Mendoza v. State

349 S.W.3d 273, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 7563, 2011 WL 4141074
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 15, 2011
Docket05-09-01290-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 349 S.W.3d 273 (Mendoza 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
Mendoza v. State, 349 S.W.3d 273, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 7563, 2011 WL 4141074 (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion By

Justice FITZGERALD.

Appellant Roman Jesse Mendoza was indicted for murder and relied on the defense of self-defense. The jury convicted him, and he appeals. We hold that the trial judge erred by instructing the jury on the doctrine of “provoking the difficulty,” and accordingly we reverse appellant’s conviction and remand the case for further proceedings.

I. Background

A. Summary

On a Saturday night in October 2007, appellant, his brother Vincent Mendoza, and Juan Arturo Muro were socializing with Jorge Hernandez at Hernandez’s house in Kaufman, Texas. All four men were drinking beer, and appellant, Hernandez, and Muro were using cocaine. At some point, appellant stabbed Muro with a knife, causing Muro’s death. At trial, appellant testified and acknowledged that he killed Muro, but he insisted that he acted in self-defense. The jury convicted appellant of murder, sentenced him to 45 years in prison, and assessed a $10,000 fine.

B. The State’s case

Hernandez’s next-door neighbor, Victoria Monsivais, testified that on the night of *275 October 13, she heard loud music coming from Hernandez’s house between 10 and 11 p.m. At some point, the music stopped, and Monsivais heard noises that sounded like men fighting. She testified that it sounded like someone hitting someone, that it was a “terrible noise,” and that it sounded like someone might be hurt. She looked outside through a window and saw nothing except the taillights of a car driving away. She called 911, and within a few minutes the police arrived. • She spoke to the police officers, but she spoke very little English, and the police left within a few minutes. At about 10:30 a.m. on Sunday, October 14, Monsivais went outside to take out her trash. She saw a body lying in Hernandez’s yard, and she went back inside and called the police.

Police officer Daniel Carrier responded to a call about a body at Hernandez’s house on October 14. With the aid of photographs, he described the scene to the jury. The front yard of Hernandez’s house was fenced off by a black, iron fence. A chain-link fence separated the front yard from the back yard on the left side of the house. Many beer cans were in the front yard. The officer saw Muro’s body lying on the ground in Hernandez’s back yard, roughly three to five feet from the chain-link fence. The police knocked on Hernandez’s door until he came out, appearing as though he had just awakened. When the police showed him Muro’s body, Hernandez appeared to be genuinely surprised and distraught. Hernandez identified appellant and appellant’s brother Vincent, who lived across the street from Hernandez, as suspects.

Police officer Tim Moore, the crime-scene investigator, testified Muro’s body was in a fetal position. There was no sign of a “big fight or a brawl or anything like that” at the scene, only the blood around Muro’s body and signs of “[a] little bit of disturbance around it.” Muro’s body was in rigor mortis, indicating that he had been dead for a number of hours. Stab wounds were obvious on the body. There were no blood trails leading away from the body, which indicated to Moore that the injuries had occurred in that general area. Examination revealed that “there were quite a few stab wounds” on the body, including some to the head. Some time later, Moore participated in the execution of a search warrant at another location, the home of appellant’s friend Romy Bradley. That search included a search of a septic tank on that property, and the investigators recovered a knife from the septic tank.

Tracy Dyer, a medical examiner for the Dallas County Medical Examiner’s office, performed the autopsy on Muro’s body. According to the autopsy report, Muro was about five feet, eight inches tall, and weighed 160 pounds. There were nine stab wounds on Muro’s body. There was also a blunt-force injury on the top of Muro’s head. A toxicology exam detected a blood-alcohol level of .23 percent and also detected cocaine and chemicals that result from the breakdown of cocaine in the body. There were no defensive wounds on the body, that is, no wounds on the hands or arms that would be consistent with attempting to fend off a knife attack. In Dyer’s opinion, Muro did not sustain any wounds that would have killed him instantly, but he thought it would be a “long stretch” for Muro to have survived for as much as two hours with his injuries.

Jorge Hernandez, through an interpreter, testified that on October 13, his wife and child were out of town, so he invited his friend Muro to his house. While they were drinking beer and playing music, appellant and Vincent Mendoza joined them. All four men drank beer on the front porch and conversed for a while. Over the course of the evening, Hernandez had *276 about eight or nine beers. Muro had brought a bag of powder cocaine, and Hernandez, Muro, and appellant all snorted some cocaine. Hernandez made them use the cocaine inside his house so that then-drug use could not be seen by others. Eventually, Muro said he did not have any more cocaine. When appellant said he wanted more, Muro said he would need money to buy more cocaine. Appellant said he did not have any money. After this conversation, all four men were in the living room. Muro and appellant went into the kitchen. When Muro came out, he told Hernandez to be careful because appellant had just pulled a knife on him. Muro also told Hernandez that appellant wanted more drugs. Hernandez asked Vincent what was wrong with his brother. Appellant and Vincent both seemed upset and seemed to want to fight with Muro. Hernandez was scared that they were going to fight in his house, so he ushered all three men outside. He saw appellant and Vincent walk to the middle of the street and stop; he also saw Muro sit down on the steps by the door. Hernandez sat down in his living room. Hernandez heard two shouts or screams, and he looked out his front door. He saw the Mendozas’ car take off “real fast,” and he did not see Muro. Hernandez testified that he called the police, but the police never knocked on his door. He was scared of getting into trouble, so he turned out his lights and went to sleep. He awakened when the police knocked on his door the next morning.

Hernandez acknowledged that the Men-dozas never threatened him and he did not hear appellant threaten Muro. He never saw the knife that appellant stabbed Muro with but did see appellant with a small white knife used while they were using cocaine, “either crushing it or doing the line.” Hernandez testified he stayed in the house after he had gotten the other three men to go outside. When he heard the screaming, he thought Muro had run away.

Romy Bradley testified appellant showed up at her house after 10:00 p.m. on October 13. He appeared to be scared and thought he had killed somebody. Appellant told her that he had been at a party at Phillip Circle and that a guy had followed him home. A fight broke out there and he stabbed the guy. He also told her that he was going to go down a back road and get rid of his clothes and his knife. She suggested that he could burn his clothes in a burn barrel out back and drop his knife in the septic tank. She did not see any blood on his clothes or on the knife. Appellant burned his clothes. Bradley dropped the knife in the septic tank, and she gave appellant some clothes to wear. Then he left.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
349 S.W.3d 273, 2011 Tex. App. LEXIS 7563, 2011 WL 4141074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mendoza-v-state-texapp-2011.