Julio Cesar Jimenez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 18, 2009
Docket04-08-00121-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Julio Cesar Jimenez v. State (Julio Cesar Jimenez 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.

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Julio Cesar Jimenez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

i i i i i i

OPINION

No. 04-08-00121-CR

Julio Cesar JIMENEZ, Appellant

v.

The STATE of Texas, Appellee

From the 293rd Judicial District Court, Zavala County, Texas Trial Court No. 97-06-02666-ZCR Honorable Cynthia L. Muniz, Judge Presiding

Opinion by: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice

Sitting: Catherine Stone, Chief Justice Karen Angelini, Justice Phylis J. Speedlin, Justice

Delivered and Filed: March 18, 2009

AFFIRMED

Julio Cesar Jimenez was convicted by a jury of murder, and sentenced by the trial court to

47 years incarceration. Jimenez appeals his conviction complaining of: (1) charge error; (2) judicial

vindictiveness; (3) erroneous admission of evidence; (4) prosecutorial misconduct; (5) improper jury

argument; (6) improper rulings regarding two witnesses; and (7) cumulative error. We affirm the

judgment of the trial court. 04-08-00121-CR

BACKGROUND

Jimenez was convicted for the murder of Armando Aguillon. Jimenez and Aguillon knew

each other and had previous problems before the day of the shooting. Jimenez testified that he was

afraid of Aguillon because in the past, Aguillon had threatened Jimenez with a gun and would often

follow him in his car. Jimenez eventually decided to move from Crystal City to San Antonio to

avoid Aguillon’s menacing presence.

The day before the incident, Jimenez returned to Crystal City to retrieve some of his

belongings from his parents’ house. Jimenez testified that one of the items was a shotgun; he put

the gun in the backseat of his car, and several shotgun shells in the front seat.

The day of the incident, Jimenez was driving around Crystal City with his friend Dario

Granado when they encountered Aguillon at a gas station. At the gas station, Aguillon made some

hand motions which Jimenez interpreted as a challenge to come and get him. Jimenez drove off, and

Aguillon chased him on the highway, ramming into the back of Jimenez’s car more than once. At

some point, positions switched and Jimenez began chasing Aguillon. When Aguillon drove into a

residential area and pulled into an empty lot, Jimenez pulled in behind him. Jimenez testified that

Granado had somehow accessed Jimenez’s gun and loaded it; once the car stopped, Granado aimed

the gun out the window and shot Aguillon. Aguillon died about a week later.

Jimenez testified that immediately after the incident, he and Granado drove to Jimenez’s

parents’ house to get some money, and then drove back to San Antonio. Granado told Jimenez’s

father, his own brother, and his brother’s friend that he shot somebody. A few days later, Jimenez

returned to Crystal City and turned himself in.

-2- 04-08-00121-CR

In 2002, Granado was tried for Aguillon’s death and convicted of manslaughter. Jimenez

was tried a total of four times for his part in the crime. The trial that forms the basis of this appeal

began on January 29, 2008. At that trial, Jimenez was found guilty by a jury, and the trial court

assessed punishment of forty-seven years incarceration at the Texas Department of Criminal

Justice–Institutional Division. This appeal followed.

JURY CHARGE ERROR

In his first issue, Jimenez argues the jury charge in the guilt-innocence phase improperly

applied the law of defense of a third party, allowing the jury to convict Jimenez on an inaccurate

theory of law and resulting in egregious harm. Jimenez was tried and convicted as a party to the

offense, and raised the affirmative defenses of self-defense and defense of a third party (on the part

of Granado). The application paragraph of the jury charge included the following language:

Now, if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt . . . [that] Dario Granado reasonably believed that the use of deadly force on his part was immediately necessary to protect himself or Julio Cesar Jimenez against the use or attempted use of unlawful deadly force by Armando Aguillon, and that Dario Granado then shot the said Armando Aguillon, and that a reasonable person in the situation of Dario Granado at that time would not have retreated, then you should acquit Julio Cesar Jimenez. . . .

(Emphasis added).

Jimenez argues that the charge improperly applied the law of defense of a third party, which

allowed the jury to convict him if it found a reasonable person in Granado’s shoes should have

retreated. At the time of the offense, the law did not require the actor in defense of a third party to

retreat. Under section 9.33 of the relevant Penal Code:

A person is justified in using force or deadly force against another to protect a third person if:

-3- 04-08-00121-CR

(1) under the circumstances as the actor reasonably believes them to be, the actor would be justified under Section 9.31 or 9.32 of this code in using force or deadly force to protect himself against the unlawful force or unlawful deadly force he reasonably believes to be threatening the third person he seeks to protect . . . .

TEX . PENAL CODE ANN . § 9.33 (Vernon 2006) (emphasis added). Section 9.32 of the Penal Code

stated:

A person is justified in using deadly force against another:

...

(2) if a reasonable person in the actor’s situation would not have retreated; and

(3) when and to the degree he reasonably believes the deadly force is immediately necessary:

(A) to protect himself against the other’s use or attempted use of unlawful deadly force . . . .

Id. at § 9.32 (emphasis added).

A plain reading of the two sections together appears to require a third party to retreat, if

possible, before defending another. Prosecutors have argued that courts should adhere to the plain

meaning of the statute and leave it to the Legislature to revise the statutory language in order to

achieve its desired purpose. See, e.g., Hughes v. State, 719 S.W.2d 560, 563 (Tex. Crim. App.

1986). However, the Court of Criminal Appeals found the legislative intent was apparent in section

9.33 when it held the following:

Because under § 9.33(2) . . . an accused must reasonably believe that his intervention is “immediately necessary to protect the third person,” it would be paradoxical, to say the least, to suggest that the Legislature intended that he first be required to retreat. Clearly what the legislature did intend was to justify use of deadly force to protect a third person in any situation in which the third person would apparently be justified in using deadly force to protect himself. By positing in § 9.33(1) that “the actor would be justified under Section . . . 9.32 of this code” in using deadly force to protect himself against that force “he reasonably believes

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to be threatening the third person he seeks to protect,” the Legislature was merely placing the accused, who is the “actor” under § 9.33, supra, in the shoes of the third person. So long as the accused reasonably believes that the third person would be justified in using deadly force to protect himself, the accused may step in and exercise deadly force on behalf of that person. Part of what goes into the assessment of whether the third person had a right to exercise deadly force in defense of himself is whether or not a reasonable person in his position would have retreated instead. Thus, in deciding intervention is necessary, the accused must reasonably believe that “a reasonable person in [the third person’s] situation would not have retreated.”

Id. at 564.

The Hughes decision is controlling authority for the proposition that it is error for a court’s

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