Avila v. State

954 S.W.2d 830, 1997 WL 539388
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 12, 1997
Docket08-95-00289-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 954 S.W.2d 830 (Avila v. State) 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
Avila v. State, 954 S.W.2d 830, 1997 WL 539388 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

*832 OPINION

McCLURE, Justice.

This is an appeal from a conviction for the offense of murder. A jury found Appellant guilty in the slaying of his wife, sentenced him to 61 years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, and assessed a fine of $10,000.

SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Appellant and his wife, Jacqueline, lived with their young daughter, Appellant’s parents, and Appellant’s sister. The testimony of Appellant and his father, Juan Avila, differed considerably concerning the events leading up to the murder. Both testified that Appellant and Jacqueline had a number of disagreements, some of which stemmed from changes that had occurred as a result of Jacqueline becoming a policewoman. Appellant is a deputy reserve sheriff. He and Jacqueline had each taken the examination to enter the El Paso Police Academy, but only Jacqueline had passed the test. Jacqueline graduated from the Academy some three or four months before her death. Appellant testified that he had encouraged his wife to become a police officer, but that after she joined the force, she became aloof and never spent any time at home. He asked her to leave the department in order to save their marriage, but she told him she would rather leave him and their daughter. By contrast, Juan stated that Appellant was jealous of his wife’s success and this jealousy motivated his desire for Jacqueline to quit her job. He also testified that his son was hot-tempered and became violent when angered. Jacqueline was not a violent person by nature, and Appellant was the more aggressive of the two.

Appellant and his father also offered different versions of the events on the night of the murder. Juan testified that his son came home around 10:30 p.m.; Jacqueline came in between 11:30 p.m. and midnight. Juan testified that his wife woke him between midnight and 1 a.m., saying that she heard Appellant and Jacqueline arguing. Juan thought he heard Appellant strike his wife, and he went to their bedroom. He found Appellant and Jacqueline arguing about her leaving the police department. He heard Jacqueline tell Appellant that she was tired of his abuse and that she was going to leave him. Appellant threatened her at that point, although the specifics of the threat are not clear from the record. Juan watched as Jacqueline moved to Jennifer’s bedroom 1 , and he noticed that she was not carrying anything with her. Appellant stayed in the couple’s bedroom with their daughter. Juan remarked that both Appellant and Jacqueline kept their duty guns in gun cases in their bedroom closet, and he believed that the guns stayed in the closet after Jacqueline went to Jennifer’s room.

Around thirty minutes later, Juan heard another argument between Appellant and Jacqueline, then gunshots, this time from Jennifer’s bedroom. Juan forced open the door and saw Appellant standing next to the bed with a dark-colored pistol in his hand; Jacqueline was lying quite still on the bed. Juan testified that when he first came upon the scene, Appellant was not injured in any way. Juan stepped out of the room and into the hallway because Appellant still had the gun in his hand and Juan was afraid of him. A few minutes later, he heard more shots. When he went back inside, he found that Jacqueline was still not moving, but this time Appellant had been shot. Juan told his son to put the gun down; Appellant complied by putting the gun on the dresser. Juan identified a black-colored pistol as the one Appellant held in his hand; he did not see a silver-colored gun. Juan told his wife to call 911.

Appellant testified that on the night of the shooting, his wife had come home late from work in a bad mood. She had snapped at Appellant for not eating the food she had brought home, said she wanted a divorce, and said that a silent message on the telephone answering machine must have been a woman with whom Appellant was having an affair. After an argument centering around these comments, Jacqueline had violently refused his sexual overtures and had moved to Jennifer’s bedroom to sleep alone. Appellant put his daughter to bed, then went to the *833 other bedroom. Jacqueline told Mm that she was going to leave him because of his infidelity. He responded that she was probably the one having the affair, that he would file for divorce, and that he would take their daughter away from her. As soon as he said that, Jacqueline tried to kick him, and he saw a gun fall on the floor. He then saw that Jacqueline was holding her gun in her right hand and pointing it in his direction; Appellant grabbed the gun on the floor and began shooting. When he saw what he had done, he turned Ms gun on himself and fired, then hugged his wife and kissed her. Appellant testified that Ms actions on the Mght he killed Ms wife represented self-defense.

The 911 operator received the call at approximately 2:49 a.m. Officer Rogelio Flores responded to the imtial call. Appellant told him that he and Ms wife had “shot each other.” Jacqueline’s weapon was found on top of her right hand with blood on it. Barbara Elizalde, a serologist from the Department of Public Safety laboratory, testified that blood taken from the left arm and wrist of the deceased matched that of Appellant.

Officer Jimmy Aguirre also responded to the imtial call. He testified that Jacqueline had been dead long before the police arrived, and that a silver Smith & Wesson stainless steel 9 mm pistol was restmg on top of her left hand, rather than her right hand, as Officer Flores had testified. Officer Aguirre found the placement of the silver pistol to be very awkward.

Identification and Records Section Police Officer McGill performed an atomic absorption test on the hands of the deceased, and one of her hands revealed a positive test. These test results could mean either that (1) she fired a weapon; (2) she was in close proximity to a discharged weapon; or (3) that a weapon that had been discharged had touched her, depositing gunshot residue. Six brass cartridges from Appellant’s gun and one silver casmg from the gun allegedly fired by Jacqueline were recovered at the scene. Jacqueline’s wounds were inflicted from up to seven feet away. Firearms examiners could not determine that the silver shell came from her gun.

Appellant’s sole wound was found in his back. The one bullet hole in Ms t-shirt showed gunpowder residue indicating that the muzzle of the weapon was in contact with the t-shirt at the time the wound was inflicts ed.

Appellant raises five points of error on appeal. First, he argues that the trial court erred by excluding the expert testimony of Luiz Natalicio, Ph.D., which suggested that Appellant fired the pistol at Ms wife involuntarily, as a reflex action. In his next four points, he contends that the trial court committed charge error by refusing to submit the lesser-included offenses of involuntary manslaughter and erimmally negligent homicide in violation of both the federal and state constitutions. We address each in turn.

INAPPLICABILITY OF DeGARMO DOCTRINE

The State imtially raises a general claim that all of Appellant’s pomts of error are waived because of Ms alleged confession during the pumshment phase of trial. The State cites the emboldened passage in the following colloquy to support its argument that the DeGarmo

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Bluebook (online)
954 S.W.2d 830, 1997 WL 539388, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/avila-v-state-texapp-1997.