Schiffert v. State

257 S.W.3d 6, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2075, 2008 WL 755500
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 20, 2008
Docket2-02-278-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 257 S.W.3d 6 (Schiffert 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
Schiffert v. State, 257 S.W.3d 6, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2075, 2008 WL 755500 (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

OPINION ON PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

ANNE GARDNER, Justice.

After reviewing Appellant’s petition for discretionary review, we modify our opinion and judgment in this appeal. See Tex. R.App. P. 50. We withdraw our November 21, 2007 opinion and judgment and substitute the following.

I. Introduction

A jury convicted Appellant William Matthew Schiffert a/k/a Jerry Schiffert as a party to the murder of Corey McMillan, found habitual offender allegations to be true, and assessed Appellant’s punishment at seventy-five years’ confinement. The trial court sentenced Appellant accordingly. On appeal, Appellant raises four points: (1) the trial court egregiously erred in the parties application paragraph of the jury charge by failing to require the State to prove intent; (2) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient; (3) trial counsel was ineffective; and (4) the trial court erred in the self-defense portion of the jury charge.

In our original opinion and judgment, we held that the evidence was legally sufficient but factually insufficient under the standards of review in effect at the time. 1 On November 22, 2006, the court of criminal appeals vacated our opinion and judgment and remanded the case for reconsideration in light of its opinion in Watson v. State, 2 in which it re-articulated the factual sufficiency standard of review. Schiffert v. State, 207 S.W.3d 800, 801 (Tex.Crim.App. 2006). Reconsidering the factual sufficiency point in light of Watson, and reaching the remaining issues that we did not reach in our original opinion, we affirm.

II. Background

Brandy Upchurch began dating McMillan in 1999. Soon after, they began living together and eventually moved into the Budget Inn motel. According to a statement that Appellant gave to the police, Appellant first met Upchurch when he went to the motel to visit a friend. Up-church told Appellant that she could not come outside because her “old man [McMillan] would beat her.” Appellant continued to talk to Upchurch whenever he went to the motel.

Ultimately, Upchurch left McMillan and moved into Appellant’s trailer. About a month later, Appellant arrived at the trailer and found Upchurch gone. According to Upchurch, McMillan had found her in Appellant’s trailer, and after he threatened her, she went back with him to the motel. The following day, November 5, 2001, Up-church called Appellant to come get her; she told him that she had been kidnapped by McMillan and that she wanted Appellant to come pick her up. Appellant and *10 his nephew, Aaron Kennedy, went to the motel to get her.

In the meantime, after a confrontation with McMillan, Upchurch left the motel on foot. She called Appellant and Kennedy, who picked her up in a nearby restaurant parking lot. The three of them then drove back to the motel parking lot. Upchurch first testified that their purpose in returning to the motel was to retrieve her clothes, but on cross-examination she testified she expected to go to Appellant’s trailer, not back to the motel.

GinnyLu Ward was in the parking lot of Enterprise Rent-A-Car, which shares the lot with the motel, when the events transpired. According to Ward, when Appellant drove into the motel parking lot, he “acted like [he] didn’t see who [he was] looking for, and [then he] made a U-turn.” Upchurch testified that Appellant stopped the car, called McMillan on the phone and said, “I’m looking at your punk bitch now.” Soon afterwards, McMillan came out into the parking lot. According to Ward, “[the driver] saw who [he was] looking for and [he] gunned it, and when he gunned it, he lost control for just a moment and hit [a] red truck.” The collision damaged the driver’s door of Appellant’s car; Upchurch testified that they later had to pry the door open. Upchurch also admitted on cross-examination that she told the prosecutor before trial that Appellant tried to run over McMillan at some point during the incident. 3

Ward testified that Appellant parked his car twelve to fifteen inches behind McMillan’s car in such a way that McMillan’s car could not have pulled out without hitting Appellant’s car. Kennedy then jumped out of the car and began stabbing McMillan. Ward testified that, as Kennedy stabbed McMillan, McMillan said, “[W]hat the hell are you doing?” and “[W]hy are you here?” Ward said that as Kennedy was stabbing McMillan, Appellant turned to her and “smirked.”

Kennedy got back in the car, and Appellant quickly drove away. As the car left the lot, Upchurch looked back; she saw McMillan’s hand over his throat and blood on his shirt.

Officer Michael McGuire was dispatched to the motel, where he found McMillan, who was bleeding and appeared to have been stabbed in the left side of his neck and on the left side of his chest. McMillan was taken to the hospital, where he later died. Detective Tim Gilpin was also dispatched to the scene. Witnesses gave him the license number of the car Appellant was driving; he ran the license and learned the car was registered to Appellant.

The day after McMillan’s death, Officer Richard Curtis, who was assigned to the Crime Scene Search Unit, was dispatched to an apartment complex after a search warrant had been obtained for Appellant’s vehicle. Police found the car at the complex and impounded it. While examining the car, Curtis stated that he had trouble getting the driver’s-side door open; the door would open only about twelve inches. There was one license plate on the car, but it was not registered to the car.

Upchurch said that, in the days following McMillan’s death, she saw Appellant, and he and Kennedy tried to stay separate from each other. She also stated that she *11 heard Appellant discuss leaving town because he was on parole and he was afraid that the police would be looking for him.

On November 9, 2001, Officer Benjamin Jones was on patrol when he saw a car with a brake light out. He pulled the car over and asked for identification, but the driver had none. The driver gave his name as “Michael Smith.” Officer Kenneth Stack arrived on the scene after Jones had stopped the car. Based on a photo that he had seen earlier that day, Stack recognized Appellant as the driver. According to Stack, when he showed the photo to Appellant, Appellant said, “You got me.”

According to Deputy Medical Examiner Daniel Konzelmann, McMillan’s body had two distinct stab wounds, one on the chest and one on the neck. The neck wound was not lethal because it did not cross any vital structures. The wound to the chest was lethal because it went into the heart. Konzelmann saw no defensive wounds on McMillan’s upper arms or hands and no signs indicating a prolonged struggle.

III. Charge Error: The Law of Parties

In his first point, Appellant argues that the trial court erred by misstating the law of parties in the application paragraph of the jury charge and that the error caused Appellant egregious harm.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 S.W.3d 6, 2008 Tex. App. LEXIS 2075, 2008 WL 755500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schiffert-v-state-texapp-2008.