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James Garza v. State
04-15-00456-CR
| Tex. App. | Oct 14, 2015
|
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Case Information

*0 FILED IN 4th COURT OF APPEALS SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 10/14/15 2:34:44 PM KEITH E. HOTTLE Clerk

*1 ACCEPTED 04-15-00456-CR FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 10/14/2015 2:34:44 PM

KEITH HOTTLE CLERK NO.    04-­‐15-­‐00456-­‐CR IN  THE  COURT  OF  APPEALS FOURTH  COURT  OF  APPEALS  DISTRICT SAN  ANTONIO,  TEXAS JAMES  GARZA. Appellant V. THE  STATE  OF  TEXAS, Appellee ON  APPEAL  FROM  THE  290th  DISTRICT  COURT OF  BEXAR  COUNTY  TEXAS CAUSE  NUMBER  2009-­‐CR-­‐12648A BRIEF  FOR  THE  APPELLANT EDWARD  F.  SHAUGHNESSY 206  E.  Locust  Street San  Antonio,  Texas  78212 (210)  212-­‐6700 (210)  212-­‐2178  (FAX) Shaughnessy727@gmail.com SBN  18134500

ORAL  ARGUMENT  REQUESTED                                 ATTORNEY  FOR  APPELLANT

TABLE  OF  CONTENTS

*2 Table of Contents ..................................................................................................... ii Table of Interested Parties ...................................................................................... iii Table of Authorities .................................................................................................. iv Brief for the Appellant .............................................................................................. v Summary of the Argument ...................................................................................... 6 Argument and Authorities ....................................................................................... 9 Conclusion and Prayer ............................................................................................ 10 Certificate of Service ............................................................................................... 12 Certificate of Compliance…………………………………………………………………………....12

ii *3 PARTIES  AND  COUNSEL TRIAL  COUNSEL  FOR  THE  STATE: WENDY  WILSON Assistant  Criminal  District  Attorney Bexar  County,  Texas 401  W.  Nueva San  Antonio,  Texas  78205 TRIAL  COUNSEL  FOR  APPELLANT: EDWARD  F.  SHAUGHNESSY,  III 206  E.  Locust San  Antonio,  Texas  78212 APPELLANT’S  ATTORNEY  ON  APPEAL: EDWARD  F.  SHAUGHNESSY,  III 206  E.  Locust  Street San  Antonio,  Texas (210)212-­‐6700 (210)  212-­‐2178  Fax SBN  18134500 TRIAL  JUDGE: MELISA  SKINNER 290th  Judicial  District Bexar  County,  Texas

iii

TABLE  OF  AUTHORITIES

*4 Cases Bear  Cloud  v.  State,  334  P.3d  132  (Wyoming  2014)… ……………………………..……..10 Eddings  v.  Oklahoma,  102  S.  Ct.  869  (1987)… ……………………………………....………10 Miller  v.  Alabama,  _____  U.S._____,  132  S.  Ct.  2455  (2012)… ………..………....7,  8,  9,  10 State  v.  Dull,  351  P.2d  641  (Kansas  2015) …………………………………………………….10 State  v.  Lyle,  854  N.W.2d  378  (Iowa  2014) ………………………………………………...…10

iv

NO.  04-­‐15-­‐00456-­‐CR

*5 JAMES  GARZA, § COURT  OF  APPEALS,  FOURTH Appellant § V. § COURT  OF  APPEALS  DISTRICT THE  STATE  OF  TEXAS, §

Appellee § SAN  ANTONIO,  TEXAS BRIEF  FOR  THE  APPELLANT TO  THE  HONORABLE  COURT  OF  APPEALS:

Now  comes  the  appellant,  James  Garza  and  files  this  brief  in  Cause No.   04-­‐14-­‐00456-­‐CR.     The   appellant   appeals   from   a   judgment   of   the 290 th District  Court  of  Bexar  County,  Texas.

The   appellant   was   indicted   by   a   Bexar   County   grand   jury   for   the offense  of  Capital  Murder  on  December  16,  2009.    He  was  subsequently convicted   by   a   jury   and   sentenced   to   Life,   without   the   possibility   of parole,   in   the   Texas   Department   of   Criminal   Justice-­‐   Institutional Division.    That  conviction  was  and  sentence  was  appealed  to  this  Court. On  October  12,  2012,  this  Court  affirmed  the  judgment  of  the  trial  Court in   all   respects.   See: Garza   v.   State,   (04-­‐22-­‐00891-­‐CR,   Tex.   App.-­‐San *6 Antonio,   October   24,   2012)   (2012   WL   5236048). The   appellant subsequently   sought   and   obtained   a   Petition   for   Discretionary   Review to  the  Court  of  Criminal  Appeals.    On  June  11,  2014,  that  Court  reversed the   judgment   of   this   Court   and   remanded   the   cause,   to   this   Court,   for further   proceedings. Garza   v.   State,   435   S.W.   3d   258   (Tex.   Crim.   App. 2014).

This  Court  subsequently  reversed  and  remanded  the  cause  to  the trial  Court  for  purposes  of  resentencing. Garza  v.  State,  453  S.W.3d  548 (Tex.  App.-­‐San  Antonio,  2014)

The   appellant   thereafter   appeared   in   the   290 th District   Court   for purposes   of   resentencing.   (C.R.-­‐179,   180,   181)     Following   a   sentencing hearing   conducted,   before   the   trial   Court,   the   appellant   was   sentenced to   Life   in   the   Texas   Department   of   Criminal   Justice-­‐Institutional Division.  (S.C.R.-­‐3,  4)    The  appellant  thereafter  filed  a  written  notice  of appeal  and  this  appeal  was  pursued.  (C.R.-­‐173)

SUMMARY  OF  ARGUMENT

*7

The  trial  Court  erred  in  refusing  to  provide  the  appellant  a sentencing  hearing  that  complied  with  the  dictates  of  the  United  States Supreme  Court  set  forth  in Miller  v.  Alabama,  _____  U.S._____,  132  S.Ct. 2455  (2012).

STATEMENT  OF  APPLICABLE  FACTS

Prior  to  the  sentencing  hearing,  ordered  by  this  Court  in  its opinion  of  December  23,  2014,  the  appellant  caused  to  be  filed  a  written Motion  fro  Appointment  of  an  Independent  Expert  Witness.  (C.R.-­‐167) That  motion  sought  two  species  of  relief  from  the  trial  Court  prior  to  the “resentencing”  hearing  ordered  by  this  Court.    It  sought  to  have  the  trial Court  to  appoint  an  expert  witness  in  the  issue  of  “mitigation”.    In addition  the  motion  requested  that  the  “resentencing”  be  conducted before  a  jury  and  that,  the  potential  range  be  that  of  a  traditional  first degree  felony    (Five  years  to  Life) [1] .    (C.R.167  thru  170)    On  the  date  the *8 case  was  called  for  the  “resentencing”,  that  motion  was  presented  to  the trial  Court.    After  hearing  arguments  from  counsel,  the  trial  Court denied  the  relief  requested  in  the  motion.  (R.R.-­‐9)

The  trial  Court  then  proceeded  with  an  evidentiary  hearing limited  to  the  single  issue  of  whether  or  not  the  appellant  was seventeen  years  of  age  at  the  time  of  the  commission  of  the  offense.    The appellant  presented  evidence  that  established  that  he  was  seventeen years  of  age  at  the  time  of  the  commission  of  the  offense.    The  State  of Texas  presented  no  evidence  to  contradict  the  appellant’s  evidence  on that  particular  issue.    The  trial  Court  then  made  a  factual  finding  that  the appellant  was  seventeen  years  of  age  at  the  time  of  the  commission  of the  offense.  (R.R.-­‐13)    Thereafter  the  trial  Court  assessed  the  appellant’s punishment  as  Life  in  the  Texas  Department  of  Criminal  Justice-­‐ Institutional  Division  with  the  possibility  of  parole.  (R.R.-­‐14)    An amended  judgment  was  entered  to  reflect  the  action  of  the  trial  Court.

(S.C.R.-­‐3,4)

*9 APPELLANT’S  SOLE  POINT OF  ERROR THE  TRIAL  COURT  ERRED,  IN  VIOLATION  OF THE  EIGHTH  AMENDMENT  TO  THE UNITED  STATES  CONSTITUTION,  IN  REFUSING THE  APPELLANT’S  REQUEST  FOR  A  PUNISHMENT HEARING  CONSISTENT  WITH  THE  HOLDING  OF  THE UNITED  STATE  SUPREME  COURT  IN MILLER  V.  ALABAMA,  ____U.S.____,  132  S.CT.  2455  (2012) ARGUMENT  AND  AUTHORITIES As  has  been  noted  by  both  this  Court  and  the  Court  of  Criminal Appeals,  the  appellant  has  never  been  accorded  a  sentencing  hearing  of any  sort  and  has  been  sentenced  initially  to  Life  without  the  possibility of  parole,  and  thereafter  to  Life.    As  a  consequence,  the  seventeen  year old  defendant [2] has  never  been  accorded  a  sentencing  hearing  which allowed  him  to  present  meaningful  mitigation  evidence,    the  Eighth Amendment  to  the  United  States  Constitution [3] ,  as  recently  construed  in the  context  of  defendant’s  under  the  age  of  eighteen  at  the  time  of  the offense,  mandates  that  offenders  seventeen  years  of  age  or  younger  be *10 accorded  a  sentencing  hearing  that  allows  a  sentence  to  take  into account  the  background  and  mental  and  emotional  development  of  a youthful  defendant  be  duly  considered  in    assessing  his  culpability. Miller  v.  Alabama,  supra,  pg.  2467. (Citing: Eddings  v.  Oklahoma,  102  S.Ct. 869  (1987)). The  Court  explained  the  rationale  behind  its  holding  that life  without  the  possibility  of  parole  for  youthful  offenders  was inconsistent  with  the  Eighth  Amendment  in  the  following  terms: Such  mandatory  penalties,  by  their  nature,  preclude a  sentencer  from  taking  account  of  an  offender’s  age and  the  wealth  of  characteristics  and  circumstances attendant  to  it. Miller  v.  Alabama,  supra  at  2468. The  sentencing  protocol  employed  in  the  instant  case  is fundamentally  indistinguishable  from  that  found  flawed  in Miller. Life in  confinement  is  no  less  a  mandatory  sentence  than  Life  in  confinement without  the  possibility  of  parole.    Consequently  a  mandatory  sentence  of life  for  a  youthful  offender,  such  as  that  imposed  herein,  is  violative  of the  Eighth  Amendment  because  it  is  a  sentence  that  wholly  fails  to  allow for  the  admission  and  consideration  of  mitigating  factors  attributable  to the  youth  of  the  offender.    See: State  v.  Dull,  351  P.2d  641  (Kansas  2015); State  v.  Lyle,  854  N.W.2d  378  (Iowa  2014);  Bear  Cloud  v.  State,  334  P.3d 132  (Wyoming  2014).

PRAYER  FOR  RELIEF

*11 WHEREFORE,  PREMISES  CONSIDERED,  Appellant,  James  Garza, prays  that  this  Court,  reverse  the  judgment  of  the  trial  Court  and remand  the  cause  for  purposes  of  a  new  punishment  hearing  and  a sentence  imposed  by  a  jury. /s/Edward F. Shaughnessy,III

EDWARD  F.  SHAUGHNESSY,  III

206  E.  Locust San  Antonio,  Texas  78212 (210)  212-­‐6700 (210)  212-­‐2178  (fax)

SBN  18134500

Shaughnessy727@gmail.com Attorney  for  the  appellant

CERTIFICATE  OF  SERVICE

*12 I,  Edward  F.  Shaughnessy,  III,  attorney  for  the  appellant  hereby certify  that  a  true  and  correct  copy  of  the  instant  pleading  was  served upon  Nico  LaHood,  Criminal  District  Attorney  for  Bexar  County,  401  W. Nueva,    San  Antonio,  Texas  78205  by  use  of  the  U.S.  Mail  on  this the__14__  October,  2015. /s/ Edward F. Shaughnessy,III Edward  F.  Shaughnessy,  III Attorney  for  the  Appellant

CERTIFICATE  OF  COMPLIANCE

I,  Edward  F.  Shaughnessy,  III,  attorney  for  the  appellant,  hereby certify  that  the  instant  document  contains    1365    words. //Edward F. Shaughnessy,III Edward  F.  Shaughnessy,  III

NOTES

[1] Prior to the onset of the trial the appellant had caused to be file a written Election of Punishment wherein he notified that he desired that a jury assess his punishment in the

[2] At the time of the offense.

[3] Excessive bail shall not be required, nor excessive fines imposed, nor cruel and unusual punishments inflicted.

Case Details

Case Name: James Garza v. State
Court Name: Court of Appeals of Texas
Date Published: Oct 14, 2015
Docket Number: 04-15-00456-CR
Court Abbreviation: Tex. App.
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