Opinion
No. 14-04-00797-CR
Memorandum Opinion Filed: December 15, 2005. DO NOT PUBLISH. Tex.R.App.P. 47.2(b).
On Appeal from the 337th District Court, Harris County, Texas, Trial Court Cause No. 968,543. Affirmed.
Panel consists of Justices HUDSON, FROST, and SEYMORE.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Challenging his conviction for aggravated robbery, appellant Joseph Antwan Bonner asserts that the trial court reversibly erred in admitting evidence of an extraneous offense and that the evidence supporting his conviction is legally and factually insufficient because the accomplice testimony offered by the State was not sufficiently corroborated. We affirm.
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Shortly after midnight on November 17, 2003, Dierdre Williams drove into her apartment complex. Williams noticed that a white Mazda Protege had followed her through the open gate and around to the back of the complex where her apartment was located. The white Protege pulled into a parking space near where she parked. Williams exited her vehicle and opened the back door to retrieve some items. At this time, a light-skinned tall black male, later identified as appellant, approached her from the side, pointed a gun at her neck, and said, "B____, give me the keys or you're going to die." The man had his face covered. Another man grabbed the keys from Williams, and she ran to her apartment. Williams heard the men trying to operate her vehicle, and then ultimately abandon the pursuit because they could not work its standard transmission. Williams went back to the parking lot, and watched while the two men who had approached her drove away with two other men in the white Protege. She made eye contact with one of the men, wrote down the vehicle's license plate number, and called the police. Houston police officer Guy Majors arrived on the scene approximately twenty minutes later, talked to Williams, and issued a general radio broadcast with the car's description. Officer Peter Comer received the broadcast and spotted the white Protege, matched the license number, and saw that four black men were inside the vehicle. Officer Comer ran the license plate in his computer and learned the Protege had been stolen the day before. The occupants of the car drove away at a high rate speed and crashed into a parked vehicle. All four occupants abandoned the Protege and fled on foot. Officer Greg Jelin helped establish a perimeter around the area and joined in a search for the suspects. Officer Jelin found appellant, who was holding a sawed-off pump-action shotgun wrapped in some sort of material. Officer Jelin ordered appellant to "stop and get down." Appellant attempted to escape and went underneath a fence. Officer Jelin could not fit under the fence because of the bulkiness of his on-duty gear. Shortly thereafter, a private citizen found appellant hiding behind some bushes. Appellant apparently discarded the shotgun. Police officers and dogs conducted a search but were unable to retrieve it. Williams was presented with a videotaped line-up from which she positively identified one of the line-up participants as the lighter-skinned black male who was sitting in the Protege's back seat and with whom she had made eye contact. She could not identify the other lighter-skinned black male that held the shotgun on her because she never saw his face. Williams testified that although she could not be completely positive, she was fairly confident that appellant was the one who had held the gun. She based this identification on his height, complexion, and hair. Two of appellant's accomplices, Floyd Stevenson and Tommy Allison, also testified. Stevenson stated that he and appellant had stolen the white Protege from Michelle Ranum the night before they robbed Williams. Neither individual had worn masks or gloves while stealing Ranum's vehicle. They targeted Ranum when she drove her car into her apartment complex. They approached Ranum when she exited her car. Appellant took the keys from Ranum, and appellant and Stevenson got into the car and drove away. Stevenson further testified that the following evening Allison and another man (Derrick Dancer) joined appellant and him at Stevenson's house. The four of them conspired to commit another robbery, got into the stolen Protege, and went to Allison's house to retrieve a gun. Appellant then drove them to the area of Williams's apartment complex where he told them that they were going to rob some drug dealers. They decided that they should steal another car and abandon the stolen Protege. Stevenson testified that they followed Williams into her apartment complex. Appellant and Allison got out of the car and approached Williams with a gun in an attempt to steal her car. Stevenson testified that they were unable to steal the car because none of them could operate a standard transmission. After being followed by a police officer, and hitting a parked vehicle, they all abandoned the Protege and fled on foot. Stevenson testified that he believed appellant carried the shotgun with him as he ran away. Next, Allison testified that he met appellant, Stevenson, and Dancer on November 17, 2003, and had a discussion about robbing someone. Allison further testified that they all got into the white car, retrieved a shotgun from his house, and appellant drove them to an area of town to rob "some drug dealers." Allison testified that they approached Williams and attempted to steal her car. He stated that appellant wore a mask, held a gun to Williams, and demanded the keys to her car. Allison testified that he took the keys from Williams but faced away as much as he could because his face was not covered. When they realized that they could not operate Williams's car, they returned to the white Protege and left the complex. Finally, Michelle Ranum (the owner of the white Protege and victim of the first robbery) testified that shortly after midnight on November 16, 2003, appellant and Stevenson (their faces uncovered) approached her. She testified that they asked her for a cigarette and light. When she replied that she did not have any cigarettes, they walked away. Ranum got out of her car and walked to her apartment. Appellant approached her again and demanded her keys. After a struggle, appellant took her keys and purse. Ranum testified that appellant and Stevenson drove away in her car and she called the police. Ranum viewed a line-up in which she immediately identified Stevenson and appellant as her assailants. A jury found appellant guilty of aggravated robbery. After appellant pleaded "true" to an enhancement, the trial court assessed appellant's punishment at thirty years' confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division.II. ISSUES PRESENTED
Appellant asserts four issues on appeal:(1) The trial court committed reversible error in allowing testimony that the appellant had obtained the white Protege during an unrelated offense, and this extraneous offense was not relevant to any issue in the case.
(2) The trial court committed reversible error in allowing testimony that the appellant had obtained the white Protege during an unrelated offense, and the probative value of this extraneous offense was substantially outweighed by unfair prejudice.
(3) The evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction for aggravated robbery because there was no corroboration of the accomplice testimony of Floyd Stevenson and Tommy Allison.
(4) The evidence is factually insufficient to support his conviction for aggravated robbery because there was no corroboration of the accomplice testimony of Floyd Stevenson and Tommy Allison.
III. ANALYSIS
A. Did the trial court abuse its discretion in admitting evidence of an extraneous offense? In his first two issues, appellant argues that the trial court abused its discretion in allowing testimony from Stevenson, Allison, and Ranum in regard to the stolen Protege. Appellant argues that the trial court should have excluded the evidence that appellant was driving a stolen vehicle during the robbery of Williams. Appellant's only attempt at preserving this complaint was during a pre-trial motion in limine hearing:[Trial Court]: All right. You have a couple of motions you want to talk about?
[Defense Counsel]: Thank you, Your Honor. We have filed a motion in limine in this case; and I believe Ms. Shipley, the prosecutor, has agreed to everything except for No. 2, which involves the testimony by Michelle Ranum involving the extraneous robbery that occurred the night before this robbery. And in discussions with the Court, it's my impression that is going to come in as part of their trying — you know, corroboration as far as the co-defendant's testimony. And what I would like to do is just make it clear that she's agreed to everything else. Is that correct?
[Prosecutor]: I haven't officially read through the motion in limine, but I think that you told me that it was just plain vanilla otherwise. If that motion in limine is what you told me it is, then I have no other disagreement with your motion in limine. I do not intend to go into the defendant's record unless he gets up on the witness stand. I will advise all of the witnesses to not go into any previous convictions of the defendant of any kind. Kyle had said something like the State acting like they've got the white hat and the defense having the black hat; I wouldn't go into anything like that. Oh, and gang membership, I would not go into that in my case in chief. . . .
[Trial Court]: Make your objection. Go ahead.
[Defense Counsel]: As far as Ms. Ranum, I would like to object under 404(b) of the Texas Rules of Evidence because I don't think it's necessary to the State's case in a probative value [sic]. Under 403 it is significantly outweighed by the prejudicial effect and the fact that she's going to say he committed a robbery the night before this robbery. I think the prejudicial effect is obvious. I think it greatly outweighs any kind of probative value.
I would also object under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution, Article 1, Section 19, of the Texas Constitution. It's a violation of the due process rights, his right to be tried on the occasion [sic] for which he's charged and not some other case. And what I would ask is that —
[Trial Court]: That objection is overruled. And what I will allow you to do is I will have that objection stand during that testimony so that you don't have to get up in front of the jury and constantly make objections. It will be preserved from that standpoint.
[Defense Counsel]: Thank you, Your Honor. That's all I have . . .Appellant did not make any further objections during the testimony of Ranum, or that of Stevenson or Allison. As to the testimony of Stevenson and Allison regarding the stolen Protege, appellant did not voice any objection in the trial court and thus did not preserve error. See Ethington v. State, 819 S.W.2d 854, 858 (Tex.Crim.App. 1991). Presuming for the sake of argument that appellant preserved error as to the admission of Ranum's testimony and that it was an abuse of discretion to allow such testimony, the error would be harmless because the same evidence was admitted through Stevenson's testimony without objection. See Leday v. State, 983 S.W.2d 713, 718 (Tex.Crim.App. 1998). Stevenson's testimony in regard to the robbery of Ranum and her white Protege was substantially similar to that of Ranum's testimony:
Q: Okay. Let's talk about it. Did you and B-Down go out on November 16th of 2003 and get a white Mazda Protege together?
A: Yes, ma'am.
Q: Did you talk about getting it before you did?
A: Not really.
Q: Did you say that you wanted to go get a car or did he say he wanted to go get a car?
A: Actually, it was kind of made up at the spur of the moment. It wasn't like we planned it out; it just sort of happened.
Q: So, just sort of a spur-of-the-moment thing?
A: Yes ma'am.
Q: Do you remember what area of town you were in when you got that white Mazda Protege?
A: The southwest.
Q: Southwest?
A: Uh-huh.
Q: Do you remember the address that you were at?
A: If I'm not mistaken, I think Westheimer probably.
. . .
Q: Who was inside the white Mazda Protege?
A: Ms. Michelle.
Q: And that's the person that you now know as Michelle Ranum?
A: Yes, ma'am.
Q: Did you know her before this night?
A: No, ma'am.
. . .
Q: Well, tell me, what did you do in getting the car from Michelle Ranum?
A: I took the keys and drove off.
Q: Did you talk to Michelle?
A: Not to my knowledge. I don't remember, no.
Q: You don't remember talking to her?
A: Huh-uh.
Q: Did Joseph Bonner talk to Michelle Ranum?
A: Yes, ma'am.
Q: What did he say to her?
A: I don't remember. He just demanded it.
. . .
Q: Do you remember specifically what he said? You can quote him.
A: "Give me the keys."Because appellant did not object to the admission of the same evidence through Stevenson, we conclude that any error in admitting Ranum's testimony regarding the stolen Protege was harmless. See Valle v. State, 109 S.W.3d 500, 509 (Tex.Crim.App. 2003). Accordingly, we overrule appellant's first two issues.