Martin Gutierrez Jr. v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 2, 2018
Docket05-16-00638-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Martin Gutierrez Jr. v. State (Martin Gutierrez Jr. 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
Martin Gutierrez Jr. v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Affirmed and Opinion Filed January 2, 2018

S Court of Appeals In The

Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-16-00638-CR

MARTIN GUTIERREZ JR., Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the Criminal District Court No. 3 Dallas County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. F-1512273-J

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Bridges, Fillmore, and Stoddart Opinion by Justice Bridges Martin Gutierrez appeals his murder conviction. The jury convicted appellant and

sentenced him to sixty years’ confinement and a $10,000 fine. In three issues, appellant argues

the trial court (1) erred in refusing to grant a mistrial, (2) violated its duty to correctly instruct the

jury on punishment, and (3) violated appellant’s right to due process by failing to explain in the

jury charge that good conduct time was inapplicable. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

In June 2015, appellant was indicted on a murder charge. The indictment alleged

appellant intentionally and knowingly caused the death of Cesar Martinez-Zamarripa by striking

him with appellant’s hand and foot and inflicting neck compression with appellant’s foot. Prior

to trial, the State filed a notice of enhancement expressing its intention to enhance punishment, “as the defendant is a habitual offender having twice been finally convicted of consecutive

felony offenses, other than state jail felonies.” The notice listed the following offenses:

On or about October 5, 2006, the defendant was convicted of Assault Bodily Injury – Family Member in the 179th District Court of Harris County, Texas, in cause number 1051183, and sentenced to 2 years confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

Prior to the defendant’s conviction in cause number 1051183, on or about January 12, 2000, the defendant was convicted of Robbery in the 337th District Court of Harris County, Texas, in cause number 833072, and sentenced to 2 years confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.

At trial, Carrollton police officer Bryan Ryter testified he was “dispatched to a fight call

at a hotel” in Carrollton on May 31, 2015. The call indicated two people were fighting near

room 206, and one person was “not moving.” When they arrived, Ryter and his partner, Officer

Morris, encountered the manager who “was just pointing up towards the upstairs where Room

206 was.” Upstairs, Ryter saw “blood spots” on the landing in front of Room 206 and followed

the spots down to Room 210. The door to Room 210 was ajar, and the door swung open when

Ryter knocked on it. Inside the room, at the foot of one of the two beds in the room, Ryter saw a

motionless body lying face up with “blood all over the face and neck area.” Appellant was

sitting on the foot of the bed over the body, and appellant’s foot was on the neck of the body.

When the door swung open, appellant turned toward Ryter, and Ryter saw appellant had a knife

in his right hand. Appellant repeatedly said “I killed him, I killed him” in an “angry way.” Ryter

and Morris both drew their weapons and ordered appellant to drop the knife. Appellant looked

like he “was surprised to see” Ryter and Morris, and “it took a bunch of yelling before

[appellant] dropped the knife.” After dropping the knife, appellant “eventually complied” with

the officers’ direction to walk to the door, and Ryter put on latex gloves before handcuffing

appellant because appellant was covered in blood. After he was handcuffed, appellant “started a

constant barrage of saying, ‘I killed him. I stomped him. He messed with the wrong guy. He

–2– didn’t know who he was messing with,’ that kind of thing.” Appellant “continued saying those

statements over and over again” as he was led downstairs, placed in the prisoner compartment of

a patrol car, and held in the car for approximately thirty minutes before Ryter took him to jail. A

video camera inside the patrol car recorded appellant’s actions and statements inside the car, and

the video was played without objection.

Juan Esparza testified he worked “in construction” with appellant, “Pablo,” and

Martinez-Zamarripa, and the men all stayed at a motel on I-35 in Carrollton. On May 31, 2015,

appellant drove the men in Martinez-Zamarripa’s car to a club where they drank beer and tequila.

When the men attempted to leave the club, the valet could not find the keys to Martinez-

Zamarripa’s car. Martinez-Zamarripa blamed appellant for the loss, and Martinez-Zamarripa

and appellant “argued and they fought.” The fighting and arguing continued between Martinez-

Zamarripa and appellant outside the club and in a taxicab that took the men back to the motel.

At the motel, Martinez-Zamarripa came upstairs where appellant, Pablo, and Esparza had rooms

and “took a swing” at appellant. “[E]verybody was really drunk,” and Esparza was “pretty

intoxicated,” so he went into his room and went to bed.

Stephen Hastings, a medical examiner at the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s office,

testified he conducted an autopsy on Martinez-Zamarripa and concluded he died of homicidal

violence, including blunt force injuries and neck compression. Hastings determined Martinez-

Zamarripa’s blood alcohol level was .212, “between two and three times” the level allowable for

someone who would be operating an automobile.

The jury found appellant guilty of murdering Martinez-Zamarripa. At punishment, the

prosecutor arraigned appellant on prior convictions the State intended to use for enhancement

purposes: a 2006 conviction of assault, bodily injury, family member and a 2000 robbery

conviction. Through his attorney, appellant pled true to these allegations.

–3– During argument, the prosecutor made the following statements:

[PROSECUTOR]: Don’t believe the type of person he’s trying to paint himself as right now. He’s staring at 25 to life. He’s staring at a jury. Of course he’s gonna tell you things that are gonna make you feel remorseful for him. Don’t believe that.

Don’t believe the intoxication is the only reason why he committed this offense. Don’t believe that. You don’t have to believe it. Don’t believe what the defense attorney is saying. He is paid. He has been appointed in this case, actually.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, I’m gonna object to that.

THE COURT: Objection sustained.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Move for – ask the jury to be instructed to disregard.

THE COURT: Jury is to disregard that.

[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Move for a mistrial.

THE COURT: Your request for a mistrial is denied.

[PROSECUTOR]: This attorney is doing his job. He’s defending his client. Painting the best picture that he can; the best picture that he can, and it’s not even a good picture. It’s a picture full of excuses of why you should go easy on him. Don’t do that. Don’t believe him. Don’t believe the excuses that the expert gave you. I’d maybe believe the excuses that the expert gave you if at the end of this video he was like, Oh, my God. If when he was caught with a knife he didn’t say, Oh, my God. I didn’t know what I did, and snapped out of his trance. But this is a guy who stomped on a guy for 15 minutes and every time somebody came around, Ssshhhhh. Don’t tell anybody. You didn’t see anything. Sssshhhhh. He silenced someone. He silenced a bunch of people that night. They came – you saw them. They came. They didn’t even want to be here. You know why? They’re afraid of him, as you should be, and as the community should be.

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Martin Gutierrez Jr. v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-gutierrez-jr-v-state-texapp-2018.