Rodney James Harris v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 13, 2007
Docket14-06-01091-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rodney James Harris v. State (Rodney James Harris 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
Rodney James Harris v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 13, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed September 13, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-01091-CR

RODNEY JAMES HARRIS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Criminal Court at Law No. 14

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1410959

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

A jury convicted appellant Rodney James Harris of burglary of a motor vehicle, and the trial court assessed punishment at one year=s confinement.  In three issues, appellant complains that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in admitting an eyewitness=s in-court identification.  We affirm.


I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Around 8:00 p.m. on October 19, 2006, Matthew Tanner went to his friend Toby Melton=s house for band practice and parked his truck in the driveway.  George Kienast, who lived across the street from Melton, testified that he went outside the garage door of his house around 11:00 p.m. to smoke a cigarette and observed an interior light on in Tanner=s truck.  Kienast saw an individual inside the truckCwho was not Tanner and who he did not recognizeCunplugging items, taking them out of the truck, and placing them on the ground near the rear passenger-side tire.  Kienast, who stood about thirty yards away, described the individual as an approximately six-foot-tall African American male with a large build and wearing a red t‑shirt and blue windbreaker pants.  Kienast, however, could not see the individual=s face.  Kienast called out to the individual and asked him what he was doing.  Rather than responding, Kienast stated that the individual began speaking as though someone else were inside the truck, but Kienast could tell no one else was inside.  Kienast stated that the individual then got out of the truck, picked up some of the items he had taken from the truck, and began walking across Melton=s yard.  Kienast again asked the individual what he was doing, and he said he was installing speakers in the truck.  When Kienast asked the individual why he was walking away from the truck rather than going inside Melton=s house, he became agitated and began cursing and yelling at Kienast.  Before the individual reached the nearest street corner, Kienast testified that both streetlights and a neighbor=s porch light illuminated Kienast=s view, and he could now see that the man Awas a big, big guy.@  Kienast also noted that nothing distracted his attention from observing the individual=s actions, as it was late at night and nothing was going on in the neighborhood.   


About two minutes later, when the individual had turned the corner, Kienast knocked on Melton=s door and told Melton and Tanner he had seen a man rummaging through and taking items out of Tanner=s truck.  Tanner and Melton checked the truck, and Tanner confirmed that his interior light was on and his stereo amplifiers, the face of his CD player, and his CD case were missing.  Melton and Tanner thereafter set out in Tanner=s truck to find the individual, and Kienast called the police.  After a few minutes, Melton and Tanner encountered an individual standing on the side of a mini-mall in a business park who said something to them, and Tanner stopped the truck to talk with the individual.  The individual, who Melton described as an African American male wearing dark blue or black jogging-style pants and no shirt and who both Melton and Tanner identified in court as appellant, asked if the men were looking for something, and they informed him a neighbor had witnessed someone breaking into Tanner=s truck.  Tanner testified that when he asked appellant if he had seen anyone in a red shirt running with stereo equipment, appellant responded that he had bought stereo equipment from a man fitting that description named Marcus about thirty minutes earlier in the evening and brought it to his apartment.  Tanner described the amplifiers, and appellant confirmed that those were the exact items he had purchased from Marcus.  Appellant also handed Tanner a receipt purportedly for the sale of the items, but, according to Tanner, the receipt was for a type of wire and contained none of the items missing from his truck.


At this point, Deputy Alvin Antoine of the Harris County Constable=s Office, who had previously responded to Kienast=s suspicious person call, arrived at the scene.  Deputy Antoine testified that Kienast had informed him of the events, described the perpetrator as a black male wearing a red shirt and black to dark-colored pants, and described the direction in which the perpetrator had gone.   Less than two to three minutes after talking with Kienast, Deputy Antoine located Tanner, Melton, and appellant.  Deputy Antoine stated that appellant, who he described as wearing black-colored exercise sweatpants but no shirt, volunteered that someone he knew tried to sell him stereo equipment.  In response to Deputy Antoine=s questioning about the sale, appellant repeatedly interrupted Antoine and stated that he wanted to leave and get a beer, which Antoine described as Adeceptive.@  As Deputy Antoine interrogated appellant, Tanner testified that he pulled his truck, which was parked in the street, into a nearby driveway, and his headlights revealed that his amplifiers and his CD case were laying by a wheelchair ramp, covered by a red t-shirt.  After verifying that the items were in fact those missing from his truck, Tanner immediately informed Deputy Antoine.  In describing the placement of the items, Deputy Antoine stated that it Alooked like someone had stashed them there trying to get rid of them in a hurry.@  Deputy Antoine subsequently detained appellant.


Kienast testified that he went to the scene of appellant=

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