Elida Comacho Garcia v. State
This text of Elida Comacho Garcia v. State (Elida Comacho Garcia 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.
Opinion
NO. 07-99-0210-CR
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AT AMARILLO
PANEL C
JUNE 2, 2000
______________________________
ELIDA COMACHO GARCIA,
Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS,
Appellee
FROM THE 137TH DISTRICT COURT OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;
NO. 96-422,197; HON. CECIL G. PURYEAR, PRESIDING
Before QUINN and REAVIS and JOHNSON, JJ.
Elida Comacho Garcia (appellant) was convicted by a jury of involuntary manslaughter. Through four issues, appellant contends that her conviction should be reversed because 1) the results of her blood alcohol test should have been suppressed, 2) the state resorted to improper hypothetical questions during voir dire, 3) the evidence
was factually insufficient to prove her intoxication caused the accident, and 4) her trial counsel was ineffective. For reasons to be stated, we affirm.
Background
On July 23, 1993 at around midnight, Johnny Delatorre (Johnny) was attempting to cross Avenue Q in Lubbock, Texas with a shopping cart full of aluminum cans. He had almost traversed the well-lighted, seven-lane street when appellant struck him with her car. When the police arrived, appellant was observed by one officer exhibiting the signs of intoxication, i.e., the smell of alcohol on her breath, slurred speech, and a loss of balance. The officer administered field sobriety tests which appellant generally failed. He then placed appellant in his patrol car and advised her he would need a blood sample. In speaking to other officers at the scene, the detaining officer told them he believed Johnny might die. The officer then transported appellant to the hospital to obtain the blood sample. Upon their arrival, the officer read a document to appellant advising her that she was under arrest for driving while intoxicated. Upon hearing this, appellant refused to consent to the test. Thereafter, the officer advised appellant that he would still obtain the sample without her consent. Eventually, a sample was taken and tests showed appellant’s blood-alcohol content to be .25. Appellant was tried and convicted by a jury of involuntary manslaughter. After her motion for new trial was overruled by operation of law, she timely appealed.
Issue One
In her first issue, appellant contends that the results of her blood test should have been suppressed because a blood sample was taken without her consent and while she was not under arrest. We disagree and overrule the contention.
Statute permitted the officers to obtain a sample of appellant’s blood if, among other things, she was under arrest when the sampling occurred. Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann . art. 6701l-5, § 3 (i) (Supp.1991) (footnote: 1). The evidence at bar indicated that an officer had administered various field sobriety tests to appellant. Upon her generally failing same, the officer suspected she was intoxicated and transported her to a local hospital so that her blood-alcohol content could be tested. Prior to the blood being drawn, the officer read a document entitled “ Police Officer DWI Statutory Warning ” (referred to as “ DIC-24 " ) to appellant. The DIC-24 began with the admonishment that “ [y]ou are under arrest for the offense of Driving While Intoxicated. ” After the warning was read, appellant refused to give the sample without her attorney being present. In response, the officer advised appellant that her consent was not needed and that he would need to get a sample before she left the hospital. This officer also testified that at no time was she free to leave until a specimen had been obtained.
Given that the standard of review is one of abused discretion, LaSalle v. State , 923 S.W.2d 819, 823 (Tex.App. -- Amarillo 1996, pet. ref'd), we must read the evidence “in the light most favorable to the trial courts [sic] . . . ruling. . .”. Quinn v. State , 958 S.W.2d 395, 401-402 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997). In so reading the aforementioned evidence, we find it sufficient to support a trial court’s finding that a reasonable person would have believed appellant’s liberty was restrained. Transporting appellant to the hospital, informing her by reading the DIC-24 form that she was under arrest, stating that her consent was unnecessary, and stating that a sample would be obtained before she left is some evidence that an arrest had occurred. See Nottingham v. State , 908 S.W.2d 585, 588 (Tex. App. -- Austin 1995, no pet.) (holding that the suspect was under arrest when the DIC-24 form stating as much was read to her). That other evidence of record may have contradicted that conclusion matters not given the standard of review. Again, we must construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the trial court’s decision. And, if in doing so we uncover evidence supporting the decision, it must be affirmed.
Issue Two
Next, appellant argues that the trial court committed reversible error when it overruled her objection to a portion of the prosecutor’s voir dire. According to appellant, the prosecutor was attempting to commit the jurors to a particular verdict if certain facts were established. We disagree and reject the contention for several reasons. First, the voir dire in question consisted of the prosecutor arguing:
Let’s say that we’re trying a murder case; all right. And there’s two different courtrooms in the courthouse. And in one courtroom, you have got a 25 year old gang banger; all right. And it’s a gang-related shooting and the person he has killed is a rival gang member, and this guy is a gang member; the defendant is a gant member. Okay. And the victim is dead. Okay? That’s a murder case; all right?
In another courtroom you have also got a 75 year old gentleman who has gone to the hospital and is tired of seeing his wife suffer. . .
To this, appellant objected as follows:
[the prosecutor] stands up and says, you know, you just have to imagine circumstances, and [he] then wants to give them specific circumstances or fact patterns to assist in making a determination of a maximum or a minimum punishment. I don’t believe that’s proper, judge, to use specific facts.
From the exchange, one can see that the appellant complained of the State ’ s reference to “specific facts.” Nothing was said about an effort by the State to commit the jurors to a particular verdict should certain facts be established. Thus, the objection below does not comport with that uttered on appeal, which means the latter was waived. Tex. R. App. P.
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