Obed H. Montoya A/K/A Obed Hermeneguildo Montoya v. State
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Opinion
NUMBER 13-12-00736-CR
COURT OF APPEALS
THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG
OBED H. MONTOYA A/K/A OBED HERMENEGUILDO MONTOYA, Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.
On appeal from the County Court of Gonzales County, Texas.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Benavides and Longoria Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Valdez
Appellant, Obed H. Montoya a/k/a Obed Hermeneguildo Montoya, was convicted
of the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated (“DWI”), and he received a
sentence of eighteen months probation. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 49.04 (West
Supp. 2013). By three issues, appellant contends that that the trial court reversibly
erred by not allowing him to respond to the prosecutor’s closing argument. We affirm. I. BACKGROUND
At appellant’s trial, Deputy Michael Barbosa testified that after stopping appellant
for a traffic violation, he noticed that appellant smelled like alcohol, had glassy,
bloodshot eyes, and had slow, slurred, sluggish speech. Deputy Barbosa also
observed that a beer can was located in appellant’s car. Deputy Barbosa stated that
appellant submitted to field sobriety testing. A video of Deputy Barbosa’s encounter
with appellant was then shown to the jury, and Deputy Barbosa described what was
occurring in the video. 1 Appellant’s defense counsel asked the jury to observe
appellant’s “demeanor, how he’s standing, swaying, not swaying.”
Deputy Barbosa concluded that appellant had failed the horizontal gaze
nystagmus test showing all six possible clues indicating intoxication. 2 Deputy Barbosa
“[a]lso noted [there] was vertical nystagmus. Vertical [nystagmus] is an indicator of an
extremely large amount of alcohol and/or drugs, whether it be prescription, over-the-
counter, any illegal narcotic. Any type of drug.” According to Deputy Barbosa,
appellant also failed “the finger-count test” 3 and the alphabet test. 4 Deputy Barbosa
1 The video did not have any sound. 2 Deputy Barbosa explained that the horizontal gaze nystagmus test is used to determine whether a person has consumed alcohol. He stated:
Horizontal gaze nystagmus is a series of tests on the eyes. And what it tests for is the consumption of alcohol. Every person has a stigmatism; however, it's induced and brought out more with the consumption of alcohol. And what that does is a stigmatism is an involuntary jerking of the eye. While conducting these tests, with the consumption of alcohol, the jerkiness is more involuntary and more visible by the naked eye. 3 Deputy Barbosa described how he administered the finger touch test to appellant as follows:
I then asked [appellant] if he knew how to count to at least five. [Appellant] said yes. I then asked [appellant] to complete the finger-count test. I gave instructions to [appellant] to count out loud and touch his thumb to his index finger at one, and then touch his thumb to middle finger at two, thumb to his ring finger at three, and his thumb to his pinkie at four. I then instructed [appellant] to repeat the count and finger touches in reverse. 4 Specifically, Deputy Barbosa said:
2 testified that based on appellant’s failure of these tests, he determined that appellant
was intoxicated and arrested him for DWI. According to Deputy Barbosa, appellant
admitted that he had been drinking a little bit that night. Deputy Barbosa told the jury
that appellant refused to take a breathalyzer test to determine whether his alcohol level
was above the legal limit.
During closing argument, the prosecutor stated, “Texas law is very clear. The
officer will offer the defendant an opportunity to take a breath test or a blood test. And
Deputy Barbosa told you that he did that. And refusing to take that test is evidence of
intoxication. He had an opportunity to prove to us one way or the other and he didn’t
take it.” Appellant’s defense counsel objected to the prosecutor’s statements on the
basis that the prosecutor was “misstating facts of law.” The trial court responded that
this was closing argument and that defense counsel would be allowed to rebut the
prosecutor’s statements during his closing argument.
The prosecutor then said, “Well, Judge, I’d like to approach because I don’t want
to have that done.” At a bench conference, the State argued that pursuant to case law,
“Under the implied consent [law] there [is an] opportunity for the defendant to take the
breath test. If they refuse, that refusal is evidence of intoxication.” Defense counsel
said, “I believe that only applies in a—my understanding [is] that only applies in [an]
administrative hearing. And this is not an administrative hearing or license revocation.”
The trial court responded, “Sustain the objection for right now, which will be that.” The
State and defense counsel then finished closing argument, the trial court read the
charge to the jury, and the jury found appellant guilty of DWI. This appeal followed.
I gave him a letter to start with, which was the letter D, and end at the letter L. He made seven attempts at it and could not do it properly, mixing up letters back and forth. Sometimes only adding just two letters. He was given seven chances on that one and after the seventh chance I felt that was enough chances and made my decision to make an arrest for DWI.
3 II. ANALYSIS
By three issues, which we will consider together, appellant contends that the trial
court’s combined action of allowing the prosecutor to state that his refusal to take a
breath test was evidence of his intoxication, along with its ruling that defense counsel
would not be allowed to respond to that argument, was reversible error. 5
Appellant takes the position on appeal that the trial court overruled his objection
to the prosecutor’s remarks concerning his refusal to take the breath test and then
sustained the prosecutor’s objection. However, the prosecutor made no objection and
merely remarked, “I don’t want that done” when the trial court indicated that defense
counsel would be allowed to respond to the prosecutor’s remarks in closing argument.
The only objection specifically before the trial court was defense counsel’s objection that
the prosecutor was “misstating facts of law.” Thus, the only objection before the court to
sustain was appellant’s. We decline appellant’s invitation to construe the prosecutor’s
comment, “I don’t want to have that done” as being a proper objection. 6 See TEX. R.
APP. P. 33.1 (providing that the complaining party must state “the grounds for the ruling
that the complaining party sought from the trial court with sufficient specificity to make
the trial court aware of the complaint, unless the specific grounds were apparent from
the context”); TEX. R. EVID. 103 (requiring specific objections).
Moreover, we cannot conclude that the trial court ever ruled that appellant could
not respond in his closing argument to the prosecutor’s comments. There is nothing in 5 Appellant concedes that it is “clear” that the prosecutor may comment on the defendant’s refusal to take a breath test if that fact is in evidence. Moreover, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals has held that such comments are properly made in the State’s closing argument. See Gaddis, 753 S.W.2d 396, 398 (Tex. Crim. App.
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