Pierson v. State

644 S.W.2d 31, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5050
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 5, 1982
DocketNo. B14-81-413-CR
StatusPublished

This text of 644 S.W.2d 31 (Pierson 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
Pierson v. State, 644 S.W.2d 31, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5050 (Tex. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinions

PAUL PRESSLER, Justice.

Appellant was convicted of murder by a jury and sentenced to eighty years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections.

By his first ground of error, appellant complains that the evidence was insufficient to sustain his conviction.

The state’s first witness was Lucy Mae Mitchell. She testified that the deceased, James Willie Baines, a 38 year old, mentally retarded, black male, was her nephew and had lived at her house for about one year prior to his death. Baines apparently had limited use of motor functions, particularly speech, and often communicated by some sort of sign language. According to Mrs. Mitchell, on the morning in question Baines walked to a nearby store to buy some snuff. On his returning, Mrs. Mitchell recalls last seeing Baines “outdoors around at the back.” Later Mrs. Mitchell heard one gunshot from an unknown direction, and she ran to her front door. There she was met by Baines who was holding his chest. He ran past her into the kitchen. Mrs. Mitchell then noticed that Baines had been shot. In the kitchen Mrs. Mitchell asked Baines who shot him. Baines took some iron “eyes” off the kitchen stove and threw them in a manner which Mrs. Mitchell interpreted to be in the direction of appellant’s house.

Mrs. Mitchell also testified that about two months before Baines was shot appellant tried to kick in her door and complained that some paneling was taken from his premises. She stated that appellant had a silver gun with a white handle, possibly a .38 caliber pistol, although she wasn’t sure.

Willie Delro lived directly across the street from Baines with his mother-in-law, Mary Gaines. Delro testified that he was awakened by Mrs. Gaines at about noon on the date in question. According to Delro, as he was putting on his clothes, he heard three shots. Four or five minutes later, he looked out of his front door and saw appellant’s wife leading the Pierson’s white horse into appellant’s back yard. He did not see Baines, but he did see the appellant standing on his front porch. Delro then observed Mr. Ignacio Trevino, another neighbor, heading from the vicinity of appellant’s house. Delro believed that Mr. Trevino had some sort of package in his hands, perhaps a paper bag. Some fifteen or twenty minutes later, Delro said, Mr. Trevino left in his automobile with the other members of his family. During this period, Delro recalls seeing appellant standing on his front porch.

Mrs. Gaines testified that on the day in question she saw Baines standing in his [34]*34yard at about 11:20 a.m. She also noticed appellant and his wife talking to Mr. and Mrs. Trevino and their children in the Trevino’s front yard. Mrs. Gaines went inside, watched television for a few minutes and then went to awaken Mr. Delro. After-wards, she went into the bathroom. She then heard one shot, which came from the direction of appellant’s house. Two or three minutes later, after returning to her living room and while seated on her couch, she looked over her shoulder and saw Baines running with his hands on his chest. At some point after the shooting Mrs. Gaines saw the appellant with a dark handled pistol in his back pocket. She testified that all she could see was the handle. Evidence was introduced that in 1978 some unknown person had shot and killed Mary Gaines’ dog and had fired some shots at her house on Breeland Street.

Gisile Wafer testified that she lived in the house between Baines’ and appellant’s. On the day in question, she and a visitor, Sammy Elay, were sitting in her front yard visiting. They casually noticed both Baines and appellant at various times. The deceased was walking around in his front yard and appellant was working on a car on his own premises. At approximately noon, Wafer saw appellant go inside his house for about five minutes. Wafer testified that when appellant returned he began firing his pistol in the “opposite direction.” Wafer and Elay immediately went inside the Wafer residence. As they sat in the living room, they heard more shooting from the direction of appellant’s house and Wafer heard somebody moan. Looking out of the front door, Wafer saw Baines holding his chest and running towards the house where he lived. She also saw appellant walking his white horse from in front of the Wafer’s house towards his house. At the time Wafer looked out the door, appellant was fifteen to twenty feet away from Baines. She did not see anyone else in their yards. According to Wafer, appellant was carrying a “silvery” pistol in his back pocket.

Kato Mitchell, Mrs. Mitchell’s son and a first cousin of the deceased, testified that when he arrived at his mother’s house, other people in the neighborhood told him that they believed appellant had done the shooting. He drove slowly by appellant’s house in order to locate appellant’s street number. As Mitchell drove by, appellant came out of his house and said: “I killed that nigger and I’ll kill ya’ll too”. Mitchell also testified that he saw a gun in appellant’s back pocket. He described the gun as being large with a black handle.

Brenda Joyce Mitchell, Kato Mitchell’s wife, was in the car with her husband and offered similar testimony. She described the gun in appellant’s possession as being shiny and silver.

Houston Police Officer Michael E. Harris testified that on November 2,1979, the day following the shooting, he responded to a shooting-ambulance call on Breeland Street. At the time Officer Harris knew nothing of the shooting of the deceased. Appellant had been wounded by a shotgun blast and an ambulance had been summoned. Officer Harris found appellant lying on a stretcher in the ambulance. Harris saw no signs indicating that appellant’s wound had been self-inflicted. While appellant was in the ambulance, Harris asked him if he was involved in a “squabble” with his neighbors, whereupon appellant remarked: “Yeah, I shot the damn nigger.” Appellant would not respond to questions concerning who shot him.

Appellant’s wife, Ina Lucille Pierson, testified that she was in her backyard when she heard what sounded like two shots coming from the front of her house. Mrs. Pierson testified that when she heard the shots, her husband was in their backyard with their neighbor, Mr. Trevino, looking for some equipment. The shots were not very loud and did not sound as though they came from a large caliber weapon. Mrs. Pierson testified that she had done some laundry that day for the Trevinos. Mrs. Pierson testified that she and her son had been shot on Breeland Street and her first husband was shot and killed in the neighborhood. Mrs. Pierson indicated that appellant owned three pistols, two .357 Magnums [35]*35and a .45 Magnum. Additionally, appellant’s wife owned a .22 caliber pistol. Mrs. Pierson testified both .357 Magnums were silver in color. The .45 Magnum was black steel with black handles.

Ignacio Trevino testified that he walked across the street to have appellant’s wife wash some clothes because his wife was ill. Appellant was doing some kind of work in his front yard. Sometime during the day, perhaps before the ambulance arrived, Mrs. Pierson returned the Trevino’s clothes that she had laundered for them. Mr. Trevino heard no shots and indicated that he had been inside most of the day. After the ambulance arrived, Trevino and his family left their home and went for a doctor’s appointment. They did not return until much later that afternoon. Trevino testified, in contradiction to the testimony of appellant’s wife, that on the day of the shooting he had not been in back of appellant’s house with the appellant and his wife when they heard gunshots.

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644 S.W.2d 31, 1982 Tex. App. LEXIS 5050, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pierson-v-state-texapp-1982.