State of Texas v. James Leroy Clayton

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 11, 2009
Docket06-08-00198-CR
StatusPublished

This text of State of Texas v. James Leroy Clayton (State of Texas v. James Leroy Clayton) 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
State of Texas v. James Leroy Clayton, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-08-00198-CR



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellant



V.



JAMES LEROY CLAYTON, Appellee





On Appeal from the County Court at Law

Cass County, Texas

Trial Court No. CCLM080081





Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Carter



MEMORANDUM OPINION



James Leroy Clayton was charged with failing to provide necessary food, water, care, and/or shelter to a bay mare horse. (1) During a "hotly contested" trial, the State's witness injected extraneous offense evidence in violation of the trial court's motion in limine. Based on the prejudicial nature of the statement, which implied that Clayton's failure to properly care for a different horse led to its death, the trial court granted a post-verdict motion for new trial. The State appealed the trial court's ruling on the sole question of whether the grant of a new trial constituted error. We find this case illustrates a proper exercise of judicial discretion by a trial court and affirm the judgment.

I. Factual and Procedural Background

Edward Homer, Jr., Clayton's neighbor, was driving past Clayton's property and noticed "two of the horses was [sic] down." According to Homer, there was no food or water on the property, "the horses were thin," and "you could see the ribs on all of them." Homer called Deputy George Bates, who went to the property and saw a mare lying on the ground, struggling to rise. Bates also noticed that there was no water on the property and that some of the horses appeared thin. He called Investigator John Garrett, who drove to the property only to discover that the mare had died. Garrett also claimed there was no food or water within view, and decided to feed the other twelve horses on the property.

Veterinarian Mike Dodd was contacted to conduct an autopsy on the dead mare. It revealed that the mare had no fat or muscle, prominent hip bones, and was infested with live parasites. Dodd concluded the mare was "severely emaciated" and "likely died from malnutrition and a heavy parasite load." Clayton was arrested after the autopsy was released and was charged with cruelty to animals.

Prior to trial, Clayton filed a motion for discovery requesting the State to provide him with notice of any evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts pursuant to Rule 404(b) of the Texas Rules of Evidence. A motion in limine excluding all extraneous crimes or conduct of which Clayton did not receive prior notice was granted. During a discourse held in the trial court's chambers, Clayton expressed concerns that the State's witnesses might speak of extraneous offenses in violation of the motion in limine. At that time, the State was instructed to admonish its witnesses in order to prevent them from discussing any extraneous offenses without the matter being first brought to the trial court's attention.

During cross-examination of the State's witness, Garrett, the following discussion ensued regarding other horses on the property:

Q. [By Clayton's counsel] What was the condition of those horses?



A. [By Garrett] Most of them were in poor condition. There might have been one or two horses that were not in as bad condition as the other, but for the most part it was pretty poor.



. . . .



Q. [By Clayton's counsel] And you determined that it was not necessary to seize the rest of these horses?



A. [By Garrett] There was a filly there that was in pretty bad shape and I probably should have seized her. And that's my mistake, I didn't, because I think she later died.



Clayton's counsel promptly objected to the question and argued at the bench that Garrett had volunteered information going to "the very matter that [he] was speaking to the Court about, about other animals dying." While Clayton's counsel alleged this was a violation of the motion in limine, the State argued Clayton had opened the door to the statement. Although the trial court dismissed the State's argument in ruling that Garrett's answer was nonresponsive, the court determined the matter could be cured by instruction. Specifically, the trial court stated, "The only statement made by the witness was that a horse died. He didn't expound on what the causation was . . . so I'm going to give an instruction to the jury to disregard that last statement of the witness." Clayton's motion for mistrial was denied, and a "hotly contested" trial continued.

Through the State's witnesses, Clayton established there was some grass and water on the property. State's witness Alton McWaters, who sold the mare to Clayton, described the eighteen-year-old mare as lame from an injury to her left front ankle. He stated she limped badly, could not get around, and had to be specially fed. McWaters said the mare was underweight due to her age and also because she was a thoroughbred racehorse. Dodd noted there was grass in the mare's stomach and fecal matter was present, indicating the mare had eaten. He admitted there could have been other causes for the mare's death.

Clayton also introduced witness Michael Jordan, who took care of Clayton's horses. Jordan described the property as a twenty- to thirty-acre piece of land with two water ponds and a well shed containing grain. It was Jordan's duty to feed the horses every day. Because the grass on the property was poor, Jordan kept three rolls of hay at the back of the property for the animals to feed on in addition to the grain. The testimony was significant since Garrett testified he knew there were storage buildings on the property but did not investigate to see if they contained grain, and did not walk the property to identify natural water sources.

Like State's witness McWaters, Jordan described the mare as old and poor. He testified she had an injury to her front leg and ankle and had a rear leg that was "messed up" when she was being unloaded from a trailer. Because the mare was the descendant of Native Dancer, an award-winning racehorse that placed in the Kentucky Derby, Clayton wanted the mare to produce a colt, implying that Clayton had a motive to keep the mare in good condition. Jordan fed her separately and testified she was able to eat. The mare was wormed twice, once when purchased and again a week or two prior to her death. Clayton had been in the hospital the two days prior to the mare's death. Noting that the mare was having problems in the days leading up to her death, Clayton and Jordan had decided to "put her down" if she did not get better. According to Jordan, the mare had died before they called the veterinarian.

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State of Texas v. James Leroy Clayton, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-of-texas-v-james-leroy-clayton-texapp-2009.