Sorrells, Eric Deshon

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 2011
DocketPD-1802-09
StatusPublished

This text of Sorrells, Eric Deshon (Sorrells, Eric Deshon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sorrells, Eric Deshon, (Tex. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS

No. PD-1802-09

ERIC DESHON SORRELLS, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Discretionary Review of Case No. 13-07-00633-CR of the Thirteenth Court of Appeals, Travis County

WOMACK, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

A Travis County jury convicted the appellant, Eric Deshon Sorrells, of aggravated

robbery. On appeal, the Thirteenth Court of Appeals1 found that the evidence was insufficient to

support a conviction of aggravated robbery, and reformed the judgment to reflect conviction of

the lesser-included offense of assault by threat. We granted the State’s petition for discretionary

review on three grounds: (1) whether the Court of Appeals properly reviewed the sufficiency of

the evidence; (2) whether the Court of Appeals properly applied the law of parties; and (3) in the

1 The appeal was transferred from the Third to the Thirteenth Court of Appeals. Sorrells - 2

alternative, whether the Court of Appeals properly reformed the judgment. We hold that the

Court of Appeals erred in its review of the sufficiency of the evidence. We therefore need not

address the State’s second and third grounds. We will reverse the Court’s decision and remand

for consideration of the appellant’s remaining claims.

I. Background

The following factual background is abridged from the facts described by the Court of

Appeals. In the early morning hours of January 30, 2005, Frances Reynolds waited on a curb

outside an Austin nightclub for her boyfriend, Nathaniel Rice, to retrieve her car from a nearby

parking lot. Reynolds testified that she leaned against a Mercedes SUV parked on the street. The

appellant emerged from the club wearing a black and gray sweater and a black leather jacket. He

told Reynolds to “get the f*** off the car” because she was damaging it. With gun in hand, the

appellant struck Reynolds across the side of her head, and the two began scuffling. Shortly

thereafter, Rice arrived. As Rice approached, the appellant turned, pulled back the slide of the

gun, and said, “[D]o you have a problem with me, too?” Rice punched the appellant, and the two

started fighting. A man wearing a blue “flannel-type” jacket then ran up to Rice and punched

him. Rice fell to the ground and Reynolds went for help. When she returned, the altercation had

ended. Rice told her that his jewelry had been stolen.

Rice testified that after retrieving Reynolds’s car, he drove to the front of the club and

saw three men standing near Reynolds. Rice saw Reynolds scuffling with the appellant. As Rice

approached, the appellant pulled out a gun and “cocked it at [Rice].” Rice pushed the gun out of

the way and swung at the appellant. The appellant struck back, hitting Rice with the gun. At that

moment, a man wearing a flannel jacket punched Rice in the head. Rice was knocked to the Sorrells - 3

ground and was “jumped” by multiple people. At some point the beating ceased and the

assailants dispersed. Rice then became aware that he was no longer wearing his lion medallion

necklace, which he valued at approximately $1,000. When the police arrived moments later, Rice

told them that his jewelry had been stolen.

Kevin Fritz, a friend of Reynolds and Rice, testified that he accompanied Rice to the

parking lot to retrieve Reynolds’s car. As they drove to the front of the club, Fritz saw Reynolds

arguing with the appellant. Fritz followed as Rice approached the appellant. Upon noticing Rice,

the appellant turned and pointed a gun at Rice. Rice took a swing at the appellant, and then

another man came up behind Rice and hit him in the head. A third man joined the fight; he and

the second man “jumped” Rice. Fritz then saw the appellant point the gun at Rice. Fritz ran up

and pushed the appellant. The men then turned their attention from Rice and began fighting with

Fritz. Someone hit Fritz with a gun; after being dazed and stumbling for a few seconds, Fritz

looked up and saw the three men running into the club. At some point during the altercation,

Fritz noticed Rice’s lion medallion necklace on the ground.

Officer Charles Riley testified that he was stationed nearby when he was dispatched to the

incident. Riley arrived on the scene within twenty or thirty seconds of the dispatch and saw

several people in front of the club; everyone was being loud and yelling that “someone had taken

something” and “someone had a gun.” Riley learned that the gunman, a male wearing a black

leather jacket, had gone inside the club. Riley ran into the alley behind the club and saw three

people walking away from him down the alley. One of the three, Rachel Hardeman, turned and

looked at Riley. Then she removed her hand from her jacket pocket and deposited an object into

the side of a recycling receptacle. After the three were detained, Riley searched the receptacle and Sorrells - 4

found a gun. Riley also noticed that the black leather jacket Hardeman was wearing was too big

for her. Inside a pocket of the jacket, Riley found the lion medallion necklace. Both of the other

detainees were male. One, who would become appellant’s co-defendant at trial, wore a blue

denim jacket. The other was the appellant, who wore a black and tan sweater but was not wearing

a jacket.

Reynolds, Rice, and Fritz did not identify Hardeman, but each of them identified the

appellant as the man who had been wearing the black leather jacket.2

In addition to the facts described by the Court of Appeals, we find the following three

pieces of testimony to be important as well. First, Sergeant Richard Shirley testified that he also

responded to the incident, but he attempted to gain entrance through the front of the club. As he

looked into the club from the front, he saw the appellant wearing a black leather jacket and

moving towards the back. When Shirley finally made it through the club and got to the alley

behind it, he saw that three individuals had been detained. He noticed that Hardeman “did have

what appeared to be the same jacket” that the appellant had been wearing as he moved toward the

back of the club.

Second, Rice identified the gun recovered by Officer Riley as the weapon pointed at him

by the appellant.

Third, Officer Brian Lloyd, called as a witness by the co-defendant’s counsel, testified

without objection that Rice told him that the man with the gun and the black leather jacket took

Rice’s necklace:

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: Sir, you had occasion to talk to Nathaniel

2 Sorrells v. State, 2009 W L 3766443 at *1-3 (Tex. App. – Corpus Christi November 12, 2009). Sorrells - 5

Rice; is that right, sir?

[LLOYD]: I did.

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: Now, according to the best of your recollection, these events had just happened; had they not, sir?

[LLOYD]: Yes.

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: Now, then, in talking to Nathaniel, Nathaniel told you, did he not, sir, that a black man had produced a gun?

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: That a black man had struck him with a gun?

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: He described that same black man as taking his gold necklace?

[CODEFENDANT’S COUNSEL]: He described that black man as wearing a black leather jacket?

II. Standard of Review

In Clayton v. State3 we described the standard of review appropriate for addressing the

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Sorrells, Eric Deshon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sorrells-eric-deshon-texcrimapp-2011.