Johnny Ruiz v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 13, 2010
Docket01-08-00011-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Johnny Ruiz v. State (Johnny Ruiz 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
Johnny Ruiz v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion issued May 13, 2010




In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas





NO. 01-08-00011-CR





JOHNNY RUIZ, Appellant


V.


THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 177th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1143171





MEMORANDUM OPINION


          A jury found appellant, Johnny Ruiz, guilty of intoxication manslaughter and assessed punishment at 22 years’ imprisonment. In three issues, appellant argues that the trial court erred (1) in denying his request for an instruction on criminally negligent homicide; (2) in admitting evidence of his prior conviction for driving while intoxicated; and (3) in overruling his objection to testimony of his gang affiliation.

          We affirm.

BACKGROUND

          On December 13, 2006, appellant borrowed a car from his sister and then called his former common-law wife, Angela Sanchez, and asked for permission to pick up two of their children, three-year-old Marissa and Johnny (Baby Johnny), who had turned two years old two days earlier, from their babysitter. With the approval of Sanchez, appellant picked the children up from the babysitter, agreeing to return them to her later that afternoon. Appellant also checked his younger brother, Jose, out from school, and the four of them went to McDonald’s.

          Around 4:00 that afternoon, appellant was driving his sister’s white Mazda, with the three children in it, on Beltway 8 (the Beltway), in Harris County, Texas. Witnesses testified that appellant was driving well in excess of the posted speed limit in heavy traffic, passing other vehicles so quickly that he made them shake, tail-gating, and hanging out of the window while driving with one hand. After swerving from side to side behind a Cadillac, appellant exited to the feeder road at JFK at speeds up to 120 miles per hour. As a car in front of appellant’s car slowed to make a right-hand turn, appellant veered across all three lanes of the feeder road and headed back towards the Beltway. The car struck a curb, went airborne over the retaining wall, hit the Beltway guardrail, spun, crashed into a pickup truck, and caused other cars to crash into each other. As appellant’s car was coming to rest against the outside concrete barrier, appellant’s daughter, Marissa, was ejected from the car and landed on the Beltway. After the car stopped spinning, appellant and Jose exited the smoking car.

          After exiting the car, appellant walked around in confusion for a few moments. Two to three minutes later, appellant’s car burst into flames. Appellant grabbed Marissa and ran back to his burning car. He indicated that there was another child inside the car and wanted someone to save him, but the car was engulfed in flames. Baby Johnny’s charred body was found in the back seat of the burned-out car and identified from a DNA sample.

          Marissa was bleeding profusely from a deep laceration underneath her chin and was suffering from a bump on her head. Appellant eventually released her to paramedics, and a Life Flight helicopter transported her to Hermann Hospital. An ambulance transported Jose to a hospital. After releasing his daughter to the paramedics, appellant was placed in the back of a police car but was not formally arrested.

          Officer R. Breiding of the Houston Police Department (HPD) was dispatched to the scene and arrived around 5:20 p.m. due to traffic congestion. He noted that appellant had glassy, blood-shot eyes, lack of balance, and the odor of alcohol on his breath. Officer Breiding asked Officer C. Crum to evaluate appellant for intoxication. Officer Crum spoke with appellant and noticed that appellant and the police car in which appellant had been placed smelled of alcohol. Appellant appeared very emotional and had thick speech and poor balance. Appellant admitted to Officer Crum that he had “had a beer.” Appellant refused to take a field sobriety test, but he consented to a Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN) test. Officer Crum observed all six clues of intoxication on the HGN test. After administering the HGN test, Officer Crum formally arrested appellant. Appellant arrived at the police station around 6:30 p.m.

          Upon his arrival at the police station, appellant received his statutory warnings, and the officers asked him to submit to a breath test to determine the concentration of alcohol in his blood. Appellant refused to provide a breath sample, so the officers took him to Ben Taub Hospital for a mandatory blood test. Appellant’s blood test, taken at approximately 7:20 p.m., showed an alcohol concentration of 0.109 grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood.

          Appellant was charged with intoxication manslaughter. The State’s crime lab expert testified at trial that, through extrapolation, appellant’s blood alcohol concentration at the time of the accident was between 0.13 and 0.17, approximately double the legal limit of 0.08.

           Appellant asked the trial court for a jury charge on criminally negligent homicide as a lesser-included offense of the offense of intoxication manslaughter with which he was charged, but the trial court denied appellant’s motion. The jury convicted appellant of intoxication manslaughter.

          During the punishment phase of appellant’s trial, the State introduced evidence of appellant’s prior convictions. Deputy J. Ortiz testified that, through fingerprint analysis, he could verify that most of the judgments and jail cards presented by the State belonged to appellant. Appellant objected, however, to State’s Exhibit 58, a judgment for a 2002 conviction for Driving While Intoxicated (DWI) from Hidalgo County, arguing that while the judgment had a place for a fingerprint on it, there was no fingerprint on the judgment. Appellant also noted that this judgment did not have a corresponding jail card with a fingerprint that could connect the judgment to him. He argued that because there was no fingerprint evidence on this conviction that could connect the judgment to him, the State could not prove that he committed this offense.

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