Sturdivant v. State

445 S.W.3d 338, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5860, 2013 WL 1972179
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 14, 2013
DocketNos. 01-12-00089-CR, 01-12-00184-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 445 S.W.3d 338 (Sturdivant 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
Sturdivant v. State, 445 S.W.3d 338, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5860, 2013 WL 1972179 (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

EVELYN V. KEYES, Justice.

A jury convicted appellant, Joyce McMillin Sturdivant, of the first degree felony offenses of murder and attempted capital murder and assessed punishment at thirty years’ confinement and fifteen years’ confinement, respectively, to run [341]*341concurrently.1 In six issues, appellant contends that (1) and (2) the trial court erred by not instructing the jury that Deborah Dieterich was an accomplice as a matter of law with respect to both of the charged offenses; (3) and (4) the State failed to present sufficient evidence to support her conviction of both offenses; and (5) and (6) the trial court erred in taxing as court costs the amounts paid to the attorneys pro tern for the State, to the State’s experts and investigators, to the court-appointed attorneys, and to appellant’s experts and investigators.

• We affirm.

Background

A. The Prior Assault on Joe Sturdi-vant

Appellant was married to the complainant, Joe Sturdivant, known as “Big Joe,” for approximately forty years.2 They lived in Robinson, Texas, which is located near Waco,3 and operated a transmission-repair business, Sturdivant Transmission, together.

In summer of 2007, over a year before the murder of Big Joe, appellant approached Ali Ali Abdula Muhammad (“Doe Muhammad”), a long-time family friend, “about doing harm to [Big Joe].” Appellant told Doc Muhammad that she was “tired of’ Big Joe, that he was “so bad” to her, and that she was “[t]ired of getting beat up.” She kept telling Doc Muhammad that she wanted Big Joe killed. Doc Muhammad refused to kill Big Joe, but he had no objection to “whoop[ing] his ass.” Doc Muhammad had financial difficulties, and he testified that appellant told him that if he could “slow [Big Joe’s] ass down just a little bit,” she would pay his delinquent taxes.

Doc Muhammad agreed to this plan, and he enlisted another man, Chris Chatman, to “knock [Big Joe] out.” Doc Muhammad spoke with appellant by phone early in the morning on September 27, 2007. She told him that she “had enough” and that Big Joe’s abuse of her “went too far.” She told Doc Muhammad that she was going to leave the door to the house open and that she was going to put up their noisy dogs so they would not wake Big Joe. She told Doc Muhammad where in the house Big Joe slept so he could pass that information on to Chatman.

Chatman had a gun with him, and when he got out of Doc Muhammad’s van, he also took a Gerber knife that had been lying in the van. Doc Muhammad remained in his van. Chatman re-appeared shortly thereafter, “sweating and panting.”

Chatman, who was Doc Muhammad’s next-door neighbor, testified that Doc Mu[342]*342hammad told him about a woman who had an abusive husband and said that “something needed to be done.” Around 8:00 or 4:00 a.m. on September 27, 2007, Doe Muhammad picked Chatman up and stopped at a convenience store where he called appellant. Doc Muhammad gave Chatman a gun and a knife and told him that the dogs would be in their pens and that the door would be open. While Chatman was in the master bedroom, Big Joe woke up, saw that Chatman was holding a gun, and “immediately jumped out of the bed and just rushed [Chatman and] grabbed [him].” During the ensuing struggle, Chatman hit Big Joe over the head with the gun. As Chatman fled, he ran past a bathroom and saw appellant inside. She was standing “over the bathtub with her fingers .in her ears as if anticipating the gunshot.” When Chatman got back in the van, Doc Muhammad asked him “if [he] did it, if [he] killed [Big Joe].” Chatman assumed that Doc Muhammad had wanted him to kill Big Joe.

Robinson Police Department (“RPD”) Sergeant G. Hinson testified that he responded to a burglary-in-progress call at the Sturdivant residence early in the morning on September 27, 2007. As he approached the house, which sat a distance from the road, he saw Big Joe driving a vehicle toward him, his face and head “covered in blood.” Sergeant Hinson requested that Big Joe go back to the house to wait for medical treatment. During the investigation of the scene, Sergeant Hin-son discovered that the screen of one of the windows in a vacant bedroom had been cut. Sergeant Hinson found a Gerber knife beneath the window. Brent Watson, a forensic scientist with the Department of Public Safety, analyzed the DNA found on the knife and testified that neither Doc Muhammad nor Chatman could be excluded as contributors to the DNA profile found on the knife. Officers also inspected appellant’s phone records, which indicated that on the morning of the assault a phone call was made to the Sturdivant house from a payphone at a nearby convenience store.

Sergeant Hinson also spoke with appellant, who told him that she had gone to the bathroom and that while she was in there “somebody hit her in the back of the head knocking her out.” He stated that the Sturdivants had at least five or six “pretty noisy” dogs at their house, and he opined that the dogs would have been alerted if an intruder entered the house. Laurie Peterson, a volunteer EMT for the Robinson Fire Department who responded to the 9-1-1 call, agreed that the Sturdivants had “quite a few dogs” and that they were “very hostile.” Peterson testified that she observed appellant at the scene, that appellant had no noticeable injuries, and that appellant appeared alert and oriented. Dr. Nathan Forrest, the radiologist who interpreted the CT scan performed on appellant when she was taken to the hospital after the break-in, testified that he saw “no evidence of trauma” on appellant’s CT films.

Appellant testified on her own behalf and stated that Big Joe “never laid a hand on [her].” She denied ever telling Doc Muhammad that Big Joe was abusing her, and she denied ever telling him that she wanted Big Joe hurt. With regard to the September 27, 2007 break-in and assault, she stated that she was not aware that anything unusual was going on until Big Joe found her passed out in the bathroom and woke her up.

No one was convicted of this offense. Doc Muhammad and Chatman both testified that they received immunity from prosecution in exchange for their truthful testimony in this proceeding.

[343]*343 B. The Murder of Joe Sturdivant

Deborah Dieterich used to work for TPS Parts, a company that delivered transmission parts to various auto shops, including Sturdivant Transmission, where she met appellant. During the summer of 2008, a number of months after the 2007 break-in and assault on Big Joe, appellant approached Dieterich about finding someone to murder Big Joe. According to Dieterich, she and appellant were having a conversation and appellant “just asked [her] if [she] knew anybody that could have her husband killed.” Dieterich responded that she did not know anyone, but she would ask around. Appellant told her that she did not have any money to pay a hired killer, but she did have jewelry that she could use for payment.

Dieterich first approached Glendell Tate and asked him if he would kill Dieterich’s own husband. She later told him that “she had a friend that had a more pressing job that was more important than her husband.” Specifically, Dieterich told him that appellant wanted Big Joe Wiled, and Dieterich pointed Big Joe out to Tate by driving him by Sturdivant Transmission and a local restaurant where Big Joe usually ate lunch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
445 S.W.3d 338, 2013 Tex. App. LEXIS 5860, 2013 WL 1972179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sturdivant-v-state-texapp-2013.