State v. Fierro

603 P.2d 74, 124 Ariz. 182, 1979 Ariz. LEXIS 356
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1979
Docket4271
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 603 P.2d 74 (State v. Fierro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fierro, 603 P.2d 74, 124 Ariz. 182, 1979 Ariz. LEXIS 356 (Ark. 1979).

Opinion

CAMERON, Chief Justice.

Defendant David Madrid Fierro was adjudged guilty of first degree murder, A.R.S. § 13 — 452, * following trial to a jury in the Maricopa County Superior Court and was sentenced to life imprisonment. We have jurisdiction of this appeal pursuant to A.R.S. § 13-1711.

We must answer the following questions on appeal:

1. Was the evidence sufficient to support the jury’s conclusion that the defendant caused the death of the victim?
*184 2. Was it error for the trial court to have allowed testimony from two attorneys who had previously represented the defendant?
3. Did the trial court properly admit expert testimony on the subject of the Mexican Mafia?
4. Was defense counsel improperly restricted in presenting evidence?

The facts necessary for a resolution of this matter on appeal are as follows. Between 8 and 9 o’clock on the evening of 18 August 1977, Victor Corella was given a ride by Ray Montez and his wife Sandra as they were attempting to locate some marijuana. In the vicinity of 12th Street and Pima, Ray Montez heard his name called from another car. He stopped his car, walked over to the other car and saw that the passenger who had called his name was the defendant David Fierro. Defendant told Ray Montez that his brother in the “M,” or “Mexican Mafia,” had instructed the defendant to kill Corella. Ray Montez told defendant to do it outside the car because he and his wife “did not want to see anything.”

Montez returned to his car. Defendant followed and began talking with Corella. Corella got out of the car. Montez started to drive away when defendant began shooting Corella. Corella was shot once in the chest and four times in the head. Following the shooting, Corella’s body was taken to the emergency room at Maricopa County Hospital. His blood pressure was very low due to secondary bleeding from the gunshot wound to the chest area. Surgery was performed in an effort to control the bleeding. He was then taken to the surgical intensive care unit where a follow-up examination and evaluation revealed that he had suffered brain death. Corella was maintained on support systems for the next three days while follow-up studies were completed which confirmed the occurrence of brain death. The supportive measures were terminated and he was pronounced dead on 22 August 1977.

Ray Montez, upon reading the day after the shooting that Corella was still alive, reported to his probation officer the details of the shooting. Ray Montez and his wife Sandra were the principal witnesses against the defendant.

CAUSE OF DEATH

At the trial, Dr. Hugh McGill, a surgical resident at the Maricopa County Hospital, testified that:

“A After surgery he was taken to the intensive care unit. He was evaluated by a neurosurgeon who felt there was nothing we could do for his brain, he had brain death. He remained somewhat stable over the next two or three days. We had followup studies that confirmed our impression of brain death and because of that supportive measures were terminated and he was pronounced dead, I believe, on the 22nd. “Q Who pronounced him dead?
“A I did.
“Q Approximately what time?
“A 3:45 p. m. on the 22nd of August.
“Q How many days after he was brought in did you actually pronounce him dead?
“A Would have been four days.”

Dr. Hugh McGill, who performed the surgery on Corella and later pronounced him dead, and Doctor Thomas B. Jarvis, a Deputy Medical Examiner who performed an autopsy on Corella, both testified the cause of death was multiple gunshot wounds to the head.

Defendant initially argues that the termination of support systems by attendant doctors three days after Corella had suffered “brain death” was the cause of Corella’s death, and that the evidence supporting the judgment of guilt to the crime of murder was therefore insufficient to convict the defendant Fierro. We do not agree:

“ * * * it is not indispensible to a conviction that the wounds be fatal and the direct cause of death. It is sufficient that they cause death indirectly through *185 a chain of natural effects and causes unchanged by human action. * * * ” Drury v. Burr, 107 Ariz. 124, 126, 483 P.2d 539, 541 (1971). See also, State v. Decello, 111 Ariz. 46, 523 P.2d 74 (1974).

By the phrase “unchanged by human action” in Drury, we meant human action that changes or breaks the chain of natural events and of itself causes the death of the victim. In the instant case, the removal of life support systems did not change nor alter the natural progression of the victim’s physical condition from the gunshot wounds in the head to his resulting death. There was no change “by human action.”

“One who inflicts an injury on another is deemed by the law to be guilty of homicide if the injury contributes mediately or immediately to the death of such other. The fact that other causes contribute to the death does not relieve the actor of responsibility, provided such other causes are not the proximate cause of the death.” State v. Cheatham, 340 S.W.2d 16, 20 (Mo.1960), quoting 26 Am.Jur., § 48 at 191.

The removal of the life support systems was not the proximate cause of death, the gunshot wounds were, and it was not error to find that the defendant was the cause of the victim’s death.

We also believe that the defendant was legally dead before the life support systems were withdrawn. Although our legislature has defined dead human remains in A.R.S. § 36-301(1) and fetal death in A.R.S. § 36-301(2), it has not adopted a definition of death. A statutory definition is not necessary, however. Both the fact of death and its cause can be apparent to an ordinary layman when the condition of the body or the nature of the wound is such that no other determination is reasonable. When these obvious factors are present, it is not necessary that experts be required to testify in order to establish death and its cause. It is only where the fact of death and its cause is beyond the understanding of the average layman that expert testimony may be necessary.

The common law definition of death was as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
603 P.2d 74, 124 Ariz. 182, 1979 Ariz. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fierro-ariz-1979.