Armando O'Caña v. Norberto 'Beto' Salinas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 29, 2019
Docket13-18-00563-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Armando O'Caña v. Norberto 'Beto' Salinas (Armando O'Caña v. Norberto 'Beto' Salinas) 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
Armando O'Caña v. Norberto 'Beto' Salinas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-18-00563-CV

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

ARMANDO O’CAÑA, Appellant,

v.

NORBERTO ‘BETO’ SALINAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 93rd District Court of Hidalgo County, Texas.

DISSENTING MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Hinojosa Dissenting Memorandum Opinion by Justice Hinojosa

The majority sustains two issues asserted by Dr. Armando O’Caña, the contestee

below and appellant before us. It sustains O’Caña’s fifth issue, which contends that the

trial court abused its discretion in finding that O’Caña spoliated evidence and making a

spoliation inference, and his first issue, which contends that Norberto ‘Beto’ Salinas, the

contestant below and appellee before us, “failed to prove” that the number of illegal votes was equal or greater than the number of necessary votes to change the election outcome.

Fundamentally, the majority errs in sustaining O’Caña’s legal sufficiency challenge

by, among other things, reading the “clear and convincing” burden of proof Salinas bore

at trial to mean that Salinas was obligated to prove for whom each illegal vote was cast.

This is a review we would employ had the trial court rendered a judgment declaring

Salinas the winner. Instead, the trial court found that it could not determine the true

outcome of the election and ordered a new trial. I believe Salinas presented legally

sufficient evidence under a clear and convincing standard of this applicable finding.

Therefore, I respectfully dissent.

I. BACKGROUND

Salinas, the incumbent mayor, and O’Caña, a city councilmember, had twice

competed against each other in mayoral elections before the 2018 mayoral election. The

results of the May 5, 2018 general election provided:

Early In- Mail-In Election Total Person Vote Ballot Day

Salinas 2,138 234 713 3,085

O’Caña 1,666 269 636 2,571

Jamie Gutierrez 308 26 185 519

This tally necessitated a runoff between Salinas and O’Caña. The results of the June 9,

2018 runoff election provided:

2 Early In- Mail-In Election Total Person Vote Ballot Day

Salinas 2,197 272 849 3,318

O’Caña 2,189 393 893 3,475

On July 18, 2018, Salinas filed his original petition for election contest. A bench

trial began on September 24, 2018. At trial, Salinas presented direct, circumstantial, and

expert evidence in support of his allegations that O’Caña’s 158 vote margin 1 resulted

from O’Caña’s campaign bribing voters and harvesting mail-in ballots.

A. Bribing Voters

Samuel “Benji” Tijerina manages Top Gun Sprinters, a business that rents luxury

Mercedes Benz Sprinter vans for special occasions. Tijerina testified that, around the

time of the runoff election, Veronica O’Caña, O’Caña’s niece and proprietor of recently

formed VO Consulting, rented a van from Top Gun Sprinters for the sole purpose of

shuttling voters to the polls. The van’s windows had “limo tint,” which prevented

individuals outside from seeing inside unless their face was pressed against a window.

Veronica paid Tijerina the rental fee for the Sprinter van in cash during a brief encounter

in a parking lot.

Samuel James Deckard, one of the voters ferried in a Sprinter van, testified about

his encounters with O’Caña’s campaign. Deckard’s trial testimony mirrored that of a pre-

trial affidavit he executed. In Deckard’s affidavit, which was admitted at trial, he avers:

On 4/28/18 Benji Tijerina contacted me on Facebook Messenger. He asked me ‘Yo bro does any of your family wanna [sic] vote I will pay tem

1 The parties concede and the majority acknowledges that Salinas received one improper vote, moving O’Caña’s margin of victory from 157 to 158. 3 [sic] 10 bucks free transportation less then 3 mins’. I told him I would vote.

On 5/1/18, Benji messaged me on Facebook Messenger with ‘U ready to vote bro.’ I said I was at city hall. He called me on Facebook Messenger and told me to meet them at Whataburger on Old 83 in Mission, Texas. I met them there. I left my car at Whataburger and got into their white Mercedes van. In the van, were people working the O’Cana campaign. These people were Benji Tijerina, Jesus Rodriguez (the driver), the brother to Jesus Rodriguez (I don’t know his name but was shown a picture of Charlie Rodriguez and identified him as the brother), and an older gentleman (I don’t know his name either but was shown a picture and identified him as Jesse Lopez). After they picked me up, they went and picked up a few more people . . . . They then drove us to Mission City Hall. The van stopped at the O’Cana campsite and Charlie Rodriguez and Jesus Lopez got out of the van. Cindy Pacheco then entered the van. I don’t know her by name, but was shown a picture of her and identified her. She coached us and told us that we needed to say that we needed assistance to vote and that we wanted Cindy to assist us. We then voted from inside the van and Cindy Pacheco assisted us in voting. Once we finished voting, Cindy then told the driver, Jesus Rodriguez, ‘Yes, they voted. You can pay them.’ They then dropped me off at my dad’s house . . . , the driver Jesus Rodriguez paid me $10.

On 6/1/18, Jesus Rodriguez contacted me on Facebook Messenger stating ‘hey it’s benji’s cousin I was wondering if you an[d] your wife wanted to come vote again.’ I didn’t respond. He then showed up to my house in the van. He got off the van and came to my door and told me that this time they were paying $20 a vote and if I got 3 more votes they would pay me $60 to $80 more plus the $20 for each voter. Jesus Rodrigez then coached me to ask for assistance and ask for Lupita [O’Caña]. I didn’t remember Lupita’s name, but when shown a picture I was able to identify her. After we voted, they brought food to the [sic] told us if we know anyone else that wants to vote there is plenty of food. I asked them to take me to the store and they said they could not because it would have looked suspicious. They also told us to turn off our phones as soon as we got in the van. They then dropped me off at my dad’s house . . . . Jesus Rodriguez then gave the money to Charlie Rodriguez and then Charlie Rodriguez gave the money $20 to me.

Dolores Gomez, Pamela Durr, and Arnulfo Navarro also testified that they were

paid by O’Caña’s campaign to vote for him. Durr and Gomez recalled that, like Deckard,

4 they were ferried to the polls in a van, told to ask the poll workers for assistance, voted

with assistance of an O’Caña’s campaign worker in the privacy of the van, and were paid

for their vote. Durr identified Guadalupe “Lupita” O’Caña as the O’Caña campaign

worker who instructed her and two other voters in the van to request her assistance with

voting. After voting, Durr was paid $20. Gomez testified that Gloria Trevino, an O’Caña

campaign worker, repeatedly called her and then showed up at Gomez’s house

unannounced. Trevino transported Gomez to the polls. Gomez further testified that

Trevino paid her, her husband, her son, and her daughter-in-law $10 each to vote for

O’Caña. Navarro recalled that he and two of his brothers—Jaime and Ezequiel—were

each paid $20 for their vote by the O’Caña campaign.

B. Mail-In Ballot Harvesting

Numerous witnesses, 2 including Emeterio Gutierrez, testified as to illegal mail-in

ballot harvesting by the O’Caña campaign. Gutierrez, an eighty-two year-old Mission

resident, resides at the Palms Plaza, an apartment complex for elderly individuals.

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