Pachecano v. State

881 S.W.2d 537, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1861, 1994 WL 385629
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 26, 1994
Docket2-92-456-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 881 S.W.2d 537 (Pachecano 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
Pachecano v. State, 881 S.W.2d 537, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1861, 1994 WL 385629 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

LATTIMORE, Justice.

Servando Pachecano, Jr. was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison. He raises ten points of error in this appeal. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

C.T., a forty-one year-old wife and mother of four, and Y.M., a twenty-three year-old mother of one, were coworkers at an optical store in Fort Worth. In the early evening of November 27,1990, C.T. and Y.M. were preparing to close the store and leave for the day. Y.M. noticed two men, appellant and David Hernandez, appellant’s cousin, walk past the front of the store. When they walked by a second time and started to enter the store, Y.M., who had already brought her purse to the front of the store, started toward the back of the store. As she began walking to the back of the store, appellant followed her and put a gun to her head.

Appellant told Y.M. to give them all the money that she and C.T. had. Y.M. complied. Appellant and Hernandez also emptied the store’s cash register. While appellant next took Y.M. outside to her car and had her get into the driver’s seat, Hernandez locked C.T. in the optical store’s restroom. When Hernandez came out alone, appellant told him to go back in and get C.T. because she could call the police. Hernandez got C.T., and all four of them left in Y.M.’s car with Y.M. driving, Hernandez in the front passenger seat, and appellant and C.T. in the back seat.

Appellant made C.T. partially disrobe and began fondling her. C.T. responded by slapping appellant. Appellant then decided to drive, with C.T., who had put her blouse back on, in the front seat with him and Y.M. and Hernandez in the back seat. Hernandez made Y.M. disrobe and raped her in the back seat. Appellant drove by a K-Mart, but a police officer was there, so he did not stop. *540 He next went into a nearby store, but it did not have what he was looking for. He then drove to another K-Mart, where he bought two rolls of duct tape and some rope.

After buying the tape and rope, appellant drove to an isolated area in Fort Worth where there was an abandoned warehouse. Appellant and C.T. got out of the car and went into the budding. While they were gone, Hernandez raped Y.M. again in her ear. Thirty minutes later, appellant reappeared, wiping his knife on his pants. C.T. was not with him. Appellant and Hernandez whispered to each other for a few minutes, and then appellant said in front of Y.M., “[L]et’s hurry up and leave, because she’s tied up. She can get loose.”

Appellant and Hernandez then left with Y.M., bought some beer, and spent the night at a motel. Throughout the night they separately raped Y.M., and they also raped her at the same time. The next day they drove to Hood County, broke into a mobile home where Hernandez’ mother and stepfather lived, took sleeping bags and food in case the police were looking for them, and switched the license plates on Y.M.’s ear.

Appellant and Hernandez, holding Y.M. captive, spent the rest of the day driving around the area near the mobile home park, drinking beer, and smoking marijuana. They also tried but were unable to steal a motor home. They next returned to the mobile home park where Hernandez’ stepfather told them to leave and called the police. Appellant, Hernandez, and Y.M., who was still held captive, ran into the woods to hide. When it was dark, appellant’s two sisters, whom he had called, picked them up and drove them all back to Fort Worth. At Hernandez’s command, Y.M. pretended she was his girlfriend during the drive back.

Once in Fort Worth, Y.M. was let out at a gas station, where she called her boyfriend to come and get her. After a rape examination at a hospital, Y.M. went to the police department to give a statement on the morning of November 29th. It was then that she learned that C.T. had been found dead.

C.T.’s body was found shortly before midnight on November 28th. Her body was wrapped in a piece of carpeting and was covered by a black tarp. She was naked. Her ankles and knees were bound by duct tape, and her hands were bound behind her back with duet tape. A piece of cloth serving as a gag was in her mouth. Her head was encircled with duct tape, and then her pants had been wrapped and tied around her head as well. Her autopsy revealed that she died of suffocation.

Appellant was indicted for capital murder. His indictment alleged that on or about the 27th of November 1990, he did

THEN AND THERE INTENTIONALLY CAUSE THE DEATH OF AN INDIVIDUAL, [C.T.], BY SUFFOCATING HER BY PLACING A CLOTH IN HER MOUTH AND BY COVERING AND CLOSING HER ORAL AND NASAL OPENINGS WITH TAPE AND BY WRAPPING A CLOTH LIGATURE OVER THE SAID TAPE, AND THE SAID [APPELLANT] WAS THEN AND THERE IN THE COURSE OF COMMITTING AND ATTEMPTING TO COMMIT THE OFFENSE OF KIDNAPPING, OF [C.T.],
PARAGRAPH TWO: ... [APPELLANT] ... ON OR ABOUT THE' 27TH DAY OF NOVEMBER, 1990, DID THEN AND THERE INTENTIONALLY CAUSE THE DEATH OF AN INDIVIDUAL, [C.T.], BY SUFFOCATING HER BY PLACING A CLOTH IN HER MOUTH AND BY COVERING AND CLOSING HER ORAL AND NASAL OPENINGS WITH TAPE AND BY WRAPPING A CLOTH LIGATURE OVER THE SAID TAPE, AND THE SAID [APPELLANT] WAS THEN AND THERE IN THE COURSE OF COMMITTING AND ATTEMPTING TO COMMIT THE OFFENSE OF ROBBERY, OF [C.T.], ... [Emphasis added.]

The jury charge first instructed on capital murder and then on the lesser-included offense of murder, as follows:

Now, if you find from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that on or about the 27th day of November, 1990, in Tar-rant County, Texas, the Defendant, Ser-vando Pachecano, Jr., knowingly caused *541 the death of an individual, [C.T.], by suffocating her by placing cloth in her mouth and by covering and closing her oral and nasal openings with tape and by wrapping a cloth ligature over the said tape, OR the Defendant, Servando Paeheeano, Jr., while in the course of committing a felony, to wit: kidnapping or robbery of [C.T.], and in the course of and in furtherance of the commission or attempt, or in the immediate flight from the commission or attempt, committed or attempted to commit an act clearly dangerous to human life that caused the death of [C.T.], then you will find the Defendant guilty of murder. [Emphasis added.]

The jury returned a general verdict of guilty to murder.

In his first point of error, appellant contends that the evidence is insufficient because the State had to prove that he suffocated C.T. by all three means — the cloth, the tape, and the ligature — and there is no evidence that the tape covered and closed her nasal openings. In other words, appellant contends that the “jury was required to find that suffocation was caused by each and every manner and means alleged in the indictment.”

We need not address appellant’s insufficiency of the evidence complaint, however. The State did not have to prove that appellant suffocated C.T. by all three means. The State presented the jury with two separate murder theories: either murder: appellant suffocated C.T. with cloth, tape, and ligature (Tex.PeNAL Code ANN. § 19.02(a)(1) (Vernon 1989)); or felony murder: appellant committed an act clearly dangerous to human life that caused her death. Id. § 19.02(a)(8).

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Bluebook (online)
881 S.W.2d 537, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 1861, 1994 WL 385629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pachecano-v-state-texapp-1994.