Valtierra, Heriberto Arias

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 5, 2010
DocketPD-0909-09
StatusPublished

This text of Valtierra, Heriberto Arias (Valtierra, Heriberto Arias) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valtierra, Heriberto Arias, (Tex. 2010).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NOS. PD-0906-09, PD-0907-09, PD-0908-09, and PD-0909-09

EDUARDO VALTIERRA & HERIBERTO VALTIERRA, Appellants

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS KENDALL COUNTY

C OCHRAN, J., delivered the opinion of the unanimous Court.

OPINION

This appeal concerns the scope of a consent to search under the Fourth Amendment.

Both the trial court and the court of appeals agreed that Heriberto Valtierra consented to have

police officers enter his apartment to talk to Erica, a 13-year-old runaway. The question

before us is whether, viewed in the light most favorable to the trial court’s ruling, the

evidence is sufficient to show that the scope of Heriberto’s consent extended to the officer’s

act of walking down the open hallway to knock on the bathroom door where Erica was said Valtierra Page 2

to be taking a shower. The trial court upheld the officer’s actions, but on the basis of a

“protective sweep” or “exigent circumstances.” The Fourth Court of Appeals found that the

officer did not have consent to walk down the hallway, nor were there exigent circumstances

warranting a protective sweep.1 Because the record supports implied, if not explicit, consent

to walk some twenty feet to the bathroom door, we conclude that the officer’s actions were

reasonable and within the scope of the original consent to enter and investigate Erica’s

whereabouts. We therefore reverse the court of appeals’s judgment and remand these cases

for further proceedings.

I.

Appellants, brothers Eduardo and Heriberto Valtierra, were each charged with

possession of methamphetamine and cocaine. They filed a motion to suppress, and the trial

judge conducted a hearing, at which the following evidence was offered.

Boerne Police Officers Moncada and Rutledge received information about a possible

female runaway at an apartment on South Plant Street in Boerne. Officer Moncada

recognized the address because he had been sent there the week before on a domestic

violence call and had spoken to a man and a young girl named Erica. The two officers went

to the apartment and knocked on the door.

Heriberto Valtierra answered the door, and he and Officer Moncada talked in Spanish.

1 Eduardo Valtierra v. State, 293 S.W.3d 725 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2009); and Heriberto Valtierra v. State, 293 S.W.3d 697 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2009). Separate panels decided these cases and issued separate opinions. Both opinions, however, contained the same reasoning and result. We consolidated the two appeals for purposes of discretionary review. Valtierra Page 3

Officer Moncada’s body microphone recorded the exchange, although several portions of the

recording are inaudible. According to the transcript of the recording, Moncada asked if he

could come in, and Heriberto said, “Of course, but I was just heating tortillas.” Both officers

came into the apartment, and Moncada told him their purpose: “It’s because we are looking

for Erica. Where’s Erica.” Heriberto replied, “Over there. She’s over there, inside,” and he

waved toward the bathroom. 2 Heriberto yelled out to her, “Erica, they’re calling you.”

Moncada then asked if he could talk to her, and Heriberto said, “Yes, she’ll come out in a

minute.”

At this point, a second man came out of a bedroom and walked into the living room

where Officers Moncada and Rutledge were talking to Heriberto. The officers were

surprised because they had thought that only Heriberto and Erica were in the apartment. That

man said, “Let me close the door,” but was told to sit on the couch. Moncada asked the

second man where Erica was, and he also said, “She’s inside, in the bathroom.” While they

were waiting, Moncada asked Heriberto how he knew Erica, and Heriberto said that she was

his niece. Moncada expressed skepticism and said, “I am, I am thinking Erica is not, did not

give me her real name. And you know it.”

At this point, portions of the recording became inaudible. At the suppression hearing,

Moncada testified that, when the girl did not come out of the bathroom, he asked Heriberto

again where she was. Heriberto told him that Erica was taking a shower. Moncada was

2 The trial judge specifically found that “[f]rom the front door, the officers could see the bathroom door.” Valtierra Page 4

suspicious because he didn’t hear running water, so he asked Heriberto if he could go talk

with her. Moncada testified that Heriberto said, “Yes,” and, as he began walking toward the

bathroom–a distance of approximately 20 feet, he saw two more men inside another

bedroom. Moncada testified that when the men saw him, they immediately threw or

“stuffed” something under the bed. Moncada called to Rutledge, and the two officers moved

the men out of the bedroom and into the living room. One of those men was Eduardo

Valtierra.

Moncada knocked several times on the bathroom door, and Erica finally came out.

Meanwhile, Officer Rutledge conducted a protective sweep of the bedroom. Rutledge

testified that, after noticing drug paraphernalia in plain view during the protective sweep, he

called a sergeant. When Eduardo, the lessee of the apartment, declined to sign a consent-to-

search form, Officers Moncada and Rutledge contacted an investigator to apply for a search

warrant. When the warrant arrived, the officers found cocaine, methamphetamine, a stolen

weapon, cash, and various drug paraphernalia.

Heriberto’s testimony differed from Officer Moncada’s in two respects.3 First,

Heriberto testified that Officer Moncada himself opened the front door and was already

inside the apartment when he asked for permission to come in.4 Second, Heriberto testified

3 Heriberto admitted that he had lied to the officer about “Erica” being his niece. 4 The sound of knocking is first heard on the recording, and, after that, Officer Moncada said, “What’s up, cousin?” When Heriberto began to respond with “What’s up my–,” Moncada interrupted and said, “Police. May I talk to you, right now?” Heriberto said, “Of course.” Moncada’s next words were, “May I come in?” Heriberto responded, “Of course, but I was just Valtierra Page 5

that Moncada did not specifically ask him if he could go down the hall, but asked him, “Can

I go over there?” Heriberto “did not answer because [he] was warming up the tortillas.”

According to Heriberto, Moncada “just kept on talking to me and kept on walking towards

the inside.”

The trial judge denied the motion to suppress and made written findings of facts and

conclusions of law supporting the officers’ version of the events. Presumably as a result of

his concern over the inaudible portions of the recording, the judge avoided the issue of

consent to walk down the hall5 and denied appellants’ motion on an alternative basis: the

officers legally discovered the contraband during a protective sweep.6 After their motion to

suppress was denied, Eduardo and Heriberto pled guilty to both possession of

methamphetamine and possession of cocaine with intent to deliver. Both appealed the trial

judge’s suppression ruling.

heating tortillas.” 5 During Officer Moncada’s testimony, the trial judge expressed concern that the tape recording did not reflect either that Moncada asked for permission to go down the hall to knock on the bathroom door or that Heriberto gave him explicit permission.

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