Adan Chavez v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 15, 2023
Docket02-23-00046-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Adan Chavez v. the State of Texas (Adan Chavez v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adan Chavez v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________ No. 02-23-00046-CR ___________________________

ADAN CHAVEZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 89th District Court Wichita County, Texas Trial Court No. DC89-CR2023-0003

Before Sudderth, C.J.; Kerr and Walker, JJ. Opinion by Chief Justice Sudderth OPINION

In this habeas case, Appellant Adan Chavez challenges the trial court’s refusal

to lower his $1 million bail for his pending murder charge. 1 The State argues that

Chavez’s excessive-bail challenge is not cognizable on pretrial habeas because federal

authorities have issued a warrant for his arrest, so even if Chavez posts bail for his

murder charge, he will be transferred to federal custody rather than immediately

released. And regardless, the State contends, the $1 million bail is justified given the

gravity of Chavez’s offense, the threat he poses to the community, his criminal

history, his prior failures to appear, and his out-of-town ties.

We disagree with the State on both fronts. First, Chavez’s federal warrant does

not undermine the cognizability of his excessive-bail challenge because, whether or

not another jurisdiction seeks to detain him, habeas relief could result in his

immediate release from Wichita County’s unlawful confinement or restraint. And

second, although the statutory bail considerations support a reasonably high bail in

this case, the record before us does not contain sufficient evidence to demonstrate

that a bail of $1 million is necessary to satisfy the government’s legitimate interests.

Accordingly, we will reverse.

The State contends that Chavez is also charged with deadly conduct, but the 1

case before us involves the bail set on only the murder charge.

2 I. Background

The details of Chavez’s alleged offense are confined to two probable-cause

affidavits that accompanied his arrest warrants.2 According to those affidavits,

Chavez shot a man—Jorge Gonzalez—in front of a Dollar Saver store in the last of a

series of confrontations between Chavez and Gonzalez that day.

In the morning, Chavez had been involved in a fight with Gonzalez. One of

the two probable-cause affidavits indicated that the fight involved two of Gonzalez’s

brothers as well, and based on the address listed for the fight, it appears to have taken

place down the street from the Gonzalezes’ home. When the police talked to the

Gonzalez brothers later that morning, they were told that Chavez had warned that he

would come back with a gun. One of the brothers also showed the officers text

messages that had allegedly come from Chavez threatening harm.3 And, a few hours

2 The State relied on these affidavits to recite the details of Chavez’s alleged offense for purposes of the habeas proceeding below, so we are similarly limited. See Ex parte Anunobi, 278 S.W.3d 425, 426 n.1 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2008, no pet.) (“Our consideration of this appeal is limited to the record before us.”); Ex Parte Johnson, No. 01-91-00864-CR, 1991 WL 273264, at *1 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] Dec. 19, 1991, no writ) (not designated for publication) (“Our review on appeal is limited to the record properly before us, and assertions in the brief that are unsupported by the record will not be accepted as fact.”). 3 The text messages are not in the record so it is unclear what they said, how many there were, or when they were received. One of the two probable-cause affidavits summarized the content of the text messages as “making threats to harm the Gonzalez brothers.”

3 after talking with the police, the Gonzalez brothers returned home to find that their

residence had been shot at multiple times.

This led up to the final confrontation of the day at a nearby Dollar Saver store

where Chavez and Gonzalez first exchanged words in the parking lot. When Chavez

proceeded to get out of the truck he was in, he pulled a rifle out of a cooler in the

truck’s bed, and Gonzalez told him to put down the gun and fight him. Instead,

Chavez pulled the trigger and shot Gonzalez multiple times. Then Chavez climbed

back into the truck and fled. Gonzalez died at the scene.

The police subsequently received a tip regarding Chavez’s location, and when

they executed a search warrant, they found a rifle that a crime lab traced back to the

murder. 4 The rifle was also traced to the shooting at the Gonzalezes’ home earlier in

the day. Based on this evidence, the police obtained warrants to arrest Chavez for

murder and for deadly conduct.

Chavez was subsequently indicted for murder, and his bail was set at $1 million.

He filed a petition for writ of habeas corpus arguing that his bail was excessive. See

Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. arts. 11.01, .23.

In the brief habeas hearing that followed, only one witness testified: Chavez’s

mother. A primary focus of her testimony was Chavez’s inability to afford the

4 One of the probable-cause affidavits listed the address where law enforcement found the murder weapon, but it was not Chavez’s home address, and the affidavit did not clarify how Chavez was connected to the address.

4 $1 million bail. She explained that Chavez’s girlfriend 5—who was the mother of his

infant daughter and with whom he lived—had spoken to a bondsman, and the

bondsman required ten percent of the bail amount. Chavez’s mother stated that

neither she nor Chavez’s girlfriend could afford to pay ten percent of $1 million, i.e.,

$100,000. The family had “talked about pitching in, everybody, [Chavez’s] sisters and

[mother] . . . and his baby mother as well,” and the most they could afford to pay was

$8,000—ten percent of an $80,000 bail.6 When asked about Chavez’s possessions, his

mother stated that Chavez did not own a home and did not own a vehicle.

His mother also described his family ties to Wichita County—she, his five

sisters, three children, and long-term girlfriend all lived there. She confirmed that if

Chavez were released from all government custody, he would live at home with his

girlfriend and their daughter. Chavez was 24 years old at the time of the habeas

hearing, and he had worked for a company in the roofing industry since he was a

5 Although Chavez’s mother testified that the woman he lived with was not his wife, Chavez’s unsworn declarations of his indigency indicated that he lived with his “wife.” 6 Chavez filed two separate unsworn declarations of his indigency in very different handwriting and with very different signatures. One of the declarations indicated that he did not have a job and that the income earned by all of the adults in his household was “NA.” The other declaration stated that he worked as a roofer, that he earned about $1,000 per week, and that the adults in his household earned a total of $6,000 per month. The State did not offer either document into evidence at the habeas hearing, nor does it mention the documents on appeal. Regardless, the record indicates that Chavez was declared indigent and appointed counsel.

5 teenager. Although Chavez’s mother had not spoken to his boss, she predicted that

he would be able to resume work upon his release.

She also assured the court that Chavez would submit to bail conditions and

that she and Chavez’s girlfriend would report any violations to the court. Although

Chavez did not have a car, his mother stated that she, Chavez’s girlfriend, and his five

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