Vester v. State

684 S.W.2d 715
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1984
Docket07-81-0206-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 684 S.W.2d 715 (Vester 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
Vester v. State, 684 S.W.2d 715 (Tex. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

DODSON, Justice.

In this case, the jury convicted the appellant of first degree murder on a charge by information and assessed his punishment at confinement for a period of fifty years. Seeking reversal, he brings six grounds of error. By the first three grounds, he challenges the prosecutrix’s in-court identification of him, alleging that the pre-trial identification procedure (hypnosis of the prose-cutrix) violated his due process rights under the United States Constitution. By the last three grounds, he claims his conviction should be reversed because the State failed to disclose the existence of a ballistics report, cross-examined him concerning a pistol not connected to the alleged offense, and proceeded to trial on an information without a valid waiver of an indictment. After reviewing the record, we conclude that the appellant’s challenges to the conviction do not present cause for disturbing the judgment and we affirm his conviction.

On of about 1 April 1978, Robert Rivera was killed in an incident which occurred in Lubbock County. Robert and the prosecu-trix were parked in his car on a dirt road approximately one-fourth of a mile east-southeast of the Loop 289 overpass at East 19th Street, in southeast Lubbock. While Robert and the prosecutrix were sitting in the car, two men came to the scene. One of the men killed Robert and raped the prosecutrix. At a pretrial suppression hearing and at the trial, the prosecutrix *717 identified the appellant as Robert’s assailant and her rapist.

By his first three grounds of error and relying primarily on Simmons v. United States, 390 U.S. 377, 88 S.Ct. 967, 19 L.Ed.2d 1247 (1968), Manson v. Brathwaite, 432 U.S. 98, 97 S.Ct. 2243, 53 L.Ed.2d 140 (1977), and other similar cases, the appellant claims that his right to due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution was violated because the pre-trial identification procedures were so impermissibly suggestive as to give rise to a substantial likelihood of irreparable misidentification. He further maintains that the State failed to show by clear and convincing evidence that the prosecutrix’s in-court identification of him was of independent origin, rather than the result of unnecessarily suggestive pretrial identification procedures.

Among other things, the record shows that during the late afternoon and early evening hours of 31 March 1978, the prose-cutrix was at home with her sisters. During that period, she drank two beers prior to a 7:30 p.m. supper, and opened a third beer after the meal. At approximately 10:00 p.m., the deceased, Robert Rios Rivera, “came by” the prosecutrix’s house and asked her to go with him to the liquor store. After a short conversation, the prosecutrix changed her clothes and accompanied the deceased to “Jordan’s” on 4th Street, on the east side of Lubbock; she was still drinking her third beer of the day. At Jordan’s they purchased two six packs of beer and then headed back towards the city on the same road. The prosecutrix testified that she drank one of the beers from the two six packs and that she thought the deceased drank two during the course of the evening.

After stopping on a dirt road for the deceased to “use the restroom,” the couple drove to “a store there on East Broadway” in order to purchase some cigarettes. They then drove out East 19th away from town, just outside of Loop 289. The deceased parked the car on a dirt road amidst “a bunch of trees” and in sight of Loop 289. The prosecutrix and the deceased eventually moved to the back seat where they engaged in sexual intercourse.

After intercourse, the deceased “got out of the car to use the restroom” and the prosecutrix dressed and returned to the front seat. The deceased then asked her to get into the back seat with him again, and began to do so himself. The prosecutrix testified that, at that moment, “[sjomebody hollered in the back [behind the car], ‘get out you Mexicans.’ ” The deceased was sitting on the driver’s side of the back seat. The prosecutrix, thinking it might be the police, said, “who is it?” She testified that the deceased then said, “you b_ m_ f_s,” or something to that effect. The prosecutrix further stated that she could not yet see anyone outside the car but observed that the appellant had been shot “in the mouth.”

A man, whom she later identified as the appellant, then told the prosecutrix to “get in the back seat.” The prosecutrix “jumped in the back seat” after which she saw the appellant insert a pistol-ladened hand through the lowered portion of the back window and again shoot the deceased. The deceased slumped over the prosecutrix who was, by this time, screaming and crying. The prosecutrix then crawled over the deceased’s body, exited the car on the driver’s side and faced the two men standing outside the automobile. She testified that the appellant walked toward her until she could see his face and ordered her to walk in front of him “to where the tree was.” The appellant then raped the prosecutrix. During the progress of the rape, the other man (appellant’s companion) was, as the prosecutrix stated, “throwing Robert [the deceased] out of the car.”

After the rape, the appellant forced the prosecutrix to walk in front of him back to the car while the other man removed the clothes from the body of the deceased. The prosecutrix stated at trial that she first saw the other man’s face when he “was telling the one that raped me [the prosecu-trix] he had to get rid of me.” The other man then told her to take the deceased’s *718 watch off; she complied and gave the watch to him (appellant’s companion). The appellant and the other man then discussed whether they should also kill the prosecu-trix. Taking no such action at that time, the men gave the prosecutrix her clothes (she had been clothed when the two men arrived but was forced to strip when she was raped). The men also gave her the deceased’s boots (one of her shoes had been lost), but again talked about whether or not to “get rid” of her. The appellant then stated that he was going to let her go and that “if [she] told, he would get [her] anyway.” After additional threats from both men, the prosecutrix was told to “start walking.” She began to walk, but had not gotten far when the appellant called her back. She complied with appellant’s order to return, and again stood face to face with him. The prosecutrix was crying and begging the appellant not to hurt her; he finally told her to “keep walking and don’t turn back.”

The prosecutrix then “walked several ways” and saw the two men drive off in the deceased’s car. She walked and ran until she came to some houses, where she was assisted and the Sheriff was summoned. Deputies Keesee and Bohannon arrived at the house where the prosecutrix was and, after calming her somewhat, took her back to help find the scene of the crime. At this point (i.e. the early morning hours of 1 April 1978), the Lubbock County Sheriff’s Office “processed” the scene and began its investigation.

Deputy Keesee testified that, a day or two after the offense, he “took [the prose-cutrix] to the Lubbock Police Department.

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Bluebook (online)
684 S.W.2d 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vester-v-state-texapp-1984.