Torres, Adrian v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 27, 2003
Docket08-01-00483-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Torres, Adrian v. State (Torres, Adrian 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
Torres, Adrian v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS

COURT OF APPEALS

EIGHTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

EL PASO, TEXAS

ADRIAN TORRES,                                              )

                                                                              )               No.  08-01-00483-CR

Appellant,                          )

                                                                              )                    Appeal from the

v.                                                                           )

                                                                              )                120th District Court

THE STATE OF TEXAS,                                     )

                                                                              )            of El Paso County, Texas

Appellee.                           )

                                                                              )               (TC# 20010D02752)

                                                                              )

O P I N I O N

Adrian Torres appeals his conviction for the offense of burglary of habitation.  Over his plea of not guilty, a jury found Appellant guilty of the charged offense.  The trial court assessed punishment at 10 years= imprisonment in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice.  Appellant raises three issues on appeal; whether the evidence was (1) legally and (2) factually sufficient to sustain the conviction, and (3) whether the trial court erred in admitting an extraneous offense which was more prejudicial to Appellant than of probative value.  We affirm.


On March 29, 2001, Jose and Elsa Ortiz received a telephone call around 11 a.m. from the El Paso Police Department, asking them to come into the station to see if they could identify property taken from their home in a burglary on March 16, 2001.  Mr. and Mrs. Ortiz then left their house in separate vehicles to go to the police station.  Mrs. Ortiz returned home approximately seventy minutes later.  She entered the house and as she opened the door, she noticed that a sliding glass door within the house was shattered and she saw broken glass everywhere.  She heard noises upstairs in the master bedroom, which sounded to her like someone opening the dresser drawers or the office door.  Mrs. Ortiz left her house and went out to the street to call emergency 911 on her cell phone.  While she was on her cell phone, Mrs. Ortiz saw a patrol officer driving by and flagged him down.  Mrs. Ortiz told the officer that she thought someone was in her house.  Mrs. Ortiz did not actually see anyone in the house nor did she see anyone leave through the front entrance of the house.  The officer entered the house, announced his presence, and waited for back-up.  Within minutes several police officers arrived.  Mrs. Ortiz advised the officers that there were weapons in the house and they proceeded to secure the house.  After the officers determined that no one was in the house, they asked Mrs. Ortiz and her husband, who had by then returned home, to enter the house and identity what property, if any, was missing.  Mrs. Ortiz testified that a crystal vase, a crystal egg holder, two Rolex watches, Mont Blanc pens, and a gun were missing.  She also noticed that several other items, including a VCR and a laptop computer had been moved.  In addition, police officers found a black duffel bag belonging to Mr. Ortiz in a concrete drainage ditch behind the back wall of the Ortiz property.  The police also found pieces of broken crystal near the bag.  Mrs. Ortiz testified that a previously locked side entrance door had been pulled open.  Her husband testified that he, as owner of the house, had not given consent to anyone to enter his house and take the missing items.  Fingerprints taken at the scene were later found to have no evidentiary value.


About six months prior to the March 29 burglary, Mr. and Mrs. Ortiz had a security video camera installed in their home, which recorded the view from the front of their property. Whenever Mr. and Mrs. Ortiz left the house, they turned on the security camera.  On the date in question, Mrs. Ortiz turned on the security camera when she and her husband left the house to go to the police station and the security camera remained on until police officers arrived after the burglary.  The videotape from the security camera was admitted into evidence at Appellant=s trial.  The videotape shows the Ortizes leaving their house in separate vehicles.  Approximately thirty minutes later, a man is seen walking up the driveway to the front door of the Ortiz house.  The man then walks around the side of the house toward the back, outside the view of the security camera.  The man then walked back to the front door in view of the camera and then again walks around the side of the house out of view.  Approximately thirty-five minutes later, the videotape shows Mrs. Ortiz returning, entering the house, then leaving, and calling the police.  The videotape also shows the police arriving and entering the house.  Mr. Ortiz and police officers testified that a person leaving through the front of the property would have appeared on the videotape given the scope of the security camera=s view.  The State argued at trial that based on witness testimony the only way to exit the property without being recorded by the security camera, was by jumping over the four to four-and-a-half foot rock wall surrounding the Ortizes= backyard, which drops down nine to nine-and-a-half feet into the rear concrete drainage ditch, or by exiting on the side of the property through shrubbery.


Mr. Ortiz testified that when he and his wife were leaving the house on Thursday, March 29, 2001, to go to the police station, he noticed a gentleman watering trees in front of the adjacent house.  Though they had never met, Mr. Ortiz assumed that the man, later identified as Appellant, was his neighbor.  On the following night, Friday, March 30, 2001, Mr. Ortiz and his family went out for pizza and when they returned home, Mr.

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