Opinion
No. 01-07-00985-CR
Opinion issued November 20, 2008. DO NOT PUBLISH. TEX. R. APP. P. 47.2(b).
On Appeal from the 185th District Court, Harris County, Texas, Trial Court Cause No. 1088336.
Panel consists of Judges JENNINGS, HANKS, and BLAND.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury found Jason Edward McMaster guilty of capital murder. Because the State chose not to seek the death penalty, the trial court imposed a sentence of life imprisonment. McMaster appeals his capital murder conviction, contending that (1) the trial court erred in allowing the State to pose a hypothetical to its expert that varied from the facts actually proven in the case, (2) his trial counsel failed to preserve erroneous evidentiary rulings for appeal, and thus rendered ineffective assistance in violation of McMaster's rights under the Sixth Amendment to the United States Constitution, and (3) the evidence is not factually sufficient to sustain his conviction. Finding no error, no ineffectiveness, and no insufficiency, we affirm.
Background
One evening in December 2005, Kentrell Smith visited his cousin, Ricky Smith, at the La Quinta hotel where Smith was staying in southwest Houston, to play videogames. Kentrell Smith also expected a visit from another cousin, Corey Brown. Brown soon arrived at the hotel, accompanied by Jared Daniel, Joseph Kemp, and McMaster. The men smoked marijuana, and Daniel also had taken Ecstasy. Both Daniel and McMaster carried handguns, a 9-millimeter, and a 10-millimeter, respectively. According to Pasadena Police Department Sergeant King, who investigated the case, a 10-millimeter handgun is an unusual weapon; he had spent nineteen years as a police officer before encountering a crime scene where a 10-millimeter handgun was used or arresting someone in possession of one. McMaster asked Brown to call a drug dealer so that McMaster could rob the dealer and then kill him. Brown refused to make the call. McMaster prodded Brown a few more times to make the call; each time, Brown refused. According to Smith, McMaster became increasingly aggravated during this exchange. McMaster then demanded that Brown call Ivory Harris, another one of Brown's cousins. Brown refused to make that call as well. After McMaster repeated his demand and Brown refused a second time, McMaster glared at Brown. After about forty-five minutes, McMaster, Daniel, Brown, and Kemp left the hotel room together. Kentrell Smith and Ricky Smith stayed behind. By using cell phone company records showing the time and location of transmission towers used by McMaster's cell phone that night, the State established that McMaster left the motel at about 7:30, then moved in a southwesterly direction, eventually using a cell tower near Brown's apartment in Pasadena. McMaster reached that location about 8:30 and remained there for nearly twenty minutes, then quickly headed northward along I-45 to the Greenspoint area. Also at 8:30, Alex Ramirez, who lived in an apartment in the same Pasadena complex and directly across from Brown, was playing cards with some friends when he heard seven or eight gunshots coming from inside an apartment in or near Brown's apartment. Ramirez assumed that someone was shooting into the air for fun and kept playing cards. Later that evening, Sergeant King, then a patrolman with the Pasadena Police Department, arrived at the apartment complex in response to a report of suspicious circumstances at apartment 70. King found the door to apartment 70 standing wide open. From the doorway, he could see a black male, later identified as Brown, unresponsive and lying face-down on the floor just inside the door. King called for another officer and waited for him to arrive before entering the apartment. Once inside, the officers looked for other people in the apartment and found a black female, later identified as complainant Shelita Jones, also unresponsive, slumped against the bathroom vanity and bleeding from apparent gunshot wounds to the head. The officers confirmed that both individuals were dead and then secured the scene for the homicide investigators. Jones was 17 weeks pregnant. Investigation of the scene revealed numerous bullet holes and ricochet marks throughout the apartment, as well as many bullets and spent shell casings, all from 9-millimeter and 10-millimeter rounds. The officers also found a box of .38-caliber Winchester rounds in the apartment. Autopsies of the complainants showed that Jones died from two gunshots fired within two feet of her head. Stippling on her arm indicated that she had raised it in an attempt to shield herself from the bullets. Brown also had two gunshot wounds to the head, as well as six more gunshot wounds on his lower torso, his legs, and his left hand. Both of the bullets in Jones's head were shot from the same firearm and consistent with a .38-caliber round, as were some of the bullets recovered from Brown's body. The remaining bullets found in Brown's body and throughout the apartment, however, were from either 9-millimeter or 10-millimeter rounds. The variety of bullets at the scene indicated that the perpetrators of the murders used at least four different guns — a 9-millimeter, a 10-millimeter, and two different .38-caliber guns. In an interview, Kentrell Smith told the police about the events leading up to the murders. Kentrell Smith also described the guns he saw McMaster and Daniel carrying in the motel before the murders. DNA samples taken from the scene found McMaster's DNA on the outside knob to the door of the bathroom where detectives found Jones's body. The police also obtained DNA testing of several burnt marihuana cigar butts found in the apartment. Testing of most of the marihuana cigars did not pinpoint a particular person's DNA, though neither McMaster nor Daniel could be excluded as contributors. The investigation culminated in McMaster's arrest. Following his trial and conviction, McMaster pursues this appeal.Discussion
Review of Evidentiary Rulings
In his first issue, McMaster contends that the trial court abused its discretion in overruling his objection to the State's hypothetical question to its DNA expert concerning the presence of McMaster's DNA on the outer doorknob of the bathroom in the complainants' apartment. We review a trial court's evidentiary rulings under an abuse-of-discretion standard. Montgomery v. State, 810 S.W.2d 372, 379 (Tex.Crim.App. 1990); Roberts v. State, 29 S.W.3d 596, 600 (Tex.App.-Houston [1st Dist.] 2000, pet. ref'd). An abuse of discretion occurs only if the trial court's ruling is so clearly wrong as to lie outside that zone within which reasonable persons might disagree. Montgomery, 810 S.W.2d at 391; Roberts, 29 S.W.3d at 600.The State asked its DNA expert,
Q. Hypothetically Shelita Jones is hiding in the bathroom with the bathroom door closed and she's standing up by the door, trying to hold it closed. And Jason McMaster's on the other side of the door — it's a hypothetical — having done something to get his heart rate up, like shooting and killing somebody in the other room, just real juiced up, and he's trying to open that door, trying to get in and grinding his DNA on that doorknob when he finally forces it open. . . .At that point, defense counsel objected "to the prosecutor's prolonged hypothetical question" on the basis that it had "gone far beyond the bounds of a hypothetical question." On appeal, McMaster complains that, in posing the hypothetical, the State assumed facts not in evidence and misled the jury into considering those erroneous assumptions as substantive evidence, adversely influencing its verdict. In eliciting expert testimony, counsel may pose a question that calls on the expert to assume (1) facts supported by the evidence, (2) facts within the personal knowledge of the witness, (3) facts assumed from common or judicial knowledge, or (4) facts in accordance with his theory of the case. See Pyles v. State, 755 S.W.2d 98, 118 (Tex.Crim.App. 1988); Barefoot v. State, 596 S.W.2d 875, 887-88 (Tex.Crim.App. 1980), cert. denied, 453 U.S. 913, 101 S. Ct. 3146 (1981). Counsel may not, however, posit a question based on facts not in evidence. Pyles, 755 S.W.2d at 118. After instructing the State to get to the point, the trial court overruled the objection. Heeding the court's instruction, the State rephrased its question, asking its expert,
Q. Would you expect, under that scenario, that Jason McMaster's DNA would be the major contributor on that exterior knob to the bathroom door?
A. Yes. That could account for those results.Giving McMaster the benefit of the doubt concerning whether his objection preserved the issue he raises on appeal, we nevertheless hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in overruling it, particularly as rephrased. The investigators found some of Jones's hair and blood on the bathroom wall, and Jones was found dead on the bathroom floor. These facts indicate that a struggle ensued at the bathroom door before Jones was shot. McMaster asserts that the evidence does not support an inference that he was "juiced up," but rather, that Daniel was the only person who took Ecstasy that night. The term "juiced up," however, may not refer to the mental condition of individuals who have ingested Ecstasy, but could also include intoxication or even just excitement. The State's hypothetical scenario in which McMaster, having killed Brown, was in an excited state when he approached the bathroom door to kill Jones, reflects its theory of the case, and comports with reasonable inferences from the evidence.