Marvin Dunn v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 19, 2004
Docket08-02-00516-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Marvin Dunn v. State (Marvin Dunn 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
Marvin Dunn v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS


)

MARVIN DUNN,                                               )                  No. 08-02-00516-CR

                                    Appellant,                        )                             Appeal from

v.                                                                          )                  346th District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                   )                  of El Paso County, Texas

                                    Appellee.                          )                  (TC# 20020D02148)


OPINION


            Marvin Dunn appeals his conviction for driving while intoxicated. Appellant was found guilty by a jury and sentenced to eight years’ imprisonment in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice together with a $500 fine. We affirm.

FACTUAL SUMMARY


            On the evening of April 13, 2002, Veronica Montes entered I-10 at Zaragosa in El Paso. She was following behind two tractor-trailers and a white minivan for approximately twenty minutes. As Montes approached the downtown exit, Trailer No. 1 was in the passing lane and driving approximately 60 m.p.h. Trailer No. 2 was behind Trailer No. 1. Trailer No. 2 then moved into the next lane and began weaving in and out and straddling the lanes. Montes backed off because she thought Trailer No. 2 was going too fast or that something was wrong. Near the Schuster exit, Montes saw Trailer No. 2 catch up to the white minivan, get really close, and start to depress the brake lights. Trailer No. 2 then began to change lanes, but the truck was not going to make it because Trailer No. 1 was in the lane. Trailer No. 2 hit Trailer No. 1 on the front right-hand side. Montes saw smoke and changed lanes so that Trailer No. 1 would not hit her, but the driver controlled the truck and pulled over into the emergency lane. Trailer No. 2 left the scene. Montes followed it as it continued down the freeway and exited at Executive Center. She wrote down the license plate number. When the truck proceeded immediately back onto the Interstate, Montes then turned back and returned to the scene where she gave the driver of Trailer No. 1 the license plate number. Montes never saw the driver of Trailer No. 2.

            Angela Sommers, a field supervisor with the El Paso Police Department, heard a spot broadcast about a hit-and-run accident. She believed that the accident involved two tractor-trailers and that one had hit the guardrail while the other had fled the scene. Sommers proceeded to the on-ramp at Sunland Park to wait for the vehicle. She was looking for a red Volvo 18-wheeler bearing Tennessee plates with a white shiny trailer labeled “Volunteer Transport.” Sommers also knew the license plate number.She spotted the vehicle traveling in the inside lane at a high rate of speed. She characterized it as driving erratically from the inside lane to the center lane. Other people on the road were actually fleeing from side to side to get out of the vehicle’s way. The trailer was not fishtailing but was swaying back and forth. Sommers was running with the lights and sirens operating and she pulled onto the Interstate behind the vehicle. Although she picked it up at Sunland Park, it did not pull over until just before the Mesa exit. The vehicle was traveling well over 70 m.p.h.

            Sommers stopped the truck, notified dispatch, and verified the plates, which matched the dispatch description. As Sommers approached, the driver, later identified as Appellant, stumbled out the door and approached her. He was sweating profusely, which Sommers found odd since it was a cool April night. Appellant seemed nervous and approached Sommers with squared shoulders as if tense and fearful of the situation. Sommers asked Appellant for his license and insurance and whether he knew he had been involved in an accident. Appellant responded that he had no clue. Sommers observed damage to Appellant’s vehicle around the front right-hand side on the top bumper area. She also noticed the odor of alcohol. When additional officers arrived at the scene, she informed them that Appellant might be a drunk driver. The officers then took custody of Appellant and transported him back to the accident site to see if he could be identified.

            Officers Adrian Estrada and Juan Ferrel were dispatched to the accident around 11:30 p.m. Upon learning that Sommers had apprehended the fleeing truck, they proceeded to assist her. Estrada talked to Appellant and told him they were investigating a hit-and-run accident. Appellant insisted he was not involved in an accident. Estrada examined the truck and found damage to the rear driver’s side. He saw streaking and scrape marks. The officers then drove Appellant to the scene of the accident. In transit, they smelled alcohol on him. They described him as jumpy, nervous, excited, talking, and saying that he was not involved in an accident on the way. His speech was mumbled, garbled, and thick-tongued.

            Upon arriving at the scene, Estrada talked to the driver of the other truck and conducted an investigation. Estrada determined that Appellant had tried to pass the other vehicle driven by Jimbo Valentic on the emergency shoulder. Appellant couldn’t make it and got on his CB radio to tell Valentic to let him pass. Appellant then cut back behind Valentic, went into the second or middle lane, tried to cut Valentic off, and clipped him. Estrada saw damage to the front right side of Valentic’s truck where the lug nuts had been sheared off. Estrada believed that the damage to the two trucks was consistent with his findings. Estrada and Ferrel called a STEP unit which arrived within thirty minutes. Ferrel informed the unit what had happened, and the unit took over.

            Officer Luis Acosta, a member of the STEP unit, asked Appellant about the accident. Appellant continued to insist that he had not been in an accident. Acosta detected alcohol on Appellant’s breath; his eyes were red and watery, he was aggravated, and his speech was slurred and mumbled. Since Acosta suspected that Appellant was drunk, he asked him to perform field sobriety tests. Appellant did not tell the officer of any medical ailments, and none was apparent. Acosta testified that the tests were conducted at night but that there was lighting both from the poles and the police cars. Acosta conducted three tests including the HGN test, the walk and turn test, and the one-leg stand test. During the HGN test, Acosta observed all six clues. During the walk and turn test, he observed five out of eight clues. On the one-leg stand, Acosta observed three out of four clues. Acosta determined that Appellant was intoxicated at the scene. Appellant was arrested for DWI and placed in the patrol car.

            Acosta drove Appellant to the central station downtown and read him the DIC-55, the commercial vehicle form that is a statutory warning of the consequences of an arrest for DWI when driving a commercial vehicle. Acosta asked whether he wanted to submit a breath sample. If a commercial driver blows a .04, then his license is suspended. Appellant did not immediately say yes and he argued and stalled the officer. When asked again, Appellant finally agreed. Acosta gave him three opportunities to provide a sample. Appellant would begin giving a sample for three to four seconds, but then would stop blowing.

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Marvin Dunn v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marvin-dunn-v-state-texapp-2004.