Escobar v. State

799 S.W.2d 502, 1990 WL 175999
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 29, 1990
Docket13-89-187-CR, 13-89-188-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 799 S.W.2d 502 (Escobar 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
Escobar v. State, 799 S.W.2d 502, 1990 WL 175999 (Tex. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION

KEYS, Justice.

Appellant Edward Rivera Escobar, at a joint trial with co-defendant Amancio Flores, III, was found guilty by a jury of the murder of Jaime Villanueva and of the attempted murder of Jose Luis Villanueva. The jury assessed punishment for the murder at 99 years in T.D.C. and a $10,000 fine, and for the attempted murder at 20 years in T.D.C. and a $10,000 fine. The jury also made affirmative findings on use of a deadly weapon in both offenses. Appellant brings twenty-two points of error on appeal. We affirm both convictions.

Appellant’s own statement, admitted into evidence without objection at trial, showed the following sequence of events. Appellant had been drinking beer with a group of his friends at Andy Flores’ house in Lopez-ville, Texas, on the night that both offenses occurred. Shortly after midnight, appellant and Andy Flores went to Rick’s Quick Stop, a nearby convenience store which had already closed for the night. On their way back, , the two helped a man push his car out of a ditch. When they arrived back at Flores’ house, Andy Flores told the others that the man they had helped had called him a “hoto”. The group then decided to start a fight with this man. “We all started saying let’s go back and beat him up. Erasmo Flores then grabbed a baseball bat. Hector Moreno grabbed a car jack. We all ran back to Rick’s Quick Stop.”

When the group found a car that looked like the one Andy Flores and the appellant had helped push out of the ditch, Freddy Flores then began to break its windows. The first victim then came running from a house next to the convenience store, asking *504 the group in Spanish what was going on, and pushed Abel Gamez away from the car. Erasmo Flores then hit the first victim on the head with the baseball bat, and he fell to the ground.

A second victim then came running from the house and hit Erasmo Flores to the ground, causing him to drop the baseball bat. One of the group then kicked the second victim to the ground, at which time appellant picked up the baseball bat and hit the second victim on the head with it. Others then kicked him in the head. A supposed third victim then arrived on the scene and was kicked to the ground by Mando Gamez as appellant hit him in the stomach with the bat. While the others in the group continued to hit the victims as they lay on the ground, appellant took the baseball bat and ran back to Flores’ house. About two minutes later, the rest of the group followed. At the end of his statement appellant commented that, “I don’t know the names of the guys that we beat up and I don’t think that I had ever seen them before that night.”

Several persons witnessed either the fight or the events surrounding it, and testified consistently with appellant’s rendition. Among them, Sylvestre Garcia and Eduardo De La Garza, who had been driving through Lopezville at the time of the incident, each testified that they saw three unidentified males hitting the victims. De La Garza elaborated that he had seen one of the men holding a “wooden baseball bat.” After unsuccessfully chasing one of the assailants, Garcia and De La Garza had stopped to render aid to the victims.

Jose Luis Villanueva testified that on the night in question he, with his brother Jaime following, walked over to Jaime’s car when they noticed a group of men beating on it. Jose Luis saw three men, one of whom had a bat and started swinging it at him. After being hit a number of times with the bat, Jose Luis did not remember anything more, nor did he see who beat up Jaime. Jose Luis did, however, recognize the person who assaulted him with a bat as the second man from the left in a newspaper photograph from the Edinburg Daily Review which was admitted at trial. Appellant was later identified by a local sheriff’s office investigator as the second man from the left in the photograph.

Dr. Omar Garza testified that he treated Jaime and Jose Luis Villanueva at the Edin-burg General Hospital emergency room immediately after the assault. Jaime suffered several fractures to his skull and was pronounced brain dead three days later, though he was kept artificially alive for several more days. Dr. Garza determined that Jaime’s cause of death was severe brain injury caused by blunt, very hard trauma to his head, which could have been caused by some kind of metal or wooden object, but probably not merely kicks to the head. Jose Luis also suffered injuries to the head, including blood clots inside his brain that were surgically removed. When first admitted to the hospital, Jose Luis was also in danger of dying from his brain injuries.

Dr. Ruben Santos, the pathologist who performed Jaime’s autopsy, testified that the cause of death was a blunt force injury to the head. He found multiple fractures to the skull produced by a heavy, blunt instrument, not a sharp one. There were several blows, which could have been produced by a bat, a two-by-four, or a car jack. These injuries would be aggravated by later repeatedly kicking the victim in the head.

Appellant’s first through twentieth points of error all challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support his twin convictions. His first three points complain that the evidence was insufficient to show that he was the primary actor who caused Jaime Villanueva’s death by striking him with a wooden stick, a car jack, or his foot. Similarly, points eleven through thirteen challenge sufficiency to show that he was the primary actor who committed the clearly dangerous act of striking Jose Luis Villanueva with a wooden stick, a car jack, or his foot. Points of error four through ten challenge sufficiency to support appellant’s criminal responsibility for the conduct of his companions in causing the death of Jaime Villanueva, and points fourteen *505 through twenty challenge sufficiency to support his criminal responsibility for their conduct in striking Jose Luis Villanueva with a wooden stick, a car jack, or his foot. 1

The appellant was indicted and the court consistently charged the jury under both cases in accordance with the provisions of Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 19.02(a)(2) (Vernon 1989) that appellant must have “intend[ed] to cause serious bodily injury and commits an act clearly dangerous to human life.” In the murder case the acts of appellant and his group resulted in the death of Jaime Villanueva, constituting the offense of murder under section 19.02. In the attempted murder case their acts inflicted life-threatening wounds upon Jose Luis Villanueva, but failed to kill him, which allowed conviction only of an attempted offense under Tex.Penal Code Ann. § 15.01 (Vernon Supp.1990). In addition, the trial court properly instructed the jury on the law of parties and applied it to the facts of the present case for both the murder and the attempted murder, allowing both convictions to be sustained based either on the appellant’s own conduct or the conduct of others within his group for which he may be held legally responsible under the law of parties. We will therefore discuss together the arguments made by appellant under points of error one through twenty.

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Bluebook (online)
799 S.W.2d 502, 1990 WL 175999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/escobar-v-state-texapp-1990.