AT AUSTIN
NO. 3-91-359-CR
GEORGE NEIL MILHIM,
APPELLANT
vs.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
APPELLEE
FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 6 OF TRAVIS COUNTY
NO. 345159, HONORABLE DAVID PURYEAR, JUDGE PRESIDING
After the jury found appellant guilty of the offense of assault, Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.01 (West 1989), the court assessed punishment at one year's confinement in the county jail and a fine of one thousand dollars. The term of confinement and the fine were both probated for two years. Appellant's two points of error are directed to the court's refusal to grant his requested instruction in the court's charge limiting the jury's consideration of extraneous offenses. We overrule appellant's points of error and affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The information charged appellant with striking Michael Lebermann about the head with his hand on or about the 27th day of September 1990. Shelby Singleton, the owner of AAble Towing, testified that on the day in question she received a telephone call from a person she recognized as appellant, a driver for M & M Towing, asking to speak to one of her employees, Doyle Ray. Thirty or forty minutes later, a dispatcher at M & M Towing called and advised Singleton, "If you want your blue truck, you better come and get it . . . Doyle Ray brought it over here . . . we left him bleeding in the ditch." After Singleton advised Lebermann and Ray's brother, Wallace, of the message she had received, Lebermann and Wallace Ray left for M & M Towing in separate wreckers, Lebermann to retrieve the truck, and Wallace Ray to get his brother.
Lebermann testified that his employer's blue truck was parked in the customer parking space at M & M Towing. When Lebermann positioned his wrecker where he could back up and pick up the truck, a golf cart was parked between the wrecker and the truck. Lebermann asked what was going on and he was told to get off the property. As Lebermann started to back his vehicle into the street, appellant approached his wrecker, "screaming at me to leave." Lebermann related that as he started to pull away, appellant punched me with his fist, "Got my ear and jaw." Lebermann sustained a bruised jaw and "couldn't chew for a couple of days." Lebermann left without the blue truck. Wallace Ray remained to look for his brother.
Following Lebermann's departure, Singleton went to M & M Towing to retrieve her truck. When appellant refused to release the truck, police were called to resolve the dispute. After the arrival of the police, and the return of Lebermann to the scene, the truck was released to Singleton and Lebermann. Austin Police Officers Michele Woodfin and Danny Gratten testified regarding information they obtained at the scene concerning altercations that had preceded their arrival. Woodfin stated that appellant said that he hit Lebermann in the face, "He did not tell me why or would not tell me why." After Woodfin talked to other parties at the scene, appellant changed his story, stating that he did not block any truck and didn't hit Lebermann. Officer Gratten testified that appellant told him that he "beat up Doyle [Ray] and drug him across the street," and his dog, a pit bull, bit him. Gratten related that Doyle Ray's face was badly bruised, but Gratten did not know "how bad it was bleeding."
In his first point of error, appellant contends that the court erred in refusing his timely request for an instruction in the court's charge prohibiting the jury from considering "evidence of any other alleged incident by the defendant" in its deliberations. In his second point of error, appellant asserts that the court's refusal to grant his requested instruction allowed the jury to speculate about other matters not in evidence. An accused is entitled to be tried on the accusations made in the State's pleading and he should not be tried for some collateral crime or for being a criminal generally. Templin v. State, 711 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986).
One of the exceptions to this principle is that evidence of an extraneous or extrinsic offense may be admissible to show the context in which the criminal act occurred. Wilkerson v. State, 736 S.W.2d 656, 659-60 (Tex. Crim. App. 1987).
Where an offense is one continuous transaction, or another offense is part of the case on trial or blended or closely interwoven, proof of all such facts is proper. [T]his has been termed the "res gestae," under the reasoning that events do not occur in a vacuum and that the jury has a right to hear what occurred immediately prior to and subsequent to the commission of the act so they may realistically evaluate the evidence.
Luck v. State, 588 S.W.2d 371, 375-76 (Tex. Crim. App. 1979) (citations omitted). Where a description of the immediate circumstances reveals offenses other than those charged, exclusion of such evidence will render an understanding of testimony unlikely. Wilkerson, 736 S.W.2d at 661. It is not necessary to give a limiting instruction on an extraneous offense that constitutes a part of the res gestae of the offense for which an accused is on trial. Luck, 588 S.W.2d at 376.
In the instant cause, the series of events leading to the primary offense was initiated by a call from M & M Towing advising Singleton that, after Doyle Ray brought her truck to M & M, "We left him bleeding in the ditch." When officers were called to resolve the dispute of whether the truck could be removed from M & M, appellant told Officer Gratten that he "beat up Doyle Ray." We find that the offense involving Ray was so closely interwoven with the primary offense as to constitute one continuous transaction. No error is shown in the trial court's action in refusing to grant appellant's requested instruction limiting the jury's consideration of the extraneous offense. Appellant's points of error are overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.
Tom G. Davis, Justice
[Before Justices Jones, B. A. Smith and Davis*]
Affirmed
Filed: March 10, 1993
[Do Not Publish]
* Before Tom G. Davis, Judge (retired), Court of Criminal Appeals, sitting by assignment. See Tex. Gov't Code Ann. § 74.003(b) (West 1988).