Timothy Joe Luna v. State
This text of Timothy Joe Luna v. State (Timothy Joe Luna 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.
Opinion
APPELLANT
APPELLEE
PER CURIAM
At appellant's trial for murder, the jury found him guilty of the lesser included offense of voluntary manslaughter. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 19.04 (West 1989). The district court assessed punishment at imprisonment for twenty years.
At approximately 4:00 a.m. on April 4, 1991, Bobby Sweet returned to his house in Belton in a highly intoxicated state. Sweet had spent the previous ten hours in the company of Kellye Egan and several of her friends and acquaintances, including appellant. Sweet told Gaylon Brown, his brother, and Donnie Rich, a friend who was staying with them, that he had been in a fight at Egan's house and that his wallet and keys had been stolen. (1) Brown, Sweet, and Rich decided to drive to Egan's house in Brown's pickup to retrieve Sweet's property. They took with them two table legs and an ax handle "just in case something happened."
The three men arrived at Egan's house in Temple around 4:30 a.m. Sweet got out of the pickup and went inside, unarmed, to seek his wallet. Brown, carrying the ax handle, also got out of the pickup and approached appellant, who was standing in the yard. Brown asked appellant where his brother's keys were. Appellant said he did not know anything about the keys. Brown then swung the ax handle at appellant, missing him. Appellant fled into the house with Brown in pursuit. Rich, carrying one of the table legs, followed Brown into the house.
Inside the house, appellant found two allies in David Martinez and Pete Valdez. By the time Rich entered the house, the other men had overpowered Brown and were beating him with their fists, the ax handle, and a weight from a set of barbells. Rich attempted to pull Valdez away, was struck several times, and fled out the front door.
Brown staggered outside, followed by appellant and the others in the house. Appellant struck Brown again and he fell to the ground, where he ceased all resistance and lay curled in a defensive posture. Rich and another witness, Darlene Sneed Martinez, testified that appellant and David Martinez continued to strike Brown about the head and upper body. Darlene Martinez said that Martinez was hitting Brown with a table leg, while appellant was using a metal bar from the barbells.
The beating stopped as police sirens were heard approaching. Someone, it is not clear from the evidence who, dragged Brown's unconscious body from Egan's front yard to the street. Before fleeing to the house next door, appellant ran over and hit Brown one more time with the metal bar.
After speaking to the witnesses and viewing the scene, police officers went next door and arrested appellant and David Martinez. Both men had a large amount of blood on their clothes and bodies, but were not injured. Brown was taken to a hospital were he died three days later from massive injuries to the head.
The court instructed the jury on the use of deadly force in self-defense. Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 9.32 (West Supp. 1992). In his first point of error, appellant complains that the court erroneously limited his right of self-defense by including a charge on abandonment of the difficulty by the deceased. After setting out the law of self-defense and applying it to the facts of the case, the court instructed the jury as follows:
You are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the deceased used force or violence upon the defendant and put the defendant in fear of his life or serious bodily harm, or did some act or acts which justified the defendant in reasonably believing that he was in danger of losing his life or suffering serious bodily harm from the acts of deceased, but you further believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the deceased in good faith abandoned the difficulty and retreated, and that this reasonably appeared to the defendant and that the defendant, so knowing that deceased had abandoned the difficulty, pursued the deceased and continued to strike deceased, not in his necessary or apparently necessary self defense, and thereby killed the deceased, then the defendant would be guilty of culpable homicide, which the jury must determine from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. But, if you find from the evidence, or you have a reasonable doubt thereof, that the defendant did not reasonably believe that the deceased had withdrawn from the difficulty, but that by his retreating he was seeking a vantage ground to renew the attack or threatened attack, if any, then the defendant would have the right to pursue and strike said deceased as long as it reasonably appeared to the defendant to be necessary, and he believed it to be necessary, to protect himself, but no further.
Appellant urges that this instruction should not have been given because there is no evidence that Brown abandoned the difficulty and retreated. (2)
Appellant's own written statement to the police contains evidence of Brown's withdrawal from the difficulty. In the statement, appellant says, "I got the ax handle away from Gaylon somehow. I hit Gaylon in the head and face. He staggered outside. I told him to get his brother and leave. Gaylon was standing beside the sidewalk. I hit him again and he fell. Gaylon stayed on the ground. I saw blood coming from Gaylon." This statement and the testimony of the various witnesses, who all stated that Brown did not fight or resist appellant after leaving the house, raised an issue as to whether Brown had withdrawn from the difficulty and retreated. The court did not err by overruling appellant's objection to the instruction. Point of error one is overruled.
In his second point of error, appellant contends the court erred by refusing this requested charge:
You are further instructed that if the Defendant struck the deceased in defense of himself, then he had the right to continue striking him until the danger or apparent danger ceased, or as long as it reasonably appeared to him, as viewed from his standpoint at the time, that he was in danger.
We conclude that no error is presented, as appellant's requested charge was substantially incorporated into the instruction on withdrawal from the difficulty given by the court and quoted above. See Philen v. State, 683 S.W.2d 440, 445 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984). Appellant incorrectly asserts in his brief that the court's charge conditioned his right to pursue on a finding that the deceased had abandoned the difficulty. The truth is exactly to the contrary. The court's charge authorized appellant to pursue and strike the deceased if the jury believed that the deceased had not withdrawn from the difficulty. The second point of error is overruled.
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Timothy Joe Luna v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/timothy-joe-luna-v-state-texapp-1992.