Davey Enriquez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 7, 2009
Docket07-08-00061-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Davey Enriquez v. State (Davey Enriquez 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
Davey Enriquez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

NO. 07-08-0060-CR

NO. 07-08-0061-CR

NO. 07-08-0062-CR

NO. 07-08-0063-CR


IN THE COURT OF APPEALS


FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS


AT AMARILLO


PANEL D


JULY 7, 2009


______________________________



DAVEY ENRIQUEZ, APPELLANT


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE


_________________________________


FROM THE 223RD DISTRICT COURT OF GRAY COUNTY;


NO. 7401, 7402, 7403 & 7404; HONORABLE LEE WATERS, JUDGE


__________________________________



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ.



          Appellant, Davey Enriquez, appeals two convictions for aggravated robbery and two convictions for aggravated assault. Appellant plead not guilty to all charges, but was found guilty by a jury, which then assessed four concurrent 99 year sentences. Appellant originally raised five issues; however, prior to submission, he waived issues one and two. By issue three, Appellant contends the evidence was factually insufficient and by issues four and five, he contends the trial court erred by admitting certain evidence. We affirm.

Factual Background

          A somewhat detailed recitation of the factual background is necessary to our discussion of Appellant’s factual sufficiency issue. On Sunday, May 21, 2006, at approximately 9:00 a.m., Layne Conner and his wife, Mae Conner, were the victims of a home invasion robbery. Two masked men, one armed with a shotgun, and the other armed with a handgun, burst through the backdoor of their residence and confronted the Conners. The robbers’ accents indicated they were Hispanic. The shotgun bearing robber was described as a “big heavyset guy” with distinctive dark eyes. He was the taller of the two gunmen. The handgun bearing robber was described as being about five feet seven-to-eight inches tall and weighing 175 to 180 pounds. During the robbery, Mr. and Mrs. Conner were made to lie on the floor. The shotgun bearing robber (whom Mr. Conner identified as “this defendant here”) held his gun to the back of Mrs. Conner’s head and the handgun bearing robber held his gun to the back of Mr. Conner’s head. At one point, as a means of intimidation, the handgun bearing robber discharged his firearm, however, no one was injured.

          The robbers immediately focused on a filing cabinet containing three separate bags of money containing approximately $35,000 in cash. After Mr. Conner handed over two of the three bags of money, the robbers left, grabbing Mrs. Conner’s purse on the way out. Mr. Conner observed the two robbers flee the scene of the crime in a newer model gray Jeep Cherokee with tinted windows; however, he was unable to read the vehicle tag number. The robbers left no physical evidence or fingerprints which tied Appellant to the scene of the crime.

          While the robbery was taking place, Jesse Conner, the Conners’ nine year old grandson, hid under his grandparents’ bed. From there he observed one of the robbers wearing a shoe, “kind of like a tennis shoe,” bearing an “S” on the side of the shoe.

           After the robbers left, but before calling 911, Mrs. Conner called her daughter, Mayla Arreola. She suspected the robbers had gained information from Mayla pertaining to their residence and the stash of money because, several days earlier, while the Conners were out of town, Mr. Conner had contacted Mayla and asked her to count the cash which was contained in the bags located in the filing cabinet.

           Initially, Mayla denied telling anyone about the money in the Conner home; however, she later admitted telling a friend, Tiffeni Martinez, the substance of her conversation with her father, including the existence and location of the money. Phone records introduced by the State showed that in the days just prior to the robbery, there were numerous cell phone conversations between Tiffeni’s husband, Andrew Martinez, and his cousin, Carlos Cordova.

          A police investigation, initiated by a Crime Stoppers tip, revealed that Appellant and Cordova were close friends and that the two were often seen in the company of Appellant’s cousin, Adam Aguilar. At trial, Danielle Holmes testified that on May 20, 2006, the evening prior to the robbery, Appellant, Cordova, and an unidentified third person, came to her residence to visit with Woody (last name unknown, but later identified as Dustin Lee Allen). The three men had arrived in a gray, newer model Jeep Cherokee. After a conversation with Cordova, Woody told Danielle that he was going to Pampa to get some money and he would be back in a couple of hours; however, Holmes prevented Woody from leaving with the others. The next morning, “before daybreak,” Cordova came back and told Woody that “it just didn’t go as planned.” A few days later, Holmes learned that Appellant, Cordova, and Aguilar were “irritated and agitated” because the police had questioned them about what “happened in Pampa on May the 21st.” Holmes also testified that, after the 21st, Carlos and Appellant were wearing “nice,” “flashy” clothes.

          Another witness, Priscilla Badillo, the mother of Adam Aguillar’s daughter, testified that she overheard Appellant “talking about him and Carlos and something about Carlos’s cousin and Pampa, money, guns, kids, stuff like that.” Based on this information and its similarity to news reports about the Pampa home invasion, Priscilla made the Crime Stoppers tip. Lorena Manriquez, the mother of Appellant’s children, testified that Appellant owned a pair of Sketcher boots that had an “S” on the side of it. During the investigation, none of the clothing the robbers wore was recovered and none of the money taken was recovered. No comparable fingerprints or shoeprints were found and no impressions of the tire prints from the place where the Jeep Cherokee departed were taken.

          After the State rested, the defense offered testimony to the effect that Appellant attended a Quinceañera in Amarillo for his cousin on the afternoon and evening of May 20, 2006. Testimony from Gilbert Maldonado, Appellant’s cousin and brother of the Quinceañera honoree, indicated that Appellant stayed at the party “probably ‘til four o’clock [a.m.],” the morning of May 21st. Manriquez testified that she and Appellant left the party between 3:00 to 4:00 a.m. and that she was driving since he was drunk. She further testified that Appellant stayed in bed that morning until approximately 10:00 to 10:30.

Discussion

Issue Three - Factual Sufficiency

          By his third issue, Appellant contends the evidence is factually insufficient to sustain the verdict against him. More specifically, Appellant contends that, not only is the State’s evidence tending to connect him with the offenses extremely weak, his evidence tending to establish an alibi is such that, when combined, they render the jury’s verdict manifestly unjust.


Standard of Review-Factual Sufficiency Review

          

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Bluebook (online)
Davey Enriquez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davey-enriquez-v-state-texapp-2009.