Bryant Charles Pierce v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 5, 2024
Docket13-23-00387-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bryant Charles Pierce v. the State of Texas (Bryant Charles Pierce 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
Bryant Charles Pierce v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-23-00387-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

BRYANT CHARLES PIERCE, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

ON APPEAL FROM THE 117TH DISTRICT COURT OF NUECES COUNTY, TEXAS

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Benavides and Silva Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

After a jury trial, appellant Bryant Charles Pierce was convicted of assault causing

bodily injury, a Class A misdemeanor, and was sentenced to one year in the Nueces

County Jail. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 22.01(a)(1), (b). On appeal, Pierce argues:

(1) the jury’s rejection of his deadly force in self-defense and defense of third persons

theories was supported by insufficient evidence; and (2) the trial court erred by failing to include a charge instruction regarding deadly force in the defense of property. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Pierce was charged with committing aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, a

second-degree felony, against 62-year-old Arnold Montoya on or about May 15, 2021.

See id. § 22.02(a)(2).

At trial, Montoya testified that Sandra Calvo is his ex-girlfriend and ex-fiancée. He

said they were together for six years until he “had to leave because [he] didn’t care for

her parenting skills that she had with her son.” After they broke up, Calvo started dating

Pierce. Montoya testified without objection that, based on what Calvo said about Pierce,

he believed Pierce to be “a dangerous man” who was “weird and crazy” and who “carried

weapons.” According to Montoya, Calvo “said that . . . she didn’t know how to end it and

she was afraid of him.”

Montoya explained that, in early May of 2021, after the two had already split up,

Calvo stopped by the auto parts shop which Montoya owns and she explained that she

was going to Houston with her son. However, when Calvo departed, Montoya noticed that

she did not go in the direction of the expressway towards Houston. Montoya found this

unusual, so he followed her in his car. At some point, Calvo pulled off into a drug store

parking lot and Montoya could see her talking on the phone; she then left the parking lot

and continued in the same direction she had been going before. Montoya testified: “And

then it just hit me, well, hell, that’s probably where that guy lives, you know, where Mr.

Whoever [lives]. I didn’t know who he was at the time . . . . He probably lives in that area.”

On May 15, 2021, Montoya woke up and “had this strange feeling that something

was wrong with [Calvo],” so he drove by her house, and he noticed that her Jeep was not

2 there. He then drove to the area of the drug store where Calvo had stopped the previous

week. He proceeded down an adjacent street and saw Calvo’s Jeep parked in front of a

house. Montoya said he got out of his car and took a picture of another vehicle parked on

the premises “to get the license plate number.” Montoya noticed there was no number on

the house, so he looked at the neighboring houses to figure out the address.

Montoya said: “I went up to the door and I rang it [sic] three times, one, two, three.”1

No one answered, so Montoya got in his car and left. He testified: “And I just figured, hell,

you know, at least I know where—if something happens to [Calvo], I know what I could

tell the police, you know, that [is] where he lives or whatever. So, I pretty much had done

my whole mission.” But Montoya’s mission was not yet accomplished:

After I found out who he was exactly and through the computer[ 2] when I got to the shop, I was mad a little bit. And I texted [Calvo] and I said, well, I know—I know where you’re at now, you know. And she says where? You know, she was trying to pretend like she wasn’t there. I said, [Calvo], I know where your Jeep is, you can’t lie. . . .

I asked [sic] her in a text, tell him to expect to see me.[ 3] . . . And then—and then she said, well, come back, he wants to see you.

Montoya returned to Pierce’s house and rang the doorbell. He said he “barely got to finish

the first ring” when Pierce opened the door and began hitting him with a wooden stick.

Montoya said Pierce hit him around twenty times—on his side, on his head, and on his

back. Pierce then sprayed his front porch with water to remove the blood. Photos of

1 A photo of Pierce’s house showed that a large red “NO TRESPASSING” sign was posted

prominently above the front porch. Montoya denied seeing the sign. 2 Montoya later explained: “I have a police friend, a retired police friend, and his wife did that for

me. I gave the name and she sent back a picture of him on Facebook. It was an old picture, but it was still him.” 3 When asked what he meant by this remark, Montoya stated: “Well, because I wanted to go talk

to him. I wanted to find out if she—if he was this crazy guy that she was talking about or if she was making it up.”

3 Montoya, bloodied and with multiple bruises around his body, were taken by police at the

scene and entered into evidence.

Pierce testified that he is 56 years old and has lived on Tyler Avenue in Corpus

Christi for twenty-three years. He admitted hitting Montoya with a stick “three or four

times” on the morning of May 15, 2021; however, he said it was “[i]n self-defense.” Pierce

stated that Montoya was on his front porch and “trying to get in” his house by “[r]eaching

up and grabbing the handle and pulling on the door.” According to Pierce, Montoya was

“irate” and asked to speak to Calvo, and Calvo was “terrified.” Pierce testified:

I said, “Get off my property.” And he went, he made a movement like he was going to go around me and go into the house, and that’s when I looked down and saw the stick, and picked the stick up. And I told him, “Get off my property, I don’t want to hear what you want to say. Get off my property.”

And he reached around to grab a weapon, he reached behind his back with his left hand,[ 4] and that’s when I hit him.

Pierce acknowledged that he later sprayed water on the porch to remove Montoya’s blood

“so it wouldn’t stain the wood.” He agreed with defense counsel that he felt he, Calvo,

and his property were “in danger” that day. He further agreed that he owned a gun but

chose not to brandish or use it on that occasion.

The jury was instructed on the justifications of (1) deadly force in self-defense and

(2) deadly force in defense of a third person. See id. §§ 9.32, 9.33. It found Pierce guilty

of the lesser-included offense of assault causing bodily injury, see id. § 22.01(a)(1), and

this appeal followed.

II. EVIDENTIARY SUFFICIENCY

Pierce argues by his first issue that the trial evidence was insufficient to support

4 On cross-examination, Pierce conceded that he did not actually see Montoya with a weapon.

4 the jury’s implicit rejection of his defensive theories.

A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law

To satisfy constitutional due process requirements, a criminal conviction must be

supported by sufficient evidence. Laster v. State, 275 S.W.3d 512, 517 (Tex. Crim. App.

2009). “Evidence is sufficient to support a criminal conviction if a rational jury could find

each essential element of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” Stahmann v. State,

602 S.W.3d 573, 577 (Tex. Crim. App. 2020) (citing Jackson v.

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Related

Jackson v. Virginia
443 U.S. 307 (Supreme Court, 1979)
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