Lead Opinion
OPINION
Opinion by:
A jury сonvicted appellant Gail Mayber-ry of several counts of child endangerment. In her sole point of error, Mayber-ry contends the evidence is insufficient to support her conviction. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Background
On December 21, 2008, Mayberry came home from work and found numerous children in her home. The children were out of school on Christmas break. The children included her fifteen-year-old son, her two other children, and several of their friends. According to certаin testimony, when Mayberry arrived, her fifteen-year-old son asked if he could have the car keys so he and some of the other children could “go driving around” in the family station wagon. Mayberry contends her son was driving only to take the children home. Despite the fact that her son was fifteen and unlicensed, Mayberry handed him the keys. Mayberry did not accompany the children.
Mayberry’s son drove the group around for a while, ultimately heading to a place known as the “third bridge,” a bridge over water where children would fish and swim. When they got to the bridge it was dark and Mayberry’s son turned the car lights off in an attempt to scare the other children. There is apparently a legend about a ghost woman or some other entity haunting the bridge. At least one of the girls was scared and wanted to go home. The group then returned to Mayberry’s house. When the group arrived back at the house, Mayberry’s son honked the horn and the only two children that stayed behind during the first “ride around,” decided to go along on the second trip-all of those along on the first trip stayed in the car. There was evidence that before they left, May-berry stepped outside and saw the children in the car. With the two additional passengers, there was insufficient space in the car seats for all of the children, requiring that at least some of them remain without a seatbelt. Including the fifteen-year-old driver, there were nine children in the car. One of the children testified that Mayber-ry told them some of them could sit in the
On this second trip, the group decided to go back to the third bridge. Again, the lights were turned off in an attempt to scare the younger children. As before, one of the children wanted to go home so they left and went back to Mayberry’s house. Two of the children got out of the car, but Mayberry’s son left a third time with six of the children still in the car. Their destination was once again the third bridge. This time, however, the evidence showed Mayberry’s son drove very fast toward the bridge, causing the car to become airborne. When the car landed, the driver lost control, crashed through a fence, and landed in an empty pond. As a result of the crash, some of the children were seriously injured and two of them died. It was ultimately determined that Mayberry’s son had been traveling over 100 miles per hour; he was the only child in the car wearing a seatbelt.
Mаyberry was indicted on seven counts of child endangerment. After a jury trial, she was found guilty and the trial court sentenced her to two years in a state jail facility, but suspended the sentenced and placed Mayberry on two years community supervision. She was also ordered to pay a $1,500.00 fíne and court costs. Mayberry then perfected this appeal.
Analysis
Standard of Review
We begin by noting that although Mayberry raises both legal and factual sufficiency challenges to the evidence, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has abolished factual sufficiency review. See Howard v. State,
In reviewing a claim that the evidence is legally insufficient, the relevant quеstion is whether, after viewing 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,
Application
Mayberry argues the State failed to produce sufficient evidence that she knew the danger to the children was “imminent” or that she acted “intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with criminal negligence.” A person commits the offense of endangering a child if she “intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with criminal negligencе, by act or omission, engages in conduct that places a child younger than 15 years in imminent danger of death, bodily injury, or physical, or mental impairment.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.041(c) (West 2011).
In support of her argument, Mayberry points out her son “did much driving under her tutelage.” She also allowed him to drive across the street to the grocery store, to basketball practice, to take friends home, “and many other places.” Mayberry also apparently allowed him, on previous occasions, to drive with other children in the car. She allowed him to drive the car to San Marcos with her supervision. Mayberry even allowed her son to drive at night. Mayberry contends that in all the times she allowed him to drive, with or without her, he never received a ticket, never damaged the car, and she never received any complaints about his driving. Accordingly, Mayberry asserts that her offense, at most, was allowing her son to drive without a license. Mayberry seems to contend that without evidence she knew her son would drive recklessly or negligently, she was not subject to a conviction for child endangerment. We disagree.
Thе evidence, when viewed in the light most favorable to the verdict, established that Mayberry allowed a fifteen-year-old, unlicensed driver to drive a station wagon, at night, without adult supervision. She allowed that fifteen-year-old, unlicensed driver to drive around, at night, unsupervised with first six, and then eight, children. Moreover, she allowed this knowing that not all of these children would be able to sit safely in the vehicle, requiring that at least some of them travel without seatbelts. There was evidence thаt on the second trip, she saw all of the children in the vehicle, saw they could not all sit safely on the vehicle seats given their numbers, and advised that some of them could sit in the open cargo compartment in the back. Mayberry allowed her son to leave her house and drive with these children as passengers not once, not twice, but three times. Clearly, Mayberry had no idea where her son was or where he was taking the children, as the officer testified she stated her son “should have been driving around town but he shouldn’t have been out there.” According to her own testimony, she did not know where all of her children were-in the house or with her fifteen-year-old son.
It is irrelevant that her son had no previous accidents. His previous driving experience is likewise irrelevant. At the moment Mayberry allowed an underage, unlicensed driver to operate the vehicle at night with more passengers than there were available seats, the danger tо the children was imminent. See Rodriguez,
Considering this evidence within the Jackson v. Virginia standard, we hold the jury could have found Mayberry intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with crimi
The dissent points out that “[t]he determination of whether a child is in imminent danger is always a fact-intensive exercise.” Dissenting opinion at 513. We wholly agree with this assertion. However, the dissеnt then ignores the applicable standard, which places fact finding within the province of the jury, allowing it to draw reasonable inferences from the basic facts and make an ultimate determination with regard to whether the danger to the children was imminent. See Jackson,
Conclusion
Based on the foregoing, we overrule Mayberry’s issue and affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Dissenting opinion by: STEVEN C. HILBIG, Justice.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
The majority concludes the evidence is legally sufficient to support. Gail Mayber-ry’s six convictions for endangering a child. I disagree.
Background
Mayberry was charged with seven counts of endangering a child under section 22.041(c) of thе Texas Penal Code.
Article 21.15 Texas Code of Criminal Procedure
I disagree with the majority’s decision because the evidence does not support a conviction for endangering a child under section 22.041(c) of the Texas Penal Code. Article 21.15 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides that whеnever the accused is charged with acting recklessly or with criminal negligence in the commission of the offense, the charging instrument “must allege, with reasonable certainty, the act or acts relied upon to constitute recklessness or criminal negligence.” Tex.Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 21.15 (West 2009); Mitchell v. State,
The majority relies on the following evidence to sustain the jury’s verdict: May-berry’s son was fifteen and was unlicensed, he drove without adult supervision, at night, with six or eight children without sufficient seatbelts for each child, Mayber-ry advised some of the children to sit in an area of the car that did not have any seatbelts, she allowed her sоn to leave the residence with child passengers three times, Mayberry had “no idea” where her son was driving, and Mayberry did not know the whereabouts of all her children that night. Majority opinion at 510. But the State chose to limit its allegations to only the first two facts to prove she committed the offense. Therefore, our analysis should properly rely only on those two facts to determine whether the children were in imminent danger when she requested, allowed, or failed to prevent her unlicensed son from operating the vehicle in which the children were passengers.
The parties appear to agree this case turns on whether the danger of death, bodily injury, or impairment was immi
The determination of whether a child is in imminent danger is always a fact-intensive exercise. However, my review of cases discussing the “immediacy” element reveals a consistent pattern. Where the danger is at hand, courts have affirmed the convictions. See Rodriguez v. State,
However, where the danger was a more remote possibility, courts have concluded the danger was not imminent. See Millslagle,
I believe the evidence demonstrates Mayberry did no more than to place the children in a potentially dangerous situation by engaging in the acts alleged by the State. As her son drove away, the danger to the children was not “ready to take place, near at hand, impending, hanging threateningly over one’s head, menacingly near.” Elder,
I do not reach this conclusion acting as a thirteenth juror as suggested by the majority or by abandoning the applicable standard of review.
Viewing the proper evidence in the light most favorable to the jury’s verdict, there is insufficient evidence upon which a rational jury could have found the danger was imminent. Accordingly, I would reverse the judgments of the trial court and render a judgment of acquittal.
Notes
. "A person commits an offense if he intentionally, knowingly, recklessly, or with criminal negligence, by act or omission, engages in conduct that places a child younger than 15 years in imminent danger of death, bodily injury, or physical or mental impairment.” Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.041(c) (West 2011).
. At trial, the State abandoned Count VII, which charged Mayberry with endangering her son Deon, and the jury returnеd guilty verdicts on the remaining counts.
. Simply because a jury has found the defendant guilty does not relieve an appellate court of its obligation, when the sufficiency of the evidence is raised as a point of error, to determine whether the evidence supports the jury’s verdict, even as to the issue of immediate harm. Elder, Millslagle, Williams, Medearis, Moody, Moreno, and Bordelon are all cases where the appellate court reversed the conviction after a jury trial, concluding the evidence was insufficient to support the jury's finding of imminent danger.
