Stanton Laroy Caviness v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 4, 2004
Docket01-03-00200-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Stanton Laroy Caviness v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion issued March 4, 2004







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-03-00200-CR

____________

STANTON LAROY CAVINESS, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 230th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 923096


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Stanton Laroy Caviness, guilty of the second degree felony offense of criminal attempt with intent to commit arson of a habitation. Appellant elected to have the trial court assess punishment, and the trial court sentenced appellant to confinement for six years and a fine of $600. The trial court then suspended the imposition of the sentence of confinement and placed appellant on community supervision.

          In two points of error, appellant contends that (1) the evidence was factually insufficient to support his conviction and (2) the trial court erred in denying his motion for a mistrial, which was based on the fact that an incorrect range of punishment for the offense was provided to the jury during voir dire.

          We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

          In September 2002, appellant lived in a camper on property owned by his girlfriend, Donna Morphis, the complainant. The complainant and her daughters, Krista and Jamie Morphis, lived in a trailer on the same property.

          Nathan Paul, a friend of Krista, testified that, on the afternoon of September 3, 2002, he helped appellant remove some carpet from inside the complainant’s trailer. While they were working, Paul saw appellant consume “one, maybe two drinks” of whiskey. At some point later that afternoon, Paul left the property to “run an errand” for appellant “[t]o go get a bottle of whiskey.”

          That evening, Paul took Krista out for dinner. When Paul and Krista returned, appellant told Paul that appellant and the complainant had been arguing and that the complainant had ordered appellant to vacate the property within 72 hours. Paul then left the complainant’s property to go to his home. On his way home, Krista paged Paul, and, when Paul called in response to the page, appellant told Paul that “he wanted [him] there as a witness to what he could take off of the property.” When Paul returned to the complainant’s property, he found the complainant and appellant “yelling at each other” inside the complainant’s trailer.

          Paul further testified that, shortly after he entered the trailer, appellant left, carrying a whiskey bottle. The complainant followed appellant, yelled at him, and then came back inside the trailer to retrieve a shotgun. Paul explained that, at appellant’s request, Paul had removed the shells from the shotgun earlier that day. As she grabbed the shotgun from inside the trailer, the complainant yelled, “He’s pouring gasoline on the house!” The complainant then went outside, carrying the shotgun.

          When the complainant reached the bottom of the stairs outside the trailer, she collided with appellant, who was carrying a gasoline can. When appellant and the complainant collided, some of the gasoline splashed out of the can, and appellant dropped the can. Paul then saw appellant wrestle the shotgun away from the complainant, knock her to the ground, and throw the shotgun away. At that point, Paul smelled a “very strong” odor of gasoline next to the trailer, and he saw appellant holding a lighter and “striking it.” Paul, fearing for the lives of the complainant and her daughters, then pointed a .22 pistol, which he had brought with him, at the ground and told appellant to “get off the property,” or Paul would shoot.

          Paul and appellant “yelled at each other for a few minutes,” and appellant told Paul that “all he want[ed] [wa]s his stuff.” Paul agreed to help appellant “get his stuff,” and appellant then “grabbed his bottle of whiskey and went to leave” the complainant’s property. Appellant unhooked the electricity and water connections from his camper and drove it off its blocks. Paul opened the gate to the complainant’s property and moved his own truck, which was blocking the driveway, and appellant drove away.

          Krista testified that appellant and the complainant had been arguing that evening and that the complainant was “very upset” and “very unorganized in her mind.” Krista noted that appellant had been drinking alcohol that day, and, when asked how much alcohol appellant had consumed, she stated: “He had about his usual, which was maybe around half of a—half a gallon, if that. That’s what he had.” After Krista got home from dinner, appellant asked her to page Paul “so somebody would be there to say afterwards what had happened in a clear state of mind,” and she did.

          Krista also testified that, when the complainant came inside the trailer, she told Krista to call for emergency assistance because appellant was pouring gasoline on the trailer and “was trying to burn the house down.” Krista admitted that, although she later smelled a “strong odor” of gasoline outside, she did not see appellant pour any gasoline on the trailer. Krista testified that she saw appellant struggle with the complainant for the shotgun and that, after Paul pointed his pistol at appellant and ordered him to “stop,” she saw appellant “backing up towards the trailer” while striking a lighter.

          Harris County Arson Investigator Kenneth Callaway testified that he was dispatched to the complainant’s property that evening. Upon his arrival, Callaway interviewed the complainant, her daughters, and Paul. Callaway detected a “strong odor of gasoline around the home” and determined that “[t]he exterior of the home and the grass at the base of the home was saturated with liquid that smelled like gasoline.” By examining the grass and dirt around the trailer, Callaway also determined that a wet trail of gasoline extended approximately 50 feet along the entire length of one side of the trailer.

          Callaway also testified that, after interviewing the witnesses at the scene, he prepared a written statement for the complainant, which she read and signed under oath that same evening. The written statement was admitted into evidence and read as follows:

On Monday September 02, 2002, I began arguing with my boyfriend [appellant] about family members. [A]ppellant stays in a motor home on my property. [A]ppellant had been drinking whiskey all day. [A]ppellant began threatening me and my family. He said he was going to kill us and burn my house. He went outside.

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Stanton Laroy Caviness v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-laroy-caviness-v-state-texapp-2004.