Scott, Johnny David v. State
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Opinion
COURT OF APPEALS
EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
EL PASO, TEXAS
)
JOHNNY DAVID SCOTT, ) No. 08-01-00388-CR
Appellant, ) Appeal from
v. ) 394th District Court
THE STATE OF TEXAS, ) of Brewster County, Texas
Appellee. ) (TC# 3595)
O P I N I O N
Johnny David Scott appeals his conviction for injury to an elderly person. A jury found Appellant guilty and assessed his punishment at imprisonment for a term of two years, suspended for two years. We reform the judgment to reflect the correct county of conviction and affirm the judgment as reformed.[1]
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Sixty-seven-year-old JoAnne Kempf lived with Appellant in her home in Terlingua for five to six years. On June 24, 2001, Kempf and Appellant had been drinking with friends during the afternoon and early evening. After their friends left, Appellant and Kempf began discussing whether Appellant should fight a friend. Kempf told Appellant he should not fight because the man was a friend. Appellant suddenly picked up Kempf by the arms, threw her onto the bed, and began slapping her legs and arms. Appellant picked her up again and threw her to the floor, causing pain in her hip. The blows also resulted in bruising on Kempf=s legs and arms. Kempf ran out of the house and drove to La Kiva, an RV park restaurant. She had one drink and left. When she arrived home, Appellant was asleep and she went to bed.
The following morning when Appellant became belligerent, Kempf drove to the home of her daughter, Gay Davidson, who lived approximately one-quarter mile from Kempf=s home. Kempf was distraught and trembling when Davidson saw her. Davidson also noticed that her mother had bruises on her arms and hands and walked with a limp. After Davidson=s husband arrived home from work, they drove Kempf to the Family Crisis Center in Alpine. An advocate at the Family Crisis Center took photos of Kempf=s injuries. The next morning, Davidson drove Kempf to El Paso to catch a plane to California where she stayed with her sister. Kempf remained in California for a month before returning to Alpine and filing assault charges against Appellant. Afterward, Kempf returned to California.
Appellant testified in his own defense, providing a different version of the events of June 24. He did not recall that friends had been at their home. At about 5:30 p.m., Kempf wanted to go to happy hour at La Kiva. Appellant refused to drive her because Kempf had already had so much to drink that she could not walk without assistance and he Adidn=t need another DUI.@ Kempf insisted she would drive and started out of the door. Appellant blocked the door and tried to convince her to lay down for awhile. Kempf would not listen and Appellant walked her backwards to the bed until she sat down. Appellant put her legs up on the bed and held her arms and legs down until she fell asleep. He grabbed her arms only to restrain her and to prevent her from hurting herself. He believed he had held her down for just a few minutes. Appellant denied throwing Kempf on the bed or the floor. The following morning, Appellant noticed that Kempf was angry with him. When he asked her what was wrong, she replied, ADon=t you know?@ and suddenly left the house. Appellant did not hear from Kempf for several weeks. The only telephone conversation occurred when Kempf called Appellant, and upon hearing his voice said, AIf you are there, I am not coming home.@ Kempf quickly hung up the phone. Appellant was unable to find out where Kempf had gone, but he initially believed she was in an alcohol rehabilitation center. Kempf=s son-in-law eventually told Appellant that she was with her sister in California and that he should move out of Kempf=s home.
A grand jury indicted Appellant for three counts of injury to an elderly person. The State abandoned Count III prior to trial. After the close of evidence at the guilt-innocence phase, the State elected to proceed on Count II which alleged that Appellant intentionally and knowingly caused bodily injury to Kempf by hitting her with his hands. The trial court rejected Appellant=s request for a jury instruction on the defense of necessity because Appellant had not admitted the offense alleged in the indictment. The jury found Appellant guilty of Count II.
NECESSITY
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Scott, Johnny David v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-johnny-david-v-state-texapp-2002.