Terry Wayne Patterson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 22, 2009
Docket02-07-00438-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Terry Wayne Patterson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

                                      COURT OF APPEALS

                                       SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

                                                   FORT WORTH

                                        NO.  2-07-438-CR

TERRY WAYNE PATTERSON                                                 APPELLANT

                                                   V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS                                                                STATE

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

             FROM THE 43RD DISTRICT COURT OF PARKER COUNTY

                                MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]

Appellant Terry Wayne Patterson challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence to support his conviction for felony driving while intoxicated.  We affirm.


                                            Background

Cheriba Heliker testified that she was driving on a rural, two-lane road in the nighttime when she observed Appellant=s oncoming car approaching with its headlights off.  She said Appellant swerved in and out of his lane.  Heliker testified that a tire on Appellant=s car blew out, and Heliker swerved into the bar ditch to avoid a collision.  She said that she made a u-turn, caught up to Appellant=s vehicleCwhich was going ten to fifteen miles per hour and was Astill swerving all over the road@Cturned on her flashers, and started honking her horn.  Appellant eventually stopped in a gas station parking lot, got out of his car, and approached Heliker=s vehicle.  Heliker said that Appellant Ajust kept mumbling and rambling on,@ his speech was slurred, and he smelled of alcohol. Heliker called 911, and Appellant began to walk away down the road, staggering Apretty bad[ly]@ as he went.  Heliker concluded that Appellant was intoxicated based on training she had received from the Texas Alcoholic Beverage Commission when she worked for a convenience store.  Starr Jackson, who was riding as Heliker=s passenger, also testified, and her testimony is essentially the same as Heliker=s. 


Reno Police Officer Jake Sullivan testified that he responded to Heliker=s call.  He found Appellant standing next to a pay phone in the gas station parking lot.  Officer Sullivan said that Appellant=s speech was slurred and slow, his eyes were bloodshot and watery, he was swaying as he stood, and his breath smelled strongly of alcohol. 

Another officerCCorporal Colby LangfordCadministered the horizontal gaze nystagmus test.  Corporal Langford testified that Appellant exhibited six out of six possible clues of intoxication.  Appellant refused to perform the one-leg-stand test and the walk-and-turn test.  Corporal Langford said that he attempted to administer a portable breathalyser test, but Appellant first pretended that he could not blow through the breathalyser tube and then blew the tube off the device.  Upon Appellant=s third attempt to blow into the breathalyser, the device indicated that he had consumed alcoholic beverages. Corporal Langford testified that Appellant told him he had consumed three beers.  Corporal Langford arrested Appellant for driving while intoxicated.  At the county jail, Appellant refused to submit to another breathalyser test, and Corporal Langford obtained a search warrant to draw a sample of Appellant=s blood.  Corporal Langford testified in considerable detail that Appellant was belligerent, combative, and uncooperative throughout the entire encounter; among other things, Appellant screamed, spat, head-butted the camera mounted in Langford=s patrol car, and threatened to urinate in the car.   


Lori Whitmarsh, a medical technologist at Weatherford Regional Medical Center, testified that she drew Appellant=s blood.  Raymond Waller, the manager of the Department of Public Safety Crime Laboratory in Abilene, testified that he analyzed the blood sample drawn by Whitmarsh and that Appellant=s blood contained .22 grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters, or close to three times the legal limit.  He testified that to attain a blood alcohol level of .22, an average person would have to consume twelve beers over the course of an hour.  

Appellant testified on his own behalf.  He denied having consumed any alcohol on the evening in question before his tire blew out.  He testified that he had an unopened pint of whiskey underneath his van=s back seat.  Appellant said that after he parked the van in the gas station parking lot, he opened the whiskey and drank half of the bottle in Atwo gulps.@  He testified that after speaking to Heliker and Jackson, he walked down the road to find the blown tire=s hubcap and that he drank the rest of the whiskey as he walked. 

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