Werner, Dieter Heinz

412 S.W.3d 542, 2013 WL 5808114, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1597
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 30, 2013
DocketPD-0326-13, PD-0327-13
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 412 S.W.3d 542 (Werner, Dieter Heinz) 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
Werner, Dieter Heinz, 412 S.W.3d 542, 2013 WL 5808114, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1597 (Tex. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

COCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

In two separate indictments, appellant was charged with stalking his former girlfriend. 1 Before trial, the judge permitted the State to consolidate the offenses and denied appellant’s motion to sever. The jury convicted appellant of both offenses, and the trial judge assessed punishment at ten years’ confinement for each offense, to run concurrently. On appeal, appellant argued that the trial judge erred by denying his motion to sever. The court of appeals agreed, holding that appellant had an absolute right to sever under Section 3.04 of the Texas Penal Code. Finding the error harmful, the court of appeals reversed appellant’s conviction and ordered a new trial. 2

We granted the State Prosecuting Attorney’s (SPA’s) petition to decide if denying a severance motion is harmful error when the evidence of guilt is overwhelming for the first offense and evidence of that first offense would have been admissible in a trial of the second offense. 3 Because the State was entitled to offer evidence of appellant’s prior acts of harassment relevant to the first stalking offense to prove the elements of the second stalking of *544 fense, we conclude ■ that the error was harmless under Tex.R.App. P. 44.2(b).

I.

The first indictment alleged that appellant stalked his ex-girlfriend, D.D., during March and April 2010; the second alleged that appellant stalked her on July 13, 14, and 16, 2010. The prosecutor moved to consolidate the two cases for a single trial. Appellant then filed a motion to sever the April stalking charge from the July one. At a pre-trial hearing, the prosecutor argued that proceeding with a single trial would promote judicial economy because the State planned to offer evidence of both offenses to establish its case-in-chief. The prosecutor explained that Rule 404(b) allows the State to offer evidence of a common intent and a continuing course of conduct, and she stated that both stalking incidents involved the use of GPS tracking devices and harassing text messages. Appellant said that trying two incidents “in-volvpng] different fact patterns and different time periods” together would prejudice the jury against him. The trial judge denied appellant’s motion to sever, stating that consolidation “would not unduly prejudice the defendant” because the evidence of appellant’s course of conduct would be admissible to prove his intent.

The evidence at trial showed that appellant and D.D. had an on-again, off-again relationship for over a year until appellant ended the relationship because they did not have sex frequently enough. In October 2009, several months prior to the break-up, appellant began text messaging D.D., asking about her whereabouts and activities. D.D. thought little of it at first, but eventually grew to harbor nagging doubts about his questioning.

Appellant continued to communicate with D.D. after their break-up in January 2010, messaging her repeatedly if she failed to reply to his texts. D.D.’s suspicions grew as appellant’s messages showed an inexplicable familiarity with her and her family’s whereabouts. For example, in January of 2010, D.D.’s grandmother became ill, and D.D., planning to spend the night with her in the I.C.U., asked the mother of her daughter’s boyfriend if her daughter could spend the night at their house. Appellant texted D.D. throughout the night while she was at the I.C.U. He was upset because D.D. was to have met him that night for drinks. The next morning, appellant called D.D. and told her that her daughter had spent the night with her boyfriend. D.D. had known that, of course, but she was worried about how appellant would know her daughter’s whereabouts. He sent D.D. more text messages that month, warning her that he was going to send letters to D.D.’s mother and grandmother telling them that D.D.’s daughter had spent the night at her boyfriend’s house. He did send the letters and wrote that he didn’t approve. He also wrote them about how D.D., her daughter, and the boyfriend had gone to San Antonio for a “cheer competition.” D.D. was afraid that appellant “could go after my daughter” and hurt her, as well as D.D.

D.D.’s concerns came to a head in March when she went to the Houston rodeo and saw Sgt. Montemayor, an old friend of hers, who was a Sheriffs officer. D.D. had just received a text message from appellant saying, “I think you should go to the rodeo.” D.D. looked “frazzled” and “unnerved,” and she “threw a fit” to make Sgt. Montemayor check for a tracking device on her car. Sgt. Montemayor checked her car just to humor D.D. and was very surprised to find a tracking device under the passenger’s side back bumper. 4 He *545 told D.D. to file an official report, but she didn’t because she couldn’t prove that appellant had put the device there. She knew that appellant would be really mad if she accused him, but couldn’t prove it.

She kept the tracking device, but it seemed that appellant was still tracking her:

• He continued to text-message D.D., “harassing her” and frequently identifying her whereabouts and describing her recent movements.
• He sent text messages saying, “Pissed me off when I saw you at Kroger and you turned your head. I would never treat you like that,” and “Should have answered the phone and not ignore me again. Pissed me off. Now I show you. Prema D.” 5
• On another occasion, appellant texted D.D. that he knew she had parked in a Dairy Queen parking lot for several hours; indeed, D.D. had parked there while she visited her aunt, who .lived behind the Dairy Queen.
• On April 15th, D.D.’s daughter and her girlfriend went to the movies in D.D.’s car. When they came out of the theater, they found that three of the car’s tires 6 had been slashed by someone who looked like appellant and who had left in a car that matched appellant’s car. D.D. was really worried because “[i]t was a predator’s dream, two little girls in the movies.”
• Police discovered a second tracking device on D.D.’s car (in the very same place as the first one) when they investigated the tire-slashing incident.

Other evidence showed that appellant had purchased tracking devices on October 1, 2009; March 6, 2010; and March 12, 2010. He had a monthly subscription to a service that informed him of the trackers’ location every ten seconds, and the tracking history for those devices corresponded with D.D.’s self-reported activities and appellant’s text messages.

Following these incidents, appellant was indicted for stalking, and, on May 16th, a magistrate issued a sixty-day emergency restraining order, prohibiting appellant from coming within 200 feet of D.D., her workplace, or her residence. While the order was in effect, D.D. saw appellant drive past her home on two occasions in July, but he did not call or text her. Her daughter also saw appellant drive by a spot where she had just dropped off D.D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
412 S.W.3d 542, 2013 WL 5808114, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werner-dieter-heinz-texcrimapp-2013.