Rolando Sierra v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 2010
Docket14-09-00320-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rolando Sierra v. State (Rolando Sierra 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
Rolando Sierra v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 5, 2010.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

___________________

NO. 14-09-00320-CR

Rolando Sierra, Appellant

V.

The State of Texas, Appellee

On Appeal from the 40th District Court

Ellis County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 33198CR

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found appellant Rolando Sierra guilty of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon, assessed punishment at ten years’ imprisonment and a fine of $10,000, and recommended community supervision.  In accordance with the jury’s verdict, the court suspended the sentence and placed appellant on ten years’ community supervision.  In three issues, appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence to support the jury’s finding of guilt and argues the trial court erred in admitting certain evidence.  We affirm.

I.  Factual and Procedural Background

Based on events occurring in the late afternoon and early evening of April 14, 2008, appellant was indicted for the family violence assault of Jennifer Carter and the aggravated assault of Frank Boehler.  The two charges were tried together before a jury, which found appellant not guilty of family violence assault and guilty of aggravated assault.

According to testimony elicited by the State, Jennifer telephoned her mother, Rebecca Carter, several times on the day of the alleged assault.  Jennifer asked Rebecca to collect Jennifer and her children from the home Jennifer shared with appellant.  According to Rebecca’s common-law husband, David Hunter, Jennifer told Rebecca she and appellant had been fighting and appellant had thrown her against the wall.  When Jennifer’s son called Rebecca, she finally decided to go to Jennifer’s house.

Hunter drove Rebecca and Boehler, a family friend who was visiting Hunter and Rebecca, in Hunter’s pickup truck.  After they arrived at appellant’s and Jennifer’s home, Rebecca agreed to talk to appellant with Jennifer and told the men to wait outside.  Appellant, however, was angry that Jennifer had invited her mother inside and began yelling at Jennifer.  At that point, the two men went inside, and Boehler said, “Why don’t you just listen to her?”  Appellant ran to Boehler and hit him in the face.  They started fighting, and appellant tried to throw Boehler through a window.  According to Boehler, Rebecca or Jennifer separated the men and Boehler thought the fight was over except appellant told Boehler, “he’s got something for me” and ran to his room.

Everyone else left the house when appellant ran to the back bedroom.  Boehler went to the truck, grabbed a hammer, and, according to Rebecca, started toward the house with the hammer in his hand.  Rebecca then saw Boehler stop, turn around, and start to run.  While Boehler was running, Rebecca heard a gunshot passing over her head.  Appellant was running after Boehler and shooting.  Boehler threw the hammer in the truck and ran around toward the front of the truck.  According to Rebecca, the two men then ran around the truck and appellant shot Boehler, who fell face down.  Appellant then shot Boehler again.  According to Boehler, one shot passed through his hip and another through his diaphragm and liver.  A bullet hole was also found in the house across the street.

Rebecca heard appellant tell Boehler he was going to kill him.  Rebecca shouted, “no,” and appellant walked away.

Rebecca testified Boehler did not have the hammer when appellant shot him.  According to Hunter, before appellant shot Boehler in the back, Boehler was saying, “I give up.”

In addition to phoning Rebecca, Jennifer also had called her brother Jason several times.  Jason and his girlfriend arrived during the shooting and Jason observed Boehler “running with his hand in the air and [appellant] was just following shooting.”  Boehler had his hands up, did not have anything in his hands, and was repeating, “It’s over.”

Appellant testified in his own behalf.  According to appellant, Rebecca entered his house, cursing at him and calling him names.  A short time later, Hunter and Boehler entered.  Both looked aggressive, and Boehler was “crashing his hands together.”  Appellant told Rebecca to get out.

Boehler then told appellant to “shut . . . up” and not talk to Rebecca “like that.”  Next, Boehler approached appellant.  Appellant believed Boehler and Hunter were going to attack him and told them to leave.  When appellant tried to grab Boehler’s shirt, Boehler blocked him and appellant punched Boehler.  Boehler punched back, and appellant tried to throw him through a window.  Boehler tried to bite appellant, and appellant kneed Boehler, knocking him unconscious.  When appellant turned toward Hunter, Boehler ran from the house, saying something to appellant.  Appellant saw Boehler get something from the truck and believed Boehler had a gun.

Appellant went to his room to get a gun to protect himself.  He saw Rebecca trying to hold Boehler outside, so he ran to the door and fired a shot as soon as he saw Boehler.  He fired again, but thought he had missed twice.  When appellant fired the third time, Boehler fell on the grass.  Appellant walked around Boehler with the gun still pointed at Boehler, then retreated.  On cross-examination, appellant admitted Boehler never pointed a gun at him.

Appellant also presented the testimony of Nelda Allstot and Ruby Wesley, next-door neighbors who had witnessed the shooting.  Allstot was in her back yard when she heard the pickup driver braking.  Although she initially testified the driver left skid marks on the road, on cross-examination, she admitted she had observed the marks later and could not be one hundred percent certain the truck made them.  Allstot believed she saw someone she thought was a teenager with a hatchet in his hand.  This person had been in a rage when the truck first arrived.  Allstot testified the teenager was still running after he was shot the first time (i.e., after the second shot was fired), but in her statement given just after the shooting she indicated that the teenager fell after being hit the first time and appellant then shot him again.

Wesley, Allstot’s mother, testified she went to the front porch to watch what was happening next door.  She also testified a young man was carrying a hatchet. She did not see him drop the hatchet, but she did not see it in his hands after he first ran back to the house with it.  On cross-examination, Wesley stated the young man was hiding behind the truck when appellant shot him.  In her statement to the police, Wesley had described the “hatchet” as a claw hammer.

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Rolando Sierra v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rolando-sierra-v-state-texapp-2010.