Raymon Montelongo, Jr. v. State
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Opinion
NO. 07-06-0090-CR
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SEVENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AT AMARILLO
PANEL B
APRIL 9, 2007
______________________________
RAYMON MONTELONGO, JR., APPELLANT
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE
_________________________________
FROM THE 137TH DISTRICT COURT OF LUBBOCK COUNTY;
NO. 2005-408589; HONORABLE CECIL G. PURYEAR, JUDGE
_______________________________
Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and HANCOCK, JJ.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
          Appellant, Raymon Montelongo, Jr., plead guilty to the charge of murder and elected to have the jury assess punishment. He appeals from the jury-imposed sentence of life imprisonment. Via one point of error, appellant challenges the trial courtâs admission of four photographs, as a part of the Stateâs punishment evidence. We affirm.
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          This appeal arises from the murder of Erica Perez. Appellant and Perez had a long-term relationship and had a child together. Their relationship sometimes was discordant, particularly after the birth of their child. Appellantâs on-and-off dependence on alcohol worsened and, shortly before the murder, Perez came to believe that appellant had been unfaithful. As a result, she ended their relationship.
          Appellant entered a substance abuse counseling center, but soon left it. He was staying with his parents. On the day of the murder, after a morning of drinking, appellant went to his brotherâs home, where he acquired a pistol. He drove to Perezâs place of employment and waited in the parking lot. Shortly, they were seen and heard arguing. She was heard to say, âJust leave, leave me alone.â After further argument, appellant fatally shot Perez with the pistol, inflicting two wounds. He drove away and shortly thereafter confessed to the shooting in a telephone call to his mother. Appellantâs mother called his brother, who accompanied appellant to speak with police. Appellant again confessed to killing Perez, telling police he was not in his right mind at the time of the shooting.
          In his brief, appellant contends his defense at the punishment phase of trial focused on the âsudden passionâ mitigation. During voir dire, trial counsel spent time discussing âsudden passionâ and its impact on the range of punishment. Punishment testimony indicated that both appellant and Perez were highly agitated in the days before the murder and, as noted, engaged in a heated argument just before her death. Appellant chose not to testify at trial.
          The Stateâs punishment evidence included testimony from the medical examiner about the cause of death. He said Perez had a gunshot wound in the head, which was the fatal wound, and another gunshot wound in her chest. He testified that the âtattooingâ of Perezâs skin indicated the gun was twelve to eighteen inches away when the shot to her chest was fired.
          During the punishment phase the State also introduced over two hundred photographs depicting, among other things, the scene of the shooting, blood splatters, Perezâs body, and appellantâs face, body and hands. Most of the photographs were admitted without objection. Appellantâs point of error on appeal challenges the admission of four of the Stateâs exhibits, exhibits 236, 237, 244 and 245.
          The record reflects that the State offered its exhibits 235 through 245 together, all of them photographs of appellant or his clothing. At that point, appellantâs counsel asked to approach, and a discussion ensued at the bench outside the juryâs hearing. Counsel said he had âno objectionâ to exhibits 235, 238, 239, 240, 242, 243, 244 or 245. He told the court âwe object to 236 on the basis of relevancy, on the basis that the prejudicial value of this picture is great and the probative value is none.â He continued, âSimilarly, Judge, we object to 237 on lack of relevance, and the probative value of this evidence - - I donât know what it is, but it is outweighed by the prejudicial value.â Counsel then voiced an objection to exhibit 241, which the State withdrew. Responding, the prosecutor said, âIn regards to 236 and 237, I mean, those are definitely shown to show that there is a lack of injury on him. I know there has been testimony that there was an argument. Thereâs not any injuries underneath him. I know that [defense counsel] is going to want sudden passion in there. And so, I mean, I think theyâre definitely admissible for those, to show that there is a lack of injuries on him and underneath him.â The court overruled the objections to exhibits 236 and 237 and said he would allow their admission. At that point, the reporterâs record indicates proceedings before the jury resumed. The court announced its admission of all eleven of the tendered exhibits except the withdrawn exhibit 241. Counsel then stated, âJudge, weâd ask for a limited instruction on 236 and 237, if itâs going to be offered for the - - limited for the purpose that [the prosecutor] says heâs offering it for.â The court responded, âIt will be limited to show - - for the purpose of no injuries to the defendant.â
          Exhibit 236 is a photograph of appellant with his shirt pulled up to show his chest. Exhibit 237 is a similar photo showing appellantâs back. Exhibits 244 and 245 are photos of appellantâs hands.
          On appeal, appellant focuses on the prosecutorâs argument at the bench conference that the two challenged photos were admissible to counter appellantâs expected claim that he caused Perezâs death under the influence of sudden passion. Although appellantâs point of error asserts the photos were not relevant, his argument is to the effect that they should not have been admitted to show the absence of injuries to appellant because doing so would confuse the issue of sudden passion with that of self-defense. Ultimately, he contends, the trial courtâs action caused him to abandon his claim of sudden passion.
          We initially note our agreement with the State that the theory appellant asserts in his argument on appeal was not presented to the trial court, so his argument runs afoul of the error preservation rules. Case law establishes that an objection stating one legal theory may not be used to support a different legal theory on appeal.
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