Royce Jackman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 2016
Docket08-14-00176-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Royce Jackman v. State (Royce Jackman 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
Royce Jackman v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS EL PASO, TEXAS

§ ROYCE JACKMAN, No. 08-14-00176-CR § Appellant, Appeal from § v. 168th District Court § THE STATE OF TEXAS, of El Paso County, Texas § Appellee. (TC # 20120D01661) §

OPINION

Royce Jackman was originally indicted for capital murder on March 28, 2012. The State

later chose not to seek the death penalty and a jury found Appellant guilty of the lesser-included

offense of murder, sentencing him to 40 years in the Institutional Division of the Texas

Department of Criminal Justice. The trial court sentenced Appellant in accordance with the

jury’s verdict. Appellant now raises four issues on appeal: three challenging the sufficiency of

the evidence and one alleging charge error. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL SUMMARY

The parties’ versions of events differ drastically as to whether Appellant was required to

act in self-defense or whether he acted as the first aggressor.

Richard Renfro Jones met the victim, Clifton Baker, at one of El Paso’s homeless

shelters, the Opportunity Center. Jones struggled with a crack-cocaine addiction. He was good friends with Baker for approximately two years before Baker’s death. Jones met Appellant at the

Opportunity Center about one week before Baker’s death.

On the evening of January 5, 2012, Jones met Baker for drinks at Sonny’s Bar. Baker’s

toxicology report revealed that he was legally intoxicated with a blood alcohol level of .092. At

some point later in the evening, Baker and Jones obtained crack cocaine and walked to the corner

of Texas and Noble Streets. Both men referred to this corner as “their office” because it was

where they went to “take care of business,” or in other words, to drink and get high. Baker’s

autopsy report similarly indicated that he had consumed an amount of cocaine a few hours before

his death that would likely have caused him to feel a high. Three other men joined Baker and

Jones. Approximately thirty minutes later, Appellant joined the group and asked for a cigarette.

The men agreed that they wanted more cocaine and Baker mentioned that he had seven dollars to

contribute toward the next purchase. Appellant then asked Baker if he could use his cellphone

and Baker lent it to him. Appellant walked away with Baker’s phone, turned the corner to walk

toward the front of an apartment building, and left the group of men by the dumpsters on the side

of the building. Baker followed Appellant, and Jones trailed closely behind. Baker was able to

catch up and asked for his phone back. According to Jones, Baker was not angry or aggressive,

but was just trying to retrieve his phone. When Baker asked for his phone, Appellant responded,

“[l]et me see that $7.” When Baker refused, Appellant repeated, “[l]et me see that $7 and I can

go get the rest of the money,” so they could buy cocaine. Again, Baker refused and reiterated

that all he wanted was his phone. Appellant answered, “you think I give a f**k about this

phone”? Baker attempted to reach for his phone, but Appellant struck him.

Baker tried to defend himself and the two men engaged in a struggle until Appellant

tossed Baker to the ground. After witnessing Appellant throw Baker to the ground, Jones walked

2 away from the scuffle, back towards the office because he did not want to get involved with the

police and assumed that someone from the apartment building would attempt to break up the

fight. But after Jones heard more hitting, he headed back toward the fight and saw Baker on the

ground with a knife in his hand and Appellant circling him.1 Jones testified that Appellant would

not let Baker get up. Appellant told Baker several times to drop his knife and when Baker

refused to do so, Appellant kicked him in the face, causing Baker to fall backwards toward the

building, dropping his knife. Jones decided to walk away again, thinking someone from the

apartment building would come outside.

Approximately five minutes later, while at the office, Jones heard Baker say, “That’s it.

I’m done.” Hearing this, Jones walked back to the fight scene and saw Baker still lying on the

ground and Appellant was tapping him on the chest. Jones demonstrated for the jury exactly

how Appellant tapped Baker. He then heard Appellant say, “who got it now”? Jones was unsure

if Appellant was referring to Baker’s money or his phone.

Jones then walked westward toward downtown El Paso, still on Texas Street, when he

came across Appellant, who walked up to him with the knife still in his hand. Jones asked

Appellant what he had done, and according to Jones, Appellant grunted. Appellant then began

walking ahead of Jones, at which point the police arrived and told them to freeze and get down

on the ground. Jones complied, and the police took him into custody for questioning. The police

questioned, searched, swabbed, and fingerprinted Jones, but they ultimately did not charge him

with any crime. The police found one folded pocket knife and one folded silver multi-tool on

Jones when questioning him. Jones testified that he did not handle the knife that killed Baker.

Jones positively identified Appellant in court. On cross-examination, Jones admitted that he told

1 Jones testified that he did not initially see Baker pull the knife. When Jones returned to the fight scene, Baker already had his knife out and was lying on the ground.

3 an investigator from the Public Defender’s office that he actually did not see Appellant hit Baker

first. He also did not remember saying, as his statement to the police indicates, that Baker’s

money was in Appellant’s pocket. On re-direct, Jones clarified that to his knowledge, the money

remained in Baker’s pockets when the fight started, and he never saw, or claimed to see,

Appellant with the money. Francisco and Victoria Elias lived in one of the ground-floor

apartments on Texas Street. They stayed up past midnight watching television on January 5,

2012, and heard fighting outside their apartment window. Victoria testified that they were used

to fights near their apartment, but she and her husband were frightened that evening because they

heard continuous blows to the apartment wall. Francisco got up to look out the bedroom window

to see what was going on outside. While the window had film and metal meshing, Francisco was

still able to see two men fighting, one on top of the other. He heard the man on the bottom

saying something like “get off me” while the man on top kept replying, “not until you drop the

knife.” Francisco immediately called 911. Victoria testified that she thought she heard the man

on the bottom yell, “let me go, let me go.” While neither Francisco nor Victoria could visually

identify the two men, both were able to distinguish their voices. Victoria thought that the person

on the bottom, yelling “let me go, let me go,” sounded older, around fifty years of age, tired, and

hurt, while the man on top sounded like a younger male. Francisco similarly testified that the

man on the bottom sounded older and thought that he was Anglo-American and described his

tone as scared. Based on the tone of the man on top, Francisco thought he might have been

African-American.

Victoria saw the younger male straddling the older male, hitting him with both of his

hands, although she was unable to see what, if anything, he had in his hands. He heard the

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