Michael Estrada v. State
This text of Michael Estrada v. State (Michael Estrada 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.
Opinion
SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
FORT WORTH
NO. 2-01-463-CR
MICHAEL ESTRADA APPELLANT
THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE
Appellant Michael Estrada appeals his conviction by jury for assault-family violence. By his first and third issues, Appellant complains that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support the verdict. In his second and fourth issues, Appellant challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence with respect to his claim of self-defense, contending that he established self defense as a matter of law or that the jury's rejection of that defense was against the overwhelming weight of the evidence. We affirm.
Michael Estrada ("Appellant") and his mother argued about the clothing Appellant was wearing as he was leaving their house. Appellant was wearing two or three necklaces; several big rings; four or five bracelets, including one with spikes; two chains around his belt; a bright red fur hat; and a long trench coat. Appellant's mother did not approve of his clothing because she thought he looked like a "freak," so she told him that he was "not leaving the house looking like that." Appellant replied, "Yes, I am," and said, "I am going to wear what I like," as he turned and started toward the front door.
Appellant was seventeen years old, 6 feet 3 inches tall, and weighed approximately 165 pounds. His mother was sixty-three years old and 5 feet 9 inches tall. Appellant's mother grabbed one of the necklaces, with the intention of removing it from his neck. The jewelry did not break, and Appellant bit his mother. Appellant then left the house, and his mother called 911 and reported the assault. When the police arrived, she signed a statement saying that Appellant pushed her and bit her hand and arm when she tried to remove the chain from his neck. Several photographs were taken of injuries on the mother's arm and hand.
Appellant was charged with assault-family violence. Before trial, Appellant's mother unsuccessfully attempted to have the State drop the charges against her son because she was afraid it might hurt his chances to get into the Marines. The matter proceeded to trial after Appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge. Appellant's mother testified at trial, stating that another reason she did not want her son prosecuted was because she felt it was "my fault" that her son bit her several times.
Because Appellant's mother did not want her son prosecuted, the facts of the incident were heavily disputed at trial. At one point during trial, Appellant's mother stated, "We don't know anything that happened." However, she also testified that when she grabbed Appellant's necklace, her hand somehow got twisted in the chain when he turned, and she could not pull her hand out. She stated that Appellant backed away, making the situation worse, and he told her that she was choking him. She testified, in contrast to her written statement taken on the date of the incident, that Appellant did not push her.
Appellant's mother further testified she could not remember how many times Appellant bit her, but she admitted the bite marks hurt. When the State showed her the photographs of her hand and arm, she claimed Appellant caused only one of the marks visible in the picture. She did agree that the photographs were an accurate representation of her injuries on the date of the incident. She did not know how a bite mark could have gotten on her arm, and explained, "We think that was his bracelet with the spikes on it." However, in her statement at the time of the offense, she had written: "bit . . . my hands and arms." She acknowledged she still had a scar on her little finger from her son's bite. She also testified she thought it was "reasonable" for Appellant to have bitten her several times.
Appellant testified on his own behalf, that he did not try to push his mother but was blocking her like a football lineman to get her off of him. According to Appellant, she grabbed his shirt as he started for the door, and during the scuffle, he yelled at his mother to "get the f**k off of me" and "[j]ust leave me alone." Appellant testified that when she pulled the necklace, he could not breathe, was starting to black out, and began experiencing tunnel vision. He stated he was "telling [his] mother and father both, in English and Spanish" that he could not breathe, but his words came out in gasps and, because "[he] was starting to black out, . . . couldn't breathe and the circulation was getting cut off," he only remembered biting her on her "pinky."
When asked whether he bit his mother any more, Appellant testified that it was possible. On cross-examination, Appellant testified that the entire incident happened in a matter of seconds, "at the most under a minute." When asked why he did not simply push his mother away, Appellant testified that the first thing that came to mind to was to bite her.
Throughout trial, Appellant maintained that he acted in self-defense. While Appellant agreed on cross-examination that his mother was possibly trying to discipline him when she was grabbing at his chain and that it is reasonable for a mother to discipline her child, Appellant testified on redirect that he did not believe it was reasonable for a mother to discipline her child by choking off the supply of blood and air to the brain. Appellant further acknowledged, however, that, if the long mark on his mother's arm was a bite, that action by him was excessive.
Appellant's seventy-seven year-old father was the only other eye-witness to the fight between Appellant and his mother. Appellant's father testified through an interpreter that Appellant was not cursing, but his wife was and that she called Appellant a "thug" as he was leaving the house. He saw her grab Appellant's chain, which did not break, and choke him as a result. He denied seeing Appellant push his mother, but he admitted that he did not witness the entire incident. Appellant's father further denied that the photographs in State's Exhibit 2 were pictures of the marks on her hand and arm on the date in question, but also testified that he saw his son bite his mother. He thought it was reasonable for his son to bite her.
Colony police officer Logan Stout responded to the dispatch. Officer Stout testified Appellant's mother told him Appellant had bitten her and that he observed the bite marks. Another Colony officer apprehended Appellant and brought him back to the residence where both officers questioned Appellant. Officer Stout testified that, based on his conversations with Appellant and Appellant's mother, he determined "[t]hat she was attempting to get the jewelry and clothing off of him, at which time, he lashed out at her and bit her." Consequently, the police arrested Appellant.
Because of the extent of the mother's injuries, Officer Stout called for a paramedic. Officer Oscar Rodriguez of The Colony Fire Department responded to provide medical treatment to Appellant's mother and advised her of the risks of infection. Officer Rodriguez testified that he knew the long mark on her arm was a human bite mark; however, he did not treat Appellant's mother because she refused any medical treatment.
The State also presented the testimony of Susan Calvert-Piel, who was chief family violence prosecutor for Denton County.
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Michael Estrada v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-estrada-v-state-texapp-2003.