AFFIRM; and Opinion Filed July 3, 2014.
S I n The
Court of A ppeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
No. 05-13-00578-CR
MONIQUE DANAE MCCLINTON, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the County Court at Law
Rockwall County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. CR11-1799
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Justices Bridges, O’Neill, and Brown
Opinion by Justice Brown
Monique Danae McClinton appeals her conviction for the offense of cruelty to animals.
In two issues, she challenges the trial court’s decision to grant the State’s motion to strike words
in the information and the sufficiency of the evidence to support her conviction. We affirm.
Procedural Background
On October 22, 2011, the City of Rockwall Animal Services in conjunction with the
Rockwall County Sheriff’s office seized thirty-four dogs from property located in Royse City
that appellant leased with her husband, Wyakie Glenn Hudson. The dogs, all of which were
American Pit Bull Terriers, belonged to appellant and Hudson. Twelve of the dogs were six- to-
eight-week old puppies, and one dog was an adult female named “Baby G” that had just given
birth to six puppies. The remaining dogs were adults or older puppies.
The State charged appellant by information in thirty-four cases with the Class A
misdemeanor offense of cruelty to animals, alleging appellant committed the offense by failing
to unreasonably provide food or water or care or shelter for the dogs. See TEX. PENAL CODE
ANN. § 42.092(b)(3) (West 2011). The State went to trial on three of those cases—one case
involved a six- to eight-week old puppy, another case involved a six-month old puppy, and the
other case was for Baby G. Appellant waived a jury and pleaded not guilty in each case.
After a bench trial, the trial court found appellant guilty in the case involving Baby G and
not guilty in the other two cases. The court sentenced appellant to 365 days in the Rockwall
County jail, which was suspended pending fifteen months of community supervision, and
assessed a $400 fine. The court also ordered appellant to pay $210 in restitution and court costs.
Appellant moved for a new trial, which the trial court denied. This appeal followed.
Motion to Strike Words in the Information
Appellant argues in her first issue that the trial court reversibly erred when it granted the
State’s motion to strike certain words in the information after trial had commenced and over her
objection. The information alleged appellant:
did then and there intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly fail unreasonably to
provide necessary food or water or care or shelter for an animal, to-wit: a grey and
white adult female American Pit Bull Terrier in [appellant’s] custody, by not
providing food, water, and reasonable living conditions . . . .
(Emphasis added).1 The day before the start of trial, the State filed a “Motion to Strike Words of
the Information,” asking the trial court to delete the above italicized words from the information
and allow the State to proceed to trial on the remaining part of the information. The trial court
addressed the motion to strike at the start of trial, after the parties announced they were ready and
1
We note that the information previously had been amended before trial by adding the kennel card identification number so that the
particular American Pit Bull Terrier (Baby G) could be identified with greater specificity.
appellant had entered her pleas of not guilty. The trial court granted the motion over appellant’s
objection, and the case proceeded to trial.
Appellant argues the removal of the above language constituted an amendment to the
information because it deleted the manner and means of how the alleged offense occurred. She
maintains that permitting a trial amendment over her objection violates article 28.10(b) of the
Texas Code of Criminal Procedure and because the trial court struck a “specific means of
committing cruelty to animals” that the State was required to prove, she was harmed by this
error. The State responds that the deleted language was surplusage and repetitious of other
language that remained in the information and its deletion did not constitute an amendment under
article 28.10(b). The State adds that there was no error in striking the language because the trial
court made no substantive change to the information or the State’s burden of proof and the
manner and means alleged in the information was unaffected by the trial court’s decision to
strike the subject language.
An information may be amended after trial begins if the defendant does not object; if
there is an objection, the information may be amended only if the amendment does not charge
the defendant with an additional or different offense. TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. ANN. art. 28.10(b),
(c) (West 2006). But not every change to the face of an information is an amendment. For
example, an information may contain “surplusage,” which is unnecessary words or allegations in
the information that do not describe what is legally essential to constitute the offense charged.
Hall v. State, 62 S.W.3d 918, 919 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2001, pet. ref’d). The deletion of words
that are surplusage is not an amendment of the information; rather, such a change is merely an
abandonment, which does not implicate article 28.10. Id.; Garza v. State, 50 S.W.3d 559, 563
(Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2001, no pet.).
We agree that the deleted language constitutes surplusage, which may be abandoned at
any time without triggering the prohibition of article 28.10. While the words “by not providing
food, water, and reasonable living conditions” describe how one commits the charged offense,
the words also are repetitive of other words that remained in the information that describe the
same element—specifically, “fail unreasonably to provide necessary food or water or care or
shelter.” See Maldonado v. State, Nos. 05-05-01386-CR, 05-05-01387-CR, 2006 WL 3291045,
at *3 (Tex. App.—Dallas Nov. 14, 2006, pet. ref’d). The words that remained also mirror the
description of the offense in the penal code. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 42.092(b)(3); cf.
Haecker v. State, 571 S.W.2d 920, 921 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1978) (information is
sufficient if it follows language of the statute if that statute completely describes the offense such
that it informs accused of the nature of the charge). Because the necessary element of how the
offense was alleged to have been committed remained in the information, the deletion of the
words “by not providing food, water, and reasonable living conditions” did not alter or affect the
substance of the charged offense or the State’s burden of proof and thus, was not an amendment
to the information. See Hall, 62 S.W.3d at 919. We therefore conclude the trial court did not err
in granting the State’s request to delete the words “by not providing food, water, and reasonable
living conditions” from the information. We overrule appellant’s first issue.
Sufficiency of the Evidence
Appellant contends in her second issue that the evidence is insufficient to support her
conviction for cruelty to animals in the case involving Baby G. We review appellant’s
sufficiency challenge by considering all the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict;
based on that evidence and any reasonable inferences, we must determine whether a rational fact
finder could have found the essential elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979); Merritt v. State, 368 S.W.3d 516, 525 (Tex. Crim.
App. 2012). Under this standard, the fact finder has full responsibility for resolving conflicts in
the testimony, weighing the evidence, and drawing reasonable inferences from basic facts to
ultimate facts. Jackson, 443 U.S. at 319. We presume the fact finder resolved any conflicts in
the evidence in favor of the verdict and defer to that determination. See id. at 326. We do not
reassess witness credibility. Id. at 319.
To obtain a conviction against appellant as charged in the information, the State was
required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that appellant intentionally, knowingly, or
recklessly failed unreasonably to provide necessary food, water, care, or shelter for an animal,
Baby G, in her custody. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 42.092(b)(3). “Necessary food, water,
care, or shelter” includes the food, water, care, or shelter that is “required to maintain the animal
in a state of good health.” Id. § 42.092(a)(7). Although there are exceptions to the application of
the offense to the conduct of the person, none of the exceptions are applicable here. Id.
§ 42.092(f).
Evidence Presented at Trial
The State’s evidence consisted of testimony from six witnesses and photographs. Its first
witness was Peggy Wyda, who lived across the street from the leased property. Wyda was the
person who called the Sheriff’s office about the dogs on October 22. This was the second call
made by Wyda; she called on October 19 to report that “there were dogs on this property, and
nobody lived there.” Wyda testified that after the first call, the Sheriff’s office told her there was
nothing they could do. But she insisted they respond when she phoned a second time. Wyda
said the dogs had been barking loudly and she had not seen anybody come to the property in a
few days. She testified she was “alarmed” by the smell of dog feces and urine, which was “even
worse” than when she called on October 19, and upon closer inspection, she did not see any food
or water for the dogs.
Rockwall County deputies Abel Chavez and Brian Lee Earles testified next. Chavez
responded to the dispatch to check on the welfare of dogs at the property. Chavez testified he
could not see much from the gate entrance to the property. But he could hear a lot of dogs
barking, and he smelled a strong odor of feces. After obtaining permission from the owner,
Chavez cut the lock to the entrance gate and entered the property. Earles joined Chavez as they
moved onto the property.
The first thing Chavez saw as he entered the property was a brush pile made up of sticks
and twigs blocking dog crates. The crates were covered by blue tarps and contained “a lot of
puppies.” He also saw an adult dog, later identified to be Baby G, inside a crate with her
newborn puppies. Three of the puppies were dead; two of the dead puppies had been mutilated.
Chavez said Baby G tried to stand up, but she was too tall for that particular crate.
According to Chavez, Baby G did not look well-fed and he could see her ribcage and
bones; she looked like “she needed attention, medical attention.” Chavez also noticed spots all
over her body, like a rash, and she had scars. Earles said Baby G’s spine, ribs and hips were
protruding and that she did not look healthy. Neither deputy saw any food inside her crate.
Chavez described the water he saw in the crate as “dirty, dirty water” that looked oily. Chavez
did not think the container holding the dirty water had been filled the day before. Earles agreed
the water was not fresh and appeared “[o]ily and stagnant.” Earles believed it may have been
several days since someone provided the dogs with water. Earles said they “checked all over the
place” and did not “find any fresh food or water for any of the dogs.” The two crates containing
puppies also did not contain any food or water. The panel underneath the floor of the crates had
a lot of feces and old food.
Thirty or forty yards from the crates were larger dog kennels containing several adult
dogs and older puppies. The odor of feces from the kennels was “pretty strong.” One of the
kennels, which contained three dogs, did not have any shelter for the dogs. Earles saw some
“mushed, old-looking, nasty-looking food” in just one of the kennels, and the water buckets in
the kennels contained “more stagnant water.”
Based on the lack of food, water, shelter, and care, Earles procured a warrant to seize the
dogs and assisted animal control officer Joyce Ross, who was dispatched to the property, with
the seizure. Photographs were taken at the scene. Ross testified that when she first arrived, she
could not see the dogs because there was a lot of brush and wood stacked up around a set of
trees. But she could hear the dogs and “smell the dogs” before she saw them. She moved
around the brush pile and saw the crates that were covered with blue tarps. She saw “numerous
puppies” in two of the crates and Baby G in a third crate; a fourth crate was empty. Ross saw
three dead puppies in the front of Baby G’s crate. Two of Baby G’s other puppies were
“gasping” and “expressing foam out of their mouth[s] and nose[s].” Ross removed Baby G from
the crate so she could assess the babies. Ross performed CPR on the puppies, which “didn’t
work” because the puppies were overheated. Ross explained that it was “very warm” that day
and the live puppies were “overly warm” to the touch. A sixth puppy was stronger but later died
at the shelter.
Other than Baby G and her six puppies, Ross saw only a bucket with what appeared to be
stagnant water with a layer of greasy film on top inside the crate. There was very little water
inside the bucket. She did not see any food. The bottom of the crate had feces, vomit, and urine.
Ross testified the crate was “way too small” for Baby G to stand up in “so she was hunched over
in the kennel.” Ross described Baby G as “very skinny,” “emaciated,” and “in very poor
condition.” Ross could see “every one of [Baby G’s] ribs” and the joints in her tail. Baby G’s
skin also had issues, which Ross said looked like mange, and her ears stunk as if she had an
infection. Ross testified that all the puppies in the nearby crates also appeared to have mange.
In the puppy crates, Ross saw empty bowls, one of which looked like a large pie pan.
Ross testified the pan had “about an inch of feces and urine squashed down in it.” The puppies
did not have any water. Ross described the puppies as living in crowded conditions, extremely
hot to the touch, and “very skinny, very underweight.” Ross also testified that there was no
water in some of the adult kennels. One kennel had a large tub with about an inch and a half of
muddy water in the bottom. That kennel had no shelter for the three dogs in it, and there were
feces all around. Ross said the adult dogs ranged from skinny to mildly skinny. Some of the
dogs had scars and skin issues.
Ross gave the dogs food and water. At one point, appellant arrived at the property after
being called by the deputies. Ross testified that appellant said she had come to feed the dogs.
According to Ross, appellant brought only “two little 2 gallon/3 gallon water jugs.” Ross did not
see the food appellant brought, but appellant said she had small bags of food in her car.
Ross took the dogs to the animal shelter where she provided them with care. The dogs
also received an examination by John Keith Taylor, a veterinarian. Photographs were taken of
Baby G at the shelter and admitted as exhibits. Taylor testified that Baby G was “obviously
underweight.” Taylor said Baby G’s added nutritional requirements from being pregnant and
lactating “could have brought her to this condition.” And he would expect a pregnant or nursing
dog to have her diet supplemented or increased to “prevent this type of thing.” But even with a
dog that has adequate nutrition, Taylor confirmed that the dog “shouldn’t be this thin.” Taylor
described Baby G’s body condition as poor and said she was “undernourished.” Taylor testified
he believed the pregnancy and lactation contributed to her weight loss; his notes indicated that
Baby G was “very thin due to pregnancy, lactation.” But he said an adequately fed female dog
should lose zero body weight during a normal pregnancy. According to Taylor, at this stage in
the pregnancy, Baby G should be fed a minimum of once a day, and the owner “can get a little
more nutrition” in her if she is fed two or three times a day. He stated that a dog does not get this
thin if the owner is feeding the dog regular adult dog food at a regular volume. Taylor
referenced the photographs taken of Baby G at the animal shelter, testifying that the “picture
speaks louder than the body score does.” He said that although Baby G was thin, “she wasn’t
being starved to death.” Taylor did not see evidence of dehydration with the dogs.
Taylor testified to his familiarity with “whelping pens,” which was the term used to
describe the crate holding Baby G. Taylor explained that a “whelping pen is a pen that allows
the puppies to be contained and the mother to be able to enter and exit.” Taylor said one of the
crates brought from the property looked as if it could be big enough to be a whelping pen if the
mother had the ability to get in and out of it. He testified the crate “would be kind of cramped”
for a permanent type of confinement but that it would be an adequate whelping pen if it were
cleaned a minimum of two times a day.
The State’s final witness was James Cantrell, who was trained in animal cruelty
investigations. Specifically, Cantrell testified that after looking at the photographs and the
condition of the animals, in his opinion, “the animals were not cared for according to state law.”
Cantrell reviewed the photographs of Baby G. He said the fact that her bones protruded told him
that Baby G had been subjected to a long-term “lack of adequate food.” And even if you
consider the fact that she just gave birth to six puppies, Cantrell testified that “if she was in a
normal, healthy body weight before giving birth, then she would not be in this condition
already.” He added, that if “she were receiving adequate sustenance, she wouldn’t even be in
that condition after she had been nursing for eight weeks.” Cantrell opined that the owner of
Baby G did not provide adequate food to maintain her in good health. Although he could not say
that Baby G had not been provided with any food, from looking at the photographs, he estimated
that Baby G had not been fed appropriately for at least a month to six weeks. He testified: “You
can’t look at a dog that’s that skinny and think that it’s okay.”
Cantrell also reviewed a photograph of the bucket of water found in Baby G’s crate.
Cantrell testified that in his experience, the oily film on the water is caused by a dog stepping in
the water and contaminating the water with the oil from her skin. He also said that if the dog
was stepping in the water, the water would contain whatever the dog walked in from the ground.
Cantrell testified that this water was not fresh or necessary water to maintain the health of Baby
G. Cantrell also had concerns about the bucket of water found in the kennels. He said that
because of the size of those buckets, the dogs had to step into the buckets so they could reach the
water. That meant the dogs would contaminate the water with whatever they stepped in, like
grass or feces. Cantrell said he would not be surprised by the fact that the dogs were not
dehydrated. He clarified that he did not say there was not water available; he said the water was
not “healthful water.” According to Cantrell, “dogs will drink whatever they have to drink if it’s
a matter of survival.” In his opinion, “dehydration is not the only unhealthy condition that can
arise from having unhealthful water.”
Cantrell testified that the crate that housed Baby G was not appropriate confinement for a
dog of her size. Cantrell reviewed the photographs of Baby G in the crate and observed that
Baby G could not stand up fully or raise her head to its normal position. He added that for a dog
this size, the crate typically does not have a wire grated floor because the weight of the dog
would cause the wire to be pressed into the pads of her feet. He testified that as the dog starts to
cut her feet on the wire, she could get an infection because she’s walking on wire grate that is
dirty from her defecation and urination. Cantrell also testified that the blue tarps did not provide
necessary shelter; he believed the tarps only provided protection from the rain and would not
protect Baby G or the puppies from an extreme temperature environment.
Appellant presented the testimony of three witness and testified in her defense. One
witness was Chardonnay Arguijo, who appellant and Hudson paid to help take care of the dogs.
Arguijo described appellant and Hudson as “very loving” and educated about dogs. She also had
never seen anyone spend so much on their dogs. Arguijo testified she helped moved the kennels
and dogs from appellant’s rental property located in Fort Worth to the property in Royse City.
She said she and Hudson started the moving process for the dogs on October 17. According to
Arguijo, they first moved the large kennels and then started moving the dogs on October 18.
Arguijo’s last trip to the property was on October 19. She said that as of that day, Baby G had
not yet been moved. She thinks Baby G remained at the Fort Worth property until the next day
and that Baby G was kept in the whelping pen before she was moved. Appellant did not help
move the dogs because she was not feeling well. Arguijo testified that when she and Hudson
were at the property, they always made sure the dogs had clean water and fresh food.
Hudson testified he and appellant decided to move their animals (dogs and horses) to the
Royse City property because they were having problems getting water out of the well on the
property they leased in Fort Worth. He said they leased the Royse City property for the animals
and he and appellant rented a house ten miles away. Hudson moved Baby G and twelve of the
puppies on October 20. He testified that they were the last dogs moved because he wanted to
minimize their stress, which he said can cause dogs not to eat because they are scared. During
the moving process, Hudson left food and water each time he made a trip to the property. He
brought two 50-pound bags of food and five or six 5-gallon jugs of water. He said he was at the
property twice on October 20 and one time on October 21, the day before the seizure.
Hudson testified that months before the move, they thought they had found a home for
Baby G. The home was with a guy named Armando, who owned a male pit bull. Hudson
assumed Armando planned to breed his male with Baby G, but Hudson did not know for sure.
They gave Baby G to Armando under conditions that they could visit her. After the second visit,
they decided the way Armando was keeping Baby G “didn’t look right.” For example, Armando
was not feeding Baby G the food they recommended. So, they took her back in the middle of
September. Hudson did not know that Baby G was pregnant at the time, but he knew she was
pregnant when they started planning the move to the Royse City property. He did not know
when the puppies were due.
Hudson testified that the placement of the crates and tarps among the twigs and sticks is a
den-like environment he created. He explained he went to Animal Behavior College where he
learned that dogs live in dens. The den he fashioned was a secured area where he hoped the dogs
would feel safe from the elements and “other stuff that’s in the area.” Hudson testified that the
whelping pen they chose to house Baby G was custom made and approved by their veterinarian.
Hudson did not have any concerns about putting Baby G in that particular pen. He said she did
not seem uncomfortable and at that point in the pregnancy, she was not moving around much.
He explained that he put the logs on top of the crates to hold the tarp down, not to prevent Baby
G was getting out of the crate.
Hudson testified that Baby G lost weight because of the stress from being moved twice.
Hudson never deprived her of food and fed her “the healthiest foods” you can buy. He also said
she was always given adequate water and he did not observe any skin conditions on her. Hudson
could not tell whether the photograph of the bucket of water from Baby G’s crate looked oily or
was brown. He said he saw a reflection of the tarp in the water.
Hudson testified that he and appellant consulted their veterinarian, Mark Crabill, about
issues with mange and worms. They purchased various de-worming medications and mange
treatments from Crabill. Crabill testified that he saw the dogs for a variety of reasons, such as
performing wellness checks on puppies and helping appellant take care of some skin issues with
the dogs. Crabill did not give appellant any advice on nutritional issues with the dogs. He
estimated he saw twelve to sixteen of the dogs over the course of a four-year period. Crabill
described appellant as a concerned pet owner who wanted to do what was best for her animals.
Crabill never examined Baby G. Looking at the same photographs Taylor testified to,
Crabill agreed with Taylor’s assessment that Baby G was underweight. But from the
photographs, he could not say why she was underweight; he stated there could be “one of
multiple factors going on there,” including malnutrition. He believed the photographs show that
Baby G was given some food, just not enough food. Crabill also testified that the stress involved
with moving could affect a dog’s eating habits.
Appellant testified she loved each of the dogs and would not do anything to harm their
health. Appellant recalled she first went to the Royse City property on October 14 and 15 when
she and Hudson moved their horses. But she did not return to the property until the afternoon of
October 20. On that day, she spent an hour or two at the property during which time she gave
the dogs food and water. She also said she brought food and water the next afternoon, October
21. Appellant planned to return with food and water in the afternoon on October 22. She agreed
that she did not return to the property until after 5:00 on October 22. This was after Chavez
called appellant about the dogs. Appellant conceded she was in Fort Worth when she received
Chavez’s call and was “nowhere near the property.”
Appellant testified that Baby G was “very well taken care of” and did not have any skin
or worm conditions. When Baby G first returned from living with Armando, it was “a little
while before she started eating normally again.” Appellant also knew that Baby G was pregnant.
Appellant testified that when she left the property on October 21, Baby G had not yet given birth.
Appellant said Baby G was in good health at the time and in a “sufficient place” to deliver her
puppies. Appellant had no concerns about the whelping pen in which Baby G was placed. And
she confirmed that Baby G had been in the same pen while at the Fort Worth property.
Appellant said Baby G “never had any problems with it” and would “go in and out on her own.”
Appellant testified she gave the dogs 100 pounds of food each day. She also testified that
“necessary food” means “enough food to maintain good health” of the dogs. While appellant
agreed that Baby G was thin, she disagreed that Baby G had not been given the necessary food.
Appellant further said she understood the definition of necessary water. She agreed that the
water bucket from Baby G’s crate looked oily and that it was not fresh water.
Analysis
Appellant claims that Taylor’s testimony negated the elements the State was required to
prove because Taylor testified that “Baby G showed no signs of dehydration, and that any
evidence of malnutrition was in all likelihood due to her pregnancy, not due to neglect.” She
specifically relies on Taylor’s testimony that the added nutritional requirements from Baby G’s
pregnancy “could have brought her to this condition” and his notes from his examination of
Baby G in which he wrote that Baby G was “very thin due to pregnancy, lactation.” She also
asserts that an important consideration is the fact that Baby G was the last dog brought to the
Royse City property and she had been there only forty-eight hours before Wyda called the
Sheriff’s office. She maintains that no qualified veterinary sciences expert testified that Baby G
was not provided the necessary food in those forty-eight hours and “none of the other adult dogs
showed signs of malnourishment.”
Although Taylor testified that Baby G had additional nutritional requirements related to
her pregnancy and lactation, he only stated that these requirements “could have” brought her to
this condition. Taylor explained that he would expect a pregnant or nursing dog to have her diet
supplemented or increased and with adequate nutrition, such a dog should not be this thin.
Taylor also testified that Baby G was “obviously underweight” and “undernourished” and in
“poor” condition. Crabill agreed that Baby G was underweight but he could not state why she
was underweight. He testified that based on the photographs he saw of Baby G at the shelter, he
believed Baby G was not given enough food. He also said that there could be “multiple factors”
leading to Baby G’s condition, including malnutrition.
The trial court also heard testimony that at the stage Baby G was in her pregnancy, she
should be fed a minimum of once a day. Both Hudson and appellant testified that they gave the
dogs food and water each day leading up to the seizure of the dogs on October 22. But Baby G’s
poor physical condition as testified to by Taylor, Chavez, Earles, and Ross and the photographs
of Baby G at the animal shelter coupled with Wyda’s testimony that she had not seen anybody
come to the property in a few days contradict this testimony, and we must defer to the fact
finder’s resolution of conflicts in the evidence. See Jackson 443 U.S. at 326. Cantrell also
testified that Baby G’s physical condition as shown in the photographs indicated that she had
been subjected to long-term “lack of adequate food,” and he estimated she had not been fed
appropriately for a month to six weeks. The evidence also showed that when the deputies and
animal control arrived at the property, none of the dogs had any food, and the water provided
was not fresh, healthful water. Appellant testified that she had planned to come back to the
property in the afternoon on October 22. But she did not show up until after 5:00 in the
afternoon that day and only after Chavez called her. She conceded she was nowhere near the
property when she received Chavez’s call.
Appellant knew that Baby G was pregnant before she was moved to the Royse City
property. Appellant also knew that Baby G had some weight loss after moving back to their
home in mid-September 2011. Yet in caring for Baby G during the period when she had
additional nutritional requirements and noted stress from a prior move, appellant left Baby G
alone to deliver her puppies on property in which she was found with no food and only oily,
stagnant, not healthful water. Cf. Martinez v. State, 48 S.W.3d 273, 276 (Tex. App.—San
Antonio 2001, pet. ref’d) (stating that fact finder could infer culpable mental state from
circumstances surrounding the offense). Viewing all the evidence in the light most favorable to
the verdict, including reasonable inferences, a rational fact finder could have found appellant
failed unreasonably to provide necessary food, water, care, or shelter to Baby G to maintain her
in good health. Jackson, 443 U.S. at 318–19; see also TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 42.092(b)(3).
We therefore conclude that the evidence is legally sufficient to support appellant’s conviction for
cruelty to animals. We overrule appellant’s second issue.
Having overruled appellant’s issues, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
/Ada Brown/
ADA BROWN
JUSTICE
Do Not Publish
TEX. R. APP. P. 47
130578F.U05
S
Court of Appeals
Fifth District of Texas at Dallas
JUDGMENT
MONIQUE DANAE MCCLINTON, On Appeal from the County Court at Law,
Appellant Rockwall County, Texas
Trial Court Cause No. CR11-1799.
No. 05-13-00578-CR V. Opinion delivered by Justice Brown.
Justices Bridges and O’Neill participating.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
Based on the Court’s opinion of this date, the judgment of the trial court is AFFIRMED.
Judgment entered July 3, 2014