Samuel Aguilar v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 14, 2011
Docket13-10-00273-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Aguilar v. State (Samuel Aguilar 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
Samuel Aguilar v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

NUMBER 13-10-00273-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG 

SAMUEL AGUILAR,                                                                Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                                      Appellee.

On appeal from the 130th District Court

of Matagorda County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before Chief Justice Valdez and Justices Rodriguez and Garza 

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Rodriguez

A jury found appellant Samuel Aguilar guilty of the murder of James Sutton and assessed life in prison and a $10,000.00 fine.  See Tex. Penal Code Ann. ' 19.02 (West 2003).  By four issues, Aguilar contends that:  (1)-(3) the trial court abused its discretion in admitting certain evidence; and (4) the evidence is insufficient to establish that he committed murder.  We affirm.

I.  Background[1]

It is undisputed that Sutton, a seventy-year-old man with whom Aguilar was acquainted, was found dead in his home on May 27, 2009.  According to Chief Medical Examiner Steven Pustilnik, M.D., Sutton was bludgeoned to death on Memorial Day, May 25, 2009.

Patrol Officer Scott Sherrill, who was first on the scene at Sutton's residence on Wednesday, May 27, testified that there were large amounts of blood throughout the house, including blood spatter across the dining room walls and ceiling, blood on the kitchen floor where they found shoe prints, and blood droplets which he described as small pools of blood indicative of gravitational dropsblood dripping off something.  Officer Sherrill testified that there was blood spatter and tissue throughout the kitchen and hallway area.  The investigating officers found more blood in the breezeway and in the garage.  In addition, Texas Ranger Kip Westmoreland, who worked with the Bay City Police Department on this case, testified that a closer view of the bloodstains in the dining room revealed cast-off bloodstains from blood that was cast off of the weapon used to inflict the blow.  According to Ranger Westmoreland, this occurred as the weapon was on its back swing preparing for another blow.  Ranger Westmoreland also agreed that in addition to the bloody footprints in the kitchen, there were bloody footprints in the bathroom, and there appeared to be blood in the bathroom sink area where someone washed up, blood on the door leading to the garage, a bloody footprint on the back doorstep, blood on the garage door, and a bloody footprint inside the garage.

Tommy Lytle, a crime scene investigator with the Bay City Police Department who was the lead detective on this case, testified that during the course of the investigation, Aguilar's name was brought to his attention.  Ranger Westmoreland also testified that he learned early in his investigation Aguilar had mowed Sutton's lawn and was in and out of Sutton's house frequently.  Detective Lytle and Ranger Westmoreland also became aware that Aguilar's brother, Benny Aguilar, lived a short distance from Sutton's residence.  With Benny's consent, they searched his residence.  They noticed a bloodstain on the front door.  Officers found a purple mountain bike behind Benny's house.  It was later determined that the bike belonged to Aguilar and that it had a bloodstain on the left handbrake of the handlebar.  They also discovered a wet T-shirt inside a tightly tied plastic bag in a carport trash can outside Benny's residence.  Both Detective Lytle and Ranger Westmoreland testified that the T-shirt appeared to have bloodstains on it.  The stains were later confirmed to be blood.  The distinctive logo on the bloodstained T-shirt was the same logo seen on a shirt Aguilar had been wearing on Memorial Day at approximately 5:00 p.m. at the E-Z Pawn Shop when surveillance cameras there captured him on video.

Detective Lytle testified that after obtaining a search warrant for the travel trailer where Aguilar lived, they found a pair of wet blue and white tennis shoes under the dining table.  The shoes had "reddish color stains around the sole area" that the officers believed to be blood.  They also found a pair of baggie blue jean shorts in the bathroom.  The shorts were in a five-gallon bucket filled with a clear liquid.

According to Detective Lytle and Ranger Westmoreland, Aguilar was not located until 2:00 a.m. on the Thursday following Sutton's murder when he was found hiding in the grass under a tree in a field near the apartment of his friend, Debra Trevino.  A search of Trevino's apartment produced, among other things, a baseball cap belonging to Aguilar.  The cap appeared to have a bloodstain on it.

After Aguilar was taken into custody, investigating officers, including Detective Lytle and Ranger Westmoreland, interviewed Aguilar five times over the next several days.  Both investigators testified that Aguilar first claimed that he had not committed the offense and that he had not been in or around Sutton's residence on Memorial Day.  However, after being confronted with a witness who placed him there on that day, Aguilar admitted he may have gone to that residence to use the phone.  And after being told that his bloody T-shirt had been found, Aguilar appeared "[a] little bewildered" and told the officers that he wanted to have some time to think about it, that he did not want to incriminate himself any more than he already had, and that he wanted to be taken back to the detention facility.  The next evening, Aguilar admitted he had walked into Sutton's house on Memorial Day, and upon entering the house, he tripped over Sutton's body.  Because it was dark inside, Aguilar lit a match,[2] saw Sutton lying on the floor, and tried to wake him.  Aguilar informed Detective Lytle that he then turned on a light switch, and because Sutton did not respond and Aguilar had a bad "reputation" with the police, he fled out the front door.  Aguilar told the officers that he exited the same way he had entered and that he had not gone anywhere else in the house.

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