Jose Duran v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 18, 2013
Docket11-11-00220-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Duran v. State (Jose Duran 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 Duran v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion filed July 18, 2013

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-11-00220-CR __________

JOSE DURAN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 238th District Court

Midland County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. CR37862

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Jose Duran of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon and, after finding that he had previously been convicted of two prior felony offenses, assessed his punishment at confinement for sixty years in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Duran presents five issues on appeal: (1) the evidence was insufficient to support the verdict; (2) the conviction based on insufficient evidence denied Duran due process of law; (3) the State’s comment during closing argument that the victim’s wounds were “obviously caused by a knife” amounted to bolstering of a witness’s testimony; (4) the State’s remarks concerning the omission of an instruction on self-defense amounted to a comment on Duran’s failure to testify; and (5) the State’s suggestion that the jury should answer “yes” to the question whether the victim had been stabbed invaded the jury’s province and was improper. We affirm. Background Facts Johnny Robertson met Jennifer Sackie where they worked at a landscaping company. Robertson moved in with Sackie and her common-law husband, Jose Duran. Sometime prior to the event in this case, Duran moved out to date another woman. Apparently, the three remained friends. Both Robertson and Sackie testified that they were “just” friends; they had no romantic involvement. Robertson, Sackie, and Duran went to the Sundown Market in Midland around 8:00 a.m. on September 9, 2010. They bought at least two six-packs of beer. After drinking the beer, they walked toward the Soup Kitchen for lunch. Sackie stopped in Hidalgo Park, and Robertson and Duran went on to the Soup Kitchen. After the Soup Kitchen closed at 1:00 p.m., Robertson took a plate of food from the Soup Kitchen to Sackie who had remained in the park. Duran stayed at the Soup Kitchen, visiting with friends. Sackie ate her lunch and then went back to the Sundown Market to buy more beer, leaving Robertson in the park. While she was gone, Ricky Acosta arrived and sat nearby. When Sackie returned to the park, Duran and others arrived. Duran and Sackie began arguing over money; Sackie claimed that Duran owed her forty dollars. When she told Duran not to call her a “bitch,” Duran became angry. 2 Robertson tried to intercede, telling Duran to leave Sackie alone. Sackie said that she turned to visit with Acosta and walked toward the Soup Kitchen to cool down. Duran did not follow her, and he did not threaten her or show her a knife. Sackie admitted that she was intoxicated that day and that she did not see anyone with a knife. As Sackie walked away, Duran approached Robertson (who was sitting down) and mumbled something. Robertson did not understand Duran and thought that Duran was patting him on the back. Robertson got up and started walking toward Acosta because he did not want to argue with Duran. Robertson said that, as Robertson walked toward Acosta, Duran stuck a knife to his throat and said, “I ought to kill you.” Duran had followed behind Robertson and put his arm around Robertson’s neck. Robertson felt a poke on his neck and felt blood “tingling” down his throat. Robertson testified that he was also stabbed in the back, side, and elbow. When he reached his hand to his back, his hand became bloody. He did not see the knife. Robertson remembered going in an ambulance to the hospital where they stitched and stapled his wounds. Acosta witnessed the argument between Duran and Sackie, and said that Duran slapped her with his open hand. When Robertson intervened, Duran went to where Robertson was sitting and said, “You want some too?” Duran hit Robertson’s back two or three times. Duran pulled a knife from his back pocket and stabbed Robertson in the back. As Robertson got up and came toward Acosta, Acosta saw Duran stab Robertson in the back again. Acosta described the knife as being six or seven inches in length with an open blade and a black handle. According to Acosta, when Robertson got by a garbage can, Duran “dagged” him again. Acosta then told Duran to leave Robertson alone, and Duran left with the knife. Acosta said that Robertson did not have a knife and that he never saw 3 anyone stab Robertson other than Duran. When the police and the ambulance arrived a few minutes later, Acosta described Robertson as having a shirt with the back being full of blood. Grady McGowan works for the City of Midland on a survey crew. He noticed a crowd around one of the tables in Hidalgo Park. He then saw a fight. The “big man” was striking the “little guy” on the head, and you could see his head “pop off the table.” McGowan said that the big man was coming down on top of the little man from behind. McGowan could see that the big man was hitting the other man from the back, but McGowan was too far away to see if the big man had anything in his hand. As the big man left, McGowan followed him in his van. McGowan next saw him in police custody. Officer Tony Jacquez with the Midland Police Department said that he received a dispatch to go to Hidalgo Park because of a stabbing there. When he arrived, he saw Robertson, who had been stabbed and was bleeding. Officer Jacquez saw fresh blood on the park table and on the ground. Officer Jacquez told Officer Aaron Smith, who had arrived first, to look for the suspect. Officer Clark William Owen with the Midland Police Department was working traffic near Hidalgo Park, and he received a broadcast with the description of the suspect and the suspect’s name. Almost immediately, Officer Owen saw the suspect walking away from the area of the assault. Officer Owen said that the suspect confirmed that he was Jose Duran. They were only two blocks from the park. Officer Owen noticed fresh blood on Duran’s shirt, pants, and hands. Sergeant Richard W. Lewis with the Midland Police Department heard Duran identify himself to Officer Owen, and Sergeant Lewis also observed the blood on the palms of Duran’s hands and the blood on his shirt and pants. The officers did not find a weapon on Duran. Sergeant Lewis called in a canine unit to help search for the knife, but it was never found. 4 Officer Owen contacted Officer Christopher Bryan Lumas because Lumas’s patrol car had a prisoner cage in it. When Officer Lumas arrived, he saw that Officer Owen had Duran in handcuffs. Duran appeared to be intoxicated and smelled of alcohol. After being taken to the Midland County jail, Duran asked Officer Lumas, “So I’ve got a count of aggravated assault?” Officer Lumas told him yes. Duran then said, “I should’ve killed him.” Officer Lumas did not say anything further and simply completed the booking process. In viewing photographs of Robertson’s injuries, the jury saw the laceration to the left side of Robertson’s neck under his jaw, a stab wound to the midsection of his back, another stab wound to his lower left side, and a cut to his left elbow. Detective Charles Sims, who had taken the photographs, testified that the wounds shown in the photographs were consistent with stab wounds; they were still bleeding when he took the photographs. He based his opinion on his experience of observing stab wounds over the years. The medical records described the stab wounds as having been closed with staples and sutures. In Dr. Lawrence A. Wilson’s report to Robertson, he told Robertson that the stab wounds should be treated with care to avoid complications and to ensure complete recovery. The jury took only thirty minutes to deliberate and return with its verdict of guilty. Sufficiency of the Evidence We review a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence under the same standard, the standard set forth in Jackson v.

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Jose Duran v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-duran-v-state-texapp-2013.