Samuel Carothers v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 8, 2005
Docket03-04-00013-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Carothers v. State (Samuel Carothers 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
Samuel Carothers v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-04-00013-CR

Samuel Carothers, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 331ST JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 9-03-4176, HONORABLE BOB PERKINS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


A jury convicted Samuel Carothers of kidnapping and assessed sentence at ten years in prison. On appeal, he contends that the evidence was legally and factually insufficient to support the conviction. He also asserts that the court erred by denying his request for a jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of unlawful restraint. We affirm the judgment.



BACKGROUND

Carothers met A.S., an Austin resident attending college elsewhere, on the internet and arranged to meet her in person during spring break when she was staying in Austin with her grandmother. He picked A.S. up at her grandmother's house and took her to his home in Austin, which he shared with his aunt and grandmother. A.S. testified that the travel time between the two houses is about five to ten minutes.

While at appellant's house, they mostly stayed in his room which also functioned as the only entrance to the house. His aunt and grandmother were in and out of the house during this period. A.S. testified that the women were very nice to her. They talked, watched television, and used the computer to communicate with friends and burn a compact disc. Although appellant and A.S. had originally intended to go out to a movie, they decided to order a pizza and stay in.

A.S. testified that, as she lay on appellant's bed watching television, he lay down beside her and started kissing her neck and "upper part." She said they did not kiss on the mouth and she did not kiss him back. He started "messing with her belt" and she stopped him even after he said he just wanted to have oral sex because, she said, "Oral sex is just like having sex, and I don't do that like on the first time meeting." She told him that she needed to go home because she had told her grandmother she would return by 10 p.m. He eventually relented, but A.S. said he seemed angry and slammed the door on their way out to his car.

After driving two blocks toward her grandmother's house, appellant stopped the car in a church parking lot and told her that he could not drive further because he was too angry. He commented that he would get her home safely but might crash afterwards. A.S. testified that appellant asked if they could return to his home and have a "happy ending." She continued to refuse, explaining that she was not interested in having any form of sex that night and needed to return home timely to build her grandmother's trust. A.S. said he responded by arguing that her friends would tell her she was stupid for rejecting oral sex. When she told him they had not gotten together before because of her college boyfriend, appellant said he would have fought her boyfriend. Appellant also told her he had a history of assaults and that he had been to jail after one fight. A.S. testified that she was scared by this history of assaults. After a lengthy conversation, appellant resumed driving toward her house.

A.S. testified that appellant resumed driving toward her home, but abruptly turned the car around after she made a comment that angered him. She testified that she told him, "I'm sorry that it came out like this. I told him I was shy, and he thought I said something stupid." She testified that appellant told her that "was just an excuse" and was "B.S." She said he was speeding and drove through a red light. A.S. testified that she never tried to get out of the car because "he told me that if I did get out the car, he would run me over"; she was also too nervous to try and use her cell phone to call 911. She testified that appellant drove past his house, out past the new airport, and into dark areas. She testified that appellant told her "it is dark out here and nobody will find you out here." He also told her they were so far out that her cell phone would not work. She said they were driving through dark areas without a lot of businesses or homes. She testified that he also said, "[O]ut here white people don't like black people, a bunch of red necks, and that's it." She testified that, during the ride, she got progressively more nervous and started shaking and curled up in her seat; appellant thought she needed to urinate.

She said that around the time they passed through the community of Webberville, appellant stated that he had changed his mind and wanted to have sex with her. When she again declined, he turned the car around back toward Austin. But he then turned around again, headed away from Austin, and stopped the car on the side of the road. He unzipped his pants and pulled out his penis. She testified, " I was saying no, I don't want to do it, but he was like do it, do it." She said he repeatedly, firmly told her to do it. She said his tone of voice made her fear that he would do something to her if she did not comply. She performed oral sex on him for about a minute, then he told her to take off her pants; after repeated, firm commands to do so, she complied and also took off her underwear. A.S. testified that she constantly protested and asked why, but complied because she felt she must. At appellant's direction, she got into the back seat, where he groped her vaginal area and eventually tried to penetrate her vagina with his penis; she resisted by keeping her legs together, despite his shouted commands to the contrary. She said she continued to protest and tried to get up, but he pushed her down with his hand on her sternum, scaring her. She testified that she believed that, if she had tried to fight him at any point, he would have overcome her physically.

A.S. testified that appellant then told her to get out of his car because she would not have sex with him. He prevented her from getting her purse (which contained her cell phone) and clothing, so she got out wearing only a shirt and socks. It was shortly before midnight. She was near a house whose occupants lent her clothes and let her call 911. Travis County sheriff's officers stopped appellant. They retrieved some of her belongings from his car and from alongside a mile-long stretch of road.

On cross-examination, A.S. admitted that her testimony included details absent from her police report, such as her allegations that appellant claimed prior assaults, that he sped, and that he ran a red light. She denied changing into appellant's T-shirt at any time and claimed to be unaware that appellant's aunt was upset by her presence in the house.

The residents of the home who answered the door testified that A.S. was crying and appeared very upset. Bill Rabenberg testified that he first thought she had been in a car accident, but that A.S. told him her boyfriend had kicked her out of the car. Anna McCarter testified that A.S. said that someone had tried to assault her. McCarter testified that A.S.

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Samuel Carothers v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-carothers-v-state-texapp-2005.