State v. Uyless Troy Bland

475 S.W.3d 327, 2013 WL 5507652, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 12427
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2013
Docket13-13-00155-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 475 S.W.3d 327 (State v. Uyless Troy Bland) 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 v. Uyless Troy Bland, 475 S.W.3d 327, 2013 WL 5507652, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 12427 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice LONGORIA.

Uyless Troy Bland was charged with possession -of less 1 than one gram of a controlled substance in penalty group' 1, a state jail- felony. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.115(b) (West 2010). After holding an evidentiary hearing, the trial court granted Bland’s motion to sup.press the evidence of the controlled substance. The State now appeals by five issues. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

The factual background of this case was developed during the evidentiary hearing held on Bland’s motion to suppress. 1 At the hearing, which was conducted on March 8, 2018, the State offered the testimony of two patrol officers employed by the City of Victoria Police Department.

Officer Stephen Lang testified that during the daytime hours of October 18, 2012, he received a call to assist another officer working an assault or possibly a robbery on Cameron Street.' According to Officer Lang, when he arrived at the'location, he encountered the “victim,” James Hayes, who had injuries to his face and was bleed-* ing, and a second -patrol officer, Officer Heather Rodriguez, who was gathering information on whether.it was an assault or a robbery. After speaking to Officer Rodriguez, Officer Lang travelled to the 900 block of Depot Road, where the complainant had indicated that the incident occurred. Officer Lang stopped in front of 906 Depot Road, a house with the front door wide open. He proceeded to the house and “fohnd a' blood trail in the house, from the front porch.” From' prior experiences', Officer Lang knew the house was a “troubled house” and had been the subject of prior “drug and assault investigations.”

■When he. got to the front porch, he saw blood droplets leading into the house. And from .the open doorway, he observed a table in the middle of a kitchen, where a bloody towel had been discarded. He saw a woman standing in a back bedroom looking at him, and he asked her to come to the do,or to speak to him. . Her name was Lezlie Jackson. . When she came to the door, Officer Lang “asked her, basically, who else was in. the house and what happened, and she began to tell ... [him] the owner [of the house] ... ‘Stinker’ was his name ... [also known as] Royal Mump-hord ... was assaulted.” Officer Lang testified that he was familiar -with Mump-hord and that Mumphord was not the same man that he had initially encountered on Cameron Street.' Jackson informed Officer Lang that there were two or three *330 other people in the house, in. the back bedrooms, but that Mumphord was not there, and she told Officer Lang she could not give him consent to enter the house to speak with the other occupants because it was not her house; Based on the blood evidence, Officer Lang believed that there could be additional victims inside- the house, but he did not ask Jackson if anyone was hurt or injured.

Between two and five minutes after Officer Lang arrived at the house, Officer Rodriguez joined him, and together they entered the house “to look for additional victims and render aid, if necessary.” He went to the left, and she went, to the right. Proceeding to the back bedroom, Officer Lang found Bland sleeping on a couch, and continuing farther into the house, without waking Bland, he found a second woman, Stella Sanchez, and asked her to come to the front of house. She complied. He then went to Bland and woke him up. By Bland’s foot, on the couch, Officer Lang “could see some paraphernalia — a- crack pipe.” He “proceeded to wake him up, for the paraphernalia he was in immediate control of.” As Officer Lang was arresting Bland, a 'black contáiner fell off the couch. He opened it and found that it contained crack cocaine. Officer Lang escorted ; Bland: to the porch, photographed the scene, and then left the house. Officer Rodriguez had been with him the entire time.

After Officer Lang gave the foregoing testimony, the State offered, and the trial court admitted into evidence; State’s Exhibits 1 through 13, which were the photographs taken by Officer Lang at 906 Depot Road. Then, the State elicited more testimony from Officer Lang, -who stated that the house was dark and did not appear to have electricity. He also testified that he and Officer Rodriguez never actually found anyone injured in the house after they went inside.

On cross-examination, Officer Lang testified that the victim, James Hayes, had told Officer Rodriguez “that a large, heavy-set black male had committed the assault against him” and that he received that description of the suspect from Officer Rodriguez. He further testified that although “Royal Mumphord is a black male, ... [h]e’s not a particularly tall man.” According to Officer Lang, “[h]e’s skinny and short.” He testified that when he travelled to Depot Road, he was not looking for Mumphord, even though he knew that Mumphord “stayed there” at 906 South Depot. Officer Lang also testified that Jackson changed her story. Initially, she told him that Mumphord had been assaulted, but later, she told him-that it was Hayes’s blood — that “[h]e had come to the house and cleaned himself up.” He did not specify at what point in time Jackson had changed -her story — whether it was before or after he had entered the house. Officer Lang also testified that he did'not “try to ascertain from ... Jackson whether or not the person that assaulted ... Mumphord had left the scene or where he was.” He admitted that “the blood on the pictures could be a nosé bleed,” that “[tjhere wasn’t blood all over the walls,” or “all over the carpet.” Yet, he maintained that he went into the house “looking for additional .victims ... [to], see if ... [they] needed to render medical help.” When he walked by Bland initially, he did not see any injuries.

During the cross-examination, Officer Lang also testified that before entering the house, he had “evidence to believe there was evidence of a crime inside the house or that a crime was being committed in the house.” This was based on “the assault victim, and where he described it happened and finding the blood drops.” He suspect *331 ed that a crime had occurred, but he admitted that he did not have probable cause. Then, he retracted that statement and reversed his answer, stating that .he did have probable cause based on the victim saying “he was assaulted on that block and there was blood on the porch.” .Counsel for Bland asked him, “Are you sure you just weren’t looking for drugs when you went in there?” But Officer Lang said that was not true. “It wasn't until .,. [he] tried to wake up ... [Bland] that .,. [he] saw the; pipe in full sight.” Officer Lang maintained that he entered the house “to preserve life or avoid serious injury.”

The following • exchange then occurred between Bland’s counsel and Officer Lang:

Q When you entered the house, passed my client, entered the other bedroom and- found not only my client was asleep but the other person was asleep, did' that dispel your belief that you had an—
A I’m still clearing the house, to make sure nobody is hurt inside. I don’t understand what you’re asking.
Q So, after you find out that — You walk past Mr. Bland, you don’t check for injuries.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
475 S.W.3d 327, 2013 WL 5507652, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 12427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-uyless-troy-bland-texapp-2013.