State v. Roper

2001 NMCA 093, 34 P.3d 133, 131 N.M. 189
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 30, 2001
Docket21,258
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 2001 NMCA 093 (State v. Roper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Roper, 2001 NMCA 093, 34 P.3d 133, 131 N.M. 189 (N.M. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

PICKARD, Judge.

{1} This case raises multiple issues concerning the sufficiency of the evidence for Defendant’s various convictions and the manner in which he was sentenced for them. We hold that the evidence was in all respects sufficient and that the trial court did not err in any manner in its sentencing decisions.

{2} Although charged with fifteen offenses, including attempted murder, arising out of a shooting from an automobile in which two young men were injured, Defendant was convicted only of two counts of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (a sawed-off shotgun), one count of conspiracy to commit shooting from a vehicle, and one count of conspiracy to tamper with evidence. The latter count is not at issue in this appeal. Defendant contends that (1) the evidence was insufficient to support the conspiracy to shoot conviction; (2) conviction and sentencing on the two counts of aggravated assault violated double jeopardy; (3) none of the three reasons given by the trial court for increasing Defendant’s sentence for aggravating factors was lawful; (4) double jeopardy was violated by using the same facts to convict Defendant for aggravated assault, enhance his sentence with the firearm enhancement, and increase the sentence for aggravating factors; (5) failure to submit the aggravating factors to the jury for a determination beyond a reasonable doubt violated Defendant’s due process rights; (6) allowing the two co-defendants to testify against Defendant under plea agreements that provided for leniency violated Defendant’s due process rights; and (7) the verdicts are inconsistent. We find no merit in any of the contentions and accordingly affirm.

FACTS

{3} Nineteen-year-old Defendant and two friends, Paul Gutierrez and Samuel Lopez, were drinking in a motel in Albuquerque with Defendant’s girlfriend and her sister. Defendant got into an argument with his girlfriend, and he and his friends left the motel to pick up girls. They had two guns in the car, a sawed-off shotgun and a nine-millimeter handgun. It was undisputed that Mr. Gutierrez was the driver of the car, Defendant was the front-seat passenger, and Mr. Lopez was in the back seat.

{4} Mr. Gutierrez’s car stopped at a fast-food restaurant where there were girls using a pay phone. One of the girls approached Defendant. She said he was drunk, “ugly,” and “running his mouth”; she went back to where her friends were using the phone. In the meantime, there were some young men across the parking lot in front of another restaurant. Mr. Gutierrez was addressing them, “talking garbage” and asking them “what are you claiming?” This question was explained to mean that Mr. Gutierrez wanted to know to what gang the young men belonged. The young men could not hear, and one of them said ‘What?” Mr. Gutierrez apparently perceived that as a disrespectful response and responded by saying “What” himself in an angry fashion.

{5} The next thing any of the witnesses knew, the shotgun and the nine-millimeter handgun were pointing out of the driver’s window of Mr. Gutierrez’s car, and multiple shots were fired from the handgun, hitting two of the young men in the parking lot, severely injuring one of them. Several witnesses testified that it appeared to them that the driver, Mr. Gutierrez, was holding the shotgun while the front passenger, Defendant, was shooting the handgun by leaning in front of the driver with the gun out the window. One witness and Mr. Lopez testified that Mr. Lopez had the shotgun. Mr. Lopez said he stuck the shotgun out of the car when Mr. Gutierrez was “talking garbage” to the victims because he wanted to show them that there was a gun in the car. Other witnesses said that Defendant had the shotgun, while Mr. Gutierrez held the handgun. After the shooting, Mr. Lopez bragged to his cousin that he and his friends did a “drive-by” “because some guys were talking shit.”

{6} Mr. Gutierrez and Mr. Lopez both testified against Defendant pursuant to deals whereby they were given leniency in return for testifying truthfully, which they understood to mean that they would be expected to testify that Defendant was the person who did the shooting. The jury, however, convicted Defendant only of conspiracy to shoot from a motor vehicle and two counts of aggravated assault with the shotgun, the latter being submitted as lesser included offenses of aggravated battery of the two victims who were shot and injured.

DISCUSSION

1. Sufficiency of the Evidence of Conspiracy

{7} Defendant relies on State v. Mariano R., 1997-NMCA-018, 123 N.M. 121, 934 P.2d 315, to support his contention that the evidence was insufficient. We reversed a conspiracy to shoot conviction in that case on facts similar to the facts of this case: the charge was conspiracy, the underlying offense involved shooting from a vehicle, multiple people in a car were involved, the defendant knew that there were guns in the car, and he was present when one was fired. Id. ¶¶ 2, 5. In Mariano R., we said that, while we reviewed the evidence “in light of common knowledge or common experience,” “common knowledge and experience must not be confused with cynical speculation. In reviewing a determination of guilt, we cannot sanction a view that assumes the worst about human nature. That is an essential message of the presumption of innocence. Evidence is required, more evidence than was presented here.” Id. ¶ 7 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).

{8} However, notwithstanding the superficial similarity of the basic facts of Mañano R. with the facts of this case, there was much more evidence in this case to sustain a charge of conspiracy to commit shooting from a motor vehicle. It must be remembered that, while conspiracy requires an agreement, the agreement can be nothing more than a mutually implied understanding that can be proved by the cooperative actions of the participants involved. State v. Smith, 102 N.M. 512, 514, 697 P.2d 512, 514 (Ct.App.1985). According to the evidence in the light most favorable to the State, each of the occupants of the vehicle except Defendant were involved in trash-talking with the victims and all were involved in displaying weapons so that the victims would know who they were dealing with. There was evidence that Defendant was the actual shooter of the nine-millimeter handgun, although he was not convicted thereof. From this evidence, the jury could easily infer that all occupants of Mr. Gutierrez’s vehicle joined together in a mutually implied understanding to “show up” the young men in the parking lot who were perceived to be members of another gang by shooting at them from the vehicle.

{9} In contrast to Mañano R. and other cases on which Defendant relies, in which the defendants were merely acquainted with the perpetrators and present during the crimes, Defendant here was an active participant. The other people in the car were active participants also. The evidence was that at least one of the guns was taken from the motel room to the car. The natural inference was that Defendant and his friends were going out looking for trouble pursuant to a mutually implied understanding that, if trouble were found, the guns would be used. That situation occurred, the guns were used, and one of the friends bragged about it later.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 NMCA 093, 34 P.3d 133, 131 N.M. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-roper-nmctapp-2001.