Robert Johnnie Garcia v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 30, 2020
Docket13-19-00390-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Robert Johnnie Garcia v. State (Robert Johnnie Garcia 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
Robert Johnnie Garcia v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-19-00390-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI – EDINBURG

ROBERT JOHNNIE GARCIA, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 105th District Court of Nueces County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Chief Justice Contreras and Justices Hinojosa and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Chief Justice Contreras

Appellant Robert Johnnie Garcia was convicted of two counts of aggravated

robbery, a first-degree felony. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 29.03. The jury assessed

punishment at thirty-four years’ imprisonment for each count, and the trial court ordered

the sentences to run concurrently. On appeal, appellant contends that the trial court erred by: (1) not allowing cross-examination about a witness’s cooperation with the State and

pending criminal charges; (2) admitting into evidence certain hearsay statements under

the excited utterance exception; and (3) admitting into evidence recordings of phone calls

purportedly made by appellant from jail. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Trial evidence established that two armed individuals wearing hats and hosiery

over their faces robbed Pier 99, a restaurant in Corpus Christi, on the evening of July 30,

2017. David Perez, a bartender at Pier 99 that night, testified he was “100 percent” certain

that appellant—a former employee at the restaurant—was one of the robbers. Perez

stated that, during the robbery, appellant hit him in the back of the head and repeatedly

threatened to “shoot everyone in the room.” According to Perez, appellant said “he was

going to shoot each one of us individually, one by one, if we couldn’t open the safe” which

was located under the cashier’s counter. Perez testified that appellant “pistol-whipped”

another restaurant employee, Freddie Frances Anderson, several times because

Anderson was initially unable to open the safe. Surveillance video recordings of the

robbery were entered into evidence. 1

Perez acknowledged on cross-examination that he initially told police that the

robber “resembled” appellant, but he did not tell police he was “100 percent sure” it was

appellant. On re-direct examination, Perez clarified he told police that once he saw the

surveillance video, he “knew by [the suspect’s] walk that it was definitely [appellant].”

Mark Lennox, the restaurant’s general manager, testified that he hired appellant

1The surveillance videos have not been included in the reporter’s record. However, the parties do not dispute the content of the videos, and they are not necessary to our disposition of the issues raised. Therefore, we need not remand the case for supplementation of the record to include the videos.

2 as a cook roughly three to four months before the robbery and that appellant’s

employment was terminated about a week or two before the robbery. 2 Lennox stated that

Anderson was working as the manager on duty on the night of the robbery. At around

11:00 p.m. that evening, Lennox received a call from Lydia Aispuro, a server at Pier 99,

reporting that there had been a robbery and that police had been called. Lennox then

called the restaurant’s owner and went directly to the restaurant. Lennox testified:

When I first arrived at the restaurant, all of the employees were in front of the building. Most of them were visibly shaking, shaken. Some were still crying. They had [Anderson] seated at the front door of the restaurant in a chair, and she was being tended to by some of the other employees. She also was still very, very shaken, very emotional. . . . She was still bleeding,[ 3] she kept apologizing to me that she wasn’t able to do more, and she was just almost inconsolable.

Lennox testified that Anderson told him, without him asking, that appellant was one of the

robbers. The trial court admitted the testimony over defense counsel’s objection.

Claudia Curtis testified that she was working as an expeditor4 at Pier 99 on the

night of the robbery. She knew appellant because she had worked with him at the

restaurant. Curtis testified that appellant was one of the robbers, and she saw him hit

Anderson twice with his gun. Investigator Charla Hemerly of the Corpus Christi Police

Department testified that “about five of the victims” told her at the scene that appellant

was one of the robbers.

The State introduced recordings of collect phone calls purportedly made by

2 On cross-examination, Lennox agreed with defense counsel that he fired appellant because appellant “didn’t show up to work or something.” 3 Photographs entered into evidence show that Anderson had a cut on the back of her right hand.

A police officer testified she also had head injuries. 4 An expeditor is a worker that coordinates actions between cooks and wait staff in a restaurant.

Expeditor, WIKIPEDIA, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Expeditor (last visited Dec. 28, 2020).

3 appellant after he was jailed. Lieutenant Jay Worthington of the Nueces County Sheriff’s

Office stated that he is the custodian of records for the county jail and that he obtained

recordings of calls associated with appellant’s name and unique inmate identification

number. Worthington could not identify the voices on the recordings, and he

acknowledged that inmates will sometimes use another inmate’s identification number to

make a collect call. The trial court admitted the recordings into evidence over defense

counsel’s objection as to authenticity. In one recording, 5 appellant’s name is provided as

the inmate making the collect call. The inmate says that he is in “big trouble” for an

“aggravated robbery” and states, “I don’t know why I lost control of myself.” He later says,

“I’ve been on the run for ten days.”

The jury found appellant guilty of two counts of aggravated robbery and acquitted

him on a third aggravated robbery count. 6 The jury further found two enhancement

paragraphs true, thereby elevating the minimum punishment for each count to twenty-five

years’ imprisonment. See id. § 12.42(d). Punishment was ordered as set forth above, and

this appeal followed.

II. DISCUSSION

Appellant’s three issues all concern the trial court’s rulings on the admission of

evidence. We review such rulings for abuse of discretion. Johnson v. State, 490 S.W.3d

895, 908 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016). A trial court abuses its discretion when its decision falls

outside the zone of reasonable disagreement. Id. If the evidentiary ruling is correct under

any applicable theory of law, it will not be disturbed, even if the trial court gave a wrong

5 Only one recording has been made a part of the appellate record. 6 The three counts were identical except they alleged different victims. Appellant was convicted of

the aggravated robbery of Anderson and of Perez. He was acquitted of the aggravated robbery of Aispuro.

4 or insufficient reason for the ruling. Id.

A. Cross-Examination

By his first issue, appellant argues the trial court erred by not allowing his trial

counsel to cross-examine Perez about a pending misdemeanor criminal charge and his

cooperation with the State in exchange for his testimony.

The record reflects that, when the State called Perez as a witness at the end of the

first day of trial, the following colloquy occurred outside the presence of the jury:

[Defense counsel]: And we get to cross-examine him that he has got a warrant out?

[Prosecutor]: No, you don’t.

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