Affirmed and Opinion Filed September 9, 2015




                                          S   In The
                                Court of Appeals
                         Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                       No. 05-12-01199-CR

                                MARK MCCAY, Appellant
                                          V.
                              THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

                      On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 4
                                   Dallas County, Texas
                           Trial Court Cause No. F11-00694-K

                            OPINION NUNC PRO TUNC
                           Before Justices Francis, Brown, and Stoddart
                                    Opinion by Justice Francis
       A jury found appellant Mark McCay guilty of attempted theft of property valued at more

than $200,000. The trial court assessed appellant’s punishment at ten years in prison, probated

for four years, and a $1000 fine. In four issues, appellant contends: the indictment (1) failed to

allege an offense and (2) failed to provide constitutionally sufficient notice of an offense; and (3)

the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction; and (4) the trial court abused its

discretion by admitting evidence of an extraneous offense. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

                                           Background

       In January 2005, Mary Ellen Bendtsen was eighty-eight years old and lived alone in a

house on Dallas’s historic Swiss Avenue, where she had resided almost her entire life. Bendtsen

was widowed twenty years earlier. Her only child, a daughter, lived in the Dallas area, as did
Bendtsen’s sister and nephew. This case centers on Bendtsen’s relationship with appellant and

his business partner, Justin Burgess. The two young men were antique dealers, and over a period

of ten or so years, they became frequent companions of Bendtsen. Certain details of this

relationship are discussed more fully below when we analyze the sufficiency of the evidence, but

the framework of events in early 2005 are necessary to our discussion at the outset.

       On January 12, 2005, Bendtsen fell and hit her head while retrieving her mail. She was

taken to Baylor Hospital in Dallas. Two days later, she signed a power of attorney allowing her

daughter, Frances Giron, to make medical decisions for her. Bendtsen remained at Baylor for

nine days and was treated for her head injury. Appellant and Burgess were frequent visitors.

About a week after she was admitted, Bendtsen’s doctor explained to her family that she would

need to spend six weeks at a rehabilitation facility before she could return home. On January 18,

2005, while Giron and her nephew were visiting facilities for Bendtsen’s rehabilitation, Bendtsen

signed a second power of attorney. This document was drafted by attorney Edwin Olsen, a

friend of appellant, and named appellant to act on Bendtsen’s behalf. From that day forward,

appellant prevented Bendtsen’s family from visiting her in the hospital.         On January 21,

appellant had Bendtsen admitted to Ashley Court, a skilled nursing facility. Appellant instructed

the staff at Ashley Court not to allow Giron to visit her mother.

       In response to these developments, Giron initiated a legal proceeding seeking to become

first the temporary, and then permanent, guardian of her mother. The court appointed an ad

litem for Bendtsen and held a series of hearings in the initial temporary guardianship proceeding.

After the first hearing on January 31, at which Bendtsen testified against the guardianship,

appellant and Burgess brought her back to her Swiss Avenue home rather than returning her to

Ashley Court. The men hosted a large party that evening at Bendtsen’s home.




                                                –2–
       Two more hearings were held on the issue of temporary guardianship. After the third

hearing, the probate court denied the temporary guardianship, although the permanent

guardianship proceeding continued.

       On February 22, Bendtsen was at home, visiting with Dixie Tidwell (a friend of Bendtsen

and appellant) and Rose Cline (a companion hired by appellant to stay with Bendtsen), when she

suffered a massive stroke. Tidwell called appellant. When he and Burgess arrived, they called

an ambulance, and Bendtsen was again taken to Baylor. On that same day, appellant and

Burgess stood at the foot of Bendtsen’s hospital bed while Olsen read her the will he had drafted

and helped her make a mark on the will to execute it. The event was video recorded by Tidwell;

she and Cline served as witnesses. The will named Tidwell executrix and left Bendtsen’s estate

to appellant and Burgess with three exceptions: her jewelry to longtime friend, Bea Grayson,

except one piece to be chosen by Cline, and a rocking chair to Giron. Bendtsen died in the

hospital on March 2, 2005. On the morning of March 3, appellant and Burgess filed the Baylor

will with the probate court. Later that day, Giron’s attorney filed the will Bendtsen had executed

in 2002 in Florida, where Giron was living at the time. The Florida will left Bendtsen’s estate to

Giron. Giron prevailed in the will contest because the Baylor will was not executed with proper

statutory formalities: although appellant had Tidwell and Cline attend the will execution as

witnesses, they did not sign in Bendtsen’s presence, and appellant and Tidwell subsequently took

the will from the hospital and had it notarized as if the notary had been present when the will was

signed. The notary was Marian Gibson, another of appellant’s friends.

       In February 2006, the State filed its indictment charging appellant with attempted theft of

Bendtsen’s estate. Appellant went to trial and was found guilty of attempted theft of property

valued at more than $200,000. The trial court assessed his punishment at ten years in prison and




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then suspended the sentence, placing appellant on probation for four years, requiring appellant to

serve thirty days in the Dallas County jail, and imposing a fine of $1,000. This appeal followed.

                                  Sufficiency of the Indictment

       In his first two issues, appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to quash

the indictment. He argues the indictment was insufficient because it failed to allege an offense

and failed to give him sufficient notice of the charges against him. Both the United States and

Texas Constitutions assure an accused the right to notice of the charges against him. U.S.

CONST. amend. VI; TEX. CONST. art. I, § 10. The charging instrument must be specific enough

to inform the accused of the nature of the accusation against him so that he may prepare a

defense. State v. Moff, 154 S.W.3d 599, 601 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004). The sufficiency of an

indictment presents a question of law; we review the trial court’s ruling on sufficiency de novo.

Smith v. State, 309 S.W.3d 10, 13–14 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010).

       Appellant was charged with attempted theft of property valued at $200,000 or more.

Both parties acknowledge appellant’s indictment was amended a number of times.                  The

indictment on which he went to trial, and which we must review for sufficiency, charged that

appellant:

       with specific intent to commit the offense of theft of property of an aggregate
       value of $200,000 or more, did all of the following, which amounted to more than
       mere preparation that tended but failed to effect the commission of said intended
       theft, to wit: Defendant, with intent to deprive any other person having a greater
       right to possession of the property than Defendant upon the death of Mary Ellen
       Bendtsen, did cause Mary Ellen Bendtsen to execute a will, naming Defendant as
       a beneficiary to receive her property upon her death; and Defendant did thereafter
       file said will for probate.

Appellant challenges the form of this indictment on grounds that it failed to allege an illegal act,

failed to identify the owner of the property appellant attempted to steal, and failed to describe the

property that was the subject of the attempted theft.



                                                –4–
        A person commits theft if he unlawfully appropriates property with intent to deprive the

owner of that property. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(a) (West Supp. 2014). A person

commits the criminal offense of attempt if, with specific intent to commit an offense, he does an

act amounting to more than mere preparation that tends, but fails, to effect the commission of the

offense intended. Id. § 15.01(a) (West 2011). An indictment alleging an attempt is sufficient if

it alleges each element of the offense of criminal attempt. Epps v. State, 811 S.W.2d 237, 242

(Tex. App.—Dallas 1991, no pet.). An indictment for criminal attempt is not fundamentally

defective for failure to allege the constituent elements of the offense attempted. Young v. State,

675 S.W.2d 770, 771 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984). Thus, appellant’s indictment charging attempted

theft was not required to allege all constituent elements of the offense of theft. See Inman v.

State, 650 S.W.2d 417, 420 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983). Instead, the indictment needed only to

allege that appellant, with the specific intent to commit a theft, committed acts amounting to

more than preparation—here, causing Bendtsen to execute the Baylor will and filing it for

probate—which tended, but failed, to effect the commission of the theft. See id.

        Appellant argues that causing a person to execute a will and filing that will for probate

are not illegal acts. If that conduct were standing alone, he would be correct. But the indictment

charged that appellant acted “with specific intent to commit the offense of theft.” At the hearing

on appellant’s motion to quash, the trial court ruled that the State had alleged an offense,

stressing that proof of the offense would turn on proof of appellant’s specific criminal intent.

We agree. If performed with the requisite criminal intent to deprive whoever would otherwise

have taken Bendtsen’s property after her death, the conduct alleged in this indictment—causing

Bendtsen to execute a will in his favor and then filing the will for probate—amounts to a

criminal offense.




                                               –5–
       Appellant also argues the indictment is insufficient because the State did not plead either

that Bendtsen lacked “testamentary capacity” or that appellant exercised “undue influence” over

her. These terms, though, are rooted in the civil law and are meaningful in probate proceedings.

In a criminal proceeding, the State can prove the accused attempted to appropriate property

unlawfully in many ways. One of those ways is by proving the owner did not give effective

consent. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(b)(1) (West Supp. 2014) (“Appropriation of

property is unlawful if it is without the owner’s effective consent.”). And the code explains that

consent is not effective if it is given by someone who by reason of mental defect is known by the

actor to be unable to make reasonable property dispositions. Id. § 31.01(3)(C). Likewise,

consent is not effective if given by someone who by reason of advanced age is known by the

actor to have a diminished capacity to make informed and rational decisions about the reasonable

disposition of property. Id. § 31.01(3)(E). But these are questions of proof, and the indictment

did not need to set out the manner and means by which the State would prove the attempted

unlawful appropriation. See Geick v. State, 349 S.W.3d 542, 546–47 (Tex. Crim. App. 2011).

       Nor, as we have stated, did the indictment need to set out the specific elements of the

theft that was attempted. See Young, 675 S.W.2d at 771. Despite appellant’s complaints to the

contrary, the indictment was not required to describe the property at issue with specificity or to

name the owner of that property. Those are constituent elements of the offense of theft, not

criminal attempt. Regardless, we conclude the indictment gave sufficient notice of the property

at issue and the owner of that property for appellant to prepare his defense. See Moff, 154

S.W.3d at 601.

       The property at issue was the property in Bendtsen’s estate, that is, whatever she owned

when she died. The State alleged that appellant intended to steal whatever property made up that

estate (with the exception of jewelry and a rocking chair). But precisely what property would be

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in the estate when Bendtsen died could not be known at the time appellant caused her to sign the

will. Property could be lost or sold or stolen during the time between signing the will and

Bendtsen’s passing. By referring to “her property at her death,” the indictment clearly identified

the property in Bendtsen’s estate, which was the property the Baylor will earmarked for

appellant. See Shriner’s Hosp. for Crippled Children of Tex. v. Stahl, 610 S.W.2d 147, 150

(Tex. 1980) (“A will speaks at the time of the testator’s death, and it is the estate he then

possessed that passes according to the terms of that will.”). Appellant argues that at the time of

trial, years after Bendtsen died, the State could have identified the property that was in fact in her

estate. However, that identification would not have spoken to appellant’s intent at the time he

caused Bendtsen to execute the will and offered it for probate. The indictment sufficiently

identified the property that appellant attempted to steal.

       The issue of timing is also relevant to naming the owner of the property in this case. At

the time appellant caused Bendtsen to execute the Baylor will, she was the owner of the property

at issue. To the extent effective consent was necessary to pass the property to appellant, it was

Bendtsen’s consent that was relevant. However, because the property would not pass until

Bendtsen’s death, the owner(s)—who would be deprived of possession of the property by

appellant—were those who would take Bendtsen’s estate in the absence of the Baylor will.

Again, the identity of that person or persons could have changed between execution of the will

and Bendtsen’s death based on a number of circumstances: Giron might have predeceased

Bendtsen, the Florida will might have been declared invalid, Giron’s two children could have

succeeded to the property. The penal code defines “owner” as a person who has title to or

possession of the property or who has “a greater right to possession of the property than the

actor.” TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 1.07(a)(35)(A) (West Supp. 2014). When appellant formed

the specific intent to steal Bendtsen’s estate, he could not have known who would take that estate

                                                 –7–
but for his conduct. Thus, the State properly adopted this statutory definition of owner and stated

appellant’s attempt was to deprive “any other person having a greater right to possession of the

property than Defendant upon the death of Mary Ellen Bendtsen.”              Again, the indictment

sufficiently identified the persons whose ownership was at issue in this prosecution.

       Before we leave the subject of the indictment, we address appellant’s argument that the

State’s prosecution in this case is an inappropriate use of the theft statute and an attempt to

criminalize a will contest. The theft statute has a broad reach: “A person commits theft if he

unlawfully appropriates property with intent to deprive the owner of property.” Id. § 31.03(a).

Indeed, chapter 31 of the penal code, which addresses theft, explains this statute was intended to

create a “single offense” that would supersede a dozen separate offenses that predated the form

of the code effective in 1974. See id. § 31.02 (West 2011) (section 31.03 supersedes theft, theft

by false pretext, conversion by a bailee, theft from the person, shoplifting, acquisition of property

by threat, swindling, swindling by worthless check, embezzlement, extortion, receiving or

concealing embezzled property, and receiving or concealing stolen property). The statute clearly

applies to a theft when the appropriation is accomplished using a legal document. See, e.g., Lehr

v. State, No. 05-09-00381-CR, 2011 WL 1566970, at *8 (Tex. App.—Dallas Apr. 27, 2011, pet.

ref’d) (not designated for publication) (theft by deed); see also Cooper v. State, 707 S.W.2d 686,

691–92 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 1986, pet. ref’d) (theft by promissory note). We see no

reason why such an unlawful transfer cannot be made by will. The fact that the two acts

necessary for a theft by will—causing the will to be made and filing the will for probate—are

separated by time does not negate the fact that such a prosecution serves the identical policies as

a theft by deed.

       Appellant expands on his contention that the State is attempting to criminalize will

contests by arguing that the probate court is the proper arena for this type of contest. A will

                                                –8–
contest determines the validity of a will. See TEX. EST. CODE ANN. § 256.04(a) (West 2014). A

prosecution for theft determines whether a person has the specific criminal intent to deprive the

owner of her property. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(a). The only will contests that can be

“criminalized” are those in which a will proponent knowingly submits a will for probate with the

specific intention of stealing an estate from others with the legal right to inherit. See id. A good

faith contest between two wills does not amount to a theft and would not be prosecuted as one.

But the legislature has expressed its intent in clear terms: when an actor appropriates property

knowing its owner cannot give effective consent to the transfer, the appropriation—or attempted

appropriation—is a criminal offense, not a probate matter. See id. § 31.03(b)(1).

          We conclude the indictment not only stated a criminal offense, it sufficiently identified

both the property at issue and the owners of that property so as to give appellant the notice he

needed to prepare his defense. See Moff, 154 S.W.3d at 601. We overrule appellant’s first two

issues.

                                     Sufficiency of the Evidence
          In his third issue, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence at trial to support

his conviction for attempted theft. Appellant argues that the Baylor will represented Bendtsen’s

true intent and that she possessed testamentary capacity when she executed that will. At the

same time, appellant contends he had no criminal intent in his conduct surrounding the Baylor

will and there was no evidence of deception, coercion, force, or threat in his dealings with

Bendtsen.      Specifically, then, appellant challenges two elements of the State’s proof.        He

contends the evidence was insufficient to establish he intended to steal Bendtsen’s estate. He

also contends the evidence was insufficient to establish he attempted to appropriate Bendtsen’s

property unlawfully, because she consented to his taking the estate when she died.

          We review a sufficiency challenge by examining the evidence in the light most favorable

to the prosecution to determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the essential
                                             –9–
elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319

(1979). The jury is the exclusive judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be

given their testimony. Wise v. State, 364 S.W.3d 900, 903 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012). Our duty is

to ensure that the evidence presented supports the jury’s verdict and that the State has presented a

legally sufficient case of the offense charged. Montgomery v. State, 369 S.W.3d 188, 192 (Tex.

Crim. App. 2012).

                                       Appellant’s Criminal Intent

       To prove an attempted theft, the State must show the accused possessed an intent to steal;

this intent may be inferred from circumstantial evidence. Wolfe v. State, 917 S.W.2d 270, 275

(Tex. Crim. App. 1996). In appellant’s case, we consider his conduct throughout his relationship

with Bendtsen, especially during her 2005 hospitalizations, and we look to evidence of

appellant’s conduct with other persons that was offered and admitted for the purpose of

determining his intent in this case.

       The evidence at trial established appellant was determined to possess Bendtsen’s Swiss

Avenue home. Bendtsen owned five-twelfths of the Swiss Avenue property; the remainder was

owned by her siblings or their heirs. Several witnesses gave specific evidence of appellant’s

efforts to obtain the house from Bendtsen. We view their testimony in the light most favorable

to the prosecution. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319.

       Jeffrey Martin, a landscape and interior designer and friend of Bendtsen, testified that in

2003 appellant called him twice and told him he was trying to get Bendtsen to sign a power of

attorney and to leave her share of the house to him and Burgess in exchange for everything they

had done for her. But Bendtsen was not cooperating. Appellant told Martin he had invested a lot

of time and energy into Bendtsen, and he had kept receipts of all the food and alcohol he had

brought to her and money spent taking her out. Appellant repeated “over and over” that he

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wanted that house and was entitled to it. Indeed, he told Martin he had a plan to get full

ownership of the house when he inherited Bendtsen’s share: he would refuse to join the other

owners in selling the house, driving the price down until he could afford to buy their shares. He

also told Martin that if Bendtsen would not sign the papers, he and Burgess would stop seeing

her—it would be the end of their relationship.

       Jackie Staley testified similarly at trial. Staley was a retired home restorer as well as a

long-time friend of Bendtsen. She said appellant called her and told her he was trying to get

Bendtsen to sign legal papers that would give Bendtsen a life estate in the house and would allow

appellant and Burgess to move in to take care of her. Appellant told Staley he had taken

Bendtsen to an attorney, but she refused to sign the paperwork. Appellant was “quite upset.”

Appellant told her that his friend Gibson was hosting a party where Bendtsen’s best friends

would talk to her and encourage her to sign the paperwork. (Staley chose not to attend such a

party, and when she spoke to Bendtsen afterwards, Bendtsen was “very angry.”) Appellant told

Staley that he and Burgess were going to “back off” their time with Bendtsen so she would

understand how much they had helped her. Appellant also shared with Staley a plan to get the

entire house: he told her he would present the other owners with bills for taxes and insurance

Bendtsen had paid while she lived there. The record indicates Bendtsen’s siblings had agreed

that she could remain in the house after their parents’ death if she paid the taxes and insurance on

the house.

       Understanding that appellant’s self-expressed goal was to obtain the Swiss Avenue

property, and that he had been unsuccessful in obtaining Bendtsen’s cooperation in making such

a transfer, the months leading up to Bendtsen’s death are revealing. Again, we look at the

evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319.




                                                 –11–
       Ayodeji Fatunde was an investigator for Adult Protective Services (APS).             After

Bendtsen’s fall, appellant encouraged a Baylor social worker to make a referral to APS alleging

exploitation of Bendtsen by her daughter. Fatunde interviewed Bendtsen, Giron, appellant, and

numerous people on staff of both Baylor and Ashley Court. His conclusion was that Giron was

not exploiting Bendtsen, but that appellant wanted to isolate Bendtsen and discredit Giron so that

he could exploit Bendtsen.

       Maryann Jones, a concierge at Baylor, was asked to go to Bendtsen’s room during the

first hospitalization to notarize a document. Jones testified the document was a legal document;

she thought it was a power of attorney. She testified that there were three men in the room

(evidence indicates it was appellant, Burgess, and attorney Olsen) who were trying to tell

Bendtsen how to answer Jones’s questions. Jones did not “feel comfortable” about proceeding

with the notarization. Similarly, Cynthia Kennedy was Bendtsen’s physical therapy assistant

during her first hospitalization. Kennedy described appellant as “meddling” in her mental status

assessment of Bendtsen, trying to steer Kennedy to topics that might make Bendtsen seem “more

cognitive” than she was.

       On January 18, 2005, appellant had Bendtsen execute the power of attorney in his favor.

(The document had originally been dated November 2003, when appellant initially tried to

persuade Bendtsen to sign a power of attorney, but she had refused.) Then on January 22,

appellant had Bendtsen execute a document (1) revoking any other powers of attorney,

declarations of guardianship, or other authorizations empowering others to act on her behalf, and

(2) naming appellant as her agent/attorney in fact to exercise both a durable power of attorney

and a medical power of attorney, and naming Olsen as her attorney in law. The January 22

document was notarized by Gibson, the same person who hosted the party at which friends of




                                              –12–
Bendtsen were to encourage her to sign over her property to appellant and who falsely notarized

the Baylor will.

       The doctors who treated Bendtsen at Baylor after the stroke testified to appellant’s

conduct that effectively isolated Bendtsen from her family.           David Cobasko, Bendtsen’s

neurologist, discussed her worsening condition with appellant. Appellant told Cobasko he was

not to discuss the case with Bendtsen’s sister or daughter; he was to discuss her status only with

appellant. Susan Ellen Kohl, Bendtsen’s attending physician at Baylor after the stroke, testified

appellant and Burgess were with Bendtsen in the emergency room.               They told Kohl that

Bendtsen was estranged from her daughter and would not want her daughter notified of her

condition. They had Bendtsen identified as “Patient X” to keep family members from learning

that she was in the hospital.

       The circumstances surrounding the Baylor will further manifest appellant’s intent. His

efforts to have Bendtsen voluntarily sign over her home had failed. He was informed that

Bendtsen’s status was grave after the stroke. He had isolated her from her family. And so he

had Olsen draft the will leaving the estate to him and Burgess and bring it to Baylor. Bendtsen’s

physical and mental status, and her ability to consent to the provisions of that will, are discussed

in more detail below. Under the facts of this case, appellant’s orchestration of this deathbed

transfer is itself evidence that he intended to take the property regardless of Bendtsen’s wishes

by creating a transfer of the property by will. When he submitted the Baylor will for probate

after Bendtsen died, appellant finalized his attempt to gain possession of her estate.

       Finally, witnesses testified to a relationship appellant developed with an elderly couple,

Jack and Irene Farrington. Appellant got to know the Farringtons after Jack’s brother died. At

some point, he assumed responsibility for caring for the sickly couple, and he sometimes lived in

their house. At one point, he hired Margaret Armstrong as a caretaker. She testified that when

                                               –13–
she arrived, the house was filthy, the couple had not been bathed in years, and they were wearing

threadbare clothing held together with safety pins. Appellant told Armstrong the Farringtons had

no living relatives. During the months she worked there, appellant brought an attorney to the

house to get Jack to sign legal papers, but he refused. The men argued a number of times, and

Armstrong advised Jack not to sign the papers. Ultimately, appellant took Jack to attorney Paul

Lokey, and Jack signed documents creating a trust. Lokey testified Jack placed his half of the

home and two bank accounts in the trust, which would be used to care for the couple during their

life and then would be split between appellant and an old friend of Jack’s.

       Appellant’s relationship with the Farringtons was challenged only when Irene’s sister and

niece visited and found the couple in frail condition. Appellant initially persuaded the visitors he

was taking care of them. But when the niece, Leona Owen, returned after a few months, she

discovered Jack had died; appellant had not notified Jack’s family. Owen took care of her aunt

for a year in the Farringtons’ house and then moved Irene to Waco. She testified that when she

was about to leave the house with Irene, appellant drove up “screaming and hollering, wanting –

I couldn’t move her, I couldn’t move the furniture, the house was his.” Owen gave appellant the

Farringtons’ furniture other than Irene’s hospital bed. Lokey testified appellant wanted the

couple’s house and was not happy when it was sold. When Irene died two years later, appellant

received about $100,000 from the trust.

       The jury was instructed they could consider this evidence only if they found and believed

beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant had in fact committed these acts. Moreover, they were

instructed that the evidence could only be considered in determining appellant’s intent,

knowledge, or plan in connection with the case before them. We conclude the jury could have

found the evidence true beyond a reasonable doubt and could have concluded it was further

evidence of appellant’s intent in the Bendtsen case. Jurors could have believed that in both cases

                                               –14–
appellant insinuated himself into elderly persons’ lives and pressured those individuals to sign

over property to him.

       We conclude there was ample evidence that appellant intended to take Bendtsen’s estate

and thus to deprive anyone who would otherwise inherit that estate from their rightful

inheritance. Rational jurors could have concluded beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant

possessed the criminal intent necessary to commit an attempted theft. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at

319.

                                 Bendtsen’s Ineffective Consent

       Appellant also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence establishing he attempted to

appropriate Bendtsen’s property unlawfully. He argues she voluntarily transferred the property

to him in the Baylor will. Unlawful appropriation can be proved in a number of ways, but one is

by establishing the owner of the property did not effectively consent to giving the property. See

TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(b)(1). And, as we have discussed, consent is not effective if it is

given by someone who by reason of mental defect is known by the actor to be unable to make

reasonable property dispositions, id. § 31.01(3)(C), or if given by someone who by reason of

advanced age is known by the actor to have a diminished capacity to make informed and rational

decisions about the reasonable disposition of property, id. § 31.01(3)(E). Accordingly, the

evidence of unlawful appropriation is sufficient if a reasonable juror could have concluded that

appellant knew Bendtsen was unable to make reasonable dispositions of her property, either

because her mind was not well or because of a diminished capacity that came about because of

her advanced age. We focus on Bendtsen’s mental status during the time leading up to and

immediately after her stroke, including the day Bendtsen made a mark on the will.

       Those who claimed to be Bendtsen’s friends were divided in their opinions as to her

mental capacity in the time period leading up to her stroke. Some testified she possessed all of

                                              –15–
the mental ability she always had; others testified to a slow decline she experienced over time;

still others testified they were concerned at the significant decline she experienced in the early

months of 2005. As the exclusive judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be

given their testimony, the jury had to resolve this conflicting testimony. Wise, 364 S.W.3d at

903. That said, even counsel for appellant acknowledged in his opening statement to the jury

that Bendtsen’s mental ability had been affected by the stroke and that “she had some problems”

as a result.

        The medical testimony on this subject, however, was not conflicting. Even before her

stroke, Kennedy testified, Bendtsen was not alert and oriented. Psychiatrist Edward Tuthill, who

performed a psychological assessment of Bendtsen, concluded she suffered from advanced

dementia and was “not competent to make informed choices or give informed consent, or even

formulate clear choices.” Tuthill found she would be “vulnerable to ‘undue influence’ and

would not be able to protect her own interests from someone.” He concluded further that this

condition was not caused by her fall, but it would have developed over time. Bendtsen’s

attending physician at Ashley Court, Vladimir Grebennikov, agreed that she was confused and

disoriented, with decreased short-term memory.

        After her stroke, Bendtsen’s doctors described her as obtunded, meaning she was

comatose or close to it. According to Tuthill, she could have conceived of the idea of a will, but

she could not have pursued it.      Significantly, the State asked each testifying health care

professional whether he or she would have been comfortable serving as a witness to a legal

transaction by Bendtsen; each witness replied negatively and testified Bendtsen lacked the ability

to participate in such a transaction. Her doctors reported her condition to appellant, who had

Bendtsen’s medical power of attorney. After Bendtsen suffered her stroke, appellant stood at the




                                              –16–
foot of her hospital bed while Olsen read her the will he had drafted and helped her make a mark

on the will.

       From this evidence, we conclude a rational jury could have found that—although

Bendtsen “signed” the Baylor will—she did not effectively consent to transferring her estate to

appellant and Burgess. A rational jury could also have concluded appellant knew that Bendtsen

was unable to give effective consent after her stroke. Accordingly, we conclude the evidence

appellant unlawfully appropriated the estate was sufficient. See Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319.

       We overrule appellant’s third issue.

                             Admissibility of Extraneous Offense
       In his fourth issue, appellant argues the trial court erroneously admitted the evidence of

appellant’s relationship with Jack and Irene Farrington during the guilt/innocence phase of his

trial. As we discussed above, the evidence included allegations of mistreatment of the couple by

appellant and of his attempts to obtain possession of their home and property.

       Appellant objected that the evidence involved conduct that was not relevant to the

Bendtsen case and was improper character evidence. His attorney argued that if the evidence

were admitted the jury could “convict him for a collateral crime,” with which he had never been

charged. Appellant also objected that the Farrington evidence was too remote from the facts of

the Bendtsen case to be admissible under the theft statute’s provision governing “recent

transactions other than, but similar to, that [upon] which the prosecution is based.” TEX. PENAL

CODE ANN. § 31.03(c)(1). We review a trial court’s decision to admit evidence under an abuse

of discretion standard. Weatherred v. State, 15 S.W.3d 540, 542 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).

       We first address the issue of remoteness. The theft statute allows the State to prove an

accused’s knowledge or intent through evidence he participated in “recent transactions other

than, but similar to” the transaction being prosecuted. TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 31.03(c)(1).

Appellant’s first objection to the Farrington evidence was that it did not involve a recent
                                            –17–
transaction, as the statute required. However, when dates within these two transactions are lined

up, the overlap is clear. Trial testimony consistently placed appellant in Bendtsen’s social circle

for ten to fifteen years. At the latest, then, he had befriended Bendtsen and was seeing her

regularly by 1995. In 1997, he hired Armstrong to care for the Farringtons, and he took Jack to

Lokey to draw up the trust in his favor. The Farringtons’ family visited in 1999, the year Jack

died. Irene’s niece stayed in the house caring for her for the following year and then moved her

to Waco in 2000. Appellant finally received his share of the trust when Irene died in 2003. That

was the same year Bendtsen visited her daughter in Florida and executed the Florida will, and it

was the same year appellant began calling Martin and Staley, confiding to them that he wanted—

and deserved—Bendtsen’s house.          We conclude that appellant’s involvement with the

Farringtons necessarily overlapped in time with his involvement with Bendtsen. The evidence

offered by the State was not remote from the Bendtsen evidence presented to the jury. We

conclude the evidence was admissible under section 31.03(c).

       Appellant also argues the Farrington evidence was not admissible under rule 403, given

its bar to evidence that is more unfairly prejudicial than probative. See TEX. R. EVID. 403. The

State argues initially that appellant did not preserve a rule 403 objection below. Our review of

the record confirms that the issue of unfair prejudice was argued by the parties and that the trial

court specifically conducted a rule 403 balancing test before admitting the evidence. Because

the trial court considered and ruled on this issue, we may as well.

       The court of criminal appeals has identified factors a trial court must balance when

performing a rule 403 analysis. Gigliobianco v. State, 210 S.W.3d 637, 641–42 (Tex. Crim.

App. 2006). On the one hand, the court evaluates the probative force of the proffered evidence

and the proponent’s need for that evidence. Id. at 641. And on the other hand—when the




                                               –18–
complaint is that the evidence is more unfairly prejudicial than probative—the court must

evaluate the tendency of the evidence to suggest a decision on an improper basis. Id.

       “[W]here intent or guilty knowledge is an essential element of the offense which the State

must prove to obtain a conviction, its materiality goes without saying.” Morgan v. State, 692

S.W.2d 877, 880 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985). In this case, evidence that appellant insinuated

himself into the lives of these elderly persons and attempted to pressure Jack into signing over

the couple’s home and accounts is highly probative of his criminal intent in Bendtsen’s case.

Appellant contends Bendtsen wanted to make first a power of attorney, and then a will, in his

favor, and that in doing so she transferred the bulk of her estate to him voluntarily. The

Farrington evidence, if the jury believed it, showed appellant’s intent to isolate frail individuals

from their families and pressure them into legally transferring property, especially the interest in

their homes.

       On the other hand, we do not see that evidence of appellant’s relationship with the

Farringtons would tend to cause the jury to decide the Bendtsen case on an improper basis. The

evidence tended to show appellant knew he could isolate elderly individuals from their families

and obtain legal transfers of those individuals’ power and money to himself. The evidence was

necessary to rebut appellant’s arguments that his conduct involving Bendtsen was based solely

on affection and a desire for her well-being. Finally, appellant was protected from misuse of the

evidence because the trial court instructed the jury concerning use of this, or any, extraneous

offense evidence. Jurors were told the evidence could be used only if they were persuaded

beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant actually committed the wrongful act, and even then,

they could consider the evidence only in determining appellant’s intent, knowledge, or plan in

connection with the Bendtsen case. We presume the jury follows the trial court’s instructions in




                                               –19–
the manner presented. Thrift v. State, 176 S.W.3d 221, 224 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). We discern

no violation of rule 403 in admission of the Farrington evidence.

       We conclude the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the Farrington

evidence. We overrule appellant’s fourth issue.

                                           Conclusion

       We have decided each of appellant’s issues against him. Accordingly, we affirm the trial

court’s judgment.




Publish
TEX. R. APP. P. 47                                 /Molly Francis/
121199F.P05                                        MOLLY FRANCIS
                                                   JUSTICE




                                              –20–
                                      S
                             Court of Appeals
                      Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
                                      JUDGMENT

MARK MCCAY, Appellant                             On Appeal from the Criminal District Court
                                                  No. 4, Dallas County, Texas
No. 05-12-01199-CR       V.                       Trial Court Cause No. F11-00694-K.
                                                  Opinion delivered by Justice Francis.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee                      Justices Brown and Stoddart participating.

      Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.


Judgment entered September 9, 2015.




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