Jose Alcaraz v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 4, 2000
Docket03-99-00486-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Alcaraz v. State (Jose Alcaraz 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
Jose Alcaraz v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN




NO. 03-99-00486-CR
Jose Alcaraz, (1) Appellant


v.


The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 167TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 990742, HONORABLE THOMAS BLACKWELL, JUDGE PRESIDING


A jury found Jose Alcaraz guilty of engaging in organized criminal activity. He was convicted of conspiring to steal more than $200,000 worth of large vehicles for use in transporting illegal aliens between Eagle Pass and Austin. The district court assessed sentence at fifty years in prison. On appeal, Alcaraz complains that no evidence corroborated the testimony of the accomplice witnesses and that the district court erred by deciding that Anselma Martinez could not claim spousal privilege from testifying against Alcaraz. We will affirm the conviction.

Because the standard of review for the sufficiency challenge requires that we discount the testimony of accomplice witnesses, we will not spend much time discussing the details of their extensive testimony. The accomplices consistently described the crime ring. The thieves stole late model Chevrolet or GMC pickup trucks and Suburbans by popping the front passenger door lock with a screwdriver, breaking into the steering column, and hot-wiring the vehicle. They delivered the trucks in Austin to an apartment and a duplex in the St. John's neighborhood and to an apartment complex off South Lamar. They were usually paid as much as $300. Many of the accomplices were told the trucks were to be used to transport illegal aliens between Eagle Pass and Austin. The vehicles were taken because of their passenger capacity and their ability to drive off-road to evade or delay capture by law enforcement authorities. Some of the men were offered pay ten times more than their car sale fee if they would drive passengers from Eagle Pass to Austin. Some of the men sold cars to appellant, whom some of them knew as "Chino," but others never met him. Some of the accomplices testified that they heard appellant talking in jail about not confessing, and asking others not to do so either.

By his first point of error, appellant argues that the court erred by denying his alleged common-law wife Martinez's claim of the privilege against testifying. Texas recognizes common-law or informal marriages if a man and woman agree to be married and after the agreement they live together in Texas as husband and wife while telling others that they are married. Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 2.401(a)(2) (West 1998). A person under eighteen years of age may not be a party to an informal marriage. Id. § 2.401(c)(1). Such marriages require that the parties agree they are currently married, not that they will marry sometime in the future. Colburn v. State, 966 S.W.2d 511, 515 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998). The person seeking to establish the existence of the marriage must prove its existence by a preponderance of the evidence. Welch v. State, 908 S.W.2d 258, 265 (Tex. App.--El Paso 1995, no pet.).

We review the denial of husband-wife privilege for an abuse of discretion. See Carmona v. State, 947 S.W.2d 661, 664 (Tex. App.--Austin 1997, no pet.). We can reverse a decision only if the trial court applied an erroneous legal standard, or when no reasonable view of the record could support the trial court's conclusion under the correct law and the facts viewed in the light most favorable to its legal conclusion. Id. We will sustain the trial court's decision if it is correct on any theory of law applicable to the case. Romero v. State, 800 S.W.2d 539, 543 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990). This principle holds true even when the trial judge gives the wrong reason for his decision, and is especially true with regard to admission of evidence. Id. at 543-44.

Martinez did not want to testify against appellant. She knew that appellant had lived with Anna Hernandez before meeting her and had two children, ages seven and five, with Hernandez. Martinez testified that she was nineteen at the time of trial on May 20, 1999, and that their son was two years old. She testified that she had lived with appellant since 1996, but that she stayed with her mother about half the time. She said her name was on the lease of the apartment where she lived with appellant, and she planned to live with him when he was free. She visited him in jail around forty times. (2) Martinez said she considered appellant her husband and that they held themselves out to be married. She admitted that, when she learned after appellant's arrest that he had been seeing another woman while they were living together, she did not care about him any more; she nevertheless testified that she still considered him her husband. She also testified, however, that they had "talked about getting married." Recalling her conversations with a detective during the investigation of the crimes charged in this prosecution, she said, "First I said he was my husband and when all this started going deeper in I said he was my boyfriend." When asked why she changed her statements, she replied, "Because we weren't married."

The court stated that appellant could not have been married to Martinez because his relationship with Hernandez constituted a marriage. Though appellant protested that there was no evidence of a previous marriage, the court denied the privilege "since he had children by another woman prior to this and he was then unable to have made a lawful common law marriage with this woman." Because there was no evidence that any marriage to Hernandez was dissolved, the court held appellant could not have married Martinez.

Even agreeing with appellant that the record lacks proof that he was married to Hernandez before his relationship with Martinez, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion by denying the spousal privilege to Martinez. Her testimony regarding the relationship was equivocal. Though she claimed appellant was her husband, she also talked of their plans to "get married" and told an investigator that appellant was her boyfriend, not her husband, because they "weren't married." Her cohabitation with appellant was part-time before his arrest. Further, Martinez could not invoke the privilege for events occurring before her eighteenth birthday because she was legally unable to declare an informal marriage then. See Tex. Fam. Code Ann. § 2.401(c) (age eighteen minimum for informal marriage) and Tex. R. Evid. 504(b)(4)(B) (excluding events preceding marriage from spousal privilege). Based on Martinez's testimony, their relationship began before Martinez was eighteen--Martinez testified in May 1999 that she was nineteen, that the relationship began in 1996, and that their child was two years old.

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Related

Leal v. State
782 S.W.2d 844 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1989)
Colburn v. State
966 S.W.2d 511 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1998)
Romero v. State
800 S.W.2d 539 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1990)
Carmona v. State
947 S.W.2d 661 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1997)
Cathey v. State
992 S.W.2d 460 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1999)
Welch v. State
908 S.W.2d 258 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1995)
Hernandez v. State
939 S.W.2d 173 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1997)

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Jose Alcaraz v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-alcaraz-v-state-texapp-2000.