

Dissenting Opinion to Denial of Rehearing En Banc filed May
24, 2011.
 
In
The
Fourteenth
Court of Appeals

NO. 14-08-00074-CR

David Mark
Temple, Appellant 
v.
The State of
Texas, Appellee 

On Appeal from
the 178th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court
Cause No. 1008763

 
DISSENTING OPINION  TO DENIAL 
OF REHEARING EN BANC
I respectfully offer my dissent to this court’s denial
of appellant’s motion for rehearing en banc.
Introduction
            A
jury convicted appellant David Mark Temple of murdering his wife Belinda Temple
on January 11, 1999, with a 12-gauge shotgun blast to the back of her head. 
This court, Justice Charles Seymore for the unanimous panel, affirmed the
conviction.  Justice Seymore, however, also authored a concurring opinion
criticizing the majority for abdicating its responsibility to perform a constitutionally
required factual-sufficiency review.
            I
suggest that en banc reconsideration is required in this case because: (1)
opinions of this court conflict about whether Jackson v. Virginia requires
a factual-sufficiency review; (2) we should resolve the conflict en banc and
hold that a rigorous and proper application of Jackson v. Virginia, including
analysis of whether a rational jury could have found the elements of the crime
beyond a reasonable doubt, embodies a factual-sufficiency review; (3) the panel
did not perform an appropriate Jackson v. Virginia sufficiency review of
the evidence in appellant’s case; and (4) a full Jackson v. Virginia sufficiency
analysis in this case mandates reversal.[1]
Conflict Among
Panels and Courts: Factual Sufficiency Required?
The Texas Court of
Criminal Appeals recently changed the standard of appellate review on legal and
factual sufficiency in Brooks v. State, 323 S.W.3d 893 (Tex. Crim. App.
2010).  According to the Brooks plurality, the legal and factual-sufficiency
standards had become “essentially the same standard” and there was “no
meaningful distinction between them that would justify retaining them both.”  Id.
at 894–95.  So, it is beyond debate the Brooks court held that the Jackson
v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307 (1979), standard is the only standard that a
reviewing court should apply in determining whether the evidence is sufficient
to support each element of a criminal offense that the State is required to
prove beyond a reasonable doubt.  See Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 895; id.
at 926 (Cochran, J., concurring).
The new standard is easily stated: Intermediate
appellate courts are to review all of the evidence (not just the evidence
that favors the conviction) in the light most favorable to the
prosecution (not a neutral light) and affirm if the evidence is legally
sufficient for a rational jury (not just “a jury”) to find all of the
elements beyond a reasonable doubt.  Id. at 899 (plurality opinion) (“It
is fair to characterize the Jackson v. Virginia legal-sufficiency
standard as: Considering all of the evidence in the light most favorable to the
verdict, was a jury rationally justified in finding guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.”).
However, this court and other appellate
courts have applied the standard inconsistently.  First, this court has stated
two different standards of review.  According to the author of the majority
opinion in Temple, the panel held that Brooks eliminated a
factual-sufficiency review in Texas criminal cases.  See Temple v.
State, No. 14-08-0074-CR, — S.W.3d —, 2010 WL 5175018, at *38 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Dec. 21, 2010, no pet. h.) (Seymore, J.,
concurring).  Other panels of this court have concluded that Brooks did
not eliminate the factual-sufficiency review, holding specifically that the Brooks
decision “does not alter the constitutional authority of the intermediate
courts of appeals to evaluate and rule on questions of fact.”  Muhammed v. State, 331 S.W.3d 187,
191 n.3 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Jan. 11, 2011, no pet. h.) (Anderson,
J.).[2]
A difference of opinion on the meaning
and application of Brooks exists within the First and Second Courts of
Appeals, as well.  See Mosley v. State, Nos. 01-08-00937-CR, 01-08-00938-CR,
— S.W.3d —, 2010 WL 5395655, at *15 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 30,
2010, pet. filed) (Jennings, J., concurring) (stating that the Brooks plurality
eliminated factual-sufficiency appellate review); Ervin v. State, 331
S.W.3d 49, 67 n.4 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2010, pet. ref’d) (Alcala, J.)
(disagreeing with recent court of appeals’ decisions that suggest Brooks abolished[3]
factual-sufficiency challenges); Wise v. State, No. 02-09-00267-CR, —
S.W.3d —, 2011 WL 754415, at *8 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Mar. 3, 2011, no pet. h.)
(Livingston, C.J., dissenting and concurring) (noting the majority’s flawed
application of the Brooks standard of review due to its failure to give
the requisite deference to the jury’s province to disbelieve even
uncontradicted evidence).
Although en banc consideration of
matters is disfavored, this case presents a textbook example of an en banc-worthy
issue under Texas Rule of Appellate Procedure 41.2(c): uniformity of the court’s
decisions.  See Tex. R. App. P.
41.2(c).  Appellant’s entitlement to a full and constitutionally protected
review of the evidence in this murder case should not depend upon which panel
of the court is randomly assigned his case.
A Rigorous and Proper Jackson
v. Virginia Analysis 
Embodies a Factual-Sufficiency
Review
Courts of the view that Brooks eliminated a
factual-sufficiency review hold that opinion because the Brooks court
unquestionably eliminated a “neutral light” handling of evidence on a sufficiency
review.  However, the plain language of Brooks belies a conclusion that
the court has relieved appellate courts of their obligation to review all of
the evidence for factual sufficiency.  Because the Brooks plurality holds
that a factual-sufficiency review is part of a Jackson v. Virginia legal-sufficiency
review, and because the Brooks plurality demonstrates the difference
between reviewing and weighing evidence, this court should hold uniformly that Brooks
and Jackson v. Virginia require a factual-sufficiency review.  The Brooks
plurality was emphatic: “a rigorous and proper application of the Jackson v.
Virginia legal-sufficiency standard is as exacting a standard as any
factual-sufficiency standard.”  323 S.W.3d at 906.
1.      Brooks
holds that the “no-rational-jury” analysis is a factual-sufficiency review.
The Brooks plurality explicitly
stated that a factual-sufficiency review under Jackson v. Virginia is
embodied in the determination of whether “‘any rational trier of fact could
have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.’”[4]
 Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 902 n.19 (quoting Jackson, 443 U.S. at
319) (holding that the “rational-trier-of-fact” component is “the portion of the
Jackson v. Virgina standard that essentially incorporates a
factual-sufficiency review”); see also Clewis v. State, 876
S.W.2d 428, 438–39 (Tex. App.—Dallas 1994) (explaining that the “Jackson v.
Virginia standard necessarily encompasses a factual-sufficiency review”), vacated,
922 S.W.2d 126 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996), overruled by Brooks, 323
S.W.3d at 902 n.19.
2.     
Brooks requires reweighing for sufficiency of evidence, not
for weight of evidence.
Again, the plain language of the Brooks decision
states that “viewing the evidence in ‘the light most favorable to the verdict’
under a legal-sufficiency standard means that the reviewing court is required
to defer to the jury’s credibility and weight determinations.”  323 S.W.3d at
899.  The Brooks decision does not authorize a reviewing court to
disregard evidence merely because the jury may have disregarded it.  Stated
differently, although the Brooks decision acknowledges that the court
has never articulated precisely how much deference is due the jury’s
credibility and weight determinations, “total deference” is not required.  See
id. at 902 n. 19 (rejecting the suggestion from the dissenting opinion in Lancon
v. State, 253 S.W.3d 699 (Tex. Crim. App. 2008), that “total
deference” is the standard).  It bears repeating.  Brooks says total
deference is not the standard.
Therefore, it is clear that the Jackson
v. Virginia sufficiency standard requires Texas appellate courts:
(1)       
to
review all of the evidence;
(2)       
to
review that evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict; and
(3)       
to
give deference to the jury on credibility and conflicts in the evidence.
Thus, Brooks forbids the reviewing court to (1)
disregard any evidence,[5] or (2)
neutrally (without deference) reweigh the evidence for the purpose of examining
the jury’s credibility determinations or resolution of conflicts in the
evidence.
Significantly, however, we know from
both Jackson v. Virginia and Brooks that there is some quantity
or quality of evidence that a rational jury cannot disregard or disbelieve.  
The Brooks plurality was specific about that point:
A hypothetical that illustrates a
proper application of the Jackson v. Virginia legal-sufficiency standard
is robbery-at-a-convenience-store case: The store
clerk at trial identifies A as the robber.  A properly authenticated
surveillance videotape of the event clearly shows that B committed the robbery.
 But, the jury convicts A.  It was within the jury’s prerogative to believe the
convenience store clerk and disregard the video.  But based on all the evidence
the jury’s finding of guilt is not a rational finding.
323
S.W.3d at 906–07.  As the hypothetical states, the jury is free to believe or
disbelieve evidence, but after a review of all of the evidence by the appellate
court, it may become apparent that the jury’s ultimate finding of guilt is not
rational.
To emphasize the appellate court’s role
in this regard, Brooks refers the reader directly to Tibbs v. Florida,
457 U.S. 31 (1982), to decipher the difficult distinction between evidentiary
sufficiency (legal) and evidentiary weight (factual).  See Brooks, 323
S.W.3d at 899–901.  The evidentiary-sufficiency standard gives “‘the
prosecution the benefit of all inferences reasonably to be drawn in its favor
from the evidence,’” whether from direct or circumstantial evidence, and
without the necessity of excluding every reasonable hypothesis except that of
guilt.  Tibbs, 457 U.S. at 38 n.11 (quoting United States v. Lincoln,
630 F.2d 1313, 1316 (8th Cir. 1980).  Tibbs further provides that the evidentiary-weight
standard reconsiders the credibility of the witnesses and evaluates whether the
“evidence preponderates sufficiently heavily against the verdict that a serious
miscarriage of justice may have occurred.”  Id. (citing Lincoln,
630 F.2d at 1119).
Thus, the plain language of Brooks demonstrates
that, although the light in which we view the evidence has changed, the court
has not eliminated the requirement that appellate courts review all of the
evidence and, “albeit to a very limited degree, to act in the capacity
of a so-called ‘thirteenth juror’” to perform a factual-sufficiency review.  Brooks,
323 S.W.3d at 901 (quoting Watson v. State, 204 S.W.3d 404, 417 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2006)).
Appellant Did Not Receive a Rigorous and
Proper
Jackson v. Virginia Sufficiency Review
The Temple majority did not
provide appellant an appropriate Jackson v. Virginia sufficiency
review.  As previously outlined, we know the Temple majority did not
perform a factual-sufficiency (“no-rational-jury”) analysis because the
opinion’s author, Justice Seymore, tells us so in his concurring opinion.  See
Temple, 2010 WL 5175018, at *38 (Seymore, J., concurring) (stating that
this court “fail[ed] to review [appellant’s] factual sufficiency challenges as
questions of fact”).
The face of the Temple opinion
reveals Justice Seymore’s observations to be accurate.  The Temple panel
demonstrably failed to apply a proper Jackson v. Virginia standard in
two, independently flawed regards.  First, the panel did not review all of the
evidence.  Second, the only “no-rational-jury” analysis applied by the panel in
any way was not to all of the evidence, but rather to individual pieces of
evidence.
A.   
The panel failed to review
all of the evidence.
Instead of reviewing all of the evidence
in the Temple record, the panel disregarded substantial evidence.  In
the name of deference to the jury, the panel concluded that any evidence favorable
to the defense must have been disregarded by the jury, and therefore we, the
reviewing court, must disregard it as well.
For example, when witnesses who lived
adjacent to the Temple home testified that they heard a noise that sounded like
a gunshot at 4:38 p.m., a time when appellant was not home, the panel concluded
that “the jury was free to disbelieve it and rationally could have done so
because [the witnesses] were children and no other witness testified that a
gunshot was heard that day.”  Id. at *6 (majority opinion).  This
analysis falls short of an analysis of “all of the evidence” in two ways. 
First, there was no conflict in the testimony for the jury to resolve—according
to Detective Schmidt, who interviewed the adjacent neighbors, no neighbor other
than the Roberts children heard a gunshot at all, and yet, we know there was
a gunshot; and we know from conclusive evidence that it occurred between
3:32 p.m. and 5:36 p.m.  Second, the panel does not even mention the testimony
of two other witnesses—also adjacent neighbors—who corroborated a disturbance
in their location at that time; their dogs inexplicably “went crazy” at the
time.
Although an appellate court is not
required to detail all of the evidence admitted at trial, a proper sufficiency
review should discuss the most important and relevant evidence that supports
the appellant’s complaint on appeal.  See Sims v. State, 99
S.W.3d 600, 603 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003) (referring to factual sufficiency
analysis).  Appellant, in his brief, urges that the timeline “made it
impossible for him to have committed the crime” because at the same time
neighbors heard gun shots, appellant was documented to be in another location. 
To disregard the timeline of sounds and absence of sounds relied upon by appellant
is to disregard, without commentary, uncontradicted evidence simply because the
jury may have disregarded it.
Although the jury is free
to disbelieve any or all of the evidence, we cannot disregard it for purposes
of a “no-rational-jury” analysis.  See Redwine v. State, 305 S.W.3d 360,
366 n.12 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, pet. ref’d) (“[D]isregarding all
contrary evidence, no matter how mountainous or compelling it may be, appears
incongruous with the reviewing court’s task of deciding whether a rational factfinder
could have found a defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt given
that it is the evidence contrary to the verdict that commonly injects
the element of ‘reasonable doubt’ into the jury’s deliberations.”).  In
deferring to the jury, the Temple panel incorrectly disregarded all
evidence that does not support the verdict.
B.    
The panel misapplied a “no-rational-jury”
standard to pieces of evidence.
There is further indication in the Temple
opinion that the panel confused the standard.  Jackson v. Virginia commands
that the appellate court determine, upon review of all of the evidence, whether
no rational jury could have found the elements of the crime beyond a reasonable
doubt.  The only two times the Temple panel mentions a “rational jury”
in its analysis of the evidence, the panel determines whether a rational jury
could have believed particular pieces of evidence.  See Temple, 2010 WL
5175018, at *6, *8 n.3 (stating that “the jury was free to disbelieve [the
children’s testimony] and rationally could have done so,” and “no rational jury
could credit Vielma’s testimony”).  That is contrary to the proper standard. 
The court is not to substitute its judgment witness-by-witness to determine whom
the jury rationally believes or disbelieves.  Instead, the jury, to whom we
defer on pieces of evidence, can only become irrational after a review of all
of the evidence.  See Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 906–07.
For an appellate court to abdicate its
responsibility to look at evidence that the jury may have disbelieved or
disregarded deprives a defendant of the constitutionally mandated, minimum-sufficiency
review.  And for an appellate court to confuse “no rational jury could believe”
a piece of evidence for a standard that requires examination of whether “no
rational jury could convict based upon all of the evidence” highlights the
absence of a proper standard of review in this case.  This court should grant en-banc
review to harmonize its statement and application of the Jackson v.
Virginia sufficiency-of-evidence review. 
A Rigorous and Proper Jackson
v. Virginia Sufficiency Review
Mandates Reversal in this Case
The Temple case is, according to
the panel, a purely circumstantial-evidence case.  However, an examination of
the status of circumstantial evidence for all types of criminal cases, in
context, as well as the specific homicide cases relied upon by the Temple panel,
reflects a significant departure from the rigorous analysis Texas requires of
such evidence.  Further, the rigorous analysis contemplated by Brooks, giving
deference to the jury as directed, still reveals that this conviction rests
upon no evidence that would permit a rational jury to find, beyond a reasonable
doubt, that appellant intentionally or knowingly caused the death of Belinda
Temple.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann.
§ 19.02(b)(1) (West 2003).
A.   
Murder convictions should not rest
upon less circumstantial evidence than contraband-possession convictions.
Until 1983, when the Court
of Criminal Appeals decided Hankins v. State, 646 S.W.2d 191 (Tex. Crim.
App. 1983) (op. on reh’g), trial courts in criminal cases instructed
juries not to convict on circumstantial evidence unless the jury
excluded “every other reasonable hypothesis except the defendant’s guilt.”  Id.
at 197 (abolishing the requirement of a circumstantial-evidence charge);
see also Carlsen v. State, 654 S.W.2d 444, 449 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983)
(op. on reh’g) (“[I]f the evidence supports an inference other than the guilt
of the appellant, a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable doubt is not a
rational finding.”).  Then, in 1991, the Court of Criminal Appeals officially
eliminated that same “reasonable hypothesis” construct from the evidence
sufficiency review, as well.  Geesa v. State, 820 S. W.2d 154, 161 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1991), overruled on other grounds by Paulson v. State, 28
S.W.3d 570, 571 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
Meanwhile, in the context of
crimes involving possession of contraband, the Court of Criminal Appeals coined
the phrase “affirmative links” (and later, just “links”) to describe the method
for evaluating the circumstantial evidence linking an accused to contraband,
such as drugs or firearms.  See, e.g., Evans v. State,
202 S.W.3d 158, 161–62 & n.9 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006); Haynes v. State,
475 S.W.2d 739, 742 (Tex. Crim. App. 1972).  Stated
differently, when the contraband is not in the exclusive
control of the defendant in the place or premise where it is found, the State
must make a showing of links[6]
between the accused and the contraband.  Evans, 202 S.W.3d at 161–62
& n.9 (noting that the term “links” is used “merely as a shorthand catch-phrase
for a large variety of circumstantial evidence that may establish the knowing ‘possession’
or ‘control, management, or care’ of some item such as contraband”).  Thus, had
appellant been charged with possession of the firearm used to murder Belinda,
the State would have had to establish links between such firearm and
appellant.  See, e.g., Williams v. State, 313 S.W.3d 393,
397 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2009, pet. ref’d) (“If the firearm is not
found on the defendant or is not in his exclusive possession, the evidence must
link him to the firearm.”).
The elimination of the “reasonable
hypothesis” construct created tension with the line of cases requiring links to
eliminate the reasonable hypothesis that the defendant was an innocent simply
in the wrong place.  See Humason v. State, 728 S.W.2d 363, 367 (Tex.
Crim. App. 1987), overruled by Geesa, 820 S.W.2d 154.  In 1995, the Court of Criminal Appeals addressed the collision
between its elimination of the “reasonable hypothesis” standard and its
retention of the “affirmative links” analysis.  In Brown v. State, 911
S.W.2d 744 (Tex. Crim. App. 1995), the court determined that each defendant must still be affirmatively linked with the contraband
he or she allegedly possessed, but this link need no longer be so strong that
it excludes every other outstanding reasonable hypothesis except the defendant’s
guilt.  Id. at 748–49.
Today, more than fifteen
years later, in a circumstantial-evidence case involving contraband, the State
must still bring evidence that affirmatively links the accused to the contraband
at issue.  See, e.g., Roberts v. State, 321 S.W.3d 545, 549 (Tex.
App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2010, pet. ref’d).  The court is not to look for a
bright-line number of links answered affirmatively; instead, the court is to
consider all of the links and determine “the logical force of all of the
evidence, direct and circumstantial.”  Evans,
202 S.W.3d at 162.  And still, the
goal of the analysis of links is to protect an “innocent bystander—a relative,
friend, or even stranger to the actual possessor—from conviction merely because
of his fortuitous proximity to someone else’s drugs.”  Id. at 161–62.  All
of these affirmative links require a focus on both the existence of
circumstantial link and the absence of circumstantial link.
The circumstantial evidence in this case
received nothing that resembles the analysis afforded a defendant in a case
involving possession of a narcotic or a firearm. But, it should have.  Absent a
confession, eyewitness, accomplice, or recovered weapon, a nonexclusive list of
affirmative links in murder cases could be:
(1) whether any of the
defendant’s DNA or other forensic evidence was tied to the crime or the scene, see
Clayton
v. State,
235 S.W.3d 772, 779–80 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007) (the defendant’s bloody handprints
at the scene); King v. State, 29 S.W.3d 556, 565 (Tex. Crim. App.
2000) (the defendant’s DNA on a cigarette butt found at the scene);
(2) whether any of the decedent’s
DNA or other forensic evidence was tied to the defendant, see Gardner v. State, 306 S.W.3d
274, 285–86 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009) (fibers likely from the decedent’s red robe
found in the truck driven by the defendant); King, 29 S.W.3d at 565
(the decedent’s blood on the defendant’s sandals);
(3) whether the defendant had
access to or possessed a weapon or ammunition of the type used to commit the
murder; see Guevara
v. State,
152 S.W.3d 45, 51 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (shell casings matching the likely
murder weapon found in the defendant’s closet and car, and the defendant
practiced firing a rented weapon of the same caliber shortly before the murder);
(4) whether the defendant was in
possession of “fruits of the crime,” Padilla v. State, 326 S.W.3d 195,
200–01 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (money and jewelry from the decedent’s home);
(5) whether the defendant made
any incriminating statements, see Guevara, 152
S.W.3d at 51 (the defendant told a friend he was researching how to make a
silencer); King, 29 S.W.3d at 564–65 (the defendant’s letter indicating
pride in the offense could be construed as an admission); see also Smith v.
State, 332 S.W.3d 425, 437 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2011) (the defendant told her ex-husband that she committed the murders);[7]
(6) whether the
defendant attempted to conceal incriminating evidence, made inconsistent or
implausible statements, or lied, Guevara, 152
S.W.3d at 50; see also Padilla, 326 S.W.3d at
201 (the defendant’s untruthful statements may be considered in connection with
the other circumstances of the case); King, 29 S.W.3d at 564–65 (the
defendant’s false statements to the media indicated consciousness of guilt and
an attempt to cover up the crime); 
(7) whether the defendant had a
motive to murder the decedent, see Clayton, 235 S.W.3d at
781 (drug-related); Guevara, 152 S.W.3d at 50 (the defendant was having
an affair and would receive substantial retirement benefits upon his wife’s
death); King, 29 S.W.3d at 565 (racial animosity); and
(8) whether the
defendant attempted to flee or escape apprehension, see Clayton 235
S.W.3d at 780–81 (sudden flight from the crime scene and avoiding arrest for
eight months).
 
Here,
upon an analysis of these proposed links, the logical force of the evidence
would not be sufficient.  And, though the Court of Criminal Appeals has not
suggested a list of affirmative links for murder cases, it is clear from the
cases relied upon by the panel in this case that the court requires some
link.
B.    
The circumstantial evidence to
support appellant’s murder conviction is nonexistent by comparison to the circumstantial
evidence in the cases upon which the Temple panel relied.
The Temple panel correctly set
forth the current role of circumstantial evidence, even as to murder cases: It
is as probative as direct evidence and it may, standing alone, be sufficient to
establish guilt.  Temple, 2010 WL 5175018, at *3 (citing Hooper v.
State, 214 S.W.3d 9, 13 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007)).  Then, the panel referenced
three cases from the Court of Criminal Appeals to support the proposition that
a murder conviction may rest solely upon inferences raised by circumstantial
evidence.  Id. (citing Clayton, 235 S.W.3d at 778–82; Guevara,
152 S.W.3d at 49–52; King, 29 S.W.3d at 564–65).  Examination
of the evidence necessary to affirm in these cases reveals the Temple
panel’s misapplication of the principles of circumstantial evidence.
In Clayton, the
defendant’s conviction rested upon, among other evidence, the following
circumstantial evidence:
The evidence at
trial showed that there was a significant amount of blood inside the car [where
Playonero was shot at close range] and a moderate amount on the outside of the
car.  A latent-fingerprint examiner with the Houston Police Department testified
that he identified prints belonging to Playonero, Ayala, and Clayton.  He
testified that he identified three sets of prints, stamped in blood—one on the
middle console, one on the gear shift, and one on the steering wheel.  These
prints belonged to Clayton.  The prints identified as belonging to Playonero
and Ayala were not bloody.
235
S.W.3d at 775.  Thus, in Clayton, the circumstantial evidence
affirmatively linking the defendant to the murder included the defendant’s
bloody handprint, to the exclusion of others, at the scene of the murder.
In King, the case about
the dragging death of James Byrd, Jr., the defendant’s conviction rested upon, among
other evidence, the following circumstantial evidence:
To
summarize, the State presented several items of evidence that connect appellant
to Byrd’s murder: (1) DNA evidence from a cigarette butt at the crime scene—indicating
appellant’s presence during the murder, (2) DNA evidence on appellant’s sandals—linking
appellant to Byrd’s injuries, (3) appellant’s false statements to the media—indicating
consciousness of guilt and an attempt to cover up the crime, (4) appellant’s
letter to Brewer—which could be construed as an admission that appellant
participated in the crime, and (5) appellant’s racial animosity—which supplies
a motive for the murder.
29
S.W.3d at 565.  Thus, in King, the circumstantial evidence linking the
defendant to the murder included the presence of the defendant’s DNA at the
scene and the victim’s DNA on defendant’s shoes.
            In
Guevara, a case that is temptingly similar to this case on the facts, the
defendant was convicted as a party to the murder of his wife.  The defendant’s
mistress committed the actual murder—this fact was undisputed.  152 S. W. 3d at
47.  The jury heard evidence about the affair, about the defendant’s lies about
the affair, and about the defendant’s convenient alibi for the time of the
murder.  See id. at 50–51. The defendant discovered his wife’s body.  Id.
at 47.  However, the jury also heard the following evidence:
·       
One
month before the murder, the appellant took his wife to a shooting range to
practice firing a rented 9mm gun, the same caliber gun that was used in the murder.
·       
The
defendant also told a friend, Paul Knauss, that he was researching how to make
a silencer.
·       
Police
found shell casings in the defendant’s car that, according to the firearms
expert, probably matched the murder weapon.
·       
Police
found a box of shell casings under some clothes in the defendant’s closet,
thirty of which matched casings from the murder scene.
Id.
at 51.  Thus, in Guevara, the circumstantial evidence linking the
defendant to the murder included shell casings from the likely murder weapon in
his car and his closet.
            In each of these cases, the State presented circumstantial
physical evidence actually linking the defendant to the murder.  In this case,
it is undisputed that the State offered no circumstantial physical evidence
linking appellant to the crime.  See Temple, 2010 WL 5175018, at
*32.  The failure to do so is not attributable to a lack of physical evidence. 
The State had blood, brain matter, guns, and ammunition.  None of it linked appellant
to the crime.
With the framework of
circumstantial evidence relied upon in the Clayton, King, and Guevara
cases, the Temple decision falls far short.  In its analysis of harm,
the Temple panel specifically identified the “circumstantial evidence
presented,” which the panel concluded, “was not negligible”:
·       
Appellant
was involved in an extra-marital affair with Heather, had left his pregnant
wife and son during the New Year’s holiday to spend two nights with Heather,
and resumed his relationship with Heather a relatively short time after Belinda’s
death, including sending Valentine’s Day flowers a month later.
·       
Appellant
criticized Belinda’s weight, housekeeping, and childrearing, and he detested
Belinda’s family.
·       
The
scene of the murder was staged to make it appear burglarized.
·       
Appellant,
his parents, and his brothers conspired to protect appellant by concealing the truth
about the family’s shotguns and appellant’s affair.
·       
Appellant’s
explanation for his trip to Brookshire Brothers and then eastward to Home Depot
was refuted by the length of time it took him to enter Home Depot after leaving
Brookshire Brothers and Bernard Bindeman’s testimony that he saw appellant
heading south from an area near appellant’s parents’ house.
·       
Appellant’s
behavior and demeanor immediately following Belinda’s death.
·       
Appellant’s
untruthfulness regarding taking E.T. to a park and placing E.T. in a child seat.
·       
Testimony
from Quinton and Tammy that, following Belinda’s death, appellant aggressively
confronted them regarding their statements to the police and grand jury, even
following them in his truck.
Temple,
2010 WL 5175018, at *32.  Assuming that
the matters recited above are circumstantial evidence at all, they fall far
short of the quantum of circumstantial evidence necessary to support a rational
jury in determining, beyond a reasonable doubt, that appellant caused Belinda’s
murder.
Some of the matters recited
are not, however, circumstantial evidence.  At best, they are inferences that
the Temple panel attempted to draw from testimony—sometimes
inappropriately.  For example, the panel broadly concluded that the Temple
family conspired to protect appellant, including concealing the truth about the
family’s shotguns.  There is, however, no evidence that any member of
the Temple family lied about the shotguns.  Members of the Temple family
testified that: (1) appellant never owned a 12-gauge shotgun, though his
brothers did; (2) in the mid-1980s, appellant owned a 20-gauge shotgun; and (3)
appellant occasionally borrowed guns from his brother when he hunted.  A friend
of the family testified that he recalled seeing appellant shoot a 12-gauge shotgun
when hunting in the mid-1980s.
This Temple-family testimony
about the shotguns is not inconsistent with the other evidence.  And it does
not need to be inconsistent for the jury to disregard it because it is
interested, family testimony.  See Evans, 202
S.W.3d at 163 (holding that the jury is not required to believe even the
uncontradicted testimony of the defendant’s mother because “[s]he is, after
all, the defendant’s mother”).  Yet, Evans does not suggest that the
jury, when disbelieving the defendant’s mother, may infer she was lying, and
because she was lying, it is a circumstance of her son’s guilt.  If that were
so, the State would only need to call the defendant’s mother in every case to
provide the silver-bullet inference.  If the mother corroborated her son’s
innocence, the jury would be free to disregard her testimony, infer she was
lying, and base its finding of guilt upon that inference.  However, that is
precisely the inference the Temple panel indulged in this case to fill
the gap of evidence regarding appellant “causing the death of Belinda Temple.”
Further, the Court of
Criminal Appeals explains that 
an inference is a
conclusion reached by considering other facts and deducing a logical
consequence from them.  Speculation is mere theorizing or guessing about the
possible meaning of facts and evidence presented.  A conclusion reached by
speculation may not be completely unreasonable, but it is not sufficiently
based on facts or evidence to support a finding beyond a reasonable doubt.
Hooper, 214 S.W.3d at 16.  It
cannot be overemphasized: This inference regarding the family members
“conspiring” to protect appellant concerning gun ownership more than fifteen
years before this murder does not arise from actual facts proven through
testimony.  It is worse than speculation about the meaning of facts.  It is
speculation about what happened if the jury chose to disbelieve Kenneth Temple
when he testified that he never purchased a 12-gauge shotgun for appellant: The
jury substituted in place of the actual shotgun testimony—without any
alternative evidence—the conclusions that: (1) Kenneth Temple did purchase
appellant a 12-gauge shotgun in the 1980s, (2) appellant still owned that gun, (3)
appellant owned double-ought, reloaded buckshot to fit into that gun, and (4) appellant
used that gun and ammunition to shoot Belinda.  This trial could have been much
shorter if that inference exercise is permissible.
C.    A rigorous and proper application of Jackson v. Virginia
to all of the evidence, viewing it in the light most favorable to the
conviction, reveals insufficient evidence for a rational jury to find beyond a
reasonable doubt that appellant actually caused Belinda’s death.
No rational jury could
have found all of the elements of the offense charged against appellant. 
Specifically, there is no evidence, direct or circumstantial, to support even
an inference that appellant actually caused Belinda’s death.  
There is evidence that supports an
inference that appellant had a motive—he was having an affair.  There is
evidence that supports an inference that appellant had the opportunity to
commit the crime—within the eighteen minutes that appellant failed to account
for his time on the date of his wife’s death[8] with
conclusive evidence.  However, the State offered no evidence of any type that
he actually committed the murder.
A review of the entire record of
evidence yields the following Jackson v. Virginia analysis:
1.      Conclusive
evidence and agreed evidence
The Court of Criminal Appeals defines conclusive
evidence as that evidence dispositive of the fact or element at issue.  Evans,
202 S.W.3d at 163 n.16.  “Such evidence ‘becomes conclusive (and thus cannot be
disregarded) when it concerns physical facts that cannot be denied.’”  Id.
(quoting City of Keller, 168 S.W.3d at 815).  The Evans court
placed into this category evidence upon which the parties mutually agree or
assume.  Id.
            The
following evidence is conclusive or agreed in this case:
·       
Belinda called appellant at home from her cell phone at 3:32 p.m.,
and the call lasted 30 seconds.
·       
Belinda was murdered in her home at 22502 Round Valley on January
11, 1999, between 3:32 p.m. and 5:36 p.m.
·       
E.T., the three-year-old son of Belinda and appellant, did not
witness the murder.
·       
Belinda was murdered by a shotgun blast to the back of her head
while she was inside and facing the rear of the bedroom closet of the home she
shared with appellant.
·       
Belinda was shot with a 12-gauge shotgun, and the shell contained
double-ought, reloaded buckshot.
·       
Belinda was murdered with a contact shot—the shotgun was aimed at
and touching her head when fired.
·       
The 12-gauge shotgun discharged at 22502 Round Valley between
3:32 p.m. and 5:36 p.m. on January 11, 1999.
·       
Appellant and E.T. were in a Brookshire Brother’s grocery store
(and on a video surveillance tape) twelve minutes from home from 4:32 p.m. to
4:38 p.m. on January 11, 1999.  Accordingly, appellant was not home from 4:20
p.m. to 4:50 p.m.
·       
Appellant and E.T. were in a Home Depot store (and on a video
surveillance tape) fourteen minutes from home at 5:13 p.m. to 5:14 p.m. on
January 11, 1999.  Accordingly, appellant was not home from 4:59 p.m. to 5:27
p.m.
·       
A contact gunshot to the back of Belinda’s head would cause some
back splatter or blow back of blood or brain matter.
·       
Forensic analysis revealed none of Belinda’s blood, none of
Belinda’s brain matter, and no gunshot residue on appellant or any of his
clothing—none that he was wearing and none recovered from the laundry,
bathroom, or vehicle.
·       
Forensic analysis revealed none of Belinda’s blood or brain
matter within either of the Temple vehicles. 
·       
The backdoor window, because it was tempered, was broken with a
tool or a gun, but not a hand or fist.
·       
Forensic analysis revealed no glass fragments on appellant’s
clothing.
·       
Forensic analysis revealed none of appellant’s fingerprints on
the bedroom television that was “placed” on the floor as part of the “staging.”
·       
An extensive search of the Temple residence and Temple vehicles
revealed no 12-gauge shotgun, no 12-gauge shotgun shells, and in particular, no
12-guage double-ought, reloaded shotgun shells.
·       
A multiple-day search that involved fifteen homicide officers, a
dive team, ten to fifteen trustees, and a DPS plane with heat-seeking equipment
scouring over four or five areas (including rice fields, reservoirs, canals, and
ponds) of interest on the north side of Katy, where police believed appellant
might have disposed of a weapon, revealed nothing.
·       
Subpoenaed emails between Heather and appellant revealed nothing
beyond a flirtation—no murder plot, no discussions of weapon, no plans for the
future that indicated a knowledge Belinda would be gone, etc.
2.      Weighed evidence,
including facts and inferences, with deference to the jury on credibility and
conflict determinations
A rigorous and proper application of Jackson
v. Virginia, as described by Brooks, requires an
appellate court to defer to the jury on determinations of a witness’s
credibility and the weight to be given the testimony by reviewing all of the
evidence in the light most favorable to the conviction.  Brooks, 323
S.W.3d at 900.  Brooks acknowledges, however, that the Court of Criminal
Appeals has never articulated precisely how much deference such determinations
are due.  Id. (noting that even the court’s factual-sufficiency
decisions have always required a reviewing court to afford a great amount of
deference “(though this Court has never said precisely how much deference) to a
jury’s credibility and weight determinations”).  Nevertheless, it is clear that
“total deference” is not required.  See id. at 902 n.19.
The jury was entitled to weigh
the disputed evidence of a relationship outside his marriage and disrespectful
treatment of his wife and determine that appellant had a motive to kill his
wife.  See Guevara, 152 S.W.3d at 50.  Former “friends” Tammy and
Quinton Harlon and Belinda’s twin sister Brenda testified that appellant
criticized his wife’s weight,
housekeeping, and childrearing, and he detested Belinda’s family.  Heather
Temple[9] admitted that she and appellant
had a sexual relationship of a few encounters, and Heather and her roommate
Tara gave testimony that appellant lied to his family and spent two nights with
Heather in the two weeks prior to Belinda’s death.  The jury heard from
investigators[10] that
Heather told police appellant said he loved her.  Quinton, who also had pursued
Heather, testified that appellant was unsure if he was willing to leave Belinda
for Heather.  Appellant continued his relationship with Heather shortly after
Belinda’s death.
            The jury was entitled to weigh the
disputed circumstantial physical evidence of glass at the scene and officer
testimony and conclude that the scene was staged to appear that a robbery had
occurred.[11]  Investigators
testified that the broken glass in the back door and the overturned television
in the bedroom appeared to have been staged because the glass was not in the
right place and the television appeared gently set on the floor.  Detective
Mark Schmidt felt that the Temple home was staged to make it appear to have
been burglarized.  Insurance agents testified about the stolen jewelry claim
made by the Temple family, which did not precisely match the list given to
police—however, the family consistently listed
only Belinda’s jewelry.[12]
The jury was entitled to weigh the
disputed testimony to conclude that appellant was lying.  Here, the evidence
supports an inference that appellant lied on several occasions.  First, evidence
supports a conclusion that appellant did not take the route home from Home
Depot north across Interstate 10 that he claimed.  Appellant was observed by
Bernard “Buck” Bindemann, who was familiar with appellant from high school (approximately
fifteen years earlier) at the intersection of Katy Hockley Cut-Off and Morton
Ranch Road between 4:50 p.m. and 5:00 p.m. on January 11, 1999.  Appellant said
he went to the park, then to Brookshire Brothers, then to Home Depot, and then
home.  Bindemann said he saw appellant at an intersection not on the described
route home and not heading toward home.  Second, appellant lied when he said he
placed E.T. in a car seat before they drove north on Interstate 10.  Crime
scene photographs of appellant’s vehicle do not show a car seat in the car. Third,
appellant confronted his former best friends Quinton and Tammy Harlon about
their grand-jury testimony and statements to police, and he told them to keep
their mouths shut.
The jury was entitled to weigh the
disputed testimony to conclude that appellant was not emotional about his
wife’s death.  Police officers observed a lack of emotion in appellant
following Belinda’s death.[13]
3.      All of the evidence, after appropriate deference 
As discussed above, a reviewing court
must consider all of the evidence.  Brooks, 323 S.W.3d at 899.  In
the near one-month guilt/innocence phase of the trial, the parties presented more
than sixty witnesses to the jury, including investigators, neighbors, family,
police and medical responders, custodians of records, and others, directed
almost exclusively to establishing the timeline of events.  However, none of
the investigators provided any link between appellant and the crime scene.  The
following evidence, falling into the categories I describe as “timeline
evidence” and “RJS evidence,” omits all evidence the jury was free to
disbelieve, as previously outlined:
a.      Timeline evidence
·       
Witnesses at the schools where Belinda and appellant worked, as
well as the daycare where E.T. was enrolled, confirm that E.T. became ill in
the morning, Belinda picked him up, and appellant came home to stay with E.T.
so Belinda could go back to work.  Belinda stopped by appellant’s parents’
house for soup on the way home, phoned appellant from her cell phone at 3:32
p.m., and then arrived home between 3:45 p.m. and 4:00 p.m..
·       
Appellant and E.T. were on a videotape at Brookshire Brothers
from 4:32 p.m. to 4:38 p.m.  Brookshire Brothers was at least twelve minutes
from the Temple home without considering that his necessary path traveled
across Interstate 10 at approximately rush hour when the freeway was under construction. 
A Brookshire Brothers manager recalled having a discussion with appellant
outside the store after 4:38 p.m.  Appellant had put a quarter in the
mechanical hobby horse for E.T. to ride, but it would not work.
·       
Neighbor Natalie Scott drove by the Temple home at 4:30 p.m. but
did not hear or see anything.
·       
At
about 4:30 p.m., Mr. and Mrs. Parker’s (adjacent-to-the-back-fence neighbors)
dog went “crazy” in the backyard.  Mr. Parker went outside to investigate and
found no reason for the dog’s behavior but noticed their tool shed had been
opened.
·       
At
4:38 p.m., Belinda’s sister called the Temple home phone line.  No one answered,
and she left a message.
·       
At
some point between 4:38 p.m. at 4:41 p.m., the Roberts brothers (adjacent
neighbors to the Temples), ages nine, eight, and six, heard a gunshot.  They
specifically recalled the sound and comforting one another.  They measured the
time by the time they were dropped off by the bus, had a snack, did a few
minutes of homework, and started a video, Dr. Dolittle.  The boys were
able to pinpoint within the movie where they heard the shot, and another
witness confirmed the bus schedule that day.  No other witnesses heard a
gunshot at any time.
·       
At
approximately 4:55 p.m. or 5:00 p.m., RJS’s (a sixteen-year-old sophomore at
Belinda’s school and the Temples’ across-the-street neighbor) dogs started
barking in the house.  He was sleeping after having smoked marijuana during the
day, and the dogs woke him up.  At the same time, between 4:50 p.m. and 5:00
p.m., Bernard “Buck” Bindemann observed appellant at the intersection of Katy
Hockley Cut-Off and Morton Ranch Road.
·       
Natalie
Scott drove by the Temple home at 5:10 p.m.  She did not see or hear anything.
·       
At 5:10 p.m., Kenneth Temple called to see how E.T. was feeling. 
No one answered, and he left a message.
·       
At 5:14 p.m., appellant and E.T. were on videotape at Home Depot
a few minutes away from Brookshire Brothers.  Home Depot is at least twelve minutes
from the Temple home without considering that his necessary path traveled
across Interstate 10 at approximately rush hour when the freeway was under
construction.  
·       
At around 5:25 p.m., Angela Vielma walked by the Temple home. 
She had a fight with her boyfriend and was walking to a friend’s house.  She
observed appellant and E.T. drive into the garage.  She did not see a dog or
another vehicle in the garage. 
·       
At approximately 5:35 p.m., appellant banged on the door of Mike
and Peggy Ruggiero.  They are adjacent neighbors on the garage side.  Appellant
was screaming, “Mike, Mike, it’s me David.  Let me in.”  When Mike opened the
door, appellant said he needed them to keep E.T. because his house had been
broken into.  Peggy kept E.T. and phoned 911 at 5:36 p.m. while appellant and
Mike returned to the Temple home.  Appellant ran through the backyard and into
the house, but Mike was stopped short by the Temple’s dog.  The dog did not
like Mike and jumped on the fence at him—Mike stayed at the gate, holding it
closed because of the broken latch, while appellant went into the house.
·       
At 5:38 p.m., appellant called 911 from inside the home.
·       
Sam Gonsoulin and Kathleen Johnson were the first responders. 
They were dispatched at 5:45 p.m. and arrived shortly thereafter.  Johnson
stayed outside with appellant while Gonsoulin went into the house.  Gonsoulin
was deceased by the time of the trial.  
According
to the Temple panel, the timeline evidence shows that appellant had
eighteen minutes to commit the murder and dispose of all physical evidence.  See
2010 WL 5175018, at *6.[14]  Further,
there was evidence that a gunshot was heard in the neighborhood at a time when
appellant could not have committed the murder, and there was no evidence that a
gunshot was heard during the time appellant could have committed the murder.
a.     
RJS evidence
As previously stated, RJS was the
sixteen-year-old neighbor of the Temples.  RJS and Belinda had a history: The
jury heard of repeated run-ins with Belinda.  She was one of his “counselors”
at school and was constantly telling him to get to class because he was a
class-skipper.  In the fall of 1998, Belinda reported RJS’s horrible
school-attendance record to his parents, and they grounded him.  Belinda also
told RJS’s parents about broken bottles in her yard, for which she suspected
RJS.  RJS stood and watched as his friends tore down the Temples’ outdoor
Christmas decorations less than a month before Belinda was murdered.  These
undisputed facts support a motive for RJS.  
RJS and his family owned guns—12-gauge
shotguns—and they used 12-gauge double-ought shotgun shells that they reloaded. 
Within days before Belinda’s murder, RJS took a 12-gauge shotgun and some
shells out with his friends to shoot.  He knew that his buddy Casey had
recently stolen a 12-gauge shotgun from his mother’s boyfriend, so Casey and
RJS decided to go shooting.  Usually, after he shot his dad’s guns, he would
clean them, but he did not know whether these guns were cleaned.  He recalled
leaving his 12-gauge shotgun with Casey.  However, police records show that,
several days after the murder, RJS’s father voluntarily surrendered two
12-gauge shotguns.  There was no blood detected on either.  RJS’s father also
surrendered live, reloaded shotgun shells; none of those submitted contained
wadding that matched the murder shell.  However, these undisputed facts support
RJS’s possession of a weapon and ammunition consistent with those used to kill
Belinda.
On the day of Belinda’s death, RJS cut
school after seventh period and was at his home, across the street from the
Temple home, several times on the afternoon of Belinda’s murder.
However, RJS testified that while he was
skipping school, he and his friends hung out, went from house to house, and
smoked marijuana.  RJS admitted to being addicted to marijuana at the time. 
Further, though he was prohibited from driving, he nonetheless drove that
afternoon.  Initially he and his friends arrived at his home at approximately
3:30 p.m. after smoking a joint.  When he arrived home, he was surprised to
find one of his front doors cracked open.  So, he and his friends looked around
the house to be sure there had not been a burglary.
Later, he and his friends drove around in
one of the boy’s tan, four-door car looking for more marijuana, but could not
find any.   The Ruggerio’s, taking their nightly walk through the neighborhood,
saw a car matching that description, containing two teens, speed from the
neighborhood at approximately 4:30 p.m.  RJS believed he returned home around
4:20 p.m. or 4:30 p.m.  He then fell asleep on the couch.  He slept soundly
because he was stoned; however, his dogs woke him between 4:55 p.m. and 5:00
p.m., as discussed above.  These facts support RJS’s opportunity to commit the
crime.
RJS talked to the police on several
occasions and “probably” smoked marijuana before going to the station to talk
to them.  He was interviewed more than once.  RJS then provided grand jury
testimony but smoked marijuana the night before.  RJS unabashedly admitted that
during this time he lied to his parents about driving the car, smoking
marijuana, having marijuana in the house, skipping school, and shooting his
father’s guns.  Accordingly, there is direct evidence that RJS lied and was
sufficiently addicted to marijuana that he smoked marijuana even when it was
likely his drug use would be discovered.
4.      No rational jury could find guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt
My conclusion about this record is
straightforward.  First, the absence of evidence should be dispositive.  A
rational jury cannot find, beyond a reasonable doubt, that one individual
caused the death of another based solely upon (1) circumstantial evidence of
motive, (2) circumstantial evidence of opportunity, and (3) inferences of
guilt, none of which actually provide an affirmative link to the crime.  If, as
outlined herein, the State calls the defendant’s mother, who says her son did
not commit the crime, and we permit the jury to disbelieve it and infer
from their disbelief that the defendant is guilty, we have allowed the
irrational.  Indeed, the Temple panel allowed the irrational.
Second, as to the evidence as a whole—deferring
to the jury—appellant’s conviction should be reversed.  A rational jury could
not hear of RJS’s motive, opportunity, and possession of a weapon and
ammunition consistent with those used to kill Belinda and, yet, form no
reasonable doubt that RJS rather than appellant committed the crime.  Moreover,
a rational jury could not believe that appellant committed this murder in the
manner that he did, whether in eighteen minutes or thirty-five.  In this
short time period, appellant allegedly surprised his wife, forced her into a
closet, with a telephone in her hand, made her turn around facing the rear,
placed a 12-gauge shotgun to the back of her head, and pulled the trigger.  Appellant
cleaned up.  He washed the blood and brain matter from himself (hair and
clothing) and left no trace in any sink in the house or on any towel in the
house.  Or, he covered himself, so he was required to dispose of the covering,
but not in the house because it was searched.  Appellant drove the blood and
brain-soaked clothing and dumped it during his outing, without leaving a trace
in the car, and he did so in a manner that a massive hunt for the items turned
up nothing.  Appellant transported and disposed of the gun without leaving a
trace of blood, brain matter, or gunshot residue in the car, and he did so in a
manner that a massive hunt for the gun turned up nothing.  Before he left home,
appellant staged it to create an appearance of a burglary.  He used a tool to
break the tempered glass in the back door, without getting glass on himself or
his shoes.  He put the tool away.  He slid the television off of its stand
without leaving prints on it.  He opened miscellaneous drawers.  He did all of
these things while: (1) his three-year-old son was waiting for him somewhere
inside or outside the house; and (2) hoping no one in the neighborhood heard
the blast and called for help.  It is more than just hard to believe this
actually happened; it is irrational to believe it.
CONCLUSION
            This
court should grant appellant’s motion for rehearing en banc.  The Temple panel
decision should not remain the Fourteenth Court of Appeals’ last word on this
case; our authoring colleague, Justice Seymore, agrees, although for different
reasons.
The unrest that Brooks has
created in intermediate appellate courts’ application of the standard of review
cost appellant his only appeal of right.  Brooks eliminated a
factual-sufficiency point of error because the standard that would apply is
indistinguishable from the legal-sufficiency review.  It was not the purpose of
Brooks to ease the burden of intermediate appellate courts.  Appellant
is still entitled to a full-record review, a detailing of evidence sufficient
to support a rational jury’s determination to convict, and an evaluation of the
process used to convict that generates a confidence that appellant’s conviction
will and should stand the test of time and technology.  This court will continue
to wrestle with circumstantial evidence, and inferences, and how to afford appropriate
deference in the refining of Brooks.  And, yet, just as appellant
did not receive the benefit of a Clewis neutral-light review because the
State was unable to indict in 1999, appellant will not receive the benefit of a
proper Brooks standard of review if we do not grant this rehearing. 
 
                                                                                    
                                                                        /s/        Sharon
McCally
                                                                                    Justice
 
 
Publish — Tex. R. App. P. 47.2(b).
Motion for Rehearing En
Banc Denied.  Justice McCally filed a Dissenting Opinion to the Denial of En
Banc Rehearing.  Justice Seymore filed a Dissenting Opinion to the Denial of En
Banc Rehearing, in which Justice Anderson joins.  Justice Brown filed a
Concurring Opinion to the Denial of En Banc Rehearing, in which Justice Boyce
joins.  




 




[1] I also
suggest that en banc reconsideration is appropriate in the case because of the
flawed Brady and cumulative-error analysis performed by the Temple panel. 
Specifically, an “alternate suspect” RJS was the subject of the Brady point
of error.  On the fifth day of trial, one of the State’s witnesses revealed to
appellant’s counsel for the first time that: RJS, the Temples’ sixteen-year-old
neighbor, lied to the police about skipping school on the day of the murder;
RJS failed three polygraph tests; RJS had access to a 12-gauge shotgun and
reloaded shells (the gun and ammunition used to murder Belinda) that the police
had recovered; and RJS had recently shot that gun.  The Temple panel
held this Brady error was not preserved and was harmless.  Yet, the
record clearly reflects that (1) prior to trial the court assured appellant’s
counsel that he had read grand jury transcripts, which included RJS’s
testimony, and they contained no Brady materials, (2) appellant’s
counsel did not learn of the new information about RJS until several days after
the beginning of trial, (3) appellant’s counsel attempted to find RJS during
trial but was unsuccessful, so he sought a continuance before resting his
evidence—it was denied, and (4) the State, though it remained silent about
RJS’s location during the continuance hearing the day before, called RJS as a
rebuttal witness.  Regarding error preservation, the panel’s reliance upon Wilson
is misplaced on its face as appellant met the Wilson standard.  See
Wilson v. State, 7 S.W.3d 136, 146 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (holding that when
the appellant learned of the exculpatory material five days before testimony
began, his Brady complaint was not preserved by his failure to seek a
continuance “before testimony began or before he rested his case in chief”
(emphasis added)).  Further, at a minimum, applying the cumulative error test
of Harris v. State, this Brady error, along with the plethora of
evidentiary and jury-argument errors the Temple panel specifically found,
has eliminated integrity in the trial that led to appellant’s conviction.  See
Harris v. State, 790 S.W.3d 568, 587–88 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989)
(holding that the reviewing court must focus upon the integrity of the process
leading to the conviction and should “always examine whether the trial was an
essentially fair one”); see also Kelly v. State, 321 S.W.3d 583,
602 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th] 2010, no pet.).  However, as I conclude herein
that the evidence is legally insufficient and that a judgment of acquittal is
appropriate, I do not write separately on this legal error.


[2] Accord
Quintanilla v. State, No. 14-10-00011-CR, 2011 WL 665328, at *5 n.2
(Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Feb. 24, 2011, no pet. h.) (mem. op., not
designated for publication); Serrato
v. State, No. 14-09-00764-CR, 2011 WL 345635, at *3 n.3 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] Feb. 1, 2011, no pet. h.) (mem. op., not designated for
publication); Ivey v. State, No. 14-09-00698-CR, 2011 WL 303893, at *2
n. 1 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Jan. 27, 2011, no pet. h.) (mem. op., not
designated for publication); Wilson v. State, No. 14-09-00731-CR, 2011
WL 166901, at *1 n.1 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Jan. 11, 2011, no pet. h.)
(mem. op., not designated for publication); Shepard v. State, No.
14-08-00970, 2011 WL 166893, at *13 n.10 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] Jan.
11, 2011, no pet. h.) (mem. op., not designated for publication); Quinn v.
State, No. 14-09-00914-CR, 2010 WL 4891410, at *2 n.1 (Tex. App.—Houston
[14th Dist.] Dec. 2, 2010, no pet. h.) (mem. op., not designated for
publication).


[3] There is
no doubt, however, that in holding that factual and legal-sufficiency reviews
are indistinguishable, the Court of Criminal Appeals has eliminated or
abolished “factual sufficiency” as an independent point of error on appeal.  See
Howard v. State, 333 S.W.3d 137, 138 n.2 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).


[4] Justice
Seymore’s dissent from the denial of en banc reconsideration suggests this
court would likely conclude the evidence in this case is factually insufficient
upon a neutral weighing of the evidence, which is mandated by the Texas
Constitution.  As I conclude that, when viewed in the light most favorable to
the conviction, the evidence is legally insufficient and no rational juror
could have found the elements of this offense beyond a reasonable doubt, I
necessarily agree that the evidence would be insufficient under a neutral-light
review.


[5] The
command to review all of the evidence on a criminal-sufficiency challenge
stands in contrast to the civil standard, rejected by Brooks, which
authorizes the reviewing court to disregard contrary evidence unless reasonable
jurors could not.  See City of Keller v. Wilson, 168 S.W.3d 802,
827 (Tex. 2005).


[6] Ultimately the nonexclusive list of links suggested by the Court of
Criminal Appeals has evolved into the following: (1) whether the defendant was
present when a search was conducted; (2) whether the contraband was in plain
view; (3) the defendant’s proximity to and accessibility of the narcotic; (4)
whether the defendant was under the influence of narcotics when arrested; (5)
whether the defendant possessed other contraband or narcotics when arrested;
(6) whether the defendant made any incriminating statements when arrested; (7)
whether the defendant made furtive gestures or attempted to flee; (8) whether
there was an odor of contraband; (9) whether other contraband or drug
paraphernalia were present; (10) whether the defendant owned or had the right
to possess the place where the drugs were found; (11) whether the place where
the drugs were found was enclosed; (12) whether the defendant was found with a
large amount of cash; and (13) whether the conduct of the defendant indicated a
consciousness of guilt.  Evans, 202 S.W.3d at 162 n.12.
 


[7] The
primary issue in Smith was whether the trial court properly refused an
accomplice-witness instruction in light of the ex-husband’s handling of the
murder weapon.  Smith is remarkable in the context of this case
because, when the conviction rests in part upon “accomplice” testimony,
corroborating evidence beyond motive and opportunity must, by statute, exist.  See
Tex. Code Crim Proc. Ann. art.
38.14 (West 2005).  Thus, the Smith court analyzed the evidence linking
the defendant to the crime scene and the weapon at issue.  Here, because there
is no allegation of an accomplice, the evidentiary threshold applied by the
panel was less. If the Temple panel’s analysis is correct, the State
would have needed more evidence to convict appellant if someone had come
forward and claimed to have assisted appellant in murdering his wife.


[8] The
conclusive evidence (from video surveillance, cell phones, and 911 calls) in
this case accounts for appellant’s whereabouts—away from the murder scene—for
all but eighteen to thirty-five minutes of the one-hundred-twenty-four-minute
window in which the crime was committed.


[9] By the
time the State tried appellant for murder 8 ½ years after the murder, appellant
and Heather had married.


[10] Though
Heather disputed this police account, as this evidence is in conflict, the jury
was free to resolve it in favor of the police and, viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the conviction, I assume they did.


[11] It
important to note the State advanced the theory that appellant must have staged
the scene because his Chow, Shaka, would never have allowed a stranger into the
backyard without at least barking.  The Temple panel concluded, I
believe correctly, that the jury was not free to indulge this inference because
of the evidence that Shaka was in the garage at the time of the murder.  Temple,
2010 WL 5175018, at *8 n.3.  The dog’s bed, fresh food, and water were in the
garage; the latch on the backyard fence was broken; no one heard Shaka barking;
no one observed the dog in the backyard during the afternoon; and the dog was
known to remain in the garage even when the door was opened for vehicles to
enter.  Without this inference, the most the jury was entitled to infer,
without speculation, is that robbery was not the motive for the murder—not that
appellant committed the murder.


[12] Defense
expert testimony and defendant’s own testimony dispute that the scene was or
could have been staged.  However, as this evidence is in conflict, the jury was
free to resolve it in favor of the police, and viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the conviction, I assume they did.


[13] All
fact witnesses who had a history with appellant, even those adverse to
appellant such as the Harlons, testified that appellant was emotional over the
loss of his wife and child.  However, as this evidence is in conflict, the jury
was free to resolve it in favor of the police, and viewing the evidence in the
light most favorable to the conviction, I assume that they did.


[14] However,
the Temple panel did not view the evidence in the light most favorable
to the conviction in arriving at this timeline.  Appellant testified at trial
that Belinda arrived home “closer to 4:00 p.m.” but admitted that his initial
estimate to officers was 3:45 p.m., and thus, the window for appellant to
commit the murder and dispose of all physical evidence could have been thirty-five
minutes: from 3:45 p.m. to 4:20 p.m.  Appellant could have left his house no
later than 4:20 p.m. to make the twelve-minute commute to Brookshire Brothers,
where he appeared on a video camera at 4:32 p.m.  


