Ovalle v. State

13 S.W.3d 774, 2000 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 31, 2000 WL 256090
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 8, 2000
Docket73095
StatusPublished
Cited by799 cases

This text of 13 S.W.3d 774 (Ovalle 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
Ovalle v. State, 13 S.W.3d 774, 2000 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 31, 2000 WL 256090 (Tex. 2000).

Opinions

PER CURIAM.

The appellant was convicted in April 1998 of capital murder.1 Pursuant to the jury’s answers to the statutory special issues,2 the trial judge sentenced the appellant to death.3 Direct appeal to this Court is automatic.4 The appellant raises eleven points of error. We shall affirm the judgment of conviction, reverse the judgment of death, and remand the case to the district court.

I. Guilt-innocence Stage

A. Legal Sufficiency

In point of error four, the appellant contends that the evidence is legally insufficient to show a kidnapping, the underlying offense that aggravates this murder into a capital murder.

The appellant confessed the following facts to police officers: The victim, Larry Nelson, made sexual remarks concerning the appellant’s cousins, Jennifer and Lynnette Ovalle.5 The appellant, Nelson, and the girls then went into Alfredo Chavez’s house. After Nelson commented that he intended to have sexual intercourse with the appellant’s cousins, a fight ensued. Nelson punched the appellant; the appellant punched Nelson. The appellant dragged Nelson outside, kicked him in the head three or four times, helped drag him into a truck, and drove away in the truck with Jennifer. The appellant and Jennifer stopped at the appellant’s house, where he retrieved a knife. They then drove to Lake Halbert, where the appellant pulled Nelson out of the truck and stabbed him several times, and Jennifer ran over Nelson with the truck.

The appellant’s cousin Lynnette testified that, before arriving at Chavez’s house, she had told the appellant that Nelson had been flirting with her. Inside the house, Nelson asked Lynnette if she thought “he had a chance with” Jennifer “because he was going to ask her out.” The appellant punched Nelson in the face, and he fell to the ground. Lynette later saw the appellant outside the house stomping Nelson. Nelson was unconscious at that point. The appellant and Chavez loaded Nelson into the truck, and the appellant and Jennifer drove the truck away.

Jamie Rendon testified that he saw Nelson on the ground, and he saw the appel[777]*777lant drag the victim outside. Chavez tried to restrain the appellant, who was hitting Nelson. The appellant, Jennifer, and Chavez loaded Nelson into the truck, and the appellant and Jennifer got into the truck and drove away.

Chavez testified that the appellant punched Nelson, who fell to the floor, and the appellant stepped on him. Then the appellant pulled Nelson outside and started kicking him. Chavez attempted to restrain the appellant and eventually succeeded in persuading the appellant to stop hurting Nelson. The appellant and Chavez loaded Nelson into Nelson’s truck, and the appellant and Jennifer got into the truck and drove away.

Nancy Rodriguez, a close friend whom the appellant called “Mom,” testified that the appellant and Jennifer appeared at Rodriguez’s house on the morning of the murder. The appellant told Rodriguez that he had killed someone and that he had used a knife to slit the person’s throat. Rodriguez noticed blood on the appellant’s hands.

Finally, a medical examiner testified that Nelson was stabbed with an instrument that was consistent with a knife, that he was alive at the time the stab wounds were inflicted, and that the stab wounds were lethal.

In evaluating legal sufficiency, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the verdict and determine whether any rational trier of fact could have found the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.6 The question here is whether a rational jury could have concluded that the appellant kidnapped Nelson. The evidence shows that the appellant beat Nelson into unconsciousness, loaded him into the truck, and drove away with him. Instead of driving Nelson to a hospital for medical treatment, the appellant drove him to a lake and slit his throat. The evidence is sufficient to show that the appellant kidnapped Nelson. Point of error four is overruled.

B. Grand Jury Selection

In point of error one, the appellant contends that the trial court erred in refusing to grant his motion to set aside the indictment due to the composition of the grand jury. The appellant contended before the trial court, as he does on appeal, that persons of Hispanic origin have been systematically excluded from grand juries in Navarro County in violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He relies heavily upon Castaneda v. Partida, 430 U.S. 482, 97 S.Ct. 1272, 51 L.Ed.2d 498 (1977).

In Partida, the Supreme Court held that an equal protection violation occurs when the government purposefully excludes certain identifiable groups from serving on a grand jury.7 A rebuttable presumption of purposeful discrimination arises if the defendant makes out a prima facie case, which consists of showing: (1) that a particular group constitutes “a recognizable, distinct class, singled out for different treatment under the laws, as written or as applied,” (2) “the degree of underrepresentation ... by comparing the proportion of the group in the total population to the proportion called to serve as grand jurors, over a significant period of time,” and (3) “a selection procedure that is susceptible of abuse or is not racially neutral.”8 Once a prima facie case has been made, the burden shifts to the State to rebut that case.9

We will assume, without deciding, that persons of Hispanic descent constitute a recognizable, distinct class singled out for [778]*778different treatment.10 Texas law permits grand jurors to be selected using either a commissioner-based, “key-man” system or the random selection system used to select civil trial juries.11 Navarro County uses the commissioner-based system. The Supreme Court has held that the commissioner-based system, while facially constitutional, is susceptible to abuse.12

We focus, then, on the second element of the prima facie case — the degree of under-representation, determined by comparing the proportion of the population composed by the group to the proportion called to serve as grand jurors over a significant period of time. In Partida, the Supreme Court characterized the disparity as a 40% difference.13 The Court found this difference to be greater than that in many other cases in which disparities were found to be significant.14

The Supreme Court also conducted a statistical analysis, using statistical decision theory, to explain why the disparity gave rise to an inference of discrimination.15 The Court explained that “if the difference between the expected value and the observed number is greater than two or three standard deviations, then the hypothesis that the jury drawing was random would be suspect to a social scientist.”16 The Court found that the result in its case exceeded 29 standard deviations — a far greater variation than what would be expected by chance.17

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Bluebook (online)
13 S.W.3d 774, 2000 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 31, 2000 WL 256090, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ovalle-v-state-texcrimapp-2000.