Tuan Thanh Nguyen v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 2007
Docket14-06-00530-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Tuan Thanh Nguyen v. State (Tuan Thanh Nguyen 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
Tuan Thanh Nguyen v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 3, 2007

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed April 3, 2007.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

____________

NO. 14-06-00530-CR

TUAN THANH NGUYEN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 174th District Court

Harris  County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1055436

M E M O R A N D U M   O P I N I O N

In two issues, appellant Tuan Thanh Nguyen challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence supporting the trial court=s negative finding on the issue of sudden passion.  We affirm.   

I.  Factual and Procedural Background


Appellant pleaded guilty to murder, a first-degree felony.  At the subsequent punishment hearing before the trial court, appellant sought to reduce the conviction to a second-degree felony by establishing he acted under the immediate influence of sudden passion.  Appellant testified that on the night of March 19, 2005, he, his uncle, and some friends went to a pool hall, where appellant drank one beer.  The complainant, Vang Tien Nguyen (AVang@), and Phu Vinh Phan (APhu@) also went to the pool hall and drank beer.  According to appellant, at one point during the evening, Vang sought to Aquarrel@ with a friend of appellant=s uncle.  Later, after Vang vomited as a result of drinking alcohol, appellant=s group, at the behest of his uncle who thought Athings were getting too out of hand,@ left and went to the apartment of appellant=s uncle=s friend.  Vang and Phu wanted to accompany the group, but appellant=s uncle refused because Athey were too drunk.@  At the apartment, appellant, his uncle, and his friends continued to drink beer; appellant claims he drank Ahalf a can.@  According to Phu, a friend of appellant=s uncle invited Vang and him to the apartment, and the two thereafter went to the apartment and drank beer.

Eventually, the argument at the pool hall came up in conversation, and a further argument ensued.  According to appellant, Phu cursed at his uncle and slammed a beer can down on a table.  What happened next is disputed.  Appellant claims that as Vang and Phu were leaving, he requested them to come back, Atold Phu he was not to curse and disrespect his uncle,@ and told them both to leave, which they did.  In his statement to police, appellant maintained that Phu pushed him, and he pushed Phu back; but, he later denied ever pushing Phu.  Phu claims that as he and Vang were leaving, appellant began to argue with Vang and pushed him, and appellant=s uncle told appellant to come back inside the apartment, after which Phu and Vang left.  Appellant admitted he was Abothered@ and Aa little bit mad@ that Phu slammed the can down and disrespected his uncle and that he was mad enough to ask Vang and Phu to leave.   


After Vang and Phu left,  Vang called one of appellant=s uncle=s friends and told him to tell appellant to meet in the apartment parking lot to Atalk.@  Phu told police that appellant took the phone and argued with Vang, telling Vang he would Akick [his] ass if he ever saw him again.@  Appellant denied ever relaying such message to Vang.  Appellant then walked downstairs, but, seeing no one, immediately went back upstairs.  Vang then called a second time asking for appellant to come downstairs.  Though appellant claimed in portions of his police statement and testimony that he went downstairs a second time Ato talk only,@ he admitted on cross examination that he knew he was going downstairs to meet Vang for a fight.  Further, though he said the apartment A[could not] be locked at any time,@ he admitted he could have stayed inside the apartment rather than go downstairs to meet Vang.

Downstairs appellant claimed he saw, through the darkness and rain, a shadow approaching him from about ten feet away.  Phu, on the other hand, claimed that when he and Vang arrived, appellant was waiting for them.  Thereafter, appellant maintained that the shadow, who he later identified as Vang, abruptly struck him over the right eye with Aa very hard object, like a bottle,@ causing appellant to fall to the ground and think he was blind, as his eye stung and bled profusely.  When asked about whether he was aware that the police did not recover a bottle or other blunt instrument from the scene, appellant remarked that the area had been cleaned by a person from the apartment complex.  Appellant claimed that Vang pinned him on the ground and repeatedly hit him, forcing appellant to use his arms to protect his face.  Sometime during the alleged assault, appellant noticed that his manicuring knifeCwhich he obtained in manicuring school and happened to have in his pocketChad fallen out of his pocket onto the ground next to him.  Appellant then grabbed the knife, used both hands to unlock it and expose the blade, and, according to appellant, slashed Afreely@ at Vang in a horizontal motion to scare Vang and Ain self-defense@ to stop Vang=s assault.  Appellant maintained that he was scared for his life, did not intend to stab or kill Vang, and did not know Vang was stabbed six times, including in the chest and back.

Vang thereafter made his way back to Phu=s car.  Phu claimed that as they drove away, appellant banged on the vehicle=s passenger window.  Appellant maintained that, Ashaking,@ he went directly back upstairs to the apartment where his uncle=

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