Thomas Lee Swan v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 2013
Docket14-11-01040-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Thomas Lee Swan v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 30, 2013.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-11-01040-CR

THOMAS LEE SWAN, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 263rd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1316314

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant Thomas Lee Swan of manslaughter and assessed punishment at 15 years‘ imprisonment. Appellant challenges his conviction in a single issue contending the evidence is legally insufficient. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND

Appellant was living with Jimmy McIntire and the complainant Eric Gross at a house that appellant‘s mother had set up for homeless men. McIntire explained that there was hostility between appellant and Gross, particularly over food. When the house went into foreclosure, appellant‘s mother arranged for the men to move into an apartment on April 16, 2008. According to McIntire, that evening appellant began arguing with Gross about food and whether Gross had money on his food stamp card. Appellant then beat up Gross. During the physical altercation, appellant also stabbed Gross in the leg.1

Appellant told Gross to change his clothes because Gross was bleeding heavily, and Gross complied. McIntire testified that things calmed down after the fight. McIntire went to the corner store, and when he returned, appellant was still mad at Gross, but McIntire did not think Gross was still bleeding. Later, McIntire overheard appellant making phone calls on Gross‘s cell phone; McIntire heard appellant refer to a ―double.‖ McIntire understood that conversation to mean ―that would be a double murder if he killed me too.‖ McIntire also overheard appellant talking with appellant‘s girlfriend and his mother. Appellant‘s mother wanted to speak with Gross, but appellant would not let her. McIntire left later that evening or after midnight.2 Gross was still alive.

1 McIntire testified that he did not know when appellant stabbed Gross. He was the only witness to the stabbing, and he did not own a watch or cell phone (and the electricity was out at the apartment). He testified that Gross had left the apartment earlier in the evening and returned home at about 6:00 p.m. or 6:30 p.m. He also testified that appellant‘s mother had brought food to the apartment before Gross returned home. Appellant‘s mother testified that she brought the food to the apartment at 8:30 p.m. or 9:00 p.m. 2 McIntire testified that he left the apartment at about 11:00 p.m. or 11:30 p.m. However, McIntire also testified that he overheard several phone conversations appellant made using Gross‘s cell phone. Houston Police Department (HPD) Sergeant John Roberts testified that cell phone records indicated those conversations took place between 12:28 a.m. and 1:04 a.m.

2 Gross‘s body was discovered the next morning in a construction site near the apartment complex.3 His body was lying facedown with a large piece of concrete on top. Several cigarette butts were found at the scene. Sergeant Roberts testified that a cigarette butt lying on the ground near Gross‘s body appeared ―very fresh‖ because ash was still present and the grass was scorched beneath it. This cigarette butt had appellant‘s DNA on it. Another cigarette butt contained the DNA of an unidentified female.

Inside a dumpster near the apartment complex, police officers found a bag containing a prescription bottle with Gross‘s name on it and other toiletries, such as a toothbrush and bottles of shampoo and body wash that not been used completely. Police also recovered a bed sheet and shower curtain with blood on them. Police found other items near the dumpster, such as bloody pants with a tear consistent with the stab wound to Gross‘s leg.

Appellant went to his mother‘s house that night. His mother testified that he arrived at about 2:30 a.m. Later that morning, police spoke with McIntire and appellant‘s mother, among others, while walking through the apartment. Inside, they discovered that the bloodstained carpet had been covered with a rug. Appellant was arrested later that day at his mother‘s house. Sergeant Roberts testified that the HPD recovered a wallet containing appellant‘s identification and other items belonging to Gross, which led him to believe it was Gross‘s wallet taken by appellant. Appellant‘s mother testified that she found the wallet in the apartment and gave it to the police.

3 HPD Officer Andrew Travella testified that the apartment was about a five- to six- minute drive away from the construction site. HPD Officer Clifton Winston testified that the distance was ―maybe quarter of a mile.‖ Sergeant Roberts testified that it was about a four- to five-minute drive with a distance of ―a mile, maybe mile or two.‖

3 Dr. Roger Milton testified that he was the assistant medical examiner who performed Gross‘s autopsy. He prepared a report that was admitted into evidence at trial. He acknowledged at trial that his report stated, ―CAUSE OF DEATH: Blunt trauma of the head with skull and cervical vertebral fractures and stab wound of the right thigh with perforation of the right femoral vein.‖ Milton testified on direct examination that the stab wound could have resulted in Gross‘s death if left untreated, but the extreme injury to the back of Gross‘s head did result in Gross‘s death. He testified that Gross was still alive when his skull was crushed, and that could be determined because there was still blood pressure in the face, scalp, and brain at the time of the blunt trauma. On cross-examination, Milton testified again that the stab wound did not cause Gross‘s death, and the head injuries did in fact cause the death. The stab wound was treatable, but the head injuries were fatal. Sergeant Roberts attended the autopsy. He testified, ―That was a specific question of mine, was he or was he not or can you tell me, at this point alive.‖ Roberts explained that at the time of the autopsy, ―there was not an accurate determination made‖ about whether Gross was still alive when he received the head injury.

Appellant was indicted for murder under six theories: (1) intentionally and knowingly caused death by stabbing with a knife; (2) intending to cause serious bodily injury, caused death by stabbing with a knife; (3) intentionally and knowingly caused death by striking with a piece of concrete; (4) intending to cause serious bodily injury, caused death by striking with a piece of concrete; (5) intentionally and knowingly caused death by striking with an unknown object; and (6) intending to cause serious bodily injury, caused death by striking with an unknown object.

At the charge conference, the State abandoned the indictment paragraphs alleging death by striking with an unknown object. Thus, the court instructed the

4 jury that it should find appellant guilty of murder if it believed that appellant: (1) intentionally or knowingly caused death by stabbing with a knife; (2) intended to cause serious bodily injury, and caused death by stabbing with a knife; (3) intentionally or knowingly caused death by striking with a piece of concrete; or (4) intended to cause serious bodily injury, and caused death by striking with a piece of concrete. The court also instructed that the jury should find appellant guilty of manslaughter if it believed that appellant recklessly caused death by stabbing with a knife.4 Finally, the charge instructed that the jury should find appellant guilty of aggravated assault if it believed that appellant intentionally or knowingly caused serious bodily injury by stabbing with a knife.

Throughout trial, appellant‘s counsel conceded that appellant stabbed Gross; counsel asked the jury to convict appellant of aggravated assault. The jury acquitted appellant of murder and convicted him of manslaughter.

II. ANALYSIS

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Thomas Lee Swan v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-lee-swan-v-state-texapp-2013.