Terrance Lee Williams v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 2009
Docket01-08-00872-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Terrance Lee Williams v. State (Terrance Lee Williams 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.

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Terrance Lee Williams v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 29, 2009







In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-08-00872-CR





TERRANCE WILLIAMS, Appellant


v.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 230th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1183553





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          Appellant, Terrance Williams, was charged by indictment with the offense of aggravated assault on a “person with whom [he] had a dating relationship,” enhanced by a prior felony conviction. Appellant pleaded not guilty to the offense and pleaded “not true” to the enhancement. A jury found appellant guilty as charged, found the enhancement true, and assessed punishment at 5 years’ confinement and a $3,000 fine. The trial court entered an affirmative finding on the use of a deadly weapon.

          In one issue, appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction.

          We affirm.

Background

          Appellant and the complainant, Nichole Johnson, dated, lived together, and had a daughter together. Their relationship ended in early 2007, and appellant moved out of Johnson’s apartment. Johnson and appellant remained in contact so that appellant could visit their daughter. Appellant made numerous unsuccessful attempts to rekindle his relationship with Johnson.                    

          On January 5, 2008, appellant called Johnson several times about going with her to buy shoes for their daughter. That evening, Johnson picked up appellant from his apartment, shopped with him for shoes, and then returned to appellant’s apartment to drop him off. There, appellant asked Johnson to stay and talk about their relationship. Johnson refused, stating that she had to be somewhere else. Appellant got out of Johnson’s car, and Johnson drove away.

          Minutes later, Johnson noticed that her cellular telephone was not in its usual place—in the cup holder in her car. After a search of the car proved fruitless, she concluded that appellant must have taken it, and she returned to his apartment.

          Johnson saw appellant outside of his apartment, approached him with her daughter in tow, and asked about her telephone. Appellant replied, “Don’t worry about the phone, that b---- is historic.” Johnson asked why he had taken her telephone. Appellant replied, “I told you if I caught you f------ with someone else I will f--- you up.” Johnson told appellant that she could just get another telephone, and she turned to leave, taking her daughter’s hand.

          According to Johnson’s testimony, appellant grabbed the little girl’s other hand and pulled her away from Johnson. Johnson stumbled forward and felt a blow on the back of her head. Johnson fell to the ground, and appellant hit her with his fist. Johnson began screaming, and appellant grabbed her by her ponytail and began to drag her down the sidewalk in front of his apartment. Johnson screamed at him to stop, and appellant hit her again, then started kicking her. Appellant told Johnson that he would stop if she would agree to come inside the apartment. Johnson testified that she refused because she was “[a]fraid for [her] life.” Johnson tried to crawl away from appellant, and appellant began to “knock” Johnson’s head against the sidewalk. As Johnson sat dazed, appellant stepped away. Appellant returned a few seconds later with a stick. Johnson tried to kick him away from her and he lunged at her and hit her in the face with the stick “two to three times.” Appellant tried to pick up Johnson and move her toward his front door. Johnson fought back. Appellant again told Johnson that he would stop beating her if she would go inside his apartment. Johnson tried to crawl away again, and appellant began choking her. Johnson kicked appellant, and appellant released her and stepped away from her for a few seconds. He returned seconds later, however, and Johnson felt “a blow across the back of [her] legs and [her] buttocks.” Johnson testified that she felt at least two such blows and that, when she turned around, she saw that appellant had hit her with a gun. Johnson testified again that she feared for her life.

          During the fray, Johnson saw a woman coming through a nearby gate and Johnson called out to her for help, asking her to call 911. Appellant called the woman by name, told her it was none of her business, and told her to go home. The woman left. As appellant continued to beat Johnson, another woman came through the gate. Johnson called to her for help. Johnson testified that appellant said to the woman, “If you attempt to help, I will f--- you up.” The woman began talking to appellant, distracting him, and Johnson was able to run away. Johnson ran to a nearby Valero convenience store, where she called the police.

          Officer M. Roberts of the Houston Police Department (“HPD”) was dispatched to the Valero station. He testified that he found Johnson “[v]ery scared, very nervous.” Johnson told Officer Roberts that she had been assaulted by appellant at the adjacent apartment complex. Officer Roberts testified that Johnson told him that appellant had hit her with a stick and a gun, and that she had seen other people at the complex, but that nobody would help her. Officer Roberts testified that Johnson’s face and left eye were swollen, that her lip was “busted,” that she had a cut on her face that was consistent with having been hit with a stick, and that he saw two welts on her “rear end” that were consistent with having been struck. He did not look for the stick or the gun. Officer Roberts went to appellant’s apartment, but was unable to locate appellant. Officer Roberts found an earring in the dirt near appellant’s apartment that matched the one earring that Johnson was still wearing. Officer Roberts called an ambulance and took pictures of Johnson’s injuries. The photographs were admitted at trial.

          Johnson was transported by ambulance to the hospital. According to her medical report, which was admitted into evidence, Johnson suffered contusions and abrasions to her head, face, forearm, and hip.

          Sophi Hoggatt, appellant’s girlfriend at the time of the incident, testified that she lived at appellant’s complex on the side on which the Valero is located, and that she would have been able to hear a struggle going on at appellant’s apartment.

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