State v. Higginbotham
Decision Date | 16 May 2001 |
Docket Number | No. 00-KA-1782.,00-KA-1782. |
Citation | 790 So.2d 648 |
Parties | STATE of Louisiana v. James HIGGINBOTHAM. |
Court | Court of Appeal of Louisiana — District of US |
Juan C. Labadie, Gretna, LA, for defendant-appellant.
Paul D. Connick, Jr., District Attorney, Terry M. Boudreaux, George Wallace, Alison Wallis, Assistant District Attorneys, Twenty-Fourth Judicial District, Parish of Jefferson, State of Louisiana, Gretna, LA, for plaintiff-appellee. Court composed of Judges SUSAN M. CHEHARDY, PATRICK M. SCHOTT, Pro Tempore, and JAMES C. GULOTTA, Pro Tempore.
After a bench trial, defendant was convicted of placing threatening telephone calls (LSA-R.S.14:285) and stalking (LSA.R.S.14:40.2). On the stalking conviction, he was sentenced to one year in the parish prison with the second six months suspended with active probation, and on the telephone conviction, he was sentenced to six months in the parish prison to run concurrently with the other sentence. He has appealed attacking the credibility of the prosecution witnesses and arguing insufficiency of the evidence to support the convictions. We note that the telephone conviction is not appealable since it is not triable by jury while the stalking conviction is. LSA-C.Cr.P. arts. 779, 912.1(B). However, since the two charges were separate counts in the same bill of information and they were tried together as a single case, both convictions are properly before this Court.
The victim, Joy Spencer, testified as follows: For four years before the incidents that led to defendant's arrest and convictions, he lived with her and her daughter, Melva Spencer, and was her daughter's boyfriend. They started having trouble with defendant in September 1998 when he became violent and they called the police. Between April 1999 and May 1999, immediately after he moved out of the residence, he called her several times every day, day and night, cursing her when she answered the telephone. The phone calls were so frequent that she sometimes took the handset off the receiver so his calls would not go through to her. During one phone call, he specifically threatened to kill her, and during another, he threatened to "f* * * [her] in the rectum `till [she] died.'"
Joy Spencer further testified that defendant appeared near her home several times, and, on one such occasion, he stood on the street corner near her home, staring at her, making an obscene gesture at her with his fingers or shaking his fist at her. On another occasion, he passed her house in his truck and shook his fist at her and made an obscene gesture at her with his finger.
She testified that she felt physically threatened by the defendant's phone calls and his appearances near her home and she experienced three panic attacks. She ultimately obtained a restraining order against the defendant, but he told her, "it didn't do any good ... and where he'd shove it!"
Called as a defense witness, Joy Spencer's daughter, Melva, admitted that her mother received threatening calls from the defendant and that defendant could be violent. She also admitted that she told police she feared for her own life, but she continued to see him after he moved out of her mother's home and even signed a lease for an apartment and lived with him there for several months.
By his first assignment of error, defendant argues that Joy Spencer's testimony was ambiguous and incredible. It is not the function of the court of appeal to evaluate the credibility of witnesses, but it is for the trial court to accept or reject, in whole or in part, the testimony of any witness. State v. Hopson, 98-943 (La.App. 5 Cir. 3/30/99), 735 So.2d 81, 85,writ denied,99-1315 (La.11/12/99), 749 So.2d 650. Similarly, by his second assignment, defendant argues that the trial court erred by accepting Melva Spencer's testimony because her credibility was destroyed when she was impeached several times during her testimony. She was a defense witness, and the record does not show that she was impeached. Furthermore, again, it is not the function of an appellate court to reassess the credibility of witnesses. These assignments are meritless.
By his third assignment, defendant argues the evidence was insufficient to convict him of stalking and placing harassing phone calls. In reviewing a claim for sufficiency of the evidence, this Court must determine whether, after viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the prosecution, a rational trier of fact could conclude the State proved the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt. Jackson v. Virginia, 443 U.S. 307, 99 S.Ct. 2781, 61 L.Ed.2d 560 (1979).
He also argues that the evidence of his standing near the victim's home and passing her home in his truck do not establish a following and that his alleged activities were constitutionally protected and, therefore, cannot be construed as harassing for purposes of the stalking statute.
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