OPINION
After a bench trial, the trial court found appellant guilty of stalking and assessed punishment at four years’ confinement.
BACKGROUND
Appellant was hired by Patrick Morrison, owner of an equestrian riding center, to perform odd jobs around Morrison’s property in exchange for room and board. Morrison and his family — his wife, Aylisa, and his two daughters, Brooke, 11, and Markee, 9 — lived in a house situated on the' same tract of land as the equestrian center. Appellant lived in a small one-room guest house with a kitchen and bathroom. About a month after appellant had moved into the guest house, appellant gave Morrison a painting he had done. The painting depicted a nude female jumping a horse over a Harley-Davidson motorcycle. Morrison stated that he believed the female in the painting to be his 11-year-old daughter, Brooke. Morrison did not take any action against appellant at this time.
About a month after that, Brooke was approached by appellant in a community bathroom in the horse barn with a picture he said he had painted for her. This picture depicted a heart, upheld by three stakes in the ground, dripping blood into an open hole. Around this same time, Brooke found on top of her “tack box” (a horse supply storage container located in the barn area) a note saying, “Waiting ... Silently Screaming, I Love You.” Brooke told her mother, Aylisa, about the painting and the note. Aylisa, when appellant was not in his quarters, went into the guesthouse and found some poems and poem fragments with the “silently, screaming” language, including one titled “Ode to Brook”:
Waiting ...
Silently Screaming, I Love You
Wondering — will you forever
be my mystery
my muse
my guide through the dark forest
The Morrisons, via a Mend of theirs, Michael Blair, asked appellant to gather his belongings and leave the property. He did, but returned at night a few days later and, in the horse barn, placed a painting of a young woman arising from a flower, which workers found the next morning. Aylisa Morrison testified that she believed the young woman in the picture to be Brooke. At around this same time, appellant also left another painting on Brooke’s tack box that said “LOVE” on it with broken glass glued-on. This painting, along with all the others found, had a “W” on the back of it.
A few months later, appellant showed up at the Morrison’s house and asked to speak with Patrick. Patrick was unavailable, but Aylisa, warned by Blair that appellant might be inquiring at their house for Patrick, brandished a shotgun at appellant and told him to leave the premises because she “had 911 on the phone.” Appellant left and was later arrested and charged with stalking. 1
Before trial, appellant filed a motion to suppress two pieces of evidence: the “Ode to Brooke” poem and the other fragments of poems with the “silently screaming” language. In his motion to suppress, appellant asserted that when Aylisa Morrison entered the guest-house and confiscated the evidence, she had violated his Fourth
Legal Sufficiency
In his first point of error, appellant asserts that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction for stalking. The standard for reviewing the legal sufficiency of the evidence is whether, after reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict, any rational trier of fact could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt.
Jackson v. Virginia,
The offense of stalking, under article 42.072 of the Texas Penal Code, provides in relevant part:
(a) A person commits an offense if the person, on more than one occasion and pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct that is directed specifically at another person, knowingly engages in conduct, including following the other person, that:
(1) the actor knows or reasonably believes the other person will regard as threatening:
(A) bodily injury or death for the other person;
(B) bodily injury or death for a member of the other person’s family or household; or
(C) that an offense will be committed against the other person’s property;
(2) causes the other person or a member of the other person’s family or household to be placed in fear of bodily injury or death or fear that an offense will be committed against the other person’s property; and
(3) would cause a reasonable person to fear:
(A) bodily injury or death for himself or herself;
(B) bodily injury or death for a member of the person’s family or household; or
(C) that an offense will be committed against the person’s property.
Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 42.072 (Vernon 2003).
Appellant first argues that there was no evidence that his conduct, as alleged in the indictment, was directed at Aylisa; rather, he contends, it was directed at Brooke. However, the statute specifically provides that the “course of conduct” does not have to be directed at only the complainant, but can be conduct that the complainant would regard as threatening bodily injury (or death) to a family member.
Id.
at § 42.072(a)(1)(B). This is the case under
In his next argument, appellant argues that there was no evidence that he “followed” Aylisa when he snuck back onto the Morrison’s property and left the third and fourth paintings for Brooke, and then returned a few months later to the house, ostensibly in search of Patrick. The Code does not define the word “followed”; therefore, we apply the plain meaning of the word.
Lane v. State,
Appellant next argues that there was no evidence of another essential element of the offense: that he knew or reasonably believed Aylisa Morrison would regard his leaving the third and fourth paintings and showing up at the Morrison home a few months later inquiring after Patrick as threatening bodily injury toward Aylisa or Brooke.
The evidence shows that after he left (or gave) the first two paintings to Brooke and Aylisa found the poems to Brooke in appellant’s quarters, appellant was asked to leave the Morrison’s property by Michael Blair. In each of the instances of conduct charged in the indictment — sneaking back onto the property to leave the third and fourth paintings and returning to the property a few months later — it would have been reasonable for the fact finder to infer that appellant, knowing that he had been asked to leave for giving paintings to the complainant’s 11-year-old daughter because of their questionable content, knew or reasonably believed that returning to the property (whether to leave paintings at night or to return to the property during the daylight) would cause Aylisa to feel threatened that he intended bodily injury to Brooke. Therefore, we reject appellant’s argument.
Accordingly, we overrule his first point of error.
Motion To Suppress
Appellant’s second point of error is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress.
The State argues that appellant waived this point of error on appeal. The State contends that appellant had the bur
To be precise, the “burden of proof is
initially
on the defendant to raise the exclusionary issue,” and then the burden shifts to the State to prove that it complied with the law’s requirements.
Pham v. State,
At trial, appellant argued
I would move to suppress [the evidence] on the Fourth Amendment as well as the State law article 38.22, 38.23. 5 I believe the evidence is clear that my client, Mr. Hansen, was living in that place when [Aylisa] went into the guest room ... and seized and took away [the poems]; ... I think that [the] testimony [ ] from all the State’s witnesses is that he was — Mr. Hansen was living there.
We conclude that this was enough to notify the trial court, with sufficient specificity, of appellant’s objection that Aylisa’s actions amounted to a violation of the laws of Texas and his request that the evidence be excluded under article 38.23.
6
Young v. State,
We now turn to the merits of appellant’s claim. Article 38.23 provides that no evidence obtained by an officer or person in violation of the Constitution or laws of the State of Texas shall be admitted in evidence against the accused in a criminal case. Tex.Code CRIM. Proc. Ann. art. 38.23(a) (Vernon 2005). In
Jensehke v. State,
the Court of Criminal Appeals held that, when a non-governmental actor takes property that is evidence of a crime without the consent of the owner and with the intent to turn the evidence over to the police, article 38.23 may not be triggered and the evidence may not have to be excluded.
Here, Aylisa took appellant’s poems and poem fragments from his guesthouse and clearly intended to deprive appellant of this property. However, she took the evidence with the intent to turn it over to the police. Aylisa testified that after she and her husband discussed the contents of the poems found in appellant’s quarters, they decided to call the police. When the police arrived she showed them the poems. A rational trier of fact could have concluded that she took the evidence with the intent of turning it over to the police and, therefore, did not commit a burglary. We hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the evidence.
Cf. Jensch-ke,
Accordingly, we overrule appellant’s second point of error.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. Tex Penal Code Ann. § 42.072 (Vernon 2003).
. U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. Tex. Const, art. I, § 9.
. TexCode Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 18.04 (Vernon 2003).
. Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 38.22, 38.23 (Vernon 2005).
. The Fourth Amendment of the United States Constitution does not apply in this case because Aylisa Morrison is not a state actor nor was she acting “as an instrument or agent of the Government.”
Skinner v. Railway Labor Executives’ Ass’n,
