Jose Alberto Rivera Acosta v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 4, 2021
Docket05-20-00863-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Alberto Rivera Acosta v. the State of Texas (Jose Alberto Rivera Acosta v. the State of Texas) 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
Jose Alberto Rivera Acosta v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Affirm and Opinion Filed November 4, 2021

In the Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-20-00863-CR

JOSE ALBERTO RIVERA ACOSTA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 265th Judicial District Court Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F18-54878-R

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Myers, Partida-Kipness, and Carlyle Opinion by Justice Carlyle

Appellant Jose Alberto Rivera Acosta1 entered a negotiated guilty plea to the

third-degree felony offense of family-violence assault enhanced by a prior family-

violence assault conviction. See TEX. PENAL CODE § 22.01(b)(2)(A). Pursuant to the

plea agreement, the trial court placed him on five years’ deferred adjudication

community supervision and imposed a $500 fine.

1 The record shows appellant generally uses the name Jose Rivera. In this opinion, we refer to him as Mr. Rivera. The State later moved to adjudicate based on violation of several community

supervision conditions. Following a hearing, the trial court adjudicated Mr. Rivera

guilty and sentenced him to five years’ imprisonment.

Mr. Rivera contends (1) the trial court abused its discretion by admitting jail

call records into evidence over his objection and (2) the five-year sentence is

“outside the range of punishment due to an improper enhancement” resulting from

ineffective assistance of counsel in the enhancement case. We affirm the trial court’s

judgment in this memorandum opinion. See TEX. R. APP. P. 47.4.

Background

The indictment in this case alleged that in June 2018, Mr. Rivera

“intentionally, knowingly[,] and recklessly cause[d] bodily injury” to Julie Vasquez,

“a member of defendant’s family and household and with whom the said defendant

had a dating relationship.” The indictment also contained the following enhancement

paragraph:

[D]efendant had been previously duly and legally convicted of the following assaultive offense . . . against a person who was a member of the said defendant’s family and household and with whom the said defendant had a dating relationship and such offense . . . render[s] the offense alleged in the first paragraph above a felony of the third degree under Section 22.01(b)(2) of the Texas Penal Code:

In Cause Number MA1851404-N in the COUNTY CRIMINAL COURT NO. 11 of Dallas County, Texas, the said defendant was convicted of ASSAULT FAMILY VIOLENCE on or about the 9TH day of FEBRUARY, A.D., 2018[.]

–2– Mr. Rivera signed an October 17, 2018 plea agreement in which he confessed

to the charged offense and pleaded true to the enhancement paragraph. He also

agreed to community supervision terms that included, among other things, condition

(r): “Do not have any form of contact, be it in person, by mail, telephone or any form

of communication with Julie Vasquez directly or indirectly, for the duration of the

Supervision Term.”

On February 4, 2020, the State filed a motion to adjudicate, contending Mr.

Rivera had violated eight community service conditions, including condition (r). Mr.

Rivera pleaded not true to the State’s allegations.

At the hearing on the motion to adjudicate, Dallas County Hospital District

police officer Luke Rose testified that on January 13, 2020, he responded to a call

from Parkland Hospital’s urgent care clinic regarding an assault. When he arrived at

the clinic, a nurse took him to an examining room where Julie Vasquez was sitting

on the ground, alone. She “was shaking and just couldn’t really complete a

sentence.” According to Officer Rose, Mr. Rivera and Ms. Vasquez’s father had just

left the examining room and were “on their way to the restroom.” Before the two

men returned, Officer Rose took Ms. Vasquez to a different room down the hall so

he “could ask her what was going on without having someone in the room.” Ms.

Vasquez seemed “frightened and upset” and “was talking softly so that Mr. Rivera

couldn’t hear that she moved into a different room.”

–3– Officer Rose stated Ms. Vasquez told him that earlier that day, she and Mr.

Rivera had sex “and then at some point she was on the bed and he folded the mattress

over her and he jumped on it multiple times.” She told Officer Rose “the only way

she could get away is to tell him that her father needed to go to the hospital.” When

the three of them got to the hospital, Ms. Vasquez told a nurse she had been assaulted.

Officer Rose testified he questioned Mr. Rivera, who “said that she was lying

and that all he did that day was have sex with her.” Officer Rose contacted “dispatch”

and learned Mr. Rivera “did have a protective order and the victim was Julie

Vasquez.” Then, he arrested Mr. Rivera.

John Ludwigs, an investigator with the Dallas County District Attorney’s

office, testified he assisted the prosecutor in this case by “pulling jail calls.” Mr.

Ludwigs stated the jail’s electronic “Securus” phone system can be searched by

phone number to generate a log of calls made to that number by jail inmates. Securus

also “sometimes gives you a name associated with” the phone number for which a

search is performed. He testified (1) during 2020, 242 calls were made to a particular

phone number using Mr. Rivera’s jail inmate “PIN” number, and (2) Securus showed

that phone number “came back to” Julie Vasquez. A Securus call log listing 239 calls

to the phone number in question and a printout showing that phone number as

registered to Ms. Vasquez were admitted into evidence over defense counsel’s

hearsay objection.

Mr. Rivera testified on direct examination:

–4– Q. . . . Mr. Rivera, did you violate any bond conditions with respect to a protective order?

A. From—from my understanding, yes and no because the simple fact that I—the—the previous convictions to this wasn’t even supposed to be a conviction. It was supposed to be dismissed because a nonprosecution affidavit was filed. I was poor of knowledge and poor educated on the case and the materials in the case—

[COUNSEL FOR STATE]: Objection. Judge, nonresponsive.2

THE COURT: Yeah. Listen to the questions that are asked and give answers to just those questions.

On cross-examination, Mr. Rivera testified:

Q. Okay. And you knew that you weren’t supposed to be anywhere near [Ms. Vasquez] as a part of that probation?

A. Yes, ma’am. .... Q. Okay. So you’re still interacting with her and you’re still in a relationship with her, you’re still having contact with her, despite this probation condition?

A. Yes, ma’am.

Q. Okay. And, in fact, you had sex with her on [January 13, 2020]?

On redirect examination, Mr. Rivera stated:

Q. So what—what would it be that you would be asking the Court to do or consider?

2 It isn’t completely clear whether the prosecutor’s objection to a nonresponsive answer to defense counsel’s question on direct examination was warranted here. As a prudential matter, the prosecutor had all of cross-examination to probe this point. As this Court explained in the seminal case, Smith v. State, 763 S.W.2d 836, 841–42, (Tex. App.—Dallas 1988, pet. ref’d), “[n]ot every unresponsive answer should be stricken.” At worst, Mr. Rivera offered a relevant but perhaps not strictly or completely responsive answer. See id. In any event, the prosecutor here did not address admissibility when objecting so the testimony remains before this Court. See id. –5– A.

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