Ronnie Lee Price v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 6, 2007
Docket01-06-00647-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ronnie Lee Price v. State (Ronnie Lee Price 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
Ronnie Lee Price v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion issued July 6, 2007

Opinion issued July 6, 2007



In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-06-00647-CR

        01-06-00648-CR


RONNIE LEE PRICE, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 209th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause Nos. 1024367 & 1052195


O P I N I O N

          Ronnie Lee Price (“Price”) appeals his conviction for capital murder under section 19.03(a)(2) of the Texas Penal Code, for which the State did not seek the death penalty.  Price, who received an automatic life sentence, claims that the indictment was inadequate to charge him with capital murder and protests the admission of evidence of a protective order that his estranged wife had obtained to keep him away from her home.  Finding no error, we affirm.

Background

Price and Sharon Wilkins Price (“Sharon”) separated in about November 2004 after approximately eleven years of marriage.  Sharon remained in the home, which she held in her name.  In January 2005, she secured a protective order against Price.  The protective order contains a finding that Price “has committed family violence,” and prohibited Price from:

a)     Committing family violence against SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS.

b)    Communicating directly with SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS in a threatening or harassing manner. 

c)     Communicating a threat through any person to SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS.

d)    Going to or near the residence or place of employment or business of SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS, specifically . . . from coming with[in] 150 feet of [Sharon Price’s] place of residence . . . or [] employment.

e)     Possessing a firearm . . . .

f)      Engaging in conduct directed specifically toward SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS, including following SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS, that is likely to harass, annoy, alarm, abuse, torment, or embarrass SHARON PRICE, RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS. 

g)     Going to or near the child care facility or school of RONNELL PRICE and KEVIN WILKINS . . . .

Sharon filed for divorce February 2005. 

Late in the evening of April 21, 2005, Sharon’s electricity went out.  She called her cousin, Clyde Ball, who lived about a block away, to find out whether the electricity had gone out there.  Ball answered the phone and told Sharon he would head over to check her electricity.  As he walked toward the house, he saw Price, who also lived nearby, walking in the neighborhood.  A short time later, he saw Price again, but this time in his truck.  After Ball had sat outside the door talking with Sharon for a short time, Price approached the door.  He angrily asked Sharon why she had invited Ball to the house at that time of night.

Ball walked away to try to defuse the situation.  After he started on his way home, he heard a lot of banging, “like someone was kicking in something.”

When Ball arrived home, he told Mitzi Ball, his cousin and Sharon’s sister, about the situation at Sharon’s house.  Mitzi changed out of her nightclothes so that she could go to Sharon’s home and find out what was happening. 

Meanwhile, Price and Sharon’s nine-year-old son Ronell, who had been asleep in his room, was awakened by the sound of a gunshot.  Ronell left his room to investigate and found Price walking around and holding Sharon’s gun.  When Ronell asked where his mother was, Price responded, “I think your mother is dead.”  Frightened, Ronell ran back to his room and hid under his desk. 

When Mitzi arrived at Sharon’s home, she called for Sharon from the front entry, noting that a bar had been broken out of the burglar bars over the front door.  Price opened the door and shot Mitzi twice, once in the neck and once in the hand.  She fell in the yard, unable to move.  A short time later, Price returned, kneeled over Mitzi, held the gun to her head and pulled the trigger twice, but the gun did not discharge. 

Price left the scene and called Leo Wilson, with whom he had been living since late January or early February 2005.  Price told Wilson he was in trouble.  Price explained to Wilson that he had gone to Sharon’s home to talk to her, but they had gotten into it and he took the gun from her and shot her and her sister. 

The State charged Price under two indictments, one for the aggravated assault of Mitzi and the other for the capital murder of Sharon.  Before trial, Price excepted to the substance of the capital murder indictment, which the trial court denied. 

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