Shelley Edward Davis, Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 28, 1997
Docket03-96-00653-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Shelley Edward Davis, Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-96-00653-CR
Shelley Edward Davis, Jr., Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BELL COUNTY, 27TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 46,181, HONORABLE MARTHA J. TRUDO, JUDGE PRESIDING

PER CURIAM

A jury found Shelly Edward Davis, Jr., guilty of aggravated robbery and burglary. The trial court assessed punishment at forty years' imprisonment. Appellant raises four points of error contending that the evidence is factually insufficient to support his conviction, the trial court erred by allowing certain identification testimony, and he received ineffective assistance of counsel. We will affirm the judgment of conviction.



Background

During the afternoon of August 2, 1995, Melvin Fullen sat at his dining room table paying bills. Appellant entered Fullen's house through an unlocked front door without Fullen's permission. Appellant walked over to Fullen, pointed a gun at him and told him to give him all of his money. Appellant was wearing a t-shirt pulled up over his head to hide his face. At first Fullen thought that the intruder was his neighbor playing a joke and so just looked at him and said, "go to hell." Appellant told Fullen, "I want your money, get your hands up." When Fullen stood up, the t-shirt slipped off appellant's head and Fullen saw appellant's face. Appellant then fled from the house out the front door. Fullen described the intruder as an African American male about six feet tall, wearing glasses with medium length hair. About a week after the incident, Fullen saw appellant at a neighbor's house.

At trial, Fullen identified appellant as the intruder who entered his house. Fullen stated that, without a doubt, appellant was the intruder, though appellant looked different at trial. Fullen thought that since the incident, appellant had gained weight and was no longer wearing glasses.

Pamela Oxendine also testified for the State. She met appellant through friends and had known him for about four years. Oxendine and appellant often talked to each other on the telephone. On August 11, 1995, about 1:30 p.m., Oxendine received a telephone call from appellant during which appellant told her that he had robbed an elderly man who lived in the 2700 block of Grasslands. Fullen lived at 2714 Grasslands. Appellant told her that he walked into the man's house through an open front door, saw the man in a small greenhouse watering plants, put a gun to the man's head and demanded money from him. Appellant told her that he did not get any money from the man or take any property from the house. Oxendine thought appellant was kidding.

Later that afternoon, Oxendine went to visit a friend who lived two houses away from Fullen in the same block of Grasslands. When she arrived, her friend was talking with Fullen about the intruder at Fullen's house on August 2. Based upon their conversation, Oxendine came to believe that what appellant had told her in their telephone conversation earlier that afternoon was true.

Killeen police officer Karl Ortiz, the primary investigating officer, testified that he presented Fullen with a photographic line up of six men. Appellant's photo was included in the line up. Fullen picked out appellant's photo as the one most resembling the individual who came into his house though he could not be positive in his identification.

Appellant's mother testified on his behalf. She testified that appellant was between 6'3" and 6'4" tall and recalled that during August 1995, appellant did not wear eyeglasses but instead wore contacts.



Identification

By points one, two and four, appellant complains about the identification evidence supporting his conviction. By point one, appellant contends that the trial court erred by admitting Oxendine's testimony about his identity because it was not based on her personal knowledge.

Oxendine testified that she and appellant were acquainted. On August 11, 1995, a little over a week after the alleged break-in of Fullen's house, she and appellant talked on the telephone. She could identify appellant's voice based upon her acquaintance with him and her general familiarity with his voice. After she identified appellant as the caller, appellant told her about robbing a man in the 2700 block of Grasslands on August 2, 1995. She did not go to the police right away because she did not believe appellant's story and thought he was kidding. Later that afternoon, Oxendine met with Tanya Fuentes who was talking with Fullen. The following exchange occurred at trial:



[Prosecutor]: And did you receive a description--well, let me ask you this. Without getting into the specifics of the conversation that you had with Tanya, were they talking about a robbery of Mr. Fullen that had occurred?



Oxendine: Yes, they were.



[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, I object to that as hearsay information to this witness.



The Court: Sustained.



[Prosecutor]: Did you receive a description of the individual? Without saying what the description is did you receive a description of the individual that had supposedly robbed Mr. Fullen?



[Defense Attorney]: Your Honor, I object to what she received as being hearsay information. Whatever it was is still hearsay. That doesn't make any difference what is was, something out of the presence of the courtroom is hearsay, not admissible.



[Prosecutor]: If I may, Your Honor, we're offering this not for the truth of the matter asserted to her, but whether or not she received a description. It's a simple question. It's not calling for any hearsay.



The Court: Sustained. I'm sorry overruled. . . .



[Prosecutor]: Did you receive a description of the individual?



Oxendine: Yes, sir, I did.



[Prosecutor]: And based upon that description did you come to a conclusion of who you thought personally the individual might have been?



[Defense Attorney]: Your Honor, I object.



Oxendine: Yes.



The Court: That is sustained. Rephrase your question.



[Prosecutor]: Based upon the description that you got did you take your information to the police?



Oxendine: Yes, I did.



[Prosecutor]: And why did you take your information to the police?



Oxendine: The reason why I took my information to the police because I figured it was the same suspect that I was told on the telephone what he told me and what he did, so I went to the police department and reported and wrote a statement.



[Prosecutor]: Without getting into the specifics of the information that you received was the information you received consistent with the general physical description of this defendant?



Oxendine: Yes, it was.



[Prosecutor]

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