Mize v. State

915 S.W.2d 891, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 3212, 1995 WL 737393
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 14, 1995
Docket01-94-00586-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 915 S.W.2d 891 (Mize 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
Mize v. State, 915 S.W.2d 891, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 3212, 1995 WL 737393 (Tex. Ct. App. 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

MIRABAL, Justice.

A jury found appellant, Vincent Edward Mize, guilty of aggravated robbery. The *893 jury found two enhancement paragraphs true, and assessed punishment at confinement for 99 years. In two points of error, appellant complains about the absence of an accomplice-witness instruction in the jury charge. We reverse and remand.

Appellant and a co-defendant, Russell Meadors, were tried together. The alleged accomplice, Suzanne Titlow, testified that on February 6,1993, she, appellant, and Deanna “Nicole” Vincent (Nicole), went nightclubbing. Around two o’clock in the morning, they left the club and appellant drove to a gas station to use the phone to answer a page. Appellant then drove them to “a guy named Erie’s house” — Titlow did not know Eric. Appellant went inside the house for 10 to 20 minutes while Titlow and Nicole waited in the car. Titlow was “high” on alcohol, marihuana and valium. Russell Meadors, appellant’s co-defendant, arrived with another man, Tim; they waited in their car. Appellant came out of the house with some other guys who Titlow did not know. Appellant told Titlow and Nicole that he “was going to get some weed and did we want to go with him.” Titlow said “yeah.” Appellant, Mea-dors, Tim and the two women rode together in a blue rental car. There was one shotgun in the rental car. The other people got into two other cars and followed. 1

They drove to a convenience store and appellant got out of the car and went and talked to the guys in the other ear. Appellant then came back and he drove to a neighborhood of trailer homes. They drove by a particular trailer, and appellant showed Tit-low where they were going to get the marihuana. Appellant then instructed Titlow to drop him off, along with Meadors and Tim, at the end of the street and to return in five minutes to pick them up. Titlow dropped them off and watched them disappear into the woods adjacent to the trailer park before driving away. Titlow drove around the neighborhood for five minutes and then re-Nicole was passed out turned to the trailers, in the back seat.

When Titlow returned to the pick-up point, she saw Tim in the middle of the street motioning her to pull the car into the driveway of the trader home. Tim had some keys and opened the trunk of a car; he took packages of marihuana out of the trunk and put them into the back seat of the car where Nicole was passed out. Titlow saw Meadors come out of the trailer with an older Mexican male and a white female. Meadors had a shotgun or rifle.

Soon after Meadors appeared, Titlow heard appellant yell something. She could not, however, see appellant and did not know where he was. She then heard a gunshot. At that point, Titlow “threw the car in reverse and then I went in the ditch and then I got out and I drove down the road and Russell and Tim were down there and they got in the car with me.” They drove back to Eric’s house. The other ear was already there, and they told the others what had happened. 2 Titlow then testified, “[T]hey asked us if we got the weed and we said, ‘Yeah.’ So, we took the — it was paint buckets of weed and we took that into the house and then Tim and Russell left and me and Nicole waited there for (appellant) to show up or to see what had happened because we didn’t know if he got shot or what.” About an hour later, appellant arrived at the house. Appellant was real shaken up. His shoulder seemed to be out of joint, and he had a big rip in his pants. Titlow testified appellant told her that his gun went off and he thought someone had been shot in the foot. Appellant left the house about 10 minutes later, and Titlow left soon thereafter.

Robert Quintanilla, Sr. testified that he, his girlfriend, and Robert’s 17-year old son, Robert Quintanilla, Jr., were asleep in their trailer home during the early morning of February 7, 1993. Robert Quintanilla, Sr. was awakened by noises outside. Three men *894 were at his front door, claiming to be with the Harris County Sheriffs Department.

Quintanilla testified that two of the men had shotguns, and the third had a pistol. The man with the pistol had light brown shoulder length hair, a moustache and beard, and a small scar on his face. He spoke a combination of Spanish and English. Quin-tanilla said that the man with the pistol went to the back room of the trailer house where his son, Robert Jr., was sleeping. The two men with shotguns took between two to four hundred dollars from Quintanilla. After taking his money, the two men forced Quintanil-la and his girlfriend outside to find the marihuana. Quintanilla testified he had 30 pounds of marihuana on his property that had been brought there by a friend from the Valley. The marihuana was hidden in one of the old cars Quintanilla had parked in his front yard.

The two men took the marihuana from the back of the old car and loaded it into a greenish-blue car. Quintanilla testified that about that time, he heard a gunshot. Thinking his son had been shot, he ran back to the trailer house to get his gun. After he grabbed his gun, Quintanilla turned around and saw the man with the pistol facing him. The man tried to shoot Quintanilla, but his gun locked up. The man immediately fled, dropping his pistol along the way. Quintanil-la shot at the fleeing man 14 times. At trial, Quintanilla did not recognize appellant, or anyone else in the courtroom, as being one of the robbers.

Officer Robert E. Brown of the Harris County Sheriffs Department testified that he found the discarded pistol later that same morning. The pistol was introduced into evidence. There was no fingerprint testimony or ownership evidence.

Robert Quintanilla, Jr. was shot in the side and had to be hospitalized for two days. Pretrial, Robert, Jr. could not positively identify appellant in a photo spread as having been involved in the robbery; he could only say appellant “looked familiar” and “possibly” was one of the men involved. Robert, Jr. did not identify appellant in a subsequent pretrial line-up. Robert, Jr. did not recognize appellant, or anyone else in the courtroom at trial, as being one of the robbers.

Nicole testified that the evening of February 6, 1993, she went out “clubbing, drinking” with appellant and Suzanne Titlow. After visiting a number of bars, she passed out in the back seat of a car. When she woke up, she did not know where she was. She saw Titlow in the front seat, and she saw Russell Meadors and Tim walking with some Hispanic people. She heard gunshots, and everyone started running. Russell and Tim got in the car and Titlow sped off. Nicole did not see appellant at any time after she woke up in the back seat. Nicole testified that the five years she had known appellant, she had never heard him speak Spanish, and she had never seen him with a beard.

Appellant, Russell Meadors, and Tim did not testify.

In point of error one, appellant asserts he was deprived of a fair and impartial trial because the trial court failed to instruct the jury that Titlow was an accomplice witness, and the State adduced insufficient corroboration.

An accomplice as a matter of fact

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
915 S.W.2d 891, 1995 Tex. App. LEXIS 3212, 1995 WL 737393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mize-v-state-texapp-1995.