Winningham v. State

334 S.W.3d 289
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 16, 2011
Docket02-07-00389-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 334 S.W.3d 289 (Winningham 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
Winningham v. State, 334 S.W.3d 289 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

OPINION ON PETITIONS FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW

BILL MEIER, Justice.

Pursuant to rule of appellate procedure 50, we have reconsidered our previous opinion upon reviewing Appellant Lester Winningham, Jr.’s and the State’s petitions for discretionary review. See Tex.R.App. P. 50. We withdraw our July 1, 2010 opinion and judgment, and we substitute the following primarily to comport with the court of criminal appeals’s recent opinion in Brooks v. State, which was handed down after our original opinion issued. See 323 S.W.3d 893, 902-03, 912-13 (Tex.Crim.App. 2010).

I. Introduction

A jury found Winningham guilty of murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment. The trial court entered judgment accordingly. In two points, Winningham contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. Because we hold that the evidence is sufficient to support Winningham’s conviction, we will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

II. Background

At roughly 6:30 a.m. on Friday, July 22, 2005, when mechanic Craig Bayer arrived for work in Muenster, Texas, he saw a “heavy column of smoke” drifting into the air in the field behind the shop where he worked. Bayer said that he initially did not “think much of it,” believing that the smoke emanated from a truck that someone had started. But as Bayer got closer to his shop, the smoke became more visible. Bayer noticed fire and began to believe that someone was burning trash at the business next door. Bayer described the flames as “six to eight feet tall [with] black smoke coming off of it.” He looked for a water hose with the intent of putting the fire out but did not find one. When Bayer came within ten to fifteen feet of the fire, which had died down by then to a few feet high, he became certain it was not trash that was burning. At first, Bayer did not believe what he was seeing. He thought that he was seeing a “mannequin,” but then he noticed that the “toenails were painted and [pantyhose were] around the feet” of the body in the fire. Bayer called 9-1-1 and chose not to attempt to extinguish the fire. Roughly five minutes later, the Muenster fire chief arrived. At that time, by Bayer’s account, the fire was out.

County officials called Texas Ranger Tracy Murphree to investigate. At trial, Murphree described the scene:

It was obviously a burned body of a white female, pretty much burnt beyond recognition. It appeared that the body, previously to being burned, was ■wrapped in some sort of blue tarp. Really unable to determine an age or [292]*292anything because of the extensive burns. Also there, I saw a receipt from [an] Academy store in Arlington and a plastic bag that appeared to have [once] held a rope. Also noticed that on the receipt, there was a listing for a rope that was purchased on the receipt.

As Murphree said, he found a July 2, 2005 receipt from an Academy Sports store in Arlington, Texas, listing two items: a “10 X 16 POLY TARP” and a “1/4” X 50FT POLYG" rope. Murphree also found a partial footprint and a tire track. Plaster casts were made. Mur-phree testified that because of the nature of the gravel road and the highly trafficked area where the footprint and tire track were found, there “wouldn’t be much to compare [the molds to].” Murphree said that the female body had “a pretty obvious gunshot wound to about the midline section of the back.” At that time, Murphree said, the body was still unidentified. The following Tuesday, July 26, 2005, Mur-phree received a call informing him that, through dental records, the body had been identified as the body of Deborah Houchin.

Assisted by the Arlington Police Department, Murphree went to Houchin’s home to further investigate, where he encountered another gruesome scene. The house was disheveled. Murphree saw blood-smeared eyeglasses in the kitchen, blood drops near the home’s computer, and a bloodied bullet that had been “spent.” Murphree also observed blood smeared “through the kitchen, through the extra living area, through the laundry room, and into the garage.” Murphree said, “One of the things that also caught my eye was a— a drawer was open with a bag of dog food just ripped open in the drawer and a big bowl about half full now that had water in it laying in the kitchen floor.” Murphree said that another thing that “first” caught his eye was a path of bleach stains along each step on the stairs. At the end of the path, Murphree found an “eyeglass chain that was laying at the foot of the stairs.”

Murphree said that because he concluded there were no signs of forced entry, no valuables missing from the house, signs that the assailant attempted to clean up something with bleach, and what appeared to Murphree as someone who cared about the dogs having fed them before fleeing, he believed this was not a “stranger-on-stranger” murder. Murphree also said that the manner in which Houchin’s body was found further solidified his belief that Houchin had been murdered by someone she knew.

Murphree learned that Houchin was a fifty-six-year-old therapist who had lived in Arlington, Texas, and was associated with a group of other therapists who ran a therapy clinic in Arlington. The Wednesday and Thursday after Houchin’s body was found, Murphree went to the clinic to interview Houchin’s coworkers. He determined that the last time her coworkers had seen Houchin alive was at approximately 11:00 p.m. on Thursday, July 21, 2005. Houchin’s coworkers and other investigators informed Murphree that Houchin was not expected to be at work on Friday, the day her body was found. But her absence the following Monday had caused her coworkers to file a missing persons report. Murphree also learned that Houchin and Winningham, in addition to being coworkers, had previously been romantically involved.

Through talking to coworkers, Mur-phree learned that Houchin and Winning-ham were once engaged but later broke off their engagement — ostensibly because Houchin had asked Winningham for a prenuptial agreement. Murphree also learned that the couple had what was described as a “yo-yo” relationship where at times they were together and at other [293]*293times they were not. Based on this information, Murphree said that Winningham was naturally a person he would want to interview regarding Houchin’s murder.

Murphree testified that when he and another investigator visited the clinic during their investigation, the other investigator pointed out peculiar markings on Win-ningham’s vehicle:

My attention was drawn to vertical scratches just to the right side of the license plate. I could see inside those scratches a — a light blue — some sort of transfer that was very significant to me [because] the color of the transfer in those scratches was the same color as the tarp that [Houchin] had been wrapped in when her body was burned.

Murphree said that the color was inconsistent with the vehicle’s interior and exteri- or. Murphree had Winningham’s vehicle impounded.

Murphree said that the interior of the trunk “was pretty [pristine].” By contrast, Murphree said that the interior of the passenger compartment was “[p]retty much in disarray, like somebody had been living in it.”

According to Murphree, when investigators conducted a search of Winningham’s car, there was “a wad of cash of $13,000,” a folded piece of paper with thirteen $100 bills, and another folded piece of paper with three $100 bills.

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334 S.W.3d 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winningham-v-state-texapp-2011.