elizabeth Hospital.  He testified that her birth weight was five pounds, six ounces.  The baby=s APGAR scores (reflecting the status at birth) were good.  The baby had some trouble breathing within an hour or two after her birth, but Dr. Knojia said that situation was not unusual.  The baby stayed at the hospital for five days and had gained weight by the time she was discharged.  Dr. Knojia would have expected the baby to gain a minimum of two pounds and a maximum of five pounds during the next two months; however, the baby=s weight at autopsy was four pounds ten ounces, way below what Dr. Knojia expected.  Dr.

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