Garland Edwin Gross v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 3, 2006
Docket03-06-00035-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Garland Edwin Gross v. State (Garland Edwin Gross 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.

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Garland Edwin Gross v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-06-00035-CR

Garland Edwin Gross, Appellant



v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 2034169, HONORABLE BRENDA P. KENNEDY, JUDGE PRESIDING

M E M O R A N D U M O P I N I O N



A jury convicted appellant Garland Edwin Gross, Jr. of assault against a public servant, a third-degree felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.01(b)(1) (West Supp. 2006). Appellant elected to have punishment assessed by the judge, who assessed a sentence of five years' imprisonment, but suspended that sentence and placed appellant on community supervision for five years. The trial court also assessed a $2,500 fine and ordered appellant to complete 200 hours of community service. Appellant argues on appeal that the evidence was factually insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in allowing the State to improperly impeach both appellant and his son. We affirm the judgment of conviction.



BACKGROUND



On October 13, 2003, appellant's daughter Brittany, (1) twenty-two years old at the time, called the Lakeway Police Department in response to a family disturbance at the Gross household. The full details of this family disturbance are not clear from the record, but there is testimony that appellant and his eighteen-year-old son Jeffrey were engaged in a physical altercation and that both Brittany and appellant's wife Stephanie unsuccessfully tried to intercede and break up the fight. Appellant left the house after the police were called but before they arrived. Appellant testified that he did not know that the police had been called. Officer Hector Almaguer was dispatched to the Gross household to respond to Brittany's call. He entered the house on the first floor through the side door and encountered Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey.

The Gross house is divided into three levels. The first floor includes a bedroom and the game room with a side door that opens to the outside. The second floor contains the front entrance to the house, and a staircase with seven steps connects this floor to the first floor below. The third floor is where the dining room is located, and there are stairs connecting it to the second floor.

Almaguer proceeded to interview Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey in the dining room on the third floor of the house. All of appellant's family members indicated that they did not want to press charges against appellant for anything that occurred during the family disturbance. Shortly after beginning the interviews, Almaguer received a radio transmission from Sergeant Mary Proctor, who had also been dispatched to the scene and was outside the house. Proctor told Almaguer that appellant had returned and was entering the residence.

Almaguer testified that upon receiving the radio transmission, he stood up from the dining room table, as did appellant's family members. They moved to the back portion of the third floor, while Almaguer descended to the second-floor landing where he encountered appellant coming up the stairs from the first floor. Almaguer testified that he told appellant to stop and put his hands behind his back because he was under arrest for family violence. Almaguer testified that he repeated this command three times. The officer testified that then, without saying a word or even making eye contact, appellant "rushed him," delivered an upper-ridge chop to Almaguer's throat with his right hand, and punched Almaguer in the chest with his left hand. Almaguer recounted being immediately incapacitated by this attack, and stated that appellant then grabbed Almaguer's shirt and pulled him down the stairs. Almaguer testified that both he and appellant landed at the bottom of the stairwell, where Lakeway Police Officer Damien Perez, who had recently arrived at the scene, pulled appellant off of Almaguer. Almaguer testified that as appellant was taken into custody he said that he had taken on bigger and better police departments and would likely be filing a lawsuit against Almaguer. Almaguer also testified that although he did not remember where appellant's wife and children were during the incident, they would be lying if they testified that they were right behind him.

Appellant, Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey all testified to a different version of the incident, often using the same words. All three of appellant's family members testified that when Almaguer was alerted that appellant had returned to the residence, they followed Almaguer down the stairs to the second-floor landing and were standing approximately three feet behind him with a good view of the incident when it happened. This contradicted Almaguer's testimony that the Gross family members were not behind him. It also contradicted Proctor's testimony that when she and Perez entered the house as appellant and Almaguer landed at the bottom of the stairs she saw Jeffrey, Brittany, and Stephanie standing on the third floor. Proctor also testified that the family members all told her at the time that they did not see the incident, although she did not note this in her written report.

Appellant and his family members all testified that appellant, who is right-handed, was holding a can of soda in his right hand on the stairwell. Appellant and his children testified that Almaguer screamed at appellant to "put your fucking hands behind your back" because he was under arrest; Stephanie could not remember whether Almaguer had cursed. All four testified that appellant told Almaguer that he had come home to check on his family, and appellant and his children testified that appellant said "this is wrong" or "you've got it wrong." Appellant and his family all denied that appellant struck Almaguer with his hands. Instead they said Almaguer grabbed appellant's side, presumably to spin him around to put him in handcuffs, when both appellant and Almaguer tumbled down the stairs. The family members testified that Almaguer landed on top of appellant and that Perez "flopped" on top of both of them at the bottom of the stairwell.

Appellant acknowledged that after being taken into custody he told the officers that he had taken on bigger and better police departments and that he would probably file a lawsuit against Almaguer. Appellant testified that the officers were "trash-talking" to him, so he did it right back. A videotape that was filmed from the patrol cars outside the house picked up some audio from inside the house through the officers' microphones; it was entered into evidence. On the tape, appellant can be heard stating that Almaguer pushed him down the stairs and that he was attacked in his own home. On another such tape, Almaguer can be heard stating that he was the one pushed down the stairs.

After appellant was in custody, Proctor took digital photographs of Almaguer's injuries. Proctor also took statements from Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey about the family disturbance that brought the police to the Gross household in the first place. However, Proctor did not inquire about the incident involving Almaguer and appellant.

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