David Ford v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 2009
Docket13-07-00250-CR
StatusPublished

This text of David Ford v. State (David Ford 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
David Ford v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-07-00250-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

DAVID FORD, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 94th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Justices Yañez, Rodriguez, and Benavides Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez

A jury convicted appellant, David Ford, of assault on a public servant and assessed

his sentence at four years' imprisonment. See TEX . PENAL CODE ANN . § 22.01 (Vernon

Supp. 2008). By four issues, Ford contends: (1-2) the trial court committed reversible error

by not including the lesser included offense of misdemeanor assault and the issues of self- defense and necessity in its jury charge; (3) the trial court committed reversible error by

allowing the State to introduce evidence of Ford's alleged confession to a state jail nurse;

and (4) the evidence was factually insufficient. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

During Ford’s trial, the State presented the testimony of Amy Hartnett, R.N., and

Officers Victor Uribe, Juan Roberto Reyes, Jacob Garza, Rolando Arias, Patrick

McMenamy, Steven Gohlke, Frank Bautista, and Rosemary Sifuentes. According to

Officer Uribe, while responding to a complaint that a man was "trying to start some fights,"

he discovered Ford lying on the ground between two buildings. When Officer Uribe

attempted to "make contact with him [Ford], he was totally out of it." Ford was belligerent,

cursing, and "getting kind of violent." When Officer Uribe asked Ford for his name, Ford

answered, "You bitch." Officer Uribe looked in Ford's wallet for identification and found a

driver's license belonging to Charles Teague. The photograph on the driver's license

"looked very similar to [Ford]." Officer Uribe arrested Ford on suspicion of public

intoxication and transported him to the City Detention Center (CDC). Once at the CDC,

Ford was admitted under the name Charles Teague.

Officer Garza testified that, after Ford was placed in a holding cell at the CDC, Ford

made a racial epithet and spat at him. Officer Reyes testified that Officer Garza called for

assistance because Ford was spitting and acting aggressively. Officer Garza stated that

"[w]hen an arrested person becomes — when he's that intoxicated and makes those types

of actions, he is put in restraints and a spit shield is applied to prevent him from spitting."

According to Officer Garza, it is essential that a prisoner who spits is restrained in order to

"prevent him from harming himself and other . . . inmates or officers" because the prisoner

2 may have a communicable disease. Officer Reyes testified that he and Officers Bautista

and Sifuentes assisted Officer Garza with restraining Ford. According to Officer Reyes,

the officers restrained Ford using a maneuver he believed was called a "leg sweep."1 Ford

was later released from his restraints, given a shower, and moved to another holding cell.

When Officers McMenamy and Gohlke arrived at the CDC to process another

prisoner, Officer Garza asked them to thank the officers in their department for bringing

Teague to the CDC. Officers McMenamy and Gohlke informed Officer Garza that the

prisoner could not be Teague because he was currently in prison. Officers McMenamy and

Gohlke went to Ford's cell and, after "observing Ford's face," Officer Gohlke identified the

prisoner as David Ford. Once the officers stated that the prisoner was Ford, Officer Garza

began the process of positively identifying him. According to Officer Garza, fingerprints

could not be taken because of Ford's belligerence and combativeness. Instead, he had

to rely on a mug shot on file.

The mug shot showed that Ford had a scar on the bridge of his nose. Officer Garza

went to Ford's cell to look for the scar. When he entered Ford's cell, he moved Ford in an

effort to awaken him so that he could look at his face. Ford awoke and grabbed a phone

receiver and swung it at him. Officer Garza "walked with him . . . towards the corner and

did what [is] call[ed] an arm drag to take him down."2 Officer Arias went into the cell to

assist Officer Garza. During the struggle, Ford repeatedly shouted an obscenity and said,

"I want to play." According to Officer Garza, he could not get Ford's hand behind his back

1 Officer Reyes stated that when restraining a prisoner using a "leg sweep," the officers "try to bring [the prisoner] down slowly, bring his feet from under him and bring him down."

2 Officer Garza described an "arm drag" as a procedure "where you grab them [prisoners] by the arm and you assist them down to the ground." 3 to cuff him, and Ford "kept trying to grab his hand . . . . And at that point is when [Ford]

was free and Officer Arias was struck in the head." Officer Garza stated:

Once we realized that we were not able to cuff him from behind, we ended up cuffing him in front. Once that was done, we leg ironed his legs together. And we ended up having to cuff him from cuff to leg iron to keep him from – you know, to control him.

Officer Garza explained that Ford then wrapped his legs around Officer Arias's leg and

would not release it. He had to move "the shackle up to where – right around . . . [Ford's]

shin area and tensed it down. And at that point he released [Officer Arias's] leg." Officer

Garza testified that Officer Arias was injured during the struggle.

Officer Arias testified that he heard yelling and banging from an open cell. He ran

to the cell and found Officer Garza struggling with Ford. When asked to describe the

struggle, Officer Arias stated,

To me it seemed like [Officer Garza] was trying to restrain [Ford]. And [Ford] was on his back trying to – I mean, he wasn't wanting to give up. He wasn't wanting to turn around. I went in right away and grabbed one of his hands. And I repeatedly told [Ford], stop resisting, just relax, relax, stop resisting. And he just kept going.

Officer Arias stated that Ford was kicking, spitting, cursing, and shouting, "I want to play."

According to Officer Arias, when Officer Garza released Ford's cuffed hand, Officer Arias

grabbed that hand, and, while Ford's other hand was free, Ford hit Officer Arias on his

head. Officer Arias stated that he was hit hard and felt pain.

Ford was then transferred to the county jail. Hartnett, who works as a nurse at the

jail and who is employed by Christus Spohn Memorial Hospital, testified that when a

prisoner arrives at the jail they are automatically sent to the nurse's station to "insure that

the person is healthy enough to be placed in a holding cell." Hartnett observed Ford to be

4 conscious; he did not appear drowsy, he could walk, and he did not complain of any pain.

Hartnett described Ford's appearance as "disheveled," and noticed a prominent red mark

over his eye. Ford initially refused to answer Hartnett’s questions, but eventually told her

that "he had assaulted an officer and they had taken him down and somehow in that

process he had gotten injured." According to Hartnett, Ford stated that "he had swung at

an officer and he – somehow after that, you know, when they subdued him, he got injured."

When asked what Ford had swung at the officer, he "mentioned a telephone." Hartnett

explained that she documented Ford's explanation on a county jail form that he did not sign

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