Garza v. State

915 S.W.2d 204, 1996 WL 27083
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 22, 1996
Docket13-94-206-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 915 S.W.2d 204 (Garza 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
Garza v. State, 915 S.W.2d 204, 1996 WL 27083 (Tex. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

CHAVEZ, Justice.

A jury found appellant guilty of capital murder and assessed his punishment at life in prison. By seven points of error, appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient to support the conviction, that his confession was involuntary and should have been suppressed, and that the trial court erred by failing to make and file written findings of fact and conclusions of law regarding the confession’s voluntariness. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

By point of error four, appellant complains that there is insufficient evidence to corroborate his confession. By points five and six, he complains that his confession does not establish the corpus delicti of capital murder, and by point seven, he complains that the evidence is insufficient to corroborate the testimony of Maria Martinez, an accomplice witness. As these four points all concern sufficiency matters, we will address them together.

The record shows that appellant and Dora Cisneros were indicted and jointly tried for the capital murder of Joey Fischer, a senior at St. Joseph Academy in Brownsville and the former boyfriend of Cisneros’s teenage daughter, Cristina. Fischer was killed on the morning of March 3, 1993, when he was shot in the head and chest while standing in his family’s driveway in the Rancho Viejo section of Cameron County. Family members heard gunshots but did not witness the killing. Fischer’s brother saw a white car speed away but could not identify the car or its occupant or occupants. The police were immediately summoned and arrived at the crime scene within minutes. Fischer was already dead when the first officers arrived. A business card from a Dallas area bail bond company was found next to Fischer’s body.

About a month after the shooting, the investigators’ trail led them to appellant, a San Antonio man with ties to the Brownsville *206 area. Appellant admitted his involvement in the killing and gave a written statement to the police on March 31,1993. Appellant was not immediately arrested after giving the statement because the police needed his cooperation in their continuing investigation. Thus, after obtaining appellant’s statement, the police asked appellant to meet with Maria Martinez, an elderly woman who appellant said participated in the conspiracy to murder Fischer. Appellant cooperated, and three conversations between appellant and Martinez were monitored and tape recorded by investigators. Recordings of these conversations were admitted in evidence. After appellant and Martinez talked these several times, Martinez was arrested. Martinez then agreed with the investigators to meet with Cisneros, the person who, according to appellant, was behind the crime. The meeting between Martinez and Cisneros was monitored and tape recorded by investigators. At trial, the recording of this meeting was admitted as evidence against Cisneros.

At trial, neither appellant nor Cisneros testified. Maria Martinez was the State’s key witness. 1 In her testimony, Martinez described herself as the owner of a secondhand clothing store in Brownsville and admitted that she also read Mexican cards, gave advice, and prepared potions for people seeking cures to their problems. Martinez testified that appellant, whom she referred to as “Güero,” initially visited her because of some family problems. Although she could not recall when appellant first visited her, it is clear that both appellant and Cisneros were seeking Martinez’s help for their respective problems during the fall of 1992. Appellant made several trips to Martinez’s store in an effort to find a solution to his family problems. Martinez prepared oils mixed in holy water for appellant to use. These mixtures were supposed to bring appellant good luck in the resolution of his problems.

Martinez testified that Cisneros came to her for a reading of the cards, seeking answers about the relationship between her daughter Cristina and her Anglo boyfriend, whose name she did not disclose. Martinez did not specify when this meeting occurred. When Martinez told Cisneros that the boy was “very far away” from her daughter, Cisneros appeared very serious and a little bit angry. High school friends of Fischer and Cristina testified that Fischer and Cristina had gone to Fischer’s junior prom together but had broken off their relationship sometime during the summer of 1992. Evidence from other sources showed that Cisne-ros had attempted persistently to find ways to get Fischer to continue dating her daughter.

Martinez testified that during her second meeting with Cisneros, Cisneros asked her to cast a spell on Fischer. Cisneros said that she wanted something bad to happen to Fischer or for Fischer to get killed. When Martinez told Cisneros that she did not know how to cast that type of spell, Cisneros got upset and left her store. Four or five days later, Cisneros called Martinez and asked her to pray that Fischer would go back to her daughter. At a meeting before Halloween 1992, Cisneros told Martinez that she wanted Martinez to get some guys “to do a little job” for her. Cisneros did not elaborate and left the store.

Martinez approached appellant about “the job” on one of his visits. At first, appellant was not helpful because he did not know anyone who could perform “the job.” Ultimately, appellant agreed to find some guys to do “the job” because Martinez promised appellant that his assistance would cure his family problems.

On Halloween, Cisneros left an envelope in Martinez’s store for Martinez to give to appellant. Without opening the envelope, Martinez gave it to appellant. When appellant opened it in her store, Martinez saw that the envelope contained a photo of a boy and some papers. Appellant told Martinez that he would “take care of the guys” and left. Martinez testified that Cisneros did not know appellant. In referring to Cisneros, she only told appellant that it was a lady who wanted a job done, but she never revealed Cisneros’s real name to appellant. Martinez only referred to Cisneros as “La Clienta” (“the customer”).

*207 Martinez testified that during November 1992, Cisneros repeatedly contacted her to find out what was going on regarding the job. During one conversation, Cisneros warned Martinez to be very careful, to say nothing about the envelope, and to keep her mouth shut. Cisneros told Martinez on another occasion to tell appellant that she wanted the boy really dead. During November, appellant also contacted Martinez, though only periodically. During one such contact, Martinez passed along Cisneros’s message “to kill him.” Appellant told Martinez to let the lady know that he was taking care of the guys.

Cisneros did not contact Martinez much during the month of December but did several times during January. Cisneros was upset because nothing was happening. During one discussion, Cisneros told Martinez that “the Gringo” had raped her daughter. 2 Cisneros again told Martinez to tell appellant that she wanted the boy “really dead” and requested that the killer take the boy’s ring and wallet to prove that he was really dead. According to Martinez, appellant was busy in Dallas during January but told Martinez that he would come, presumably to Brownsville, at some later date.

During February, Cisneros continued to contact Martinez to find out what was happening.

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Bluebook (online)
915 S.W.2d 204, 1996 WL 27083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garza-v-state-texapp-1996.