Danilo De Jesus Meza v. State

497 S.W.3d 574, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 6975, 2016 WL 3571390
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 30, 2016
DocketNO. 01-15-01050-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 497 S.W.3d 574 (Danilo De Jesus Meza 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
Danilo De Jesus Meza v. State, 497 S.W.3d 574, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 6975, 2016 WL 3571390 (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Sherry Radack, Chief Justice

This is a DWI case. The only issue is whether there is sufficient evidence that appellant’s blood alcohol content was at least .15 or above at the time of the accident to support a Class A misdemeanor DWI conviction. Concluding there is insufficient evidence to support the Class A misdemeanor conviction, we reverse appellant’s conviction on that charge and render a judgment of acquittal. We remand for a *575 new trial on the lesser-included Class B misdemeanor DWI offense.

BACKGROUND

A. Trial Evidence

Officer G. Arroyo with the University of Houston police department testified that he was called to the scene of a single-car accident on Calhoun Street on March 6, 2015 at about 1:40 am. He found an Infinity G35 Coup laying upside down on its roof and debris scattered about. There was' no one in the- car, but a group of people had gathered around. He began looking for witnesses to what happened, and several people told him that the driver just climbed out and walked away. Eventually several of the witnesses pointed to appellant hiding behind a portable building. When Arroyo approached him, appellant was stumbling, had “the smell of alcohol coming off of him, [and] bloodshot eyes.” Appellant admitted to being the driver, stated that he was driving his uncle’s car, and he declined medical attention.

Appellant also told the officer that he had been drinking and had five or six beers. Appellant could not recall when he had those drinks, but Arroyo testified that appellant was slurring his speech. When Arroyo asked appellant to perform field sobriety tests, appellant refused, saying he was too cold.

Arroyo arrested appellant because he believed appellant was intoxicated to the point that he had lost use of mental and physical faculties. At the police station, appellant consented to a Breathalyzer test.

M. Skelton testified that when appellant was brought to Central Intox, the center where standardized field sobriety tests, breath tests, and blood tests are performed, she began by administering field sobriety tests. First appellant took the “one-leg stand” test, which has four markers indicating intoxication: (1) raising arms more than six inches above the side of the body, (2) putting the raised, foot down, (3) using arms for balance, and (4) swaying and hopping. Appellant put his foot down and swayed. He also bent his leg and was unable to count out loud, which are not markers for impairment, but can be considered in determining intoxication by loss of mental faculties.

During appellant’s walk-and-turn test, he also exhibited signs of impairment. Specifically, after having the test explained to him multiple times, appellant broke position, used his arms to balance, took an improper turn, and took an extra step.

The horizontal gaze nystagmus test was next administered, which indicates impairment if the eyes jerk involuntarily and gaze to the side. Skelton observed several clues of impairment in this test: (1) lack of smooth pursuit (involuntary jerking of the eyes as they gaze to the side), (2) two clues for “distinct and sustained nystagmus, maximum deviation,” and (3) two clues for the “onset of nystagmus from prior to 45-degree angle.” She testified that appellant’s results on these tests' indicate a “BAC, the blood alcohol concentration higher than 0.10 which is 77 percent accurate.”

Appellant then consented to giving two breath samples, which registered BACs of .176 and .173. T. Israel, a technical supervisor, testified to the accuracy of these results at the time the test was taken. Then the State began asking questions about extrapolation back to the time of the wreck, which drew an objection from defense counsel:

Q. Do. the results—are the results on this test slip above .08?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Are they above a .15?
*576 A. Yes, sir.
Q. Are you familiar with the technique known as retrograde extrapolation?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And can you talk about what that is?
A. All it is [is] a BAC guesstimation. Texas is a time of stop state. So, if we have certain facts, we can estimate what a person’s breath alcohol was at the time of driving based off of what we have on the test record.
Q. And how do you go about doing that?
A. Again, we have to have certain facts. Most importantly, a time of last drink, height, weight, gender, time of last meal, time of last stop, what they ate are all very important as well when factoring into this.
Q, So, knowing those facts, what’s the actual process to do a retrograde extrapolation?
A. If everything aligns and we are able to perform a retrograde extrapolation, we use the lowest number of elimination rate ever reported which is a .01. With that, if we have X amount of time from stop, to X amount of time from test, we are able to add back that .01 an hour to get an approximation of what their breath alcohol was.
Q, And so, you mentioned the term “elimination.” What is that?
MR. HARRIS: Judge, Judge, I’m going to have to object to this line of questioning. The Court has made the state aware that they are not to attempt any kind of retrograde extrapolation without all the factors that are laid out in Mata and Bums. The state knows that if you do not have those factors, the witness knows she cannot extrapolate in this case. And they are attempting to get around that which just flies in the face of the Bums case and the Bums decision. So, I’d ask that the state be precluded from continuing this line of questioning.
THE COURT: I’d like to think this is a good faith by the state, and it’s not. Counsel, so right now, I don’t know what they know or you know. I’m just sitting with them and listening carefully.
MR. HARRIS: Okay.
THE COURT: So, take it slow and steady. If you don’t have the extrapolation factors, let’s back this process down. Back to you.
MR. MOORE: Judge, may we approach real quick?
THE COURT: Come up.
(At the Bench)
(Jury not present)
MR. MOORE: So, Judge, at this point, we’re just trying to lay a foundation for the process that she’s talking about so that we can get some of the details without performing an extrapolation.
MR. HARRIS: It’s completely irrelevant, Judge.
THE COURT: Well, if you can’t make the factors extrapolation, let’s not spin our wheels getting there, to take the jury with a number you can’t extrapolate to.
MR. MOORE: It’s not the extrapolation.

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Bluebook (online)
497 S.W.3d 574, 2016 Tex. App. LEXIS 6975, 2016 WL 3571390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danilo-de-jesus-meza-v-state-texapp-2016.