Taylor v. State

653 S.W.2d 295, 1983 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1166
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 1983
Docket65286, 65287
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 653 S.W.2d 295 (Taylor v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. State, 653 S.W.2d 295, 1983 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1166 (Tex. 1983).

Opinions

OPINION

CLINTON, Judge.

These are appeals from convictions for murder and attempt to murder obtained in a single jury trial; life sentences were assessed in each cause.

I.

The sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s verdict in the murder cause is challenged.

On May 16, 1979, Gregory Taylor (The State’s main witness in these causes and the victim of the attempt) was walking down the street when appellant and Marilyn Garrett 1 stopped to pick him up. According to Taylor — whose street name was “Rat” because “I am a thief” — he bought some gin and some Schlitz beer from a bootlegger. The three then rode around in appellant’s car, drinking and shooting preludin through the afternoon. Later, after Rat2 took a bath at his mother’s house, he was picked up about 11:00 p.m. by appellant and Marilyn again. Riding around, looking for more drugs, the three ultimately headed for a club in South Dallas called the Sunset Strip.

On arrival, Marilyn, who had been driving, parked the car and motioned a man she called “June Bug”3 over. She told him they were looking for some “preludes” and asked if he knew about any. June Bug indicated he did, and went inside to find his cousin, Eddy Lee Finch, also known as “Pun’kin,” the soon to be deceased. Pun’kin came to the car and told the group he only had two preludin left, but he thought he knew where some more were. He went back inside and returned with a very large man who was only identified as “Big Lawrence.” Big Lawrence told the group in the car that he had about 30 more preludin at his house and would get them if they would give him a ride there.

Big Lawrence and Pun’kin climbed into the back seat of appellant’s two door Pontiac beside Rat who was behind appellant. Marilyn followed Lawrence’s directions to an apartment on Loomis. There, Big Lawrence exited the car and went inside. After about five minutes, Lawrence came back out and was headed toward the driver’s side of the car when, according to Rat, appellant pulled a pistol and pointed it at “everybody in the back seat.” Rat testified, “I tried to push the back seat out and the gun went off.” He sustained a gunshot wound to the chest.4 He lost consciousness. When he woke up, he jumped out of the car and landed on the pavement. After lying there momentarily, he got up and ran “around the corner and down about two or three streets,” then ran to a house and passed out. According to Rat, he was missing over $100.00 in cash and a ring after the incident.

Dallas Police Officer R.W. Everett testified he and his partner received a radio dispatch at about 2:00 a.m. on May 17, 1979 about a shooting. On the 1400 block of [297]*297Maryland Road,5 Everett and his partner found Rat who had been shot once, his head swollen to twice its normal size. After putting Rat into an ambulance, the officers proceeded to the apartment on Loomis where a dispatch about a shooting had gone out right before they were sent to Maryland Road. On arrival, they found a body at the top of the stairs at the apartment complex. Eddie Lee Finch (Pun’kin) had already been pronounced dead. Appellant’s Pontiac was found with the headlights on and “the front door ... open” parked northbound in the southbound lane of the 3700 block of South Lamar — about 30 yards from the body of the deceased. According to Everett, about three different people “told [him] they had heard the gunshots and looked out and saw three people running from a vehicle that was parked in the 3700 block of South Lamar ...,”6 a woman and two men. The car was identified as appellant’s.

Ballistics tests determined that Rat and Pun’kin were both shot with the same .38 caliber pistol. No blood was found in appellant’s car. Marilyn’s fingerprint was found on a Schlitz beer can recovered from the left front floorboard of the car and Rat’s fingerprints were lifted from a hard hat which was found between the back seat and the back windshield.

Thomas F. Gilchrist, M.D., Dallas County Assistant Medical Examiner, testified he performed an autopsy on the deceased who had sustained two gunshot wounds at virtually point blank range: from two to five inches.7 The fatal bullet entered the left side of his back just above the waist, and traveled up, forward, and to the right, lodging in the chest muscle; this bullet passed through the left kidney, the inferior vena cava, the liver at the juncture of the left and right lobes, and the right lung before exiting the chest cavity and lodging in the right chest muscle.

The other bullet entered the front left chest muscle at about the armpit and exited about 4 cm. above and to the right of the entrance wound.

Dr. Gilchrist was not asked how mobile the victim might be or how long he might live after sustaining such injuries, though he did testify such wounds would not cause a lot of external bleeding. Like Rat, the deceased had no money on his person when found by the police, though witnesses testified he earlier had some money in his sock.

On direct examination, the prosecutor set up a hypothetical question in which five individuals were in a two door car and the deceased attempted to get out of the back seat on the passenger side; Gilchrist testified it would be consistent with the wounds sustained that he was shot by a person sitting in the front seat in the passenger side8 at close range. He also testified that the relationship between the two entrance wounds — that “they go through the body at the same angle” — would mean that it is a high likelihood that the victim was in more or less the same position as the shooter.

Gilchrist further opined that the soot on the wounds indicated the deceased was not running at the time he was shot.

On crossexamination, defense counsel suggested a hypothet in which the deceased was shot by “a person in the left front seat, behind the steering wheel,”9 as he “tried to get out the right side.” Gilchrist conceded that any of the other persons in the car could have done the shooting, though some were more likely than others.

While the evidence establishing appellant’s guilt of murdering the deceased is tenuous, and large unexplained gaps exist [298]*298in the sequence of events, we believe a rational trier of fact could have found appellant intentionally caused Eddy Lee Finch’s death beyond a reasonable doubt under the charge of the Court. Griffin v. State, 614 S.W.2d 155 (Tex.Cr.App.1981); Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).

Most compelling is the ballistics evidence that the deceased and Rat were shot with the same weapon; that weapon was placed in the hand of appellant by Rat’s testimony. Clearly, Rat did not have the .38 revolver; Big Lawrence was not near the car at the time of the fray and the evidence indicates it was a friend of the deceased who, like the deceased, was unacquainted with the others in the car. Through a process of elimination only appellant and Marilyn Garrett remain as possible perpetrators of the murder.

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Bluebook (online)
653 S.W.2d 295, 1983 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-state-texcrimapp-1983.