Jose Guadalupe Garcia Flores v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 20, 2019
Docket14-17-00745-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Jose Guadalupe Garcia Flores v. State (Jose Guadalupe Garcia Flores 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 Guadalupe Garcia Flores v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed June 20, 2019.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-17-00745-CR

JOSE GUADALUPE GARCIA FLORES, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 351st District Court Harris County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 1471756

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Jose Guadalupe Garcia Flores was convicted of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. The jury assessed appellant’s punishment at six years in prison. In two issues, appellant argues that the trial court erred when it (1) refused his request for jury instructions on the lesser offenses of class A and class C misdemeanor assault; and (2) denied his request for a jury instruction on self- defense. Finding no error, we affirm. BACKGROUND

Jose Gomez, the complainant, went to the Rancho El Dorado with his uncle and others for a rodeo. Appellant was also present at the rodeo that evening. Gomez and appellant knew each other as a result of their regular attendance at the Rancho El Dorado and they had an unfriendly relationship. According to Gomez, appellant had threatened to kill him, as well as his wife and children. As a result of this threat, Gomez tried to not “cross words with [appellant] or look at him.”

On the night of the incident, Gomez was on his horse when it started to rain. He then rode his horse into the bar area at the Rancho El Dorado because that area was covered. It was then that Gomez saw appellant, who was standing near the bar with several friends, making rude hand gestures at him. According to Gomez, appellant was about fifteen feet away when he made the hand gestures. Gomez got off his horse and walked toward appellant to ask appellant “what was his problem.” As Gomez walked toward appellant, appellant’s friends blocked his way and he was unable to get closer than eight feet to appellant. According to Gomez, he was not armed, and he did not threaten appellant. Gomez’s friend, Juan Carlos Vega Rojas, came up to him and they both turned around to walk away from appellant. As they were walking away, Gomez heard a gunshot. Gomez turned back around and saw appellant pointing a handgun at him. At that moment, Gomez decided to run toward appellant to try to take the gun away from him. Gomez grabbed appellant’s hands and pushed them down. As they struggled, Gomez heard two more gunshots and he knew right away that he had been shot. Gomez was struck twice, once below his stomach and the second time in his groin. Even though he had been shot, Gomez was able to take the gun away from appellant and then hit appellant. Gomez fainted as he tried to hit appellant a second time. Gomez testified that his uncle took the gun away from him right

2 before he fainted. Gomez did not know what happened to the gun, which was never recovered.

Maximiliano Vega was friends with Gomez and he was with Gomez at the rodeo that night. Vega was sitting on his horse next to his brother, Juan Carlos, and Gomez, when Vega saw appellant standing with Rene Flores. Vega then saw Gomez get off his horse and walk toward appellant. According to Vega, Gomez tried to get close to appellant, but the crowd pushed him back. Vega then saw Gomez turn around and start walking back toward his horse. At that point, Vega saw Rene Flores pull out a gun. He then saw appellant grab the gun from Rene Flores and fire a shot at the ground. This gunshot spooked Vega’s horse and it rode away with him. As a result, Vega did not see what happened next. He did, however, hear two more gunshots. After Vega got his horse under control, he dismounted, and walked back to where he saw Gomez laying on the ground, bleeding.

Juan Carlos was on his horse next to Vega and Gomez in the bar area. Vega told Juan Carlos that Gomez was heading toward appellant. Juan Carlos then saw appellant and Gomez arguing. He also observed that appellant looked angry. Juan Carlos then jumped down off his horse, grabbed Gomez by the arm, and started taking him away to avoid any problems. As they were walking away from appellant, Juan Carlos heard the first gunshot. Both men turned around and they saw appellant pointing a gun down at the ground. Appellant then raised the gun and pointed it at them. Gomez moved toward appellant to take the gun away from him. After Gomez tried to grab the gun away from appellant, Juan Carlos heard two more shots. Juan Carlos did not see Gomez get shot because Gomez’s back was toward him. Later, Juan Carlos saw appellant running toward the stable, so he grabbed him. According to Juan Carlos, appellant struggled to get away. While

3 struggling, appellant told him that he still had the gun. At that point, Juan Carlos hit appellant once or twice. The police arrived, and Juan Carlos told them appellant was the person who had fired the shots.

Sergeant Juan Reynaldo of the Houston Police Department arrived on the scene to help interview Spanish-speaking witnesses. He also talked to appellant. According to Reynaldo, appellant told him that he had argued with Gomez, but that he did not shoot him.

At trial, appellant called three witnesses to testify. The first, Obidio Cisneros, a friend of appellant who was drinking with appellant in the rodeo’s bar along with other friends. Cisneros saw Gomez come up to appellant and hit him in the back. According to Cisneros, appellant turned around and started defending himself. Cisneros testified that both men started punching each other. A crowd then gathered around, and Cisneros could no longer see anything. Cisneros then heard two shots. According to Cisneros, a friend tried to separate appellant and Gomez and it was then that he heard the two gunshots. Cisneros did not see either man, appellant or Gomez, with a gun. Cisneros testified that earlier that day, he had seen Gomez throw his horse on appellant in the arena. Finally, Cisneros testified that he saw an unidentified man with a gun, pointing it “in every direction when the shots happened.”

Next, Rene Flores testified that he was friends with appellant. According to Flores, earlier in the day, when appellant and his friends were still on their horses, Gomez and his friends would ride their horses by and “kind of push the horses to us.” Flores believed that Gomez was intoxicated that evening. Flores testified that there was a fistfight between appellant and Gomez. According to Flores, he was twelve to fifteen feet away when he saw the fistfight. Prior to the fistfight, Flores saw Gomez bothering appellant. Flores saw people trying to separate appellant

4 and Gomez, while others were “going to fight.”

Flores did not see appellant or Gomez with a gun that night, but Flores did see a tall, young, Hispanic man, between twenty and thirty years old, wearing a big hat, and carrying a gun. Flores testified that the tall man was pointing the gun at everyone. Flores believed that the tall man with the gun was a friend of Gomez and that he had never seen the tall man at the Rancho El Dorado before the night of the shooting.

While appellant and Gomez were fighting, Flores heard three shots, two together, and then a third. Flores did not see the start of the fight between appellant and Gomez because he had taken his horse away from the bar area. When he returned from putting his horse away, there was a crowd of people and it was while he was standing behind the crowd that he saw the tall man with the gun. Flores testified that he did not tell the police what he had seen that night because he did not see any police walking around. Finally, Flores testified that he did not know Gomez had been shot until after the night of the shooting.

Victor Palacios, appellant’s final witness, testified that he was friends with both appellant and Gomez. According to Palacios, Gomez was intoxicated that night.

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Bluebook (online)
Jose Guadalupe Garcia Flores v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jose-guadalupe-garcia-flores-v-state-texapp-2019.