Stephen Brent Batteas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2006
Docket02-05-00036-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Stephen Brent Batteas v. State (Stephen Brent Batteas v. State) 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
Stephen Brent Batteas v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                        NO. 2-05-036-CR

STEPHEN BRENT BATTEAS                                                   APPELLANT

                                                   V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                STATE

                                              ------------

           FROM THE 396TH DISTRICT COURT OF TARRANT COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]


Appellant Stephen Brent Batteas appeals his conviction for injury to a child causing serious bodily injury.  The jury found Appellant guilty and assessed a sentence of life imprisonment.  The trial court sentenced Appellant accordingly.  In seven points, Appellant complains that the trial court committed reversible error in overruling his motion to suppress the second and third statements he gave to police, in admitting a 911 tape over Appellant=s objection, in denying Appellant=s motion for an instructed verdict because the State failed to show due diligence by the grand jury to ascertain the manner or means of causing injury, by refusing to admit two prior inconsistent statements by a witness, in submitting paragraphs one and two of the indictment that had previously been waived by the State, in refusing to admit testimony concerning a prior demeanor of a crucial witness, and in failing to charge the jury on the issue of voluntary intoxication as mitigation in punishment.  We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Christin Chanel hired Appellant, an ex-boyfriend, to care for her sixteen-month-old son, Zachary, for a couple of weeks beginning in April 2002 until a permanent caretaker could begin caring for Zachary.  On April 28, 2002, Chanel picked Appellant up from his home and drove him to her apartment.  That evening, Chanel and Appellant watched television together and then Appellant took Chanel=s car and left the apartment for a while.  After Appellant returned, Marcheta Paulina Olson went to the apartment complex to meet him, and the two sat talking in the car at the apartment complex.  Later, Chanel called Appellant on Olson=s cellular telephone and asked him to return to the apartment so she could go to her mother and stepfather=s horse stables where a horse was expected to give birth that evening.


Appellant and Olson returned to the apartment and Chanel left to go to the horse stables.  When Chanel left the apartment, Zachary was asleep in his crib.  Olson remained at the apartment with Appellant when Chanel left.  Olson was having problems with her contact lenses, so she and Appellant went to the bathroom to find contact solution.  While in the bathroom, Olson heard Zachary cry, and Appellant went into the bedroom to check on him.  Appellant told Olson that Zachary was fine.

Appellant and Olson then returned to the living room.  They heard a noise coming from his room that sounded like a toy, so Appellant again checked on Zachary and told Olson he was fine.  Shortly thereafter, Olson left the apartment.


At approximately 3:45 a.m., Appellant called 911 and reported that Zachary was not breathing.  When emergency personnel arrived, they found Zachary laying on the sofa bed in the living room.  His body temperature was low, he was not breathing, and he had no pulse.  Police questioned Appellant as the paramedics tended to Zachary.  Appellant testified at a pretrial suppression hearing that the officer instructed him to sit on the curb and he did not feel free to leave.  Subsequently, police called Chanel and informed her that Zachary had been transferred to the hospital.  Police also called Olson back to the scene to give a statement, and she arrived approximately twenty minutes later.

Appellant later agreed to give a statement to police and was taken by patrol car to the police station.  Appellant testified at the pretrial suppression hearing that he felt like he had to ride in the police car to the police station, and he did not feel free to leave while at the police station.  Sergeant Arvin Campbell testified that Appellant was not in custody when he gave the statement that morning, but he was a suspect.  Sergeant Campbell testified that he informed Appellant that he was not under arrest and read him Miranda warnings.[2]  Appellant then wrote his statement out for police.  When he finished giving his statement, Appellant left the police station with Olson.


A few days following the incident, Sergeant John Van Ness went to Appellant=s house to obtain a second statement from Appellant.  Sergeant Van Ness did not take Appellant into custody after he made his second statement. The following day, Sergeant Van Ness went back to Appellant=s house to clarify some of the things that Appellant had previously stated.  Sergeant Van Ness testified that when he spoke with Appellant, Appellant was not under arrest and was not handcuffed.  He further testified that he never made any threats or promises to Appellant to encourage him to make the statements.

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