Daniel Gonzalez Castaneda v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 10, 2011
Docket13-09-00124-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Daniel Gonzalez Castaneda v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-09-124-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG 

DANIEL GONZALEZ CASTANEDA,                                      Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                       Appellee.

On appeal from the 370th District Court

of Hidalgo County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Garza, Vela, and Perkes

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Vela

            A jury convicted appellant, Daniel Gonzalez Castaneda, of murder.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(b) (Vernon 2003).  After finding he had a previous felony conviction, the jury assessed punishment at life imprisonment.  In three issues, Castaneda argues the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction, and he complains of charge error.  We affirm.

I. Factual Background

A. State’s Evidence

            On March 21, 2008, Pablo Magallan was driving a friend, Victor Cavazos, to Cavazos’s Hidalgo County home when a black Ford Expedition passed Magallan’s vehicle and cut in front of him.  Cavazos knew that Magallan’s neighbor, Castaneda, nicknamed “Puerco”, drove such a vehicle.  Cavazos testified that they began following the Expedition because Magallan wanted to find out why the driver “cut him off.”  Both vehicles then parked on Melba Carter Street in Mission, Texas (the street on which both Magallan and Castaneda lived), and Cavazos saw Castaneda standing next to the Expedition’s driver’s side door.  Magallan, who was not carrying any weapons, walked “[w]ith his hands down, on his side” toward Castaneda.  Cavazos testified that “[r]ight when he [Magallan] got about . . . six, eight feet, [from Castaneda] that’s when I saw the shadow, the gun come out of Puerco’s hand, and I saw the sparks come out.”  Cavazos said he “heard a gunshot. . . .  And then Pablo [Magallan] just . . . collapsed.”

            On cross-examination, Cavazos testified he recognized Castaneda as the shooter “because of his physical attributes.”  When defense counsel asked him, “So did you assume that it was Daniel because of his physical attributes, as you say?”, he said, “Yes, ma’am.”       

Officer Esteban Jara was dispatched to Magallan’s home at 304 Melba Carter and saw Magallan lying on the ground with a bullet wound below his rib cage.  He asked, “[W]ho shot you?”, and Magallan said, “Daniel.”  He asked Magallan where Daniel lived, and he pointed in a westward direction and said, “[H]e lives here.”  Officer Jara testified his investigation revealed that Castaneda lived in the residence and occasionally drove a black Ford Expedition.

Castaneda’s sister, Manuela Ruiz, testified that on the evening in question, she was at Castaneda’s home and heard a gunshot.  Afterwards, she saw that Cavazos “reached to the back [of Magallan], [and] . . . got a gun out. . . .”  Cavazos ran with the gun toward Magallan’s house and returned to the scene before the police arrived.

On cross-examination, Ruiz testified she saw Magallan “trying to get something from his back.”  When defense counsel asked her, “And was he [Magallan] walking toward where Daniel was at?”, she said, “No.  He was walking toward the door where we were at.”  She said Cavazos “reached to his [Magallan’s] back and got a gun.”

On re-direct-examination, when the prosecutor asked Ruiz, “So then you got to see when your brother [Castaneda] shot him [Magallan]?  You didn’t only hear the shot, . . . but you got to see it?”, she said, “Yes.”  She stated that the weapon that Cavazos took from Magallan “was a silver, like, an automatic. . . .”  She said that after the shooting, Castaneda left in his Expedition.

Castaneda’s nephew, Rene Loredo, Jr., testified that after the shooting, he picked up Castaneda, who was carrying a rifle, and took him to a motel.  A few days later, Loredo moved him to Mexico.  Afterwards, police recovered a rifle that was found underneath a mattress in the motel room where Castaneda had stayed.  Shortly thereafter, Mexican authorities apprehended Castaneda and delivered him to Mission police.

While at the Mission Police Department, Castaneda waived his Miranda[1] rights and provided a written statement to the police in which he stated, in relevant part, that on the evening in question, he returned home after picking up his nephew, Leroy Espinoza.  They left Castaneda’s home in Castaneda’s black Expedition with Espinoza driving the vehicle.  As they drove toward Bryan Road, a Dodge passed them and hit the curb.  Castaneda told Espinoza to turn around and go back home.  When they turned to go home, Castaneda saw the Dodge “reversing and then came back behind us.”  When they returned home, Castaneda ran into the house, found a rifle, and loaded it.  When he went outside, “Pablo” kept telling him, “’Pos’ que onda?’”[2]  He stated that Pablo “kept getting closer, but I kept telling him that he needed to leave.  Every time I said something, he kept getting closer.  I was not sure to shoot, but since he was getting closer, but at one point I guess I decided to pull the trigger. . . .”  He stated that, “[w]hen I shot Pablo he just fell to the ground. . . .  As soon as I saw him go to the ground, I ran to the Expedition with the rifle and drove away. . . .”  He stated that, “I had put the rifle under the mattress in the [motel] room” before leaving for Mexico.      

During its case-in-chief, the State introduced the rifle that was recovered from the motel room into evidence.[3]  Loredo identified the rifle as the one that Castaneda was carrying when he took him to the motel.

Dr. Norma Farley, the forensic pathologist who conducted Magallan’s autopsy, testified his cause of death “was a perforating gunshot wound to the abdomen.”  She recovered bullet fragments from his lumbar vertebral column, and she recovered another bullet fragment from the musculature of his lower back.  She stated that a blood specimen from Magallan showed he was intoxicated.

B. Defense Evidence

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Daniel Gonzalez Castaneda v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-gonzalez-castaneda-v-state-texapp-2011.