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Eric Roel Jimenez v. State
13-13-00066-CR
Tex. App.
Feb 25, 2015
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Case Information

*0 FILED IN 13th COURT OF APPEALS CORPUS CHRISTI/EDINBURG, TEXAS 2/25/2015 5:05:22 PM DORIAN E. RAMIREZ Clerk *1 ACCEPTED 13-13-00066-CR THIRTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS CORPUS CHRISTI, TEXAS 2/25/2015 5:05:22 PM DORIAN RAMIREZ CLERK IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS CAUSE NO. 13-13-00066-CR ON APPEAL FROM

THE 357 TH DISTRICT COURT OF CAMERON COUNTY, TEXAS CAUSE NO. 2012-DCR-1135-E ERIC ROEL JIMENEZ V. STATE OF TEXAS * * * * * * * * * *

APPELLANT'S BRIEF

* * * * * * * * * *

Larry Warner, ATTORNEY AT LAW Counsel for Eric Jimenez 3109 Banyan Circle Harlingen, Tx 78550 7443 Phone (956) 230 0361 Tex.State Bar# 20871500 Usdc,Stdx# 1230 office@larrywarner.com website: larrywarner.com Member, Bar of the Supreme Court of the United States (1984)

APPELLANT REQUESTS ORAL ARGUMENT,

PURSUANT TO TEX.R.APP.PROC.39.7 *2

Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(a),Appellant provides the

following identity of parties and counsel:

PARTIES AND INTERESTED PERSONS 1. Eric Roel Jimenez, Appellant.

2. Hon. Brian Clark Erskine, State Bar No.

24074182, Assistant District Attorney, Cameron County Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville, Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

3. Hon. Brandy Bailey, State Bar No. 24050244,

Assistant District Attorney, Cameron County Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville, Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849.

PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

4. Hon. Luis V. Saenz, State Bar No. 17514880,

District Attorney, District Attorney, Cameron County Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville, Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL AND ON APPEAL 5. Hon. Jennifer Marie Avendano, State Bar No.

24052304, District Attorney, District Attorney, Cameron County Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville, Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849. PROSECUTING ATTORNEY ON APPEAL 6. Hon. Richard R. Rodriguez (DECEASED), State Bar

No. 17148527, Attorney at Law, 1117 E Harrison St., Harlingen, Texas 78550, Phone (956) 425- 4992.

DEFENSE ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

7. Hon. Ricardo Alonzo Barrera, State Bar No.

24071959, Attorney at Law, 1314 E. Harrison, Harlingen, Texas 78550, Phone (956) 428-2822. DEFENSE ATTORNEY ON APPEAL

*3 8. HON. LARRY WARNER, State Bar No. 20871500, Law

Office of Larry Warner, 3109 Banyan Circle, Harlingen, TX 78550. Phone (956) 230-0361. DEFENSE ATTORNEY ON APPEAL

*4 Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(b,Appellant provides the

following table of contents:

TABLE OF CONTENTS

PAGE IDENTITY OF PARTIES...................................2-3

TABLE OF CONTENTS.....................................4-5

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES..................................6-8

STATEMENT OF CASE.......................................9

ISSUES PRESENTED.......................................10

1. Is this a proscribed summary of the evidence or

comment on the weight of the evidence? Is the error fundamental? Is any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?
Immediately after the prosecutor argued that the defendant must be guilty because he refused the breath test, the Judge said, “I mean, it just tracks the evidence”.

2. Is this egregious harm: “Intoxication

means...having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more”? (CR52)

3. Did the state’s proof disprove this exception:

“except a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks” in proving operation of a “motor vehicle”?(CR8)

4. Is this egregious harm? Does this instruction

amount to a proscribed comment on the weight of the evidence? “The law in our State provides that a person may be convicted on the testimony of one witness....”(CR 53, ¶3) *5 STATEMENT OF FACTS..................................11-12

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT............................... 13-15

ARGUMENT............................................16-34

CONCLUSION AND REQUEST FOR RELIEF.....................35

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE.................................36

CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE..............................36 *6 Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(c),Appellant provides the

following index of authorities arranged alphabetically

and indicating the pages of the brief where the

authorities are cited:

INDEX OF AUTHORITIES CASES PAGES

Almanza v. State ,686 S.W.2d157(Tex.Crim.App.[en

banc]1984) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

"Intoxication means...having an alcohol concentration

of 0.08 or more."

Blue v. State ,41 S.W.3d 129(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]2000)

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16,17,22,33

The Code prohibits the Judge from commenting on or

summing up the evidence.

Boozer v. State ,717S.W.2d608(Tex.Crim.App.1986) . . 30

It used to be that the measure of the legal

sufficiency of the evidence was the instruction to

the jury actually given.

Carbide Int.,Ltd. v. State , 695S.W.2d653,659hn10(Tex.

App.–Austin 1985,no pet.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

A penal statute... must be couched in such explicit

terms that the party upon whom it is to operate may

with reasonable certainty ascertain what the statute

requires to be done, and when it must be done;

otherwise, there would be no opportunity for a person

charged with the duty to protect himself by the

performance of it according to the law.

Clark v. State (App. 5 Dist. 1994) 878 S.W.2d 224 . 21

To determine whether trial court's comments on

evidence prejudiced defendant's rights, reviewing

court considers consequences that probably resulted

from trial court's comments; error is harmless if

reviewing courts determines beyond reasonable doubt

that court's error made no contribution to

conviction. *7 Fulminante v. Arizona ,499 U.S.279(1991) . . . . . 23,33

The error was structural, not trial error.

Hoang v. State (App. 6 Dist. 1999) 997 S.W.2d 678. 18,20

A trial court improperly comments on the weight of

the evidence if it makes a statement that implies

approval of the state's argument, that indicates any

disbelief in the defense's position, or that

diminishes the credibility of the defense's approach

to its case.

Leal v. State ,338S.W.2d 443(Tex.Crim.App.1960) . . 25

“[T]he jury[,] relied heavily upon its alcohol

content.”

Malik v. State ,953 S.W.2d 234(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]1997)

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14,31

The Court of Criminal Appeals said the measure of

review was a theoretically correct charge, rather

than the charge actually given.

McElroy v. State ,667S.W.2d856(Tex.App.–Dallas 1984,pet.

granted,affirmed) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30

The state did not disprove it.No one said, “This was

not a device used exclusively on stationary rails or

tracks”.

Rodriguez v. State ,758 S.W.2d 787,788(Tex.Crim.App.[En

Banc]1988) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

"On rehearing, this Court held that Rule 81(b)(2),

Tex.R.App.Pro., and not the tests set out in Almanza,

supra, govern in deciding whether this kind of charge

error was harmless to the defendant."

Rosamond v. State ,730 S.W.2d 147(Tex.App.–Corpus

Christi,no pet.) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

The Court of Appeals acquitted Appellant when the

state failed to prove a different exception.

Strong v. State (App.13 Dist.2004)138S.W.3d 546 . 17,18 *8 To be a comment on the weight of the evidence, the

Judge’s comments must be in the presence of the jury.

Williams v. State (App. 2 Dist. 1992) 834 S.W.2d 502,pet.

refd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32

An instruction is not an improper comment on weight

of evidence if it was not reasonably calculated to

benefit state or to prejudice defendant's rights.

OTHER REFERENCES:

TEX.PEN.CODE§49.01(2)(B) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

TEX.PEN.CODE§49.01(2)(B),art. 6701l . . . . . . . . 25

Jones on Evidence § 2:34 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26

http://www.intheknowzone.com/substance-abuse-topics/bin

ge-drinking/blood-alcohol-concentration.html(accessed

February 23, 2015) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 *9 Pursuant to Tex.R.App.P.38.1(a), Appellant provides the

following statement of the case, stating concisely the

nature of the case, the course of the proceedings, and

the trial court's disposition of the case:

STATEMENT OF THE CASE The defendant was prosecuted for DWI, a felony.

He pleaded not guilty and tried the issue to a jury.

The jury found the defendant guilty.

The judge assessed punishment at probation.

Defendant filed a timely notice of appeal.

His lawyer died.

The District Court asked Mr. Warner to represent

appellant. *10 Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(e), Appellant presents

this statement of issues presented:

ISSUES PRESENTED

1. Is this a proscribed summary of the evidence or

comment on the weight of the evidence? Is the error fundamental? Is any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?
Immediately after the prosecutor argued that the defendant must be guilty because he refused the breath test, the Judge said, “I mean, it just tracks the evidence”.

2. Is this egregious harm: “Intoxication

means...having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more”? (CR, 52)

3. Did the state’s proof disprove this exception:

“except a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks” in proving operation of a “motor vehicle”?(CR, 8)

4. Is this egregious harm? Does this instruction

amount to a proscribed comment on the weight of the evidence? “The law in our State provides that a person may be convicted on the testimony of one witness....”(CR 53, ¶3) *11 Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(f), Appellant provides

the following statement of facts stating concisely

without argument the facts pertinent to the issues of

points presented:

STATEMENT OF FACTS

1. Is this a proscribed summary of the evidence or

comment on the weight of the evidence? Is the error fundamental? Is any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?

Immediately after the prosecutor argued that the

defendant must be guilty because he refused the breath

test, the Judge said, “I mean, it just tracks the

evidence”.

“Now he has got to prove his innocense. MS. BAILEY: And Your Honor, failure to take or refuse to take the breath test is a legal argument to show guilt.
THE COURT: I mean, it just tracks the evidence. Overruled.” (RR 1, 4-5)”

2. Is this egregious harm: “Intoxication

means...having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more”? (CR52)

The instructions are found at CR 52.

3. Did the state’s proof disprove this exception:

“except a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks” in proving operation of a “motor vehicle”?(CR8)

The theoretically correct charge states the

exception. *12 There was no testimony or evidence to negate the

exception.

4. Is this egregious harm? Does this instruction

amount to a proscribed comment on the weight of the evidence? “The law in our State provides that a person may be convicted on the testimony of one witness....”(CR 53, ¶3) The noted instruction appears at (CR 5,3¶3) *13 Pursuant to Tex. R. App. Proc. 38.1(g), Appellant

provides the following summary of the argument which he

hopes the Court will find to be a succinct and accurate

statement of the argument made in the body of the brief

not merely a repetition of the issues or points presented

for review:

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT

1. Is this a proscribed summary of the evidence or

comment on the weight of the evidence? Is the error fundamental? Is any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?

Immediately after the prosecutor argued that the

defendant must be guilty because he refused the breath

test, the Judge said, “I mean, it just tracks the

evidence”.

“Now he has got to prove his innocense. MS. BAILEY: And Your Honor, failure to take or refuse to take the breath test is a legal argument to show guilt.
THE COURT: I mean, it just tracks the evidence. Overruled.” (RR 1, 4-5)”

2. Is this egregious harm: “Intoxication

means...having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more”? (CR52)

Someone with that much alcohol in his system would be

dead. *14 Prior versions over the last century have expressed

the proscribed amount as a decimal followed by a

percentage sign: “0.10%” and “0.15%”.

Criminal statutes must be strictly construed. The

Court of Appeals may not add or understand a percent

sign when none appears in the statute.

3. Did the state’s proof disprove this exception:

“except a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks” in proving operation of a “motor vehicle”?(CR 8)

This was the “theoretically correct” instruction

which Malik said was the measure for the legal

sufficiency of the evidence. It is the instruction the

Judge gave. There is no testimony or evidence in the

record to disprove the exception. The Court should acquit

Jimenez.

4. Is this egregious harm? Does this instruction

amount to a proscribed comment on the weight of the evidence? “The law in our State provides that a person may be convicted on the testimony of one witness....”(CR 53, ¶3) The state put on three witnesses. The first two said

they did not even see the defendant on that day. The *15 third was the officer who thought he was intoxicated and

who arrested him. The Judge’s correct instruction

amounted to a comment on the weight of the evidence. The

error was fundamental in this one witness case. The jury

must have thought that since the Judge said they could

convict on the testimony of one witness, then the

defendant must be guilty. The error is not harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt because the Judge’s perceived

opinion tipped the scales. The defendant said he had one

drink. Other testimony was that the airbags deployed and

that people hit by airbags are dazed. The Court of

Appeals should order a new trial. *16 Pursuant to Tex. R. App. Proc. 38.1(h), Appellant

provides the following argument or the contentions made,

with appropriate citations to the authorities and to the

record:

ARGUMENT

1. Is this a proscribed summary of the evidence or

comment on the weight of the evidence? Is the error fundamental? Is any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?
“He had the ability to take the test, to 14 definitively show if he was intoxicated, and he refused.
15 MR. RODRIGUEZ: Your Honor, I'm going to 16 object to this line of argument, she is putting the burden
17 on the defense, and that is totally -- 18 THE COURT: What's the objection?

19 MR. RODRIGUEZ: Huh?

20 THE COURT: What is your objection?

21 MR. RODRIGUEZ: The objection is that's an 22 illegal argument -- not illegal, it's an unconstitutional
23 argument, she is putting the burden on the defendant. Now

24 he has got to prove his innocense.

25 MS. BAILEY: And Your Honor, failure to 1 take or refuse to take the breath test is a legal argument

2 to show guilt.

3 THE COURT: I mean, it just tracks the 4 evidence. Overruled.” (RR 1, 4-5)

The Code prohibits the Judge from commenting on or

summing up the evidence. That is what happened here.

This is very similar to the fundamental error in Blue v.

State ,41 S.W.3d 129(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]2000) *17 The Judge may not comment on the weight of the

evidence:

“In ruling upon the admissibility of evidence, the judge shall not discuss or comment upon the weight of the same or its bearing in the case, but shall simply decide whether or not it is admissible; nor shall he, at any stage of the proceeding previous to the return of the verdict, make any remark calculated to convey to the jury his opinion of the case.” Blue v. State ,41 S.W.3d 129(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]2000) To be a comment on the weight of the evidence, the

Judge’s comments must be in the presence of the jury.

Comments made by trial judge concerning admissibility of

testimony by State's rebuttal witness in trial of

defendant on two counts of aggravated sexual assault,

giving defendant choice of returning to the stand to

preclude the testimony of the witness or remaining silent

and relying on his original statement, did not violate

defendant's right to due process or statute prohibiting

judges from commenting on the weight of evidence or its

bearing in a case; comments were made outside the

presence of the jury, and did not provide assistance to

the State. Strong v. State (App. 13 Dist. 2004) 138

S.W.3d 546. *18 The comments in Strong were outside the presence of

the jury, so they were not the proscribed comments on the

weight of the evidence.

The comments in Jimenez were in the presence of the

jury.

“THE COURT: So let's go ahead and proceed 3 with closing arguments.***(RR1 4) MS. BAILEY: Now, ladies and gentlemen of 6 the jury, you have all of the evidence before you....”(RR 1, 5)

The prosecutor’s remarks appear between the two

citations above.

A trial court improperly comments on the weight of

the evidence if it makes a statement that implies

approval of the state's argument, that indicates any

disbelief in the defense's position, or that diminishes

the credibility of the defense's approach to its case.

Hoang v. State (App. 6 Dist. 1999) 997 S.W.2d 678.

The following comment by the Judge is a statement

that implies approval of the state’s argument:

“He had the ability to take the test, to 14 definitively show if he was intoxicated, and he refused.

15 MR. RODRIGUEZ: Your Honor, I'm going to *19 16 object to this line of argument, she is putting the burden

17 on the defense, and that is totally -- 18 THE COURT: What's the objection?

19 MR. RODRIGUEZ: Huh?

20 THE COURT: What is your objection?

21 MR. RODRIGUEZ: The objection is that's an 22 illegal argument -- not illegal, it's an unconstitutional
23 argument, she is putting the burden on the defendant. Now

24 he has got to prove his innocense.

25 MS. BAILEY: And Your Honor, failure to 1 take or refuse to take the breath test is a legal argument

2 to show guilt.

3 THE COURT: I mean, it just tracks the 4 evidence. Overruled.” (RR 1, 4-5)

This comment approved the state’s argument that

“failure to take or refuse to take the breath test is a

legal argument to show guilt.” The state’s argument was

made immediately before the Judge’s comment. The Judge’s

comment was on the “evidence”. The prosecutor’s argument

was about the defendant’s guilt. The judge’s comment

approved the prosecutor’s argument by intimating that the

evidence showed that the defendant was guilty by

commenting on the evidence.

What would a lay juror have thought? That is the

test. To determine whether trial judge's remarks were *20 improper comment on evidence, some factors to be

evaluated are whether the remarks were made in the

presence of the jury and whether the comments, however

impartially they may have been made, may have led the

jury to infer the judge's own opinion of the merits of

the case. Hoang v. State (App. 6 Dist. 1999) 997 S.W.2d

678.

The remarks were in the presence of the jury, as

indicated by the Trial Judge’s calling for final

arguments and the prosecutor’s addressing the “Ladies and

Gentlemen of the Jury”.(RR 1, 4-5)

Right after the prosecutor made an argument that the

evidence(of his not taking the test) indicated he was

guilty, the Trial Judge commented on the “ evidence ”,

saying “I mean, it just tracks the evidence.” The Judge

did not say, “I mean, it just tracks the statute”. The

Judge said, “I mean, it just tracks the evidence.” A lay

juror would have thought that the Judge thought that the

evidence showed, that the evidence showed that the

defendant was guilty. *21 To determine whether trial court's comments on

evidence prejudiced defendant's rights, reviewing court

considers consequences that probably resulted from trial

court's comments; error is harmless if reviewing courts

determines beyond reasonable doubt that court's error

made no contribution to conviction. Clark v. State (App.

5 Dist. 1994) 878 S.W.2d 224.

There was no blood test. There was no breath test.

There was no crash. There was a refusal. There was an

argument that he must be guilty because he refused the

test. The evidence that he did not take the test was

admissible. The prosecutor could point out to the jury

that the defendant did not take the test. But the Judge

could not approve the prosecutor’s argument that the

defendant must be guilty because he did not take the

test. Coming right after the prosecutor’s argument and

mentioning the evidence, the evidence, makes the comment

one on the weight of the evidence and the error not

harmless beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court of Appeals

cannot say that as the reviewing court it determines

beyond reasonable doubt that the trial court's error made *22 no contribution to conviction in this weak case. The

prosecutor’s very argument depended on Jimenez’ having

refused the test.

The Court of Appeals should find error, fundamental

error, harmful error, in that the Judge’s comment

approved the prosecutor’s argument and helped the

prosecution.

The Court of Appeals should order a new trial.

The error was fundamental The Judge in Blue v. State ,41S.W.3d

129(Tex.Crim.App.[EnBanc]2000) told the jury that he

wished the Defendant had pleaded guilty so that everyone

would not have to waste time. The Court of Criminal

Appeals deemed the comment error, fundamental error. In

Jimenez the Trial Judge told the jury that the evidence

showed the defendant was guilty; the Judge did that by

approving the prosecutor’s argument that the defendant

was guilty because the defendant did not take the test.

Of course the refusal was admissible. That is not the

test for whether the Judge made a comment on the weight *23 of the evidence. Of course the prosecutor could argue

that the refusal was some evidence of guilt. Perhaps that

argument was error. It does not matter when we are

examining the Trial Judge’s comment. What matters is

that the Trial Judge approved the prosecutor’s argument

that the defendant must be guilty because the defendant

refused the test. In a weak case, the Judge’s comment

helped the state. The test is whether the Court of

Appeals can say beyond a reasonable doubt that the

comment made no contribution to the verdict.

The error was structural, not trial error. Fulminante

v. Arizona ,499 U.S.279(1991) If the Judge tells the jury

that the prosecutor’s argument that the defendant must be

guilty since the defendant refused the test “tracks the

evidence”, why bother with a jury. The Judge agrees with

the prosecutor that the defendant must be guilty because

the Judge approves the prosecutor’s argument.

But a fair trial requires a neutral judge. The lack

of a neutral judge is structural. Fulminante,supra

The Court of Appeals should find the error

fundamental and should review it. On review, it should *24 find that the error is not harmless beyond a reasonable

doubt. It should order a new trial.

2. Is this egregious harm: “Intoxication

means...having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more”? (CR, 52) Almanza v. State ,686 S.W.2d157(Tex.Crim.App.[en banc]1984) superseded by rule as stated in Rodriguez v. State ,758 S.W.2d 787,788(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]1988) The correct statement is “0.08%” or “0.0008). So, the error is off by a factor of 100.

“After the Court of Appeals decided the instant appeal, this Court delivered its opinion on the Court's own motion for rehearing in Rose v. State , 752 S.W.2d 529 (Tex.Cr.App.1988). On rehearing, this Court held that Rule 81(b)(2), Tex.R.App.Pro., and not the tests set out in Almanza, supra, govern in deciding whether this kind of charge error was harmless to the defendant. This Court further held that failure to object to the unconstitutional jury charge did not waive error. Since an objection was not required, it is of no consequence in the instant case that appellant's point of error on appeal was not raised at trial.” Rodriguez v. State ,758 S.W.2d 787,788(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]1988) The relevant law

Here is what the law says:

“(B) having an alcohol concentration of 0.08 or more.”TEX.PEN.CODE§49.01(2)(B) *25 Here is what the law meant to say: “(B) having an alcohol concentration of 0.08% or more.”

Here is what the immediate predecessor of TEX.PEN.CODE§49.01(2)(B),art. 6701l –1, said: “Until art. 6701l –1 was amended, effective January 1, 1984, the sole definition of “intoxication” in Texas was that a driver did not have the normal use of his mental or physical faculties by reason of introduction of alcohol into his body. The statutory amendment added the new definition of “having an alcohol concentration of 0.10% or more.”

Here is what the 1923 to ~1960 version provided in a prosecution for murder by driving while intoxicated:

Leal was prosecuted “under Art. 802c, Vernon's Ann.P.C.” “Roger Bickham, chemist and toxicologist, who examined the specimen, testified that the urine had an alcohol content of .15 percent.” “[T]he jury[,] relied heavily upon its alcohol content.” L e a l v . S t a t e , 3 3 8 S . W . 2 d 443(Tex.Crim.App.1960)

The Court of Appeals may not add a percent sign that

the Legislature did not state: *26 The Third Court of Appeals set out the guiding maxim:

“It is a well-established principle of statutory construction that penal statutes must be strictly construed in determining the liability of the person upon whom the penalty is imposed, and that the more severe the penalty, and the more disastrous the consequence to the person subject to the provisions of the statute, the more rigid will be the construction of its provisions in favor of such a person and against the enforcement of such law.... A penal statute ... must be couched in such explicit terms that the party upon whom it is to operate may with reasonable certainty ascertain what the statute requires to be done, and when it must be done; otherwise, there would be no opportunity for a person charged with the duty to protect himself by the performance of it according to the law.” Carbide Int.,Ltd.v.State ,695S.W.2d653,659hn10(Tex. App.–Austin 1985,no pet.) The Court of Appeals may take judicial notice of

percentages and decimals.

“Judicial notice has been taken of a world-wide financial crisis, an extraordinary stock market collapse, a general economic and financial depression which followed it, and an ensuing adverse business and financial condition and distress and widespread unemployment.” Jones on Evidence § 2:34....

The figure “.08" is equivalent to 8%. A person with

8% alcohol in his blood would be dead: *27 “ Blood Alcohol Concentration (BAC) “The legal system uses a more scientific method for

determining when a person is drunk, Blood Alcohol

Concentration (BAC,) the percentage of alcohol in the

blood (or proportion of alcohol to blood in the body)

as someone drinks.

In most states, a BAC of .10% is considered legally

drunk. This means that for every 1,000 milliliters of

blood, the body contains 1 milliliter of alcohol. In

some states, the legal definition of intoxication is

.08%, which means that for every 1000 milliliters of

blood, the body contains 8/10ths of a milliliter of

alcohol.

A BAC of .37%-.40% or higher can cause death.

Death may occur at .37% or higher. BACs of .45% and

higher are fatal to nearly all individuals.”

http://www.intheknowzone.com/substance-abuse-topics

/binge-drinking/blood-alcohol-concentration.html(ac

cessed February 23, 2015)

The Court of Appeals should find error, that the

error is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt, and

should remand for a new trial.

The indictment charged driving while intoxicated:

“operate a motor vehicle in a public place while said defendant was intoxicated....” (CR, 8) The evidence:

*28 Here is the essence of the testimony of the three

witnesses the state presented:

SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE STATE'S WITNESSES:

JOSE MARTINEZ

A. Well, picking up the leaves from the trees,

12 the branches of the palm trees. (RR 3, 23)

19 Q. And what else did you see?

20 A. Well, the car wrecked between the palm

21 trees. (RR 3, 24)

A. Well, like a bit not all there. He might

15 have been a little, drinking a little. (RR 3,

28)

[Never IDs man walking as defendant.]

ROLANDO ORTEGA:

17 A. I am Officer Rolando Ortega with the La

18 Feria Police Department. (RR 3, 31)

Q. Were you near him at all?

2 A. No.

3 Q. So would you be able to testify about

4 whether or not he was intoxicated?

5 A. No. (RR 3, 35)

24 A. Yes. The vehicle hit the concrete and then

25 slid over and ended up where it is at right now.

(RR 3, 41)

9 Q. And then what was it's final resting place?

10 A. Final resting place was just about ten or

11 fifteen feet away from the point of impact,

facing north bound on Lilac. (RR 3, 42)

12 Q. (BY MS. BAILEY) So, but you saw no skid *29 13 marks.

14 A. Correct.

15 Q. And you were unable to determine the speed.

16 A. Yes. (RR 3, 44)

A. After the investigations, I spoke with

23 Officer Padilla, which he had told me his side

of the

24 story, and he had told me he had charged the

driver

25 with DWI because he smelled the alcohol on him.

1 So I just completed my accident

2 investigation, and concluded that fact there he

had

3 been drinking. (RR 3, 48-49)

JUAN PADILLA:

16 A. I am presently employed with the Harlingen

17 Police Department (RR 3, 59)

1 just only an individual I saw walking away from

it. (RR 3, 63)

the witness has

16 identified the defendant?

17 THE COURT: So noted. (RR 3, 63)

I noticed his eyes

3 were red. I mean, I could smell alcohol from him

4 when I was talking to him. He was staggering, he

5 couldn't keep his balance RR 3 65

he

22 stated that he was driving and somebody pulled

23 out in front of him, walked in front of him,

which

24 caused him to have the accident. (RR 3, 63) *30 A. He replied that he had one drink, one beer (RR

3, 67)

he actually had to hold on to the door to keep

16 from falling to the ground. (RR 3, 67)

A. The defendant stated to me that he was

4 driving. (RR 3, 68)

we asked him for a sample

25 of his breath, which he stated he would comply

with (RR 3, 72)

Q. But you were unable to obtain a blood

7 alcohol reading because he refused to provide

one, is

8 that correct?

9 A. He refused yes, sir. (RR 3, 81)

The prosecutor’s argument reinforced the error:

“So the first one is not having the normal use of your mental faculties by the reason of introduction of alcohol into the body, for not having physical faculties, for having an alcohol concentration of .08 or higher.” (RR 1, 6/7-11)

3. Did the state’s proof disprove this exception:

“except a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks” in proving operation of a “motor vehicle”?(CR, 8)

This is an “exception”. The state has to disprove it: *31 McElroy v. State ,667S.W.2d856(Tex.App.–Dallas 1984,pet.granted,affirmed) The state did not disprove it.No one said, “This was not a device used exclusively on stationary rails or tracks”.

It used to be that the measure of the legal

sufficiency of the evidence was the instruction to the

j u r y a c t u a l l y g i v e n . B o o z e r v .

State ,717S.W.2d608(Tex.Crim.App.1986) Then the Court of

Criminal Appeals said the measure of review was a

theoretically correct charge, rather than the charge

actually given. Malik v. State ,953 S.W.2d

234(Tex.Crim.App.[En Banc]1997)The judge’s charge in

Jimenez is theoretically correct in including the

language “not a device used exclusively on stationary

rails or tracks”. The proof failed to disprove the

exception. The Court of Appeals should acquit Appellant,

just as this Court of Appeals did when the state failed

to prove a different exception. Rosamond v. State ,730

S.W.2d 147(Tex.App.–Corpus Christi,no pet.)

4. Is this egregious harm? Does this instruction

amount to a proscribed comment on the weight of the evidence? “The law in our State provides that a person may be convicted on the testimony *32 o f o n e w i t n e s s . . . . ” ( C R , 53¶3).....................

An instruction is not an improper comment on weight

of evidence if it was not reasonably calculated to

benefit state or to prejudice defendant's rights.

Williams v. State (App. 2 Dist. 1992) 834 S.W.2d

502,pet.refd.

In Jimenez, the instruction did indeed benefit the

state by leaving the intimation that the judge would

permit a conviction on the testimony of the only witness

the state presented. In Jimenez, the instruction did

prejudice the defendant’s right not to have the Judge

comment on the weight of the evidence. The evidence was

in equipoise. There was testimony the jury could have

accepted that the defendant swerved to avoid a collision,

and that that caused the accident. There was testimony

that he had one beer. There was testimony that the

airbags deployed and that people impacted by airbags are

dazed. But the Judge’s instruction tipped the scales *33 against the defendant by effectively commenting on the

weight of the evidence.

The error was fundamental because the Judge’s

instruction deprived the defendant of a neutral and

detached magistrate. Blue,supra; Fulminante v. Arizona,

supra. The magistrate was not neutral and detached

because the Judge gave the jury an instruction which

emphasized some testimony and conveyed the Judge’s

opinion that the defendant was guilty.

The State presented three witnesses. The first two

did not see the defendant or identify him in court. Only

one witness identified the defendant. Only one said the

defendant was intoxicated. The “one witness” instruction

effectively was a comment on the weight of the evidence,

since it emphasized the one-witness-ness of the state’s

case. Above is a summary of the state’s witnesses and

the testimony of each.

The state put on three witnesses. The first two said

they did not even see the defendant on that day. The

third was the officer who thought he was intoxicated and

who arrested him. The Judge’s correct instruction *34 amounted to a comment on the weight of the evidence. The

error was fundamental in this one witness case. The jury

must have thought that since the Judge said they could

convict on the testimony of one witness, then the

defendant must be guilty. The error is not harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt because the Judge’s perceived

opinion tipped the scales. The defendant said he had one

drink. Other testimony was that the airbags deployed and

that people hit by airbags are dazed. The Court of

Appeals should order a new trial. *35 Pursuant to Tex. R. App. Proc. 38.1(I), Appellant

provides a short conclusion that clearly states the

nature of the relief sought:

CONCLUSION AND REQUEST FOR RELIEF The Court of Appeals should find that the proof

failed to disprove the exception. The Court of Appeals

should acquit Appellant.

Failing which, the Court of Appeals should find

error, that the error is not harmless beyond a reasonable

doubt, and should remand for a new trial.

RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED February 25, 2015.

/s/Larry Warner Larry Warner, Counsel for Eric Roel Jimenez 3109 Banyan Circle Harlingen, Tx 78550 7443 Phone (956) 230-0361 Tex.State Bar# 20871500 Usdc,Stdx# 1230 office@larrywarner.com website: larrywarner.com Member, Bar of the Supreme Court of the United States (1984); Board Certified, Criminal Law, Texas Board of Legal Specialization (1983) *36 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I certify that I had delivered a copy of the

foregoing APPELLANT’S INITIAL BRIEF via fax to the

following counsel of record on this 25 th day of February,

2015 to the District Attorney’s office at 964 E. Harrison

Street, 2nd Floor, Brownsville, Texas 78520. Fax: 1-956-

544-0869.

Respectfully Submitted, February 25, 2015.

/s/Larry Warner Larry Warner, Counsel for Appellant Certificate Of Compliance I certify that this brief complies with

TEX.R.APP.9(i) (2)(B) and was prepared using WordPerfect

X3, font in Courier New 14pt. And contains 4406 words as

counted by the WordCount Tool of this software program.

Respectfully Submitted, February 25, 2015.
/s/Larry Warner Larry Warner, Counsel for Appellant

Case Details

Case Name: Eric Roel Jimenez v. State
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Texas
Date Published: Feb 25, 2015
Docket Number: 13-13-00066-CR
Court Abbreviation: Tex. App.
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