Mendez v. State

545 S.W.3d 548
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 2018
DocketNO. PD–0381–17
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 545 S.W.3d 548 (Mendez v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mendez v. State, 545 S.W.3d 548 (Tex. 2018).

Opinion

Keasler, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

Today we seek to resolve a conflict among the lower courts. Some courts have held that, when a trial court sua sponte issues a defensive jury instruction but fails to apply it to a lesser-included offense, the court commits no error unless the defendant objects.1 Others, including the First *550Court of Appeals in this case,2 have held that this is error, even if the defendant does not object. We affirm the First Court of Appeals.

I. FACTS

On August 5, 2011, some time after 2 A.M., Adrian Mendez and several friends arrived at Big Man Diesel Repair. The group had spent the evening socializing and consuming a variety of drugs, including Xanax, cocaine, marijuana, and alcohol. They were later joined by Roger Guzman and Jacob Castillo, who had also been smoking marijuana and drinking alcohol. Soon thereafter, Mendez and Castillo got into a fight. The men exchanged blows until Mendez drew a knife and stabbed Castillo several times. Castillo was hospitalized and, although his initial prognosis was good, he died two months later due to complications from his stab wounds. The State charged Mendez with murder.

A. Trial

At trial, Mendez argued that he had acted in self-defense. Mendez testified that he was afraid of Castillo, claiming that Castillo had gang affiliations and a reputation for violence. Mendez explained that when Castillo arrived at Big Man Diesel Repair that night, he appeared to be intoxicated and agitated. According to Mendez, Castillo started the fight, and Mendez drew his knife only because, based on Castillo's reputation and excited state, he believed Castillo was reaching for a gun.

The jury was instructed that it could find Mendez guilty of either murder or aggravated assault. The trial court also sua sponte charged the jury on the issue of self-defense. The charge, in relevant part, read as follows:

Upon the law of self-defense, you are instructed that a person is justified in using force against another when and to the degree he reasonably believes the force is immediately necessary to protect himself against the other person's use or attempted use of unlawful force.
....
Therefore, if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, Adrian Aaron Mendez, Jr., did cause the death of Jacob Castillo, as alleged, but you further find from the evidence, as viewed from the standpoint of the defendant at the time, that from the words or conduct, or both of Jacob Castillo it reasonably appeared to the defendant that his life or person was in danger and there was created in his mind a reasonable expectation or fear of death or serious bodily injury from the use of unlawful deadly force at the hands of Jacob Castillo, and that acting under such apprehension and reasonably believing that the use of deadly force on his part was immediately necessary to protect himself against Jacob Castillo's use or attempted use of unlawful deadly force, he stabbed Jacob Castillo, then you should acquit the defendant on the grounds of self-defense ....3

Mendez did not object to this charge. The jury acquitted Mendez of murder, but convicted him of the lesser-included offense of aggravated assault. Mendez was sentenced to seven years' imprisonment and assessed a $10,000 fine.

B. Appeal and Discretionary Review *551On appeal, Mendez complained that the trial court's instruction on self-defense was "erroneous and incomplete."4 Mendez pointed out that the application paragraph permitted the jury to acquit Mendez on self-defense grounds only if it first determined that he "did cause the death of Jacob Castillo, as alleged."5 This instruction, Mendez argued, necessarily suggested that self-defense could serve to justify the offense of murder, but not the lesser offense of aggravated assault. Candidly acknowledging that he had failed to object to the charge at trial, Mendez observed that, in Almanza v. State , we said that even un-preserved jury-charge error may "call for reversal," so long as the appellant can show that the error caused "egregious harm."6 Mendez undertook to demonstrate egregious harm by arguing that, had the jury been fully and correctly instructed on self-defense, he likely would have been acquitted of both crimes.

In its reply brief, the State did not initially contest Mendez's claim of jury charge error; instead, the State sought to rebut Mendez's claim of egregious harm. Only in its motion for rehearing, after the court of appeals had ruled in Mendez's favor, did the State address the existence of jury-charge error vel non .7 Citing our opinion in Posey v. State ,8 the State argued that the trial court had no duty to issue, sua sponte , an instruction on the "defensive issue" of self-defense applied to aggravated assault.9 And, as Mendez neither requested a self-defense charge nor objected to the instruction that was submitted to the jury, the State believed that the trial court had committed no error, much less egregiously harmful error, in charging the jury as it did.

The First Court of Appeals, in an opinion authored by Chief Justice Radack, disagreed. "[O]nce the trial court included self-defense in the abstract portion of the charge," the court said, self-defense became "law applicable to the case."10 This meant that "the trial court was required to apply that defensive issue properly" to the entire case-including the lesser offense of aggravated assault.11 Analyzing a number of factors, the court went on to determine that the omission of a self-defense instruction on aggravated assault was egregiously harmful, and reversed Mendez's aggravated-assault conviction.

The State petitioned this Court to review the court of appeals' conclusion that, by failing to apply the law of self-defense to the lesser-included offense of aggravated assault, the trial court committed jury-charge error. We do not understand the State to object to the court of appeals's harm analysis, but only its ruling that the trial court "erred" at all.12

II. LAW

Texas Code of Criminal Procedure Article 36.14 directs the trial judge to *552"deliver to the jury ... a written charge distinctly setting forth the law applicable to the case."13 This charge should include, at a minimum, "all of the law applicable to the criminal offense that is set out in the indictment or information," as well as "general admonishments, including ... the presumption of innocence, proof beyond a reasonable doubt, unanimity of the verdict, and so forth."14 These matters are always "law applicable to the case."15 A judge is obligated to instruct on these issues sua sponte

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Bluebook (online)
545 S.W.3d 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendez-v-state-texcrimapp-2018.