Victoria Garcia v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 31, 2018
Docket11-16-00347-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Victoria Garcia v. State (Victoria Garcia 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
Victoria Garcia v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

Opinion filed December 31, 2018

In The

Eleventh Court of Appeals __________

No. 11-16-00347-CR __________

VICTORIA GARCIA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 39th District Court Haskell County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 6833

MEMORANDUM OPINION The jury convicted Victoria Garcia of the offense of theft of a firearm. The trial court assessed her punishment at confinement for fourteen months in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice-State Jail Division, and it sentenced her accordingly. We affirm. Appellant presents three issues on appeal. First, Appellant contends that the trial court abused its discretion when it admitted the prior written statement of a witness who testified at trial. Next, Appellant claims that the State did not lay a proper foundation for the admission of that statement. Finally, Appellant takes the position that because the State failed to authenticate video surveillance footage, the trial court erred when it admitted the footage into evidence. During the relevant time, Dawn Wallace worked at a Stripes convenience store in Haskell. At around 3:00 a.m. on October 5, 2015, Appellant came into the store with a man known to Wallace as “Miguel.” Wallace believes that they bought cigarettes. Appellant had a green Crown Royal bag on her wrist, and Wallace testified that Appellant either paid with money from that bag or some other place near the bag. Appellant later testified that she, like many people, used a Crown Royal bag to keep her money in and that she still had the bag. She demonstrated her point by taking a green Crown Royal bag out of her boot and claimed that it was the one she had used at the time that the video was made. Wallace testified that Appellant asked whether she could leave a letter for Karamy (Kara) Hendrix, an assistant manager at the Stripes store. Wallace also testified that Appellant asked whether the police were in the parking lot. Wallace told her that they were. According to Wallace, Appellant wrote the letter, went to the restroom, and left the store. “Maybe 30 minutes, an hour maybe” after Appellant left the store, Wallace went to clean the restrooms. When she picked up the garbage bag from the trash can, underneath it, in the bottom of the trash can, she found “that Crown Royal bag” and “a little square thing.” Wallace took the bag to the counter in the restroom, opened it, and saw a gun inside the bag. Meanwhile, Officer Kenneth Brian Jones Jr., a Haskell police officer, had parked on the Stripes’ parking lot about 3:00 a.m. Officer Jones saw Appellant enter the store and saw her come out of the store. When she came out of the store the first time, she looked at him and then went back inside the store; in “a little bit,” she came

2 out again. After she came out the last time, she and another person drove away from the store. After Wallace found the gun in the Crown Royal bag, she went to get Officer Jones. Wallace took Officer Jones into the restroom and showed him the Crown Royal bag with the gun in it, and she showed him the “little square thing.” Wallace had thought that the “little square thing” was a broken toy; Officer Jones explained that it was a drug scale. The gun that Wallace showed Officer Jones was a .25 caliber Titan pistol. Danny Myers had reported to the sheriff’s office that his .25 caliber Titan pistol had been stolen and that his granddaughter, Appellant, had admitted that she had taken it. Myers testified that he kept the pistol under his mattress. He gave a statement to that effect to police. The contents of that statement are as follows: Around the first of October I noticed my black Titan Pistol .25mm was missing from my house. A couple of days later I asked my granddaughter Victoria Garcia if she knew what happened too it, she denied any thing about it of course. A few days after that she told me she HAD taken it from my house. After she told me that I came to the Sheriff’s Office to report it to Officer Jones that she stole it from me, and I would like a criminal trespass on her so she can’t come back over to my house. The State questioned Myers about the statement. When asked whether he had reported to police that his granddaughter had taken the gun, Myers answered: “Well, that it had been taken by somebody.” The State asked Myers whether he gave a statement to the police, and Myers replied: “They say I did.” He first stated that the signature on the statement “looks like my signature” and later said that it was his signature. The prosecutor showed Myers the written statement and asked him whether it was the statement that he had given to the police. “Well, probably,” he answered. Then Myers testified that he was a little foggy because it happened a long time ago and he had been in and out of the hospital and was then on medication.

3 Myers said that the statement was true, but then testified that other people could have taken the gun; he did not remember. He testified that he did not know who took it. Myers further testified that he would not have put “my black Titan pistol, 25- millimeter” in the statement because he had no idea what kind of pistol it was. His explanation was: “Maybe somebody put words in my mouth.” He said that he did not think that he ever said that the gun was any certain kind of gun. When the State showed the gun to Myers at trial, he said that he had no idea if it was his gun. He also testified that the gun that was taken was not his—it belonged to an ex-wife.1 Myers also testified that he got mad at his granddaughter and that he should not have; this should have remained “a family thing.” He tried to “drop the charges. They wouldn’t let [him].” Myers told the jury that he did not “care about the gun. . . . I care about my granddaughter.” After Myers testified as set out above, the State offered the written statement into evidence. Appellant objected to the admission of the written statement “under hearsay and proper foundation and the best evidence rule.” The trial court overruled the objection and admitted Myers’s written statement into evidence. A limiting instruction was neither requested by the parties nor given by the trial court. As we have stated, Appellant claims that the trial court erred when it admitted the statement because Myers had admitted at trial that he made the statement. Appellant further objected because the State had failed to lay a proper foundation to permit the admission of the statement in that the State did not show that the statement was the original one that Myers had given to the police but, rather, that it was a later one that he had given them.

1 Appellant’s uncle, Charlie Myers, testified that his father, Danny Myers, owned a pistol and that he usually kept it in his back pocket and sometimes kept it under his mattress. Although his father had testified that the pistol belonged to an ex-wife, Charlie Myers testified that his father bought the pistol from a friend. When the State showed the pistol to Charlie, he identified it as the one that belonged to his father. Appellant told Charlie that she had thrown the pistol into the trash at Stripes.

4 We review a trial court’s evidentiary rulings for an abuse of discretion. Gonzalez v. State, 544 S.W.3d 363, 370 (Tex. Crim. App. 2018); Martinez v. State, 327 S.W.3d 727, 736 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). A trial court abuses its discretion when its ruling falls outside the zone of reasonable disagreement. Gonzalez, 544 S.W.3d at 370. Admissibility of prior inconsistent statements of witnesses is addressed in Rule 613 of the Texas Rules of Evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
Victoria Garcia v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/victoria-garcia-v-state-texapp-2018.