Thomas James Negri v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 6, 2009
Docket03-07-00588-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Thomas James Negri v. State (Thomas James Negri 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
Thomas James Negri v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-07-00588-CR
Thomas James Negri, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF LLANO COUNTY, 33RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. CR5740, HONORABLE DANIEL H. MILLS, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N


A jury found appellant Thomas James Negri guilty of murder and assessed his punishment at twenty years' imprisonment. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02 (West 2003). Appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain the guilty verdict, and that the State failed to prove that venue was proper in Llano County. We overrule these contentions and affirm the judgment of conviction.



EVIDENCE

Shirley Cowan's Disappearance

The deceased, Shirley Cowan, was appellant's mother-in-law. Cowan disappeared without a trace in January 2001. The indictment accusing appellant of Cowan's murder was filed in December 2005, and he was tried in July 2007.

At the time of her disappearance, Cowan, a sixty-year-old widow, was living in a trailer park in Austin. Cowan had two daughters, Karen Jack, who lived in Rockport, and Teresa Negri, appellant's wife, who lived with him and their children in Burnet. (1) By all accounts, Cowan had a quick temper and could be difficult to deal with. For example, Cowan did not speak to appellant or Teresa for four years in the mid-1990s as a result of hard feelings arising from a failed business arrangement between Cowan, her late husband, and appellant. In 2000, however, Cowan hired appellant to be the general contractor on a "spec" house she wanted to build on a golf course near Kingsland. By January 2001, the house was nearing completion, but there was testimony that Cowan was not satisfied with the quality of the work, and that she was planning to remove appellant from the job and replace him with her brother-in-law, Nelson Cowan.

Cowan was last seen by Natasha Stieler, Karen Jack's daughter and Cowan's granddaughter, who also lived in Austin. Stieler testified that she was very close to Cowan, spoke to her at least once a week on the telephone, and often visited her. Stieler had dinner at Cowan's residence on Sunday night, January 14, 2001. Stieler testified that she brought two rented movies with her that night and that she and Cowan watched one of them after dinner. They made plans to meet again for dinner on Wednesday night, when they would watch the second movie. Cowan promised to make spaghetti, one of Stieler's favorite dishes, and Stieler saw Cowan take some ground meat from the freezer to thaw.

On Monday or Tuesday, Stieler heard from her mother that, according to appellant, Cowan had called appellant on Sunday night and told him that she had decided to go to "the islands." (2) Stieler testified that she found this odd because Cowan had said nothing to her to indicate that she was planning to take a trip, and that she had seen no luggage or other evidence of travel plans. Stieler was further surprised to hear that Cowan had left her two dogs behind in appellant's care rather than taking them with her, as she always did when she traveled. (3) Later that week, Stieler borrowed the key to Cowan's trailer from Teresa Negri so she could retrieve her rented movie, which she had left at the trailer in anticipation of the Wednesday night dinner. Stieler testified that when she entered the trailer, she "knew something was wrong." Cowan was, according to Stieler, a fastidious housekeeper, but the dirty dishes from the previous Sunday night were still in the sink and the ground meat was beginning to go bad in the refrigerator.

Karen Jack testified that she, too, was surprised to learn that Cowan had suddenly decided to go on vacation. According to Jack, Cowan would not have left without telling Jack of her plans, and she would not have left her dogs. Jack also testified that appellant told her that Cowan had instructed him to move her trailer and car from the trailer park. This concerned Jack because, as she explained, " [Appellant] told me that she was coming back on the 29th. Where was she going to live and how was she going to get off this airplane if her trailer and her car [were] gone." Jack testified that appellant and Teresa moved Cowan's trailer and car from the trailer park on January 23. (4) The evidence shows that they first took the trailer to the building site near Kingsland, and later moved it to their residence in Burnet. Jack testified that appellant later told her that Cowan had instructed him to sell the trailer because she was out of money. On January 31, 2001, Jack called the police to report Cowan missing.

Nelson Cowan testified that he last saw his sister-in-law on January 11, 2001. On that day, he drove Cowan to Kingsland to look at the house under construction. Cowan expressed to him her displeasure with appellant's work--she was "mad as hell"--and her desire to have Nelson finish the project. Nelson also drove Cowan to appellant's house, where she intended to ask Teresa to return the extra key to Cowan's safe deposit box. Nelson testified that Cowan told him she had $300,000 in the box. The bank manager testified that Cowan had leased the safe deposit box in October 2000, and that only Cowan and Teresa Negri were authorized to open it. Bank records showed that Cowan was the only person to open the box until January 16, 2001, when Teresa opened it for the first time. Teresa also opened the box on January 31 and February 14, 2001.

Texas Ranger Matthew Linderman, who led the investigation into Cowan's disappearance, testified that Cowan's telephone records showed that the last call made with her phone was on the night of January 14, 2001, to appellant's phone number. There was no record of Cowan or anyone else using her telephone or her credit cards since that date. The only checks written on Cowan's bank account after her disappearance were signed by appellant, who was authorized to do so.



Blood at the Kingsland House

Bob Holbrook testified that he was hired by appellant to do the cabinets at the Kingsland house. Holbrook was present when, after the cabinets had been hung and painted, Cowan visited the house with appellant. Cowan did not like the color and demanded that the cabinets be repainted. Holbrook said that appellant told him not to worry and that appellant would pay him to repaint the cabinets. Holbrook testified that he could hear appellant and Cowan talk as they walked through the house that day, and she was "pretty upset about quite a few things in the house." Holbrook testified that Cowan was "real short" and "abusive" with appellant. Holbrook said that Cowan's remarks did not seem to bother appellant, who "just kind of stood back and nodded his head like everything was okay. If she wanted anything redone, it was fine to redo it, you know, everybody be paid, no problems."

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Thomas James Negri v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-james-negri-v-state-texapp-2009.