CUEVAS, VICTOR HUGO v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2026
DocketPD-0144-25
StatusPublished

This text of CUEVAS, VICTOR HUGO v. the State of Texas (CUEVAS, VICTOR HUGO v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal 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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CUEVAS, VICTOR HUGO v. the State of Texas, (Tex. 2026).

Opinions

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS

NO. PD-0144-25

VICTOR HUGO CUEVAS, Appellant

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS FORT BEND COUNTY

PARKER, J., delivered the opinion of the Court in which RICHARDSON, NEWELL, WALKER, and MCCLURE, JJ., joined. MCCLURE, J., filed a concurring opinion in which WALKER, J., joined. KEEL, J., concurred. YEARY, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which FINLEY, J., joined and SCHENCK, P.J., joined as to part 6.

OPINION

Throughout the trial, this case included serious misstatements of law that CUEVAS — 2

were buttressed by the trial judge’s rulings. In voir dire, opening statements, and

closing arguments, the State took the position that Appellant could not assert self-

defense because he was engaged in the commission of a crime during the shooting

even though the law deprives a defendant of only a presumption of reasonableness

if he commits a crime at the time he uses force in defense of himself. Concluding

that it was uncontroverted that Appellant was committing a crime at the time of the

incident, the court of appeals found that it was error to include a presumption-of-

reasonableness instruction in the jury charge. Nevertheless, the court of appeals

held that this erroneous inclusion was harmless. Appellant contends, among other

things, that the court of appeals erred in its harm determination. We agree.1

1 We granted Appellant’s first two grounds for review. In ground one, Appellant claimed, among other things:

The Court of Appeals majority erred in finding harmless error where: ...

b) the prosecutor erroneously repeatedly misstated during jury selection, the defense opening statement, and final argument that the law did not allow Petitioner to claim self-defense because he was engaged in criminal activity and the trial judge repeatedly erroneously ruled in favor of the misstatements by the prosecutor,

c) over defense objections, the trial judge erroneously included a charge which stated a person does not get a self-defense presumption of reasonableness if he is engaged in criminal activity as well as a provocation charge. CUEVAS — 3

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Incident

In July 2017, while eating sushi at a shopping center, Juan Garza saw

Appellant and his friend Milton Egbe (Egbe) on two motorcycles speed into the

parking lot. Appellant got off his motorcycle and walked over to a parked car to

speak to Osiekhuemen Omobhude (Ose) in his car. Garza then heard a sound “like

fireworks” and saw Appellant chasing the car, gun in hand, as Ose drove away.

While working at a Buffalo Wild Wings, Alexis Blanton recalled a man, later

determined to be Ose, rushing into the restaurant in a “frantic” state and “looking

for help.” Ose collapsed and became “unresponsive.” First responders took Ose

to a hospital where he was pronounced dead. The medical examiner revealed that

Ose had been shot in the right side of his face and the back of his right shoulder and

likely died within a matter of minutes.

Appellant and Egbe testified in Appellant’s defense. According to Appellant,

he and Egbe planned to eat at the sushi restaurant and then go to a nearby shooting

range, but it became apparent that the two would not have had enough time to get

Due to our disposition of the portion of Appellant’s first ground that addresses harm from the inclusion of the presumption of reasonableness in the jury charge, we do not reach other issues contained in his first ground, nor do we reach his second ground for review. CUEVAS — 4

to the shooting range before it closed had they eaten before. Appellant testified that

he planned to sell marijuana to Ose, so he set up a drug buy, texted Ose the time,

place, and price for the drug deal, brought a handgun, and gave another handgun to

Egbe to Egbe’s surprise. When the two arrived at the parking lot, Appellant told

Egbe to wait by the motorcycles while he walked to Ose’s car. Appellant sat in the

car on the passenger side with his backpack of marijuana. According to both

Appellant and Egbe, Ose pressed a gun to Appellant’s head, choked him, took his

phone and marijuana, and then told him to “[g]et the fuck out.” Once he stepped

out of the car, Appellant looked back at Ose, who still had his gun trained on him.

Ose asked, “Do you have any bread?” Appellant said that he did not have money,

to which Ose said, “Stop playing with me. I will smoke you,” as he cocked his

handgun.

According to Appellant, immediately after Ose cocked his gun, Appellant

shut the door, retrieved the handgun he had tucked into his waistband, and shot

seven times into the car. Ose drove away, initially heading toward Egbe and the

motorcycles. Egbe testified that he reached into his backpack to draw his weapon

when he saw Ose put a hand on Appellant’s neck. He was still looking for his gun

when he heard gunshots but did not know who was shooting. When he looked up, CUEVAS — 5

the car was heading toward him, so he shot at the car.

Investigator Patrick Douglas, for the Fort Bend County Sheriff’s Office,

testified to a security camera video that recorded a scene after the shooting where it

shows Appellant and Egbe putting their motorcycles into a garage. Investigator

Douglas noted that it appeared as though Appellant and Egbe either high-fived or

fist-bumped each other.

Jesse Richey testified that he was at a friend’s house two weeks before the

shooting and met Ose. According to Richey, Ose told him, “He wanted to rob

somebody named Victor. And whenever I tried telling him that it wasn’t a good

idea, that he should not do that, he said that he did not care and that Victor was an

easy lick for him.”

B. The Trial

The State’s theory at trial was that this was a drug deal that “went south”

and that Appellant intended to shoot and kill Ose. Appellant relied on a theory of

self-defense, that Ose robbed Appellant and threatened him with gun violence. The

jury charge instructed the jury on murder, self-defense, and the law of parties. The

jury found Appellant guilty of murder. The main issue in this case is whether the

erroneous inclusion of a presumption on self-defense harmed Appellant. This issue CUEVAS — 6

manifested itself throughout the trial, beginning in voir dire.

1. Voir Dire

An issue throughout the trial was whether the prosecutor misstated the law

on self-defense. While addressing the venire about the presumptions of

reasonableness of self-defense, the prosecutor made the following explanation:

[PROSECUTOR]: Okay. So you have that. And you didn’t start. Okay? So somebody’s breaking into your house with deadly force, you’re reasonable to use deadly force against them because you didn’t start the – you didn’t start the action, right? And you were not engaged in criminal activity. So all three of those things have to occur. For example –

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Objection, Judge, that’s an improper statement of the law.

[PROSECUTOR]: It’s under 9.32, exactly out of the Code, Judge.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Only to get a presumption, Judge. She’s saying it’s a proposition of law that you can’t use deadly force unless all these things occur. And that’s flat wrong. That’s only if you want the presumption that it’s reasonable.2

The trial judge had the prosecutor repeat the question, and she said, “What

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