Eduardo Rodriguez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2008
Docket14-06-00609-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Eduardo Rodriguez v. State (Eduardo Rodriguez 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
Eduardo Rodriguez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 13, 2008

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed May 13, 2008.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00609-CR

EDUARDO RODRIGUEZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 23rd District Court

Brazoria County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 50489

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

Appellant Eduardo Rodriguez appeals his murder conviction, claiming (1) legal and factual insufficiency of the evidence supporting the jury=s rejection of his self-defense claim, and (2) harmful error in the trial court=s failure to charge the jury on self-defense for multiple assailants.  We affirm.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background


In June 2005, appellant attended a party with his brother Juan Rodriguez, Marina Bravo, Sergio Guerrero, and Jose Edgar Romano.  Leodan Cruz, Wilfredo Cruz, Miguel Castorena, and Reynaldo Ayala were also at the party.  Both groups left the party in two separate vehicles and drove to the Cruz residence.

On the way, Castorena told those in his vehicle, Ayala, Wilfredo Cruz, and Leodan Cruz, that he anticipated an argument with Juan and appellant involving Castorena=s wife or the truck Castorena bought from appellant=s father.[1]  Testimony at trial indicated that Castorena=s group arrived at the Cruz house first and sought weapons in anticipation of Castorena=s predicted argument.  Ayala hid a machete and grabbed a kitchen knife.  Wilfredo got brass knuckles.

The record is unclear regarding the order of events or how much time elapsed between events that night.  After appellant=s group arrived, appellant took Ayala=s sunglasses.  Ayala demanded their return and withdrew the kitchen knife from his pocket, keeping it at his side.  Castorena took the knife from Ayala and then Guerrero took the knife from Castorena.  At some point, Leodan picked up a brick, but he dropped it immediately when Guerrero, who was also holding a brick, suggested that they both drop the bricks.  Soon after those incidents, Juan told his group to get weapons from their vehicle.

The testimony regarding the ensuing melee was sporadic at best.  Ayala testified for the State that appellant poked him with a baseball bat.  Ayala grabbed the machete and swung it at appellant and appellant=s group when they surrounded him.  Appellant hit Ayala in the back of the head with the baseball bat.  Ayala testified that after that encounter, he saw appellant run with the baseball bat in the direction where Leodan was later found unconscious.  Ayala testified that he did not see Leodan with any weapons that night, but he did not see Leodan at all once they arrived at the Cruz residence.  Ayala and Wilfredo later found Leodan unconscious; they did not find weapons around Leodan=s body.


Castorena testified for the State, but was deemed a hostile witness.  Castorena testified that appellant was the only person that night who had a baseball bat.  Castorena testified that appellant, with a baseball bat, and Bravo, with a golf club, hit him from behind on the back of his head, but he was not sure who hit him.  At trial, Castorena could not recall seeing appellant and Bravo swinging something and hitting Leodan, who was lying on the ground with Romano bent over him; however, he recounted this information to police in a police statement several days following the incident.

Wilfredo Cruz, Leodan=s brother and appellant=s only witness, testified that he saw Leodan with Romano and Bravo.  Bravo was hitting her palm with the golf club.  He testified that at one point, he saw appellant and an injured Castorena standing by Castorena=s truck, where Leodan was eventually found.  Wilfredo testified that later he saw appellant, Bravo, Romano, and Juan standing in the place where Leodan was later found.  He did not see Leodan get hit and discovered Leodan only after the participants departed in the vehicles.  Other than seeing the brick briefly in Leodan=s hand earlier that night, Wilfredo did not see Leodan with any weapons.

The only other account of the fight was appellant=s written statement given to an investigator while appellant was in a juvenile detention center.  Appellant=s statement indicated that someone Arushed@ at appellant, and Juan hit the person with his fists.  Juan told his group to Aget the bats,@ and Bravo handed appellant a screwdriver.  Appellant explained how the events unfolded in his statement:

[Leodan] ran at us with a knife, and I hit him in the head with the handle of the screw driver.  [Leodan] was still standing and [Romano] hit [Leodan] in the back of the head with some brass knuckles.  I saw a bat by the stack of bricks, and I picked it up.  I then hit [Leodan] with the bat in the top of the head and he fell to the ground.  When [Leodan] fell to the ground, [Romano] started hitting him with the brass knuckles in the head and I was kicking [Leodan] in the ribs.  Nina then walked over to us and told us to stop hitting him.  Juan came over and tried to roll him over. 


After the fight was over, the groups dispersed in two vehicles.  Police located both vehicles and found Romano, Juan, and appellant hiding in appellant=s aunt=s house.  Police found Leodan unconscious in the yard.  After paramedics arrived, Leodan was taken by Life Flight to a hospital.  He died eight days later from what was described in the autopsy report as blunt head trauma.  Police recovered a broken baseball bat, a machete, and a kitchen knife from the scene.  No weapons were found around Leodan=s body.  Lab tests revealed Leodan=s DNA on the end of the baseball bat.

Appellant was charged by indictment with murder, to which he pleaded A

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Eduardo Rodriguez v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eduardo-rodriguez-v-state-texapp-2008.