Zani v. State

657 S.W.2d 196, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4978
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 31, 1983
DocketNo. 04-81-00371-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 657 S.W.2d 196 (Zani 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
Zani v. State, 657 S.W.2d 196, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4978 (Tex. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinions

OPINION

REEVES, Justice.

Appellant was convicted of murder in a bench trial, and was assessed punishment at thirty years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections. Appellant complains of the trial court’s ruling which held for naught a conditional immunity agreement. We affirm.

Appellant and her husband, Robert Zani, posing as prospective purchasers of rural property, contacted Julius Alfred Dess, a real estate salesman situated in San Antonio, in regard to purchasing some rural acreage. The couple, however, had no intent to purchase property; their plan was to rob Dess of his money and credit cards. Dess met his death by receiving three rounds from a .25 caliber pistol in the head while sitting in the driver’s seat of his automobile on a back road in Wilson County, Texas. By written statement, appellant acknowledged that Robert Zani had informed her that he was going to kill Dess. Appellant and husband pulled Dess’s body over the front seat into the back seat of the car, covered the body, and drove to Nueces County. The body was disrobed and buried in a shallow grave on the beach. The fruits of the crime, $8.00 and some credit cards, were kept by Robert Zani. The couple retraced their steps to San Antonio, took a plane to the valley where their children and automobile had been left, and went to Mexico. Robert Zani was subsequently incarcerated and appellant went to Acapulco, Mexico, with her children.

At this time, law enforcement officers of the City of Austin and the County of Nuec-es, were investigating charges against Robert Zani. Learning that appellant was residing in Acapulco, representatives from those law enforcement offices were sent to Mexico in hope of interviewing her. On May 15, 1980, Officer Paul Ruiz and his partner, Robert Martinez of the Austin Police Department, Frank Maxwell, investigator from the Travis County District Attorney’s Office, the sheriff of Nueces County, Solomen Ortiz, and his chief deputy, Floren-cio Rendon, arrived in Acapulco, Mexico. [198]*198On May 17, 1980, Florencio Rendon and a commandante of the Mexican Federal Judiciary Police, Commandante Rodea, contacted appellant at her home. Officer Ruiz subsequently joined the two.

The officers inquired extensively into the Dess homicide. They advised appellant that, although Texas law prohibited her from testifying against her husband, Robert Zani, it would be most helpful if she would return to the United States to help clear up the crime. She readily implicated her husband by stating that he, indeed, did shoot Dess in the head two or three times. However, she did not want to return to the United States lest she be prosecuted for her participation in the crime. The officers informed appellant that they had no authority to make such a guarantee, but would try to get it.

The officers returned May 19th and appellant knowingly gave a tape recording which related, in English, the facts surrounding the Dess homicide. Officer Ruiz informed appellant that they were still attempting to obtain an agreement of immunity, but if they were successful in obtaining the immunity agreement and she returned to the United States, she would be expected to tell the truth. Moreover, she would be asked to take a lie detector test to substantiate her story. She agreed to these conditions.

The immunity agreement arrived May 21st and, shortly thereafter, the officers returned again to appellant’s mother’s home. In addition to appellant and the officers, appellant’s uncle, her mother and a Mexican official from the federal judiciary police were present. The officers testified that the immunity agreement was fully explained to the appellant, and that she and her uncle both read the statement. Questions were asked and answered. The immunity agreement in pertinent part provides:

I do hereby agree as District Attorney for the State of Texas for Atascosa County, Texas, to not seek an indictment and to not prosecute Irma Sevano Reyes de Zani if she did not directly cause the death of Julius Alfred Dess and she does the following: [Emphasis ours.]
1. Return to Texas.
2. Gives a complete statement of the events of Julius Alfred Dess’s death.
3. Cooperate with our investigators and all agencies investigating the death of Julius Alfred Dess.
4. Turn over all evidence, pieces of evidence and all information known to her about the death of Julius Alfred Dess.

The agreement was signed by Alger H. Kendall, Jr., District Attorney, and approved and accepted by the Honorable J. Taylor Brite and R.L. Etchinburg, the two presiding district judges of Atascosa County, Texas. It was also signed by the appellant and five or six witnesses.

Appellant returned to Texas with the officers, and was lodged, at the expense of the State, in a motel in Austin, Texas. When not assisting the officers in their investigation of the Dess homicide, she was free to come and go at will. She made several telephone calls to her relatives in Mexico.

On May 29, 1980, and after she had received the Miranda warning, she gave a statement to Texas Ranger George E. “Gene” Powell. Ranger Powell testified in detail as to the thoroughness of his explanation of the warning, and that she had personally read the warning. She then gave a statement which solely implicated Robert Zani in the death of Dess. After the statement had been typed, appellant read the statement, made several corrections in the spelling found therein, initialed the corrections, and signed the statement.

In subsequent days, appellant, Ranger Powell, and other officers retraced the route taken by appellant, Robert Zani, and Mr. Dess on that fateful day. From this trip, the peace officers obtained from appellant and others, further information relating to the crime. For one thing, the peace officers learned that contrary to her statement, in all probability, appellant had been riding in the back seat of the automobile instead of the front seat. Ranger Powell [199]*199confronted appellant with this information and asked that she take a polygraph test. She agreed. On June 4,1980, she met with Ronald Rogers, a polygraph operator for the Texas Department of Public Safety. Prior to taking the test, she was again given the Miranda warning and signed a statement to that effect. According to procedure, Rogers and appellant discussed the questions to be asked prior to examination. Powell informed her one of the questions would be whether she had participated in the actual shooting of Dess. During the examination, appellant denied that she had fired a shot into the head of Dess. After the test had terminated, Rogers informed appellant that the examination had indicated that she was lying in regard to firing a shot into Dess’s head. At this time she told Rogers that her husband, Robert Zani, had shot Dess two or three times and handed the gun to her and forced her to shoot him one time. Shortly thereafter, Ranger Powell again gave appellant the Miranda warning and she gave a statement stating in pertinent part:

I gave a statement to Texas Ranger G.E. Powell on Thursday, May 29, 1980, about Robert Zani shooting Mr. Julius Alfred Dess. At that time I told Ranger Powell that Robert Zani was the only person who shot Mr. Dess. I now wish to correct that statement and say that everything I said in the statement is the truth except that I also shot Mr. Dess one time.

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Related

Smith v. State
979 S.W.2d 379 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1998)
Smith, Sean Allen v. State
Court of Appeals of Texas, 1998
Zani v. State
701 S.W.2d 249 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
657 S.W.2d 196, 1983 Tex. App. LEXIS 4978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zani-v-state-texapp-1983.