OPINION
Opinion By
Lеe Verniee Jackson appeals from his bench trial conviction of criminal trespass. The court assessed punishment at six months’ confinement in the county jail, probated for one year, and a $400 fine. In six points of error, Jackson claims that the еvidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction. Because the evidence is sufficient, we affirm.
*60 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On August 8, 1996, Tom Martinez noticed two men walking from the back to the front of the house at 439 Elliston Street. No one was living in the house, which was being remodеled. The two men pulled an air conditioner out of a window of the house and laid it on the sidewalk. They got into a car and left when Martinez asked what they were doing. Martinez took their license plate number and called the police.
About thirty minutes later, Jaсkson parked his car near the air conditioner. Martinez testified that Jackson was not one of the men who removed the air conditioner from the house. There was a television in the back of Jackson’s car. Jackson got out of his car. Shortly thereafter, the police arrived and talked to him. Jackson was later indicted for the offense of burglary of a building.
Jenny Webb, who was leasing the house, identified both the air conditioner and the twenty-five-inch Sears television, which had a dent in the top, as her рroperty. Webb testified that the television was in the den and that someone would have had to have entered the house in order to get the television outside. Webb testified that she had left the back door of the house closed and locked, but after thе offense, it was open and the sidings and rail were broken off. There is a fence around the back of the house.
At trial, Jackson claimed the television belonged to him. He said he was driving to work through Webb’s neighborhood, where he used to live, on his way back frоm a pawn shop. The pawn shop is located at Interstate 35 and Mannington, and the probation office, where Jackson works, is located on Second Avenue. At trial, Jackson claimed he had been unable to pawn his television becausе it was ten years old and had a dent in the top. He stopped to look at the air conditioner because he believed it had been abandoned. Jackson denied entering Webb’s house and intending to commit or committing theft. Jackson’s girlfriend and son both testified that Jackson owned a television with a dent in the top.
Dallas Police Officer William Langston testified that he was familiar with the locations of the pawn shop where Jackson claimed to have been and of Jackson’s work. Langston testified that 439 Elliston was not on the route from the pawn shop to the probation office. Jackson would have been headed in the wrong direction because the house is west of the pawn shop, and the probation office is east of the pawn shop.
Thе trial court convicted Jackson of the lesser included offense of criminal trespass, a class B misdemeanor. The court assessed punishment at six months confinement in the county jail, probated for one year, and a $400 fine.
LEGAL SUFFICIENCY
In his first, third, and fifth points of error, Jаckson contends the evidence is legally insufficient to support the criminal trespass conviction. We assess legal sufficiency under the well-known standard of
Jackson v. Virginia,
A person can commit the offense of criminal trespass either on the property of another person or in the building of another person.
See
Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 30.05(a)(1) (Vernon 1994). Because
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Jackson was charged with the offense of burglary of a building, the trial сourt could not have convicted Jackson of criminal trespass of property because that offense is not included within the proof of burglary of a building.
See Johnson v. State,
Entry can be proven by circumstantial evidence. Entry may be shown by an accused’s exclusive, unexplained possession of goods that were previously located in the building, together with independent evidence that the building was recently burglarized.
See Hardesty v. State,
While Jackson testified at trial that the television belonged to him and that he had tried to pawn it but could not, there is no evidence he offered this explanation to the police аt the time he was stopped. Jackson testified he told the police that he thought the air conditioner was abandoned property, but they did not discuss the television. Jackson testified that one of the officers told him at the station they had identified the tеlevision, but he did not testify that he told them it belonged to him. Becaüse Jackson did not offer his explanation that he owned the television at the time his possession of it was first challenged, and because the State proved the television belonged to Webb, we conclude the trial court reasonably inferred from Jackson’s possession of the television that he entered the house and removed it.
See Garza,
Jackson further asserts the evidence of entry is insufficient because the criminal trespass conviction is inconsistent with the trial court’s implied finding that he was not guilty of the greаter offense of burglary of a building. During argument, the State elected to proceed on the second paragraph of the burglary indictment, which alleged Jackson entered the house without Webb’s consent “and did then and there commit and attempt to сommit theft.” When a trial court finds an accused guilty of what it believes is a lesser included offense, the trial court acquits him of the primary offense.
Sample v. State,
In effect, Jackson is asking us to find the evidence legally insufficient because the trial court’s two verdicts, acquitting him of burglary of a building and convicting him of criminal trespass of a building, are inconsistent. Inconsistent verdicts, however, do not require reversal for legal insufficiency.
Dunn v. United States,
Most of the cases in this area involve inconsistent jury verdicts оn multi-count indictments, or separate, but factually related, crimes. While we can find no Texas or federal case applying the
Dunn
rule to a trial court’s verdict acquitting a defendant of a greater offense and, apparently, inconsistently convicting him of a lesser included offense, we find the reasoning of
Dunn
and its progeny equally applicable. In
Harris v. Rivera,
In his first point of error, Jackson contends the evidence is legally insufficient to prove his guilt as a party because the evidence did not connect him to the two men who removed the air conditioner from the house. We have already determined the evidence is legally sufficient to support Jackson’s conviction of criminal trespass as a principal, so we overrule his first point of error.
In his fifth point of error, Jackson contends thе evidence is legally insufficient to prove he had notice that entry into the house was forbidden. The criminal trespass statute, however, defines notice as “fencing or other enclosure obviously designed to exclude intruders or to contain livestoсk.” Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 30.05(b)(2)(B) (Vernon Supp.1999). Both Webb and Martinez testified there was a fence around the back area of the house. Further, the house itself inherently gave sufficient notice because it was an enclosure obviously designed to exclude intruders.
See Moreno v. State,
FACTUAL SUFFICIENCY
In his second, fourth, and sixth points of error, Jackson contends the evidence is factually insufficient to support his criminal trespass conviction. In assessing factual sufficiency, we view all the evidence withоut the prism of “in the light most favorable to the prosecution.”
Clewis v. State,
Jackson claims the evidence is factually insufficient in the same respects he claims it is legally insufficient: entry, his status as a party, and notice. Jackson asserts the evidence is factually insufficient to prove he entered the house because his testimony that the television belonged to him and that he was looking at the air conditioner because he believed it to be abandoned contradicted the testimony of the State’s witnesses. We must defer to the trial court’s resolution of the conflicts in the testimony.
See Scott v. State,
Jackson also claims the evidence is factually insufficient to prove he acted as a party and that he had notice. As we previously stated, the evidence is sufficient to support Jackson’s conviction as a principal, and the State did not rely on the law of parties. The fence, and the house itself, satisfied the statutory notice requirement. We overrule Jackson’s second, fourth, and sixth points of error.
We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
