Cristina Belen Gutierrez v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 16, 2024
Docket03-23-00450-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Cristina Belen Gutierrez v. the State of Texas (Cristina Belen Gutierrez 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.

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Cristina Belen Gutierrez v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-23-00450-CR

Cristina Belen Gutierrez, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM THE COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 9 OF TRAVIS COUNTY NO. C-1-CR-18-200719, THE HONORABLE KIM WILLIAMS, JUDGE PRESIDING

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Following the denial of her motion to suppress evidence and motions to dismiss

for failure to disclose evidence, appellant Cristina Belen Gutierrez pleaded no contest to the

misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated and was sentenced to three days’ confinement

in the Travis County Jail. In two points of error on appeal, Gutierrez asserts that the trial court

abused its discretion by (1) denying her motion to suppress and motions to dismiss and

(2) considering the arresting officer’s probable-cause affidavit in its denial of Gutierrez’s motion

to suppress. We will affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

At the hearing on Gutierrez’s motions to suppress and dismiss, the trial court

heard evidence that on January 16, 2018, Gutierrez was involved in a single-vehicle accident on

Southwest Parkway in Austin. Police officers and firefighters responded to the scene of the crash, including Officers Jason Pauls and Michael Batham of the Austin Police Department and

Captain Scott Barfield of the Oak Hill Fire Department.

Officer Pauls, who led the investigation and arrested Gutierrez, was unavailable to

testify at the hearing. However, Pauls was wearing a body camera when he arrived at the scene,

and although the view from his camera was obstructed by a jacket that Pauls was wearing at the

time, the camera recorded Barfield telling Pauls that a witness to the crash had spoken to

Gutierrez and that Gutierrez had admitted to this witness that “she had two drinks.” Barfield also

told Pauls, “I don’t smell anything, I don’t see nothing . . . I’m not asking her anything, she

doesn’t appear to be [inaudible] . . . she’s not acting like she’s had any drinks or anything . . . .”

A copy of the recording of Barfield’s conversation with Pauls was admitted into evidence at the

hearing, and Barfield testified that he recognized his voice in the recording. However, Barfield

also testified that he did not recall any aspects of the investigation, including making the

statements in the recording.

Officer Batham assisted Pauls in the investigation. Batham testified that when he

arrived at the scene, he “walked up to the actual vehicle that was involved in a collision,”

observed Officer Pauls and others who were already near the vehicle, and “saw a female,” later

identified as Gutierrez, “get out of the vehicle.” As Batham watched Gutierrez exit the vehicle,

he noticed that “she seemed to be disheveled.” He recounted, “[S]he kind of leaned against the

car, her purse kind of fell from her hand. She seemed disheveled, uncoordinated, as I had seen

other people act in the past that had been intoxicated.” Batham also testified that Gutierrez

“bumped” or “almost bumped” into him as she was walking past him toward Officer Pauls’s

vehicle and that she momentarily stopped at the witness’s car door “for an unknown reason,”

which Batham described as “another confusing moment” in his interaction with Gutierrez.

2 Pauls indicated to Batham “that he was going to be doing [field sobriety] testing

by gesturing with his hand,” which Batham understood “to mean that [Pauls] believed that this

person had been drinking.” 1 While Pauls drove Gutierrez to another location to conduct field

sobriety tests, Batham interviewed the witness at the scene, who identified herself as Daniela

Hilario. Batham testified that Hilario told him that as she was driving west on Southwest

Parkway, “she saw a vehicle backing out of the grassy median and then over through the lanes of

traffic to the right shoulder,” where the vehicle collided with a guardrail. Hilario also told

Batham that she had stopped her vehicle and spoken to Gutierrez, who told her that “she was

okay but didn’t want police on-scene” and that “she had been drinking with some friends.”

Hilario confirmed that she had seen Gutierrez in the driver’s seat of the vehicle.

After speaking with Hilario, Batham “did [his] administrative work as far as

removing the vehicle from the roadway and releasing fire [personnel] from the scene.” After

that, Batham returned to his vehicle and “drove over to where Officer Pauls was testing”

Gutierrez to provide support. Once there, Batham “observe[d] something that was very

confusing . . . at the end of [Pauls’s] interaction with [Gutierrez].” Specifically, Gutierrez

“began walking kind of in, like, a side-to-side manner, kind of—not staggering, but it was an

unusual walk.” Batham testified, “And she walked toward me, and I didn’t really understand

what part of the sobriety test she was doing. I thought she was just walking away and I kind of

directed her to go back towards Officer Pauls.” He added, “She was walking in a manner that

was not—it didn’t seem like a normal gait. It seemed like she was staggering to some extent;

1 Later in his testimony, Batham agreed with defense counsel’s characterization of this hand gesture as “the thumb sticking out, the pinky sticking out, and the other three fingers in, waving it up and down,” which Batham testified “meant that [Pauls] believed she may have been drinking and he was gonna go test her.” 3 kind of, like, confused and kind of disoriented, generally.” Batham also testified that “it seemed

like it took her a little bit to register that she didn’t need to be in my area and [she] needed to

kind of walk away” in “the other direction.” Batham noticed that Gutierrez’s “speech seemed a

little slurred” when she spoke to him, but he did not notice an odor of alcohol on her breath,

which Batham attributed to the wind that day. However, Pauls told Batham that he had noticed

an odor of alcohol. When asked if there was anything else that made him think Gutierrez might

be intoxicated, Batham referenced Gutierrez’s “inability to understand kind of where she was,

her loss of balance, her lack of the ability to walk, like her staggering, her general sense of

confusion about the situation,” and her “getting out of the car in the manner that she did.”

Batham’s body camera recorded his portion of the investigation, and a copy of the

recording was admitted into evidence at the hearing. In the recording, Gutierrez can be seen

getting out of her vehicle and looking somewhat unsteady, bumping or almost bumping into

Batham as she walks past him, losing her balance multiple times during the portion of the field

sobriety tests that Batham observed, and being unable to walk in a straight line as she walks

toward Batham during the field sobriety tests, turns around, and walks back toward Pauls. When

asked if he noticed anything new while watching the video, Batham testified,

[A]s she was walking toward me, it’s—her gait is unusual. Her gait is unusual and it seems like she’s stepping—her steps are short. She doesn’t know exactly the reason why she was heading toward me at all. She stops, it seems like she’s very confused as to why she’s there.

....

I don’t know the decision that Officer Pauls had made at that point. I don’t know exactly what point in the SFST’s he was in other than the walk and turn is what I believe she was attempting to do as she walked toward me. But I, upon watching

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