Dexter Lopez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 5, 2013
Docket14-12-00693-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Dexter Lopez v. State (Dexter Lopez 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
Dexter Lopez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed November 5, 2013.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-12-00693-CR

DEXTER LOPEZ, Appellant V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 262nd District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1316109

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury convicted appellant, Dexter Lopez, of the felony offense of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and assessed his punishment at three years‘ confinement. Appellant challenges his conviction in four issues, asserting that the evidence is legally insufficient to support his conviction; that the trial court abused its discretion by (a) admitting lay witness testimony that amounted to a legal conclusion and (b) permitting improper impeachment of appellant in violation of the Texas Rules of Evidence; and that the trial court committed reversible error by failing to sua sponte provide a jury instruction regarding extraneous offenses and prior bad acts at the punishment phase of his trial. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Appellant and the complainant, LaTonya Watts-Smith, had a friendly relationship for several years before the incident in this case. At the time of this event, their friendship had deteriorated. On August 9, 2011, LaTonya drove her cousin, Joseph ―Jo-Jo‖ Johnson, to the apartment complex in Houston where appellant lived to visit an acquaintance Jo-Jo was dating, Adrienne ―Peaches‖ Hogan. Watts-Smith‘s husband, Michael, was also in the vehicle with LaTonya and Jo-Jo. When they arrived at the apartment complex, appellant was standing outside with Peaches. Peaches walked up to the white Suburban that LaTonya, Jo- Jo, and Michael were in and began talking to LaTonya. Jo-Jo got out of the SUV and stood by the passenger door, talking to Michael. Appellant walked up to the Suburban and started cursing and making derogatory remarks to LaTonya.

Jo-Jo took offense to these remarks and started verbally defending LaTonya. He and appellant got into an argument; the two agreed to engage in a fight. Appellant went back into his apartment to change into appropriate fighting shoes, while Jo-Jo removed his shirt. Appellant came back outside, and he and Jo-Jo began wrestling around on the ground. At the start of the fight, appellant gained the upper hand and got a chokehold on Jo-Jo. LaTonya intervened in the fight and hit appellant on the head a few times in defense of Jo-Jo. Michael pulled her away, telling her to leave them alone because ―it‘s man on man.‖

At some point during the fight, appellant‘s wife, Angel, came out of their apartment and stood nearby watching the fight. LaTonya confronted Angel; the two began arguing. Jo-Jo began winning the fight, and appellant shouted to Angel 2 to ―let one off‖ or ―shoot that thing.‖ Angel pulled a gun out from behind her back, but didn‘t shoot it and ―fumbled‖ it. Once she pulled the gun out, people scattered in different directions, and appellant took the gun from Angel.

LaTonya and Jo-Jo ran and hid behind the Suburban; appellant chased them. When LaTonya peeked up to try and see where appellant was, appellant, with the gun in his hand, reached his arm inside the open window of the Suburban and shot her through the tinted window on the other side of the SUV. Jo-Jo wasn‘t near that side of the SUV and it was possible to see through the tinted window from inside the truck. A shell casing was later found inside the Suburban.

LaTonya, not realizing she had been shot, ran toward a nearby fire truck that had been called out in response to a report of an unrelated fire. Appellant followed her as she ran towards the fire truck and pointed the gun at her again. The firefighters inside the truck let LaTonya into the back of the truck and started treating her. She had several bullet fragments in her mouth, and several of the teeth on the left side of her mouth had been torn out. One of the firefighters called the police, who arrived at the scene shortly thereafter and arrested appellant.

At trial, LaTonya, Michael, the firefighters, and several police officers testified. Appellant testified and acknowledged much of the above. However, he claimed that, prior to this incident, both Jo-Jo and LaTonya had threatened him. He also asserted that LaTonya had previously called his mother several times and expressed her anger towards him, which made him feel threatened. He testified that, a few days before this incident, LaTonya had ―threaten[ed] to shoot me and my family up.‖ Appellant stated that, when LaTonya, Michael, and Jo-Jo arrived at the apartment complex, he approached the Suburban because he didn‘t want them to come near his apartment and his family. He testified that he and LaTonya exchanged words, although he stated that LaTonya started the verbal altercation.

3 According to appellant, he was walking back to his apartment when Jo-Jo verbally accosted him, and the two of them agreed to engage in a fight. Appellant explained that, at the beginning of the fight, he had the upper hand. He testified that LaTonya had interfered briefly in the fight when he had Jo-Jo pinned down, but he stated that she punched him in the head numerous times. Appellant stated that, during the fight, he had a slight epileptic seizure and got dizzy.1 He testified he then asked his wife for his gun. When prompted by his counsel if he heard LaTonya say anything, he responded,

Oh, yes, that‘s what made me get the gun because I heard her say -- *** [―]I‘m going to get my gun[,‖] and [she] started walking towards her vehicle. That‘s when I asked where is that thing [gun]? In case anybody gon‘ get hurt, it won‘t be me and my family.

Appellant testified that he cocked the gun and pressed the eject button so it wouldn‘t automatically reload before approaching LaTonya and Jo-Jo. He stated that he fired a warning shot, trying to scare them away ―because they were the ones that [he] felt threatened by.‖ Appellant explained that he fired this shot at the window of the Suburban, claiming that he didn‘t see ―any particular individuals.‖ He said he was trying to get them away from the SUV because he was frightened by the comments that were made referring to ―grabbing a gun.‖

He acknowledged that a person could see through the tinted windows from the inside of the truck if the other window was down. But he claimed that he didn‘t have a clear view through the open window he shot through because his face

1 LaTonya testified that she was aware that appellant suffered from epilepsy.

4 was by a closed tinted window.2 He agreed that he fired the shot even though he couldn‘t see what or who was behind the Suburban and acknowledged that he knew both LaTonya and Jo-Jo were hiding behind it. He further agreed that he pointed the gun at LaTonya as she was running toward the fire truck but denied trying to shoot her. He testified that he went back into his apartment and put the gun in the closet.3 Finally, appellant acknowledged that he never saw anyone else involved in the incident with a gun.

Appellant called a neighbor, Pamela White, to testify on his behalf. Pamela, who watched the fight from her upstairs apartment, described it quite differently than the other witnesses, including appellant. She stated that the fight started and appellant fell down with Jo-Jo on top of him. She testified that LaTonya came over, and LaTonya and Jo-Jo proceeded to hit and kick appellant ―while he was down.‖ According to Pamela, appellant‘s wife came out and said something. Pamela testified that LaTonya got off appellant to go to her car, and Jo-Jo got up and then ―everybody was running around.‖ She stated that she heard LaTonya yell as LaTonya was going toward her car, ―I‘ll shoot you first.‖ Pamela testified she didn‘t know to whom the statement was directed because LaTonya had been arguing with Angel.

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