Syd Houston Otey v. State
This text of Syd Houston Otey v. State (Syd Houston Otey 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.
Opinion
A jury convicted appellant Syd Houston Otey of burglary of a habitation, and after Otey entered into a plea bargain as to punishment, the trial court assessed his punishment at thirty-five years of confinement. Otey filed this appeal, in which he raises two issues for our consideration. We affirm.
The complainant, Judy Radcliff, testified that at approximately 4:00 p.m. on November 8, 2004, she arrived at her home. When she drove into the driveway, she saw an "older model, blue truck" sitting in her driveway. Judy got out of her car and walked toward the back deck of her home, and she observed that the back door was open. Judy testified that her husband, Patrick, had left the door closed, but unlocked. Judy assumed that someone was inside her house, so she stopped and called Patrick on her cellular phone. As Judy was calling Patrick, she saw Otey come out of her house. Judy asked Otey what he was doing in her house, and Otey responded that Patrick had asked him to do some plumbing work. Patrick told Judy that he had not hired Otey, and Judy then handed her phone to Otey and told him that he needed to speak to her husband. Otey and Patrick spoke on the phone, and Otey returned the phone to Judy and acted as though he intended to re-enter the house. Judy then instructed Otey to leave, and he complied.
After Otey left, Judy approached the house and saw a television set on her back porch. Judy explained that Otey did not have permission to be in her house on November 8, 2004, and she had not put the television set on her back porch. Judy waited until Patrick arrived, and they walked into the house together. Judy testified that upon entering the house, they "found a few drawers open, and that's it." Judy and Patrick could not tell that any of the drawers' contents were missing. They contacted the police, and when Officer Swanzy arrived, Judy described what she had seen and completed a handwritten statement. Eventually, a detective asked Judy to review some photographs, and she identified Otey. Judy also explained that she had previously met Otey when he did some plumbing work at her home a few weeks earlier. Judy testified that approximately two months after the incident, Otey came to her house, "and the conversation that we had basically was that he was sorry, that he was trying to get his life back together and he asked me not to file charges on him."
Patrick testified that on November 8, 2004, he received a phone call from Judy, and he told her he did not call Otey to do any plumbing work. Patrick explained that he had previously hired Otey's brother and Otey for a plumbing job. Patrick testified that he believed Otey and his brother overcharged him for the labor, and he did not intend to use their services again. Patrick denied giving Otey permission to enter his home on November 8, 2004, but he admitted that he left the door unlocked. Patrick testified that he spoke to Otey on Judy's cell phone, and when Otey told him he was there to do some plumbing, Patrick believed Otey had simply made a mistake as to where he was to work. According to Patrick, Otey said, "Oh, okay[,]" and returned Judy's phone to her.
Judy told Patrick she believed something was not right about the situation, and he instructed her not to enter the house until he arrived. When Patrick arrived, he found Judy sitting in her car in the driveway, and he described her as "shook up." Patrick and Judy approached the house, and they saw a television set on the deck. Patrick explained that the television set belonged in the front bedroom of their home, and he had not placed it on the deck. Patrick also testified that he and Judy saw some of the drawers in the front bedroom were "pulled out," and he denied pulling the drawers out. According to Patrick, after he and Judy saw that the drawers were open, they contacted the police, and Officer Swanzy responded to the call. Patrick gave a statement to Officer Swanzy, and he later spoke with a detective and gave a typewritten statement.
Officer Shad Swanzy of the Nederland Police Department testified that he responded to a call from the Radcliffs. Patrick and Judy described what had transpired, and upon entering the residence, Officer Swanzy saw a television set on the back porch and noticed that some drawers were partially open in one of the bedrooms. Officer Swanzy examined the television set, but he was unable to obtain any fingerprints from it. Judy told Officer Swanzy that the last name of the individual she saw coming out of her house was "Otey." Officer Swanzy took the Radcliffs' statements and attempted to locate Otey. Officer Swanzy was unsuccessful in locating Otey, and he turned the case over to a detective.
In his first issue, Otey argues that the evidence is legally insufficient to support the verdict because the indictment alleged that the complainant's surname was "Radliff," but her surname was actually "Radcliff." The rule of idem sonans, (1) which provides that absolute accuracy in spelling a name is not required if the erroneously spelled name and the correctly spelled name are pronounced alike, applies to such variances. See Dingler v. State, 705 S.W.2d 144, 145 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984). The issue of whether a name proven by the evidence is idem sonans with that alleged in the indictment should be determined by the jury. Martin v. State, 541 S.W.2d 605, 608 (Tex. Crim. App. 1976). Therefore, unless the two spellings are patently incapable of being pronounced alike, an appellant who asserts the issue of idem sonans for the first time on appeal has waived the issue, and his argument presents nothing for review. Id. We are not convinced that the two spellings of the complainant's surname cannot be pronounced alike.
In this case, Otey's counsel made the following motion during the charge conference:
Comes now the defendant and after The State has rested and prior to offering any testimony on behalf of the defendant and we respectfully move for an instructed verdict of not guilty for the following reasons: . . . that there is a fatal variance between the allegations of the indictment and the proof offered by The State. Therefore, we are requesting the Honorable Court to instruct a verdict of not guilty.
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Syd Houston Otey v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/syd-houston-otey-v-state-texapp-2007.