OPINION
Appellant, Miguel Hernandez, was convicted by the trial court for the offense of driving while intoxicated, and sentenced to 60 days in jail, probated for two years, plus a $350.00 fine. Appeal has been perfеcted. We affirm.
The only issue before this court is whether the evidence is insufficient to establish “that appellant drove the vehicle while intoxicated.”
On March 5, 1988, San Antonio Police Officer Lina Ortiz was dispatched to Northeast Loop 410 in San Antonio, where a vehicle was reported to be traveling in the wrong direction. She arrived at the location within minutes and found a pickup stopped, facing the wrong wаy in the inside lane of traffic. The engine was running, the lights were on, and appellant was asleep alone in the drivers’ seat with his foot on the brake pedal. When Officer Ortiz turned off the ignition to the pickup, appellant woke up. Appellant was asked to step out of the pickup and was found to be intоxicated. A subsequent intoxilyzer test disclosed a reading of .15.
The test for determining the sufficiency of the evidеnce to support a criminal conviction is the same in both direct and circumstantial evidence cases.
Dickey v. State,
Appellant primarily relies on
Reddie v. State,
In Reddie, supra, the vehiсle was found stopped on a road outside the city limits of San Antonio leading to a new residential аrea; there was no indication of how long the vehicle had been stopped; there was no indication that the accused, while intoxicated, had driven the vehicle; no tests were administered to the appellant and no officer testified that the accused was intoxicated. This court held that undеr those circumstances, the evidence was insufficient to support a DWI conviction.
Here, a report was received that a vehicle was traveling the wrong way at the scene in question; minutes later, the appellant was discovered in a vehicle at the same location, stopped facing the wrong way in the inside lane of a heavily traveled highway; the engine and lights of the vehicle were on, and the appellant was asleep alone in the driver’s seat with his foot on the brakes; the aрpellant was intoxicated at the scene, which was substantiated by testimony of a police offiсer and a valid intoxilyzer test.
In
Greene v. State,
In
Keenan v. State,
In
Perez v. State,
In the case before us, the report of a vehiсle going the wrong way on a public highway minutes before appellant was discovered at the same location, the location and position of the vehicle appellant was discoverеd alone in, and the fact the engine was running and the lights were on was circumstantial evidence sufficient for a rational trier of fact to find that the vehicle appellant was in had been driven on a public street shortly before it was found. The appellant’s sobriety test results, the testimony of the police officer as to the intoxicated condition of the appellant at the scene, and the aрpellant being found alone in the driver’s seat with his foot on the brake, was circumstantial evidence suffiсient for a rational trier of the facts to find that the appellant, in an intoxicated condition, was the person operating the vehicle in question. We conclude that the evidence was sufficient to sustain the conviction.
The judgment is affirmed.
