Elpidio Salazar Romero v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 6, 2001
Docket13-00-00134-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Elpidio Salazar Romero v. State (Elpidio Salazar Romero 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
Elpidio Salazar Romero v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion


NUMBER 13-00-134-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI

___________________________________________________________________

ELPIDIO SALAZAR ROMERO , Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS , Appellee.

___________________________________________________________________

On appeal from the 370th District Court

of Hidalgo County, Texas.

__________________________________________________________________

O P I N I O N

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Castillo

Opinion by Justice Castillo

Elpidio Salazar Romero, appellant, was convicted by a jury of the offense of murder and sentenced to forty years in prison.(1) From this conviction he appeals, raising three points of error. We reverse and remand for a new trial.

Factual Background

On October 17, 1998, appellant was awakened by his pregnant wife who asked him to take her to a convenience store to purchase some cupcakes. Before leaving his parents' house, where he and his family were then residing, appellant took his father's loaded handgun from a top cabinet because he was worried for his safety due to the neighborhood he lived in and the enemies he had there. He placed the gun on top of the back seat of his sister's vehicle, which he was borrowing for the errand. Appellant, his wife, and his two-year-old daughter then went to the store. On the way home after making the purchase, Romero stopped at his neighbor Floyd Garcia's home to inquire about a debt that Floyd owed him. While there, Romero honked the vehicle's horn. Victor Garcia, Floyd's father, responded from inside the property's fence that Floyd was not in.

According to appellant, he began to leave but then noticed someone motioning him to stop and come back. Thinking that the person was Floyd, appellant stopped and reversed his vehicle, only to discover that it was Victor Garcia. Garcia appeared "crazy or high or something" and was advancing on the car and yelling, "I already got tired of you. You have worn my patience. You better grab your nuts because when I see you around I am going to kill you." (2) Appellant told Garcia to ignore him because he was with his family and did not want any problem, but Garcia advanced further toward the vehicle. Appellant then pushed Garcia away with the car door and reached for his gun, which he pointed at Garcia while telling him to get away. Out of the corner of his eye, appellant saw an unknown person (3) rapidly approaching the vehicle. The man came at him from the side and attacked him. Appellant testified that "they" tried to take the gun away and he kicked "them" two or three times to get them out of his way. (4) "He" had wanted to take the gun away and had been on top of appellant. Romero claimed that he feared for his life and that of his family. Appellant's finger "started moving real fast" and he "heard a shot" and then "didn't feel him" any more. Romero's wife got out of the car with their daughter and ran home. Romero "just wanted to leave" and he walked rapidly home.

When he arrived at his parents' house, he told his father what had happened and where he had left the gun, and told his sister to call 9-1-1. When she asked him if he had shot someone, he replied, "I don't know. I don't know if I shot someone." When the police arrived, appellant turned himself in. In route to the station, he told the officer that he had been attacked by someone but had not known whom. He later told another officer that he had feared the victim and Garcia were going to hurt him; the victim had come from the opposite side of where Garcia was and he believed the victim was going to hurt him; that he had felt that they were going to get him; and that Garcia and the victim had attacked him. (5) He also gave a written statement, admitted at trial, in which he claimed the victim had come at him from the side and he had gotten scared, pointed the gun towards the direction of the man, and shot some rounds.

By contrast, Victor Garcia testified that appellant had gone by Garcia's house three times that day looking for Floyd, and on the final and fatal occasion, appellant had been angry and started cursing. They began arguing and as the argument got louder, Iturrubiate came towards them and asked "What is going on?" Appellant replied, "Do you also want to mess with me?," pulled out a gun, leaned over and fired at least four shots at Iturrubiate. He then pointed the gun at Garcia and fired but the gun jammed and he complained, "I am tired that y'all keep messing with me." Garcia went to help his brother, and when he later looked up, appellant and his wife had both taken off running to their home. Garcia denied that there was any struggle between appellant and himself or his brother and did not recall being pushed by the car door.

The only other witnesses present at the time of the shooting who testified at trial were Leslie Ann Romero, appellant's wife, Sonia Alvarado, Victor Garcia's wife and Vianey Mercardo, appellant's sister. Mrs. Romero testified that Victor Garcia had told her husband "to grab his nuts" because he (Garcia) was going to kill him and he "had people and they were going to kill his [Romero's] whole family." Mrs. Romero also stated that someone else came over and three times "got in" the conversation. She also saw her husband struggling with someone whom she could not identify. According to Mrs. Romero, "they attacked him," went in the car and "jumped on him." She later stated that the "other guy just came at him" and that her husband grabbed "some other man's arms" and another man grabbed her husband's arms but she did not know who the person was.

Sonia Alvarado testified that her husband, Victor Garcia, had gone over to where appellant was. Appellant remained in the car. She thought they were arguing based on Garcia's hand motions. Iturrubiate had been sitting by her and had asked who the person was. After she told him that he was their neighbor, Iturrubiate had gotten up, gone to a nearby blue car, sat inside and lit a cigarette, and had then gone over to where Garcia was. Alvarado saw Iturrubiate standing next to Garcia but then looked away. She did not look back again until she heard the shots, at which time she saw her husband standing and appellant with a gun, aiming at Garcia and saying, "They wanted to mess with us." (6) She then turned away and she did not see where appellant went. She asked her husband where Iturrubiate was and Garcia responded, "This bastard killed him."

Vianey Mercado saw two men next to her brother's car and thought Victor Garcia was arguing with appellant because of Garcia's hand gestures. She then saw "them attacking towards the car," then saw the fire of a gun. According to Mercado, her brother then got out of the car and walked quickly back to the house. He looked scared and told her, "they came at me." She went with him to the police station and recalled at trial that he had told the police that he had been defending himself because he had been attacked.

Denial of Instruction on Self-Defense against Multiple Assailants

In his third point of error, appellant argues that the trial court erred in refusing to submit a requested instruction of a defensive issue of self-defense against multiple assailants.

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Elpidio Salazar Romero v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elpidio-salazar-romero-v-state-texapp-2001.