Matthew Ryan Arbanas v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 20, 2016
Docket05-14-01376-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Matthew Ryan Arbanas v. State (Matthew Ryan Arbanas 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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Matthew Ryan Arbanas v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

AFFIRMED; Opinion Filed April 20, 2016.

In The Court of Appeals Fifth District of Texas at Dallas No. 05-14-01376-CR No. 05-14-01377-CR

MATTHEW RYAN ARBANAS, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 219th Judicial District Court Collin County, Texas Trial Court Cause Nos. 219-82622-2012 and 219-82623-2012

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Francis, Evans, and Stoddart Opinion by Justice Evans Matthew Ryan Arbanas appeals the trial court’s judgments sentencing him to 18 years’

imprisonment with a fine of $10,000 for intoxication manslaughter and 10 years’ imprisonment

with a $10,000 fine for failing to stop and render aid. Appellant argues his conviction violates

the constitutional protections against double jeopardy and the evidence is legally insufficient to

support his convictions. We disagree with appellant’s contentions and affirm the trial court’s

judgments.

BACKGROUND

In the early morning hours of June 12, 2012, Billy Barnes was driving east on the

President George Bush Turnpike, a multi-lane highway. The evening was clear and dry. Video

from immediately before the accident shows that the rear taillights on Barnes’s car were operational. At approximately 2:20 a.m., Barnes’s car was struck from behind by a blue

Mercedes travelling at a much higher rate of speed in the same direction. The impact had

sufficient force to push the backseat of Barnes’s car into his head. Barnes’s car impacted a wall

and spun around so that it was facing in the opposite direction.

About a minute later, a car being driven by Kun “Ben” Yuk also collided with Barnes’s

car before swerving into a ditch at the side of the road. A bystander stopped, approached Yuk’s

car and asked if he should call 9-1-1. Yuk replied “yes.” Yuk got out of his car and went over to

Barnes’s car. From where he was standing by Barnes’s car, Yuk could see inside the Mercedes.

Yuk noted aloud to the bystander that there was no one in the Mercedes and asked what

happened. Yuk did not see anyone leaving the scene.

The first DPS officer to arrive at the crash site was highway patrol officer Gina Stone.

Stone testified that when she arrived, Barnes was unconscious in the driver’s seat of his car and

appeared to be seriously hurt. According to Stone, there was significant damage to the rear of

Barnes’s car and to the front of the Mercedes. The backseat of Barnes’s car had blood on it from

its impact with Barnes’s head.

Stone also examined the Mercedes. She stated the driver’s side of the windshield was

cracked and there was hair and human tissue on it. The driver’s side airbag had deployed and

there was blood on it as well as on the driver’s seat and door. Inside the Mercedes, Stone found

a black bag and a prescription bottle with the name “John Arbanas” on it. Stone also noticed an

odor of alcohol in the car as if someone had spilled a drink, but found no open containers.

Another prescription bottle with John Arbanas’s name and some blood on it was found a short

distance away. While she was inspecting the Mercedes, a cell phone in the car rang. Stone

answered the phone and it was John Arbanas, appellant’s father. Appellant’s father told Stone

that his car had been stolen.

–2– At approximately 4:00 a.m., Richardson police received a call about a suspicious person

lying in an apartment complex parking lot about a third of a mile away from the accident scene.

Officer Samantha Lee went to investigate and found appellant lying with his head on a curb

surrounded by a large amount of blood. Appellant was unresponsive and emergency services

was called.

Appellant was taken to the hospital where he was treated in the emergency room by Dr.

Michael Carrasco. Appellant was still unconscious when he arrived. A nurse drew blood for

testing and the results showed a blood-alcohol concentration of .22. Appellant had an abrasion

on his forehead and Dr. Carrasco ordered a CT scan. The scan showed no significant trauma to

appellant’s head. Because of the high alcohol content in appellant’s blood and the absence of

any significant head trauma, Dr. Carrasco concluded that appellant’s lack of consciousness was

due to alcohol intoxication and appellant was placed on alcohol withdrawal protocol.

Dr. Carrasco also treated Barnes when he was brought to the emergency room. Barnes

came in unresponsive and unable to breath on his own. Dr. Carrasco stated that Barnes was

bleeding from the back of his head. Despite treatment, Barnes ultimately died. The medical

examiner testified that, in addition to a laceration on the back of his head that extended to the

bone together with a brain hemorrhage, Barnes also had other injuries including lacerations of

the liver and fractured ribs.

A state trooper who had been dispatched to the accident scene, officer Kevin Rhodes, was

notified that a suspect had been found by the Richardson police and taken to the hospital. When

Rhodes arrived at the hospital, he found appellant with a head injury consistent with the damage

on the driver’s side of the Mercedes. According to Rhodes, appellant had a “heavy odor of an

alcoholic beverage like he’d been drinking.” In addition, the “nurse notes” in appellant’s

–3– medical records state that appellant was “foul smelling from alcohol.” Appellant finally regained

consciousness approximately twenty-four hours after he was found in the parking lot.

The State indicted appellant for the offenses of manslaughter, intoxication manslaughter,

and failure to stop and render aid following a motor vehicle accident. At trial, appellant’s father

testified that he and appellant had gone out to dinner on the evening before the accident and

returned to the father’s house. According to the father, appellant did not have a car and stayed

either with him or with his mother at night. Appellant had been complaining about an abscessed

tooth and the father told him they could go somewhere to take care of it in the morning. The

father went to sleep around 10:30 or 11:00. Next to his pillow was a black bag containing

prescription medication, the keys to his Mercedes, and his house keys.

Appellant’s father woke up a few hours later to find appellant, the black bag, and his car

gone. The father called 9-1-1 to report the car stolen and then called appellant’s cell phone.

When officer Stone answered appellant’s phone, he told her that the car had been stolen.

Appellant’s father testified that neither he nor his son had any alcohol to drink during dinner and

he kept no alcohol at his house.

Appellant also presented the testimony of Erica Deal, the younger sister of his former

girlfriend. According to Deal, appellant telephoned her house several hours before the accident

and told her mother that he was in the hospital because he “had some issues going on.” Records

showed that appellant went to the hospital complaining of pain in his teeth, abdominal pain, and

bowel leakage. Deal stated that appellant had recently been diagnosed with HIV. Although Deal

was only fifteen at the time, her mother dropped her off at the hospital to help appellant. Deal

testified that appellant had been given some prescriptions at the hospital and she helped him look

for the hospital pharmacy to have them filled. When they discovered the pharmacy was closed,

appellant called several people and finally found someone to come pick them up. Deal said

–4– appellant’s friend dropped her off at her house around 1:30.

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