Leoncio Lozano v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 26, 2006
Docket13-03-00290-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Leoncio Lozano v. State (Leoncio Lozano 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
Leoncio Lozano v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion



NUMBER 13-03-290-CR



COURT OF APPEALS



THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS



CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG



LEONCIO LOZANO

, Appellant,

v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.



On appeal from the 398th District Court

of Hidalgo County, Texas.



MEMORANDUM OPINION
(1)

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Yañez and Castillo

Opinion by Justice Castillo



A jury convicted appellant Leoncio Lozano of capital murder of a child. (2) The trial court assessed the automatic life sentence. By three points of error, Lozano asserts (1) the trial court harmed him by creating in the jury's presence a hostile environment toward his defense, and (2) the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to sustain the conviction. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

At the time of his death, Johnathan Cate was twenty months old and weighed twenty-four pounds. He died from two intestinal ruptures and a mesentery rupture caused by multiple, blunt trauma to his abdomen. He sustained bite marks above the groin (3) and bruises and lacerations to his face, abdomen, back, legs, one toe, (4) and his groin. The injuries were in various stages of healing. The child had four bruises on the left side of his abdomen and three on the right side of his abdomen. Most were fresh. A large bruise on his back was also fresh. Johnathan was the child of Lozano's then girlfriend, Crystallyn Lozano. (5) Lozano testified that he accidentally stepped on the child. Medical testimony showed that the child's injuries were not caused by stepping on him. Evidence showed that Lozano was the only adult present when the child sustained the fatal injuries. Events leading to Johnathan's death unfolded as follows.

A. The State's Evidence

Crystallyn Lozano (hereafter "Mrs. Lozano") met Lozano in an internet chat room. At the time, Mrs. Lozano and Johnathan were living with her mother. Over a month later, in August 2001, Lozano moved in with them. In early October, Lozano moved Mrs. Lozano and Johnathan out. By early December, they moved to a house across the street from his parents' house. In early December, Mrs. Lozano secured work at a local department store. Her work day usually began at 6:00 p.m. Most days, Mrs. Lozano spent her time with Johnathan at Lozano's parents' house across the street. Five days before Johnathan's death, the child's maternal grandmother observed that the child had several bruises and cried over an hour without stopping. She also observed that she could not comfort him. She testified that he was not a fussy child.

On December 22, 2001, Lozano's parents took Mrs. Lozano to work at about 7:00 p.m. When Mrs. Lozano worked, Johnathan stayed with Lozano's parents. At approximately 8:30 p.m., Lozano arrived at his parents' home from work. He remained there until 10:30 p.m. and then took Johnathan home with him. Lozano had been in charge of toilet training the child.

The following recounts Lozano's statement to police. Once home, Lozano placed the child on the toilet and then in the shower. While Johnathan was in the shower, Lozano shaved. Lozano then clipped the child's toenails and fingernails. He left the child in his room playing. A gate was always in the doorway of Johnathan's room to prevent him from wandering out. Johnathan joined Lozano in his room and climbed onto his bed. For about an hour, the two watched television. During the same time, Lozano began to get clothes ready to wash. Meanwhile, Johnathan went to his room and fell asleep. Ordinarily, the child slept on a mat on the floor in his own room. Lozano washed clothes and continued watching television. At about 1:40 a.m., he awoke Johnathan because it was time to pick up Mrs. Lozano from work. Johnathan stood up. In his statement to police, Lozano continued:

I walked back to the laundry room to get more clothes, and when I walked back to Johnathan's room I stepped across the baby gate. The baby gate is by the doorway. I stepped across barefoot and accidentally stepped on Johnathan as I walked across. I stepped on his stomach and I heard him gasp. I picked him up and he looked fine. He never cried. I carried him over to my bed and started putting on his clothes. While I was doing this I noticed that he started to look bad. I tried to raise him up, but he would fall back over. I decided that something was wrong. So I took Johnathan over to my parents' house. I told them to call the ambulance. . . . I heard the ambulance coming, so I got in my truck and drove over to Wal-Mart to pick up Crystallyn . . . and drove back home. The ambulance was still there. . . . I told Crystallyn that Johnathan was sick. I did not tell her that I accidentally stepped on him. From the time I stepped on Johnathan until I got my parents to call the ambulance I say would be about 30 minutes.



Johnathan died at the scene. (6) Efforts to resuscitate him, prior to and after his arrival at the hospital, failed. Medical reports admitted in evidence show he was dead at the scene by the time emergency personnel arrived at 2:09 a.m. Dr. Heriberto Alanis, the emergency room physician, testified he estimated that the child had been dead over an hour. He testified that the child sustained "trauma that kills." As to the bruise on the child's lower back, he testified that "there had been recent trauma," somewhere between an hour and two hours earlier. Dr. Alanis opined that, in order for an intestine to rupture, there had to be a significant to severe amount of trauma. A rupture could result from a kick or strike to the abdomen. The child may have been punched, kicked, or thrown. Stepping on the child's abdomen would not have caused his injuries. A child with a ruptured intestine would be in excruciating pain. Dr. Alanis further testified that the injury to the large toe was recent and significant enough that "a caretaker would have sought medical attention for it." The freshest injuries were the ones on the child's abdomen and lower back. The marks on his back could have been boot marks. The child's groin was "scraped." Although there was trauma to it, Dr. Alanis did not know how it occurred or who inflicted it.

Dr. R. V. Reddy, Johnathan's pediatrician, testified that he last saw the child on December 30, 2000, for a cold. He testified that a rupture to the intestine could be caused by stepping and "anything can cause a ruptured viscus." From the child's medical records, he further testified that "it is a blunt injury that causes the rupture." He testified that the urethra of the groin was "coming out which is rare." He described the injury as appearing to be a blunt force injury.

Dr.

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Leoncio Lozano v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leoncio-lozano-v-state-texapp-2006.