Rutilio Godines v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2025
Docket09-23-00284-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rutilio Godines v. the State of Texas (Rutilio Godines v. the State of Texas) 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
Rutilio Godines v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

________________

NO. 09-23-00284-CR ________________

RUTILIO GODINES, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee ________________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 252nd District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. F22-39524 ________________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

A jury found Appellant Rutilio Godines guilty of burglary of a habitation, a

second-degree felony, and sentenced him to six years in prison. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. § 30.02. In two issues, Godines complains that the trial court erred by not

conducting a competency hearing during his trial testimony, and he challenges the

sufficiency of the evidence that he intentionally entered a habitation to commit

assault. As more fully explained below, we affirm.

1 BACKGROUND

In March 2022, the 911 dispatcher received a call wherein the caller, later

identified as Nichole Perez, reported that someone had broken into her home. Perez

and her children hid in the bedroom closet while the intruder was in her home.

The trial evidence showed that on March 11, 2022, Perez was at her home in

Winnie, Texas with her two children. Perez was on the phone with her husband, who

was out of town, when she heard scratching noises and saw someone running back

and forth between her car and the front door on her surveillance cameras. Perez

testified that someone then began banging, pounding, and yelling at her front door.

The person yelled that someone was chasing him and to let him in. Perez responded

to the person that she could not help him and that he needed to leave. The person

persisted that he needed to be let in, and Perez repeated that she could not help him.

Perez testified that she did not recognize the person at her door, so she hung up with

her husband and called 911.

Once connected with 911, Perez informed the dispatcher that she saw

someone on her cameras banging on her door trying to get Perez to let him inside.

Perez testified that she feared for her life and the lives of her children, so she had her

kids hide in her bedroom closet. Using a monitor in her bedroom, Perez observed

the person, and he continued to beat on her door. He eventually entered her home

after breaking a window. Perez had already barricaded herself and her kids in the

2 master bedroom by pushing her dresser in front of the locked door when she heard

the window break. Perez was also armed with a gun. Once inside her home, the

intruder continued to yell about being let inside and told Perez to “[g]et off of the

phone or else[,]” that she would regret this, that he would get her, and he called her

expletive names; and she perceived these comments as threats.

Perez testified that she listened to the 911 call and that it was an accurate

recording of her phone call to the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office. The 911 call

was played in open court to the jury. Perez indicated that at the end of the call, she

is heard crying in relief once the police came into her house and the intruder was in

custody.

According to Perez, she did not know Godines, but his mother lived across

the street from her. Perez saw Godines once when she attended his mother’s birthday

party. That was the extent of Perez’s interaction with Godines, and she was not

introduced to him. She did not tell the officers that Godines was her neighbor

because he was not her neighbor. Perez stated that Godines’ mother is her neighbor.

Perez did not know if Godines normally stayed at his mother’s house. Perez

identified Godines as the man who broke into her house on March 11, 2022, and she

testified that she did not know it was Godines that night. According to Perez,

Godines did not have permission to be at her home that night, and despite asking for

help initially, once inside her home, Godines threatened Perez and her children with

3 a knife. Perez identified a photo of the interior of her home as it existed on the night

of the break-in. Perez also testified there is a knife depicted near the front door in

the photo and the knife did not belong to her. Additionally, video from Perez’s home

cameras admitted at trial showed a male running down her driveway.

Perez testified that her children have struggled with post-traumatic stress

disorder since the burglary. According to Perez, her son has nightmares occasionally,

and her daughter gets triggered about death and will have a breakdown. Perez stated

that she had breakdowns and struggles with feeling safe since this happened, because

she believes that Godines was trying to hurt her and her children.

The State called William Crain, a deputy with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s

Office. On March 11, 2022, Crain was assigned to K9 patrol, and he and his trained

police dog were patrolling in the Hamshire area when he was called to Englin Road

regarding a burglary in progress with the suspect still at the scene. He recalled that

Sergeant Baker and Deputy Woodle also responded to the scene. Baker began giving

commands to someone, and once Baker said it was okay, Crain went to the front of

the home with his dog. Crain testified that a bottom window near the front door was

busted out and furniture was barricaded against the window. Since this was a

burglary in progress, this indicated to Crain that a suspect had barricaded himself

inside the residence to stop anyone else from getting inside behind him, though he

initially saw no one. When he looked through the window the second time, Crain

4 saw someone inside the residence, and he deployed his dog while he gave the person

commands through the hole. The person inside complied with the commands, came

out the front door, and was taken into custody. Crain identified the person who came

out of the house as Godines.

Crain cleared the residence, and dispatch advised Perez to come out. He

described Perez as very scared with two small children with her. Crain detailed that

he checked nearby residences because Godines kept saying that there was a dead

woman and two dead children at another residence. Crain indicated that he

eventually learned Godines had been staying across the street at his cousin’s home,

and officers went to that home to check for dead bodies. Upon contacting the cousin,

officers learned that the cousin went to shower and did not know that Godines had

left the home. Officers did not locate any dead bodies.

Crain testified that Godines indicated there were dead bodies at a small trailer

park off Hwy 124. After checking that location, they found no dead bodies, and no

signs of a disturbance. According to Crain, Godines also reported he was being

chased or that his family was trying to hurt him. After investigating all Godines’s

statements, Crain determined that there were no signs that anyone had chased

Godines, no signs of a struggle at the home where Godines was staying, and no dead

bodies or signs of a struggle in the trailer park that Godines mentioned.

5 Crain described Godines as “very erratic[,]” “[a]gitated,” and he rambled a

lot. Crain wore a body camera when responding to Perez’s home, and a portion of

the body camera video was played in open court.

Crain stated that they located Godines inside Perez’s residence, and he did not

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