Samuel Cecil Sanchez v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 8, 2020
Docket09-18-00163-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Samuel Cecil Sanchez v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-18-00163-CR __________________

SAMUEL CECIL SANCHEZ, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee __________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 163rd District Court Orange County, Texas Trial Cause No. B170122-R __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Samuel Cecil Sanchez was convicted of Aggravated Assault with a Deadly

Weapon and, after he pled true to an enhancement, he was sentenced to eighteen

years confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. §§ 22.01, 22.02(a)(2).1 In two issues on appeal, Sanchez argues (1) that the

1 We cite to the current version of the statutes because the amendments do not affect the disposition of this appeal. 1 evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction, and (2) the

jury charge failed to comply with the statutory definition of “deadly force self-

defense.” We affirm.

I. Background

Evidence is undisputed that in the early evening hours of August 6, 2016,

B.G., his family, and several friends returned to a boat ramp in Orange County after

a day on the water in his brother’s boat.2 Testimony is also undisputed that Sanchez

arrived at the boat ramp at the same time in a separate boat.

B.G testified that his wife, his brother, his elderly disabled sister, and three

friends were attempting to disembark and trailer their boat when Sanchez, along with

another male passenger, arrived at the boat ramp. The group was unloading gear into

an SUV parked next to their boat slip, as B.G., B.G.’s brother, and a friend, C.N.,

trailered the boat. According to B.G., he was still in the boat with C.N. when Sanchez

walked by the boat and said, “I can’t see how . . . that truck is going to pull out with

y’all two fat asses in it.” B.G. testified that he had never met Sanchez and was baffled

as to why Sanchez would say this to them. Sanchez’s comments upset B.G., but he

2 We refer to the victim and his family members by their initials to conceal their identities. See Tex. Const. art. I, § 30(1) (granting crime victims “the right to be treated with fairness and with respect for the victim’s dignity and privacy throughout the criminal justice process[.]”). 2 continued to unload his brother’s boat as Sanchez backed a boat trailer into another

boat slip to load his own boat. B.G. stated he was aggravated, but not “really mad”

after Sanchez’s statement.

After Sanchez backed his boat trailer into the water, B.G. walked over to

Sanchez to ask him about his comment. B.G. stated that his brother and C.N.

followed him to the boat ramp to talk to Sanchez. As B.G. approached, Sanchez was

standing next to his truck on the incline of the boat ramp with his boat trailer in the

water. B.G. and Sanchez exchanged greetings and shook hands and Sanchez asked

him, “Well, what’s up, big daddy?” According to B.G., as they were shaking hands,

B.G.’s wife walked up beside B.G., and when B.G. turned to look at his wife,

Sanchez hit him. When Sanchez struck B.G., it knocked B.G.’s hat and sunglasses

into Sanchez’s truck bed, and B.G. fell to the ground. A commotion started, and B.G.

testified that he did not see anything else until after he got up from the ground. B.G.

was unsure if he punched at Sanchez after Sanchez hit him but asserted that he never

felt another punch from Sanchez. Bystanders at the boat ramp ran over and broke up

the fight, and Sanchez left the boat ramp. After the fight ended, B.G. discovered that

he had been stabbed in his neck and was bleeding. According to B.G., he never

threatened Sanchez, did not hear anyone else threaten Sanchez, did not have a

3 weapon when he talked to Sanchez, and insisted that he “wasn’t going down there

to start . . . trouble.”

B.G.’s brother testified that as he was loading the boat onto the boat trailer,

he heard Sanchez say “[w]ell, how is that truck going to pull you two fat asses out

and the boat, too[.]” The brother ignored the comment and continued to load his boat

on the trailer. B.G.’s brother stated that as he was tying down his boat and helping

to load the car, he heard “a big commotion . . . a lot of loud talking, hollering, and

cussing” from a boat located next to him. The brother then walked over to the

commotion, followed by C.N. He observed B.G. and Sanchez engaged in an

argument “hollering and cussing at each other[.]” He believed that the situation had

calmed down because he witnessed Sanchez and B.G. shake hands, when suddenly,

Sanchez hit B.G. The brother said that B.G. fell after Sanchez hit him and Sanchez

jumped on B.G.’s back. He then heard someone scream “[k]nife, knife” and saw

Sanchez stab B.G. The brother stated that Sanchez then threw something into the

water. 3 He testified that he did not threaten Sanchez and that he was “shock[ed]” by

the attack because it appeared that B.G. and Sanchez were shaking hands, and each

agreed to go their own way. He could not recall if B.G. threatened Sanchez but stated

3 Testimony at trial established that a Blackwater diver was able to retrieve a black folding knife from the boat ramp but testing on the knife proved inconclusive. 4 that his group did not have any weapons. During cross examination, the brother

stated that he did not hear Sanchez say that he was kidding after the comment, and

he took Sanchez’s tone as “threatening.”

C.N. testified that he is friends with B.G., and he and his wife were on the

boat that day with B.G. and his family. He stated that when the group arrived at the

boat ramp, he and B.G. stayed in the boat with B.G.’s brother, while his wife and

B.G.’s wife unloaded the boat. While they were on the boat, Sanchez walked by.

Sanchez stared at them and made a comment that the “truck’s not going to pull that

boat out of the water with . . . two fat asses sitting on it.” In response, both he and

B.G. cursed at Sanchez. C.N. testified that he heard Sanchez say “I’m just messing

with y’all” as he walked away. He also noticed that Sanchez staggered as he walked

to get his truck. C.N. told B.G. to forget about Sanchez, and they continued to unload

the boat.

After Sanchez backed his boat trailer into the water, C.N. observed B.G. walk

towards Sanchez. C.N. followed B.G. because he was “not going to leave him there.”

C.N. stated that he did not speak to Sanchez, and he observed B.G.’s brother

approach Sanchez as well. C.N. heard B.G. ask Sanchez “[w]hat’d you say back

there[,]” and Sanchez replied, “[h]ey big daddy [,w]here are you from?” B.G.

responded that he was from “Orangefield” and Sanchez stated, “Well, you ain’t in

5 Orangefield.” Sanchez then looked at each of them and said, “You know what? I’ll

fight all three of you. F you, F you, F you.” Sanchez hit B.G. in his left eye, and

B.G.’s head hit Sanchez’s truck. C.N. was certain Sanchez hit B.G. first, but he was

not sure if B.G. hit Sanchez. C.N. stated that Sanchez hit both B.G.’s brother and

wife during the fight. After Sanchez hit B.G., C.N. heard a girl scream that Sanchez

had a knife. C.N. then punched Sanchez’s boat passenger as he approached the fight.

As a result, he did not see Sanchez hit B.G.

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