Rebekah Levone Jordan v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 2004
Docket01-03-00459-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rebekah Levone Jordan v. State (Rebekah Levone Jordan 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
Rebekah Levone Jordan v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 20, 2004







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-03-00459-CR

____________

REBEKAH LEVONE JORDAN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from County Criminal Court at Law No. Eight

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1143056


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Rebekah Levone Jordan, guilty of the misdemeanor offense of assault. The trial court then assessed appellant’s punishment at one year in jail, suspended the imposition of appellant’s sentence, placed her on community supervision for 18 months, and imposed a fine of $300.

          In four points of error, appellant contends that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support her conviction and that the trial court erred in admitting, over appellant’s objection, improper extraneous offense evidence.

          We affirm.

Factual Background

          John Price, the complainant, testified that, on November 4, 2003, upon returning from work to his house in La Porte, he heard his dog barking in the back yard. When Price went outside to investigate, he saw appellant, who was wearing a yellow, two-piece rain suit, a blue baseball cap, and sunglasses, swinging “what looked like a radio with a broken antenna” at his dog. When Price asked appellant who she was, she ignored his question and then told him, “I’m reading your goddamn meter.” Price described appellant’s demeanor as “pretty aggressive.” After appellant refused to identify herself to Price following four or five requests, Price asked her to leave his property. Appellant then walked out Price’s gate and toward the street.

          Price then saw appellant walk toward a small, white pickup truck, which was parked on the side of the street, partially on the grass. After Price retrieved a pen and paper from his house, he saw appellant get into the truck. Price noticed “some markings” on the truck, and he crossed to the side of the street opposite the truck and walked toward it to get a better view of the markings. He then saw the words “CenterPoint Energy” written on the side of the truck.

          As Price wrote down the truck’s license plate and company identification numbers, appellant “screamed something” that he could not understand. Appellant then put the truck in gear, “stomped the accelerator and spun out” the truck’s tires, and caused the truck to cross the street and to strike Price. Price’s body “ended up going up over the [truck’s] hood,” and his feet and legs were pinned underneath the truck’s front bumper. The truck dragged Price “two or three feet,” and he estimated the speed of the truck, at the time of impact, to be approximately four or five miles per hour. Appellant stopped the truck after Price banged on the truck’s hood and yelled at her to stop. Price then called the La Porte Police Department on his cellular telephone.

          Price stated that the collision caused him to sustain painful injuries to his legs and aggravated a previous injury to his left ankle. Although Price did not seek immediate emergency treatment for his injuries, he went to an emergency room three days after the collision. He explained that the delay was caused by scheduling problems with his primary care physician. Price’s doctor told him that Price would need to undergo surgery to repair a screw, previously installed in his left ankle, that had been loosened as a result of the collision.

          Natasha Fangman, who lived across the street from Price, testified that she had gone outside to feed a cat when she heard and saw Price talking with appellant. Fangman heard Price ask appellant to identify herself and heard appellant respond, in an angry tone, “None of your damn business.” Fangman then saw Price go inside his house and appellant walk toward a small, “CenterPoint” pickup truck. When Price came back outside, Fangman saw him write down some information and walk toward the truck. She then saw appellant pull out and strike Price with the truck. Fangman then ran inside and called for emergency assistance and for the police. In Fangman’s opinion, appellant deliberately caused the truck to collide with Price.

          La Porte Police Officer T. Phelan testified that he was dispatched to investigate the collision, which was initially described to him as “a traffic accident.” When Phelan arrived at the scene, appellant approached him, “started rambling about how she had gotten in an argument,” and told Phelan that she “wanted to file charges” against Price. Appellant, who was wearing a cap that bore the name “CenterPoint” on it, also told Phelan that Price had “jumped” onto the hood of the truck, and she later denied striking Price with the truck.

          Price, however, told Officer Phelan that appellant appeared to have made “an overt attempt to strike him” with the truck. Phelan noted that Price was walking with a limp, and Phelan examined Price’s left leg and saw that it was red around the ankle, “as if it was a fresh injury.” Phelan also spoke to Fangman, who generally corroborated Price’s version of the events, although Phelan noted that both Price and Fangman told him that the truck had struck Price two times. Phelan arrested appellant after he saw a muddy rut in the grass at the side of the road where the truck had been parked and muddy tire tracks crossing the yellow stripe in the center of the road.

          Appellant testified that, on the day of the collision, she was a CenterPoint Energy meter reader and that she had gone to Price’s house to read the electricity meter. She was wearing a rain suit and a baseball cap, which bore the name “CenterPoint.” After reading the meter, which was located in the backyard of Price’s house, appellant heard a dog barking and waited for the dog’s owner to come to where she was standing. Appellant testified that she waved her handheld computer at the dog and told it to “get back.” Appellant then saw Price, who asked appellant who she was. Appellant told him that she was there to read the meter, and, after Price asked appellant to leave the property, she did.

          According to appellant, as she walked toward her company truck, which she had parked partly on the grass, Price came running toward her and, in an angry tone, yelled at appellant and demanded that she show him some identification. After she turned on the truck and drove it onto the road, appellant “looked up” and saw Price standing in front of the truck. She stopped the truck, and Price put his hands on the hood.

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Rebekah Levone Jordan v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rebekah-levone-jordan-v-state-texapp-2004.