Garland Edwin Gross v. State ( 2006 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-06-00035-CR
    Garland Edwin Gross, Appellant
    v.
    The State of Texas, Appellee
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 403RD JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. 2034169, HONORABLE BRENDA P. KENNEDY, JUDGE PRESIDING
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    A jury convicted appellant Garland Edwin Gross, Jr. of assault against a public
    servant, a third-degree felony. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 22.01(b)(1) (West Supp. 2006).
    Appellant elected to have punishment assessed by the judge, who assessed a sentence of five years’
    imprisonment, but suspended that sentence and placed appellant on community supervision for five
    years. The trial court also assessed a $2,500 fine and ordered appellant to complete 200 hours of
    community service. Appellant argues on appeal that the evidence was factually insufficient to
    support his conviction and that the trial court erred in allowing the State to improperly impeach both
    appellant and his son. We affirm the judgment of conviction.
    BACKGROUND
    On October 13, 2003, appellant’s daughter Brittany,1 twenty-two years old at the time,
    called the Lakeway Police Department in response to a family disturbance at the Gross household.
    1
    For convenience, we refer to the members of the Gross family using their first names.
    The full details of this family disturbance are not clear from the record, but there is testimony that
    appellant and his eighteen-year-old son Jeffrey were engaged in a physical altercation and that both
    Brittany and appellant’s wife Stephanie unsuccessfully tried to intercede and break up the fight.
    Appellant left the house after the police were called but before they arrived. Appellant testified that
    he did not know that the police had been called. Officer Hector Almaguer was dispatched to the
    Gross household to respond to Brittany’s call. He entered the house on the first floor through the
    side door and encountered Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey.
    The Gross house is divided into three levels. The first floor includes a bedroom and
    the game room with a side door that opens to the outside. The second floor contains the front
    entrance to the house, and a staircase with seven steps connects this floor to the first floor below.
    The third floor is where the dining room is located, and there are stairs connecting it to the second
    floor.
    Almaguer proceeded to interview Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey in the dining room
    on the third floor of the house. All of appellant’s family members indicated that they did not want
    to press charges against appellant for anything that occurred during the family disturbance. Shortly
    after beginning the interviews, Almaguer received a radio transmission from Sergeant Mary Proctor,
    who had also been dispatched to the scene and was outside the house. Proctor told Almaguer that
    appellant had returned and was entering the residence.
    Almaguer testified that upon receiving the radio transmission, he stood up from the
    dining room table, as did appellant’s family members. They moved to the back portion of the third
    floor, while Almaguer descended to the second-floor landing where he encountered appellant coming
    up the stairs from the first floor. Almaguer testified that he told appellant to stop and put his hands
    2
    behind his back because he was under arrest for family violence. Almaguer testified that he repeated
    this command three times. The officer testified that then, without saying a word or even making eye
    contact, appellant “rushed him,” delivered an upper-ridge chop to Almaguer’s throat with his right
    hand, and punched Almaguer in the chest with his left hand. Almaguer recounted being immediately
    incapacitated by this attack, and stated that appellant then grabbed Almaguer’s shirt and pulled him
    down the stairs. Almaguer testified that both he and appellant landed at the bottom of the stairwell,
    where Lakeway Police Officer Damien Perez, who had recently arrived at the scene, pulled appellant
    off of Almaguer. Almaguer testified that as appellant was taken into custody he said that he had
    taken on bigger and better police departments and would likely be filing a lawsuit against Almaguer.
    Almaguer also testified that although he did not remember where appellant’s wife and children were
    during the incident, they would be lying if they testified that they were right behind him.
    Appellant, Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey all testified to a different version of the
    incident, often using the same words. All three of appellant’s family members testified that when
    Almaguer was alerted that appellant had returned to the residence, they followed Almaguer down
    the stairs to the second-floor landing and were standing approximately three feet behind him with
    a good view of the incident when it happened. This contradicted Almaguer’s testimony that the
    Gross family members were not behind him. It also contradicted Proctor’s testimony that when she
    and Perez entered the house as appellant and Almaguer landed at the bottom of the stairs she saw
    Jeffrey, Brittany, and Stephanie standing on the third floor. Proctor also testified that the family
    members all told her at the time that they did not see the incident, although she did not note this in
    her written report.
    3
    Appellant and his family members all testified that appellant, who is right-handed,
    was holding a can of soda in his right hand on the stairwell. Appellant and his children testified that
    Almaguer screamed at appellant to “put your fucking hands behind your back” because he was under
    arrest; Stephanie could not remember whether Almaguer had cursed. All four testified that appellant
    told Almaguer that he had come home to check on his family, and appellant and his children testified
    that appellant said “this is wrong” or “you’ve got it wrong.” Appellant and his family all denied that
    appellant struck Almaguer with his hands. Instead they said Almaguer grabbed appellant’s side,
    presumably to spin him around to put him in handcuffs, when both appellant and Almaguer tumbled
    down the stairs. The family members testified that Almaguer landed on top of appellant and that
    Perez “flopped” on top of both of them at the bottom of the stairwell.
    Appellant acknowledged that after being taken into custody he told the officers that
    he had taken on bigger and better police departments and that he would probably file a lawsuit
    against Almaguer. Appellant testified that the officers were “trash-talking” to him, so he did it right
    back. A videotape that was filmed from the patrol cars outside the house picked up some audio from
    inside the house through the officers’ microphones; it was entered into evidence. On the tape,
    appellant can be heard stating that Almaguer pushed him down the stairs and that he was attacked
    in his own home. On another such tape, Almaguer can be heard stating that he was the one pushed
    down the stairs.
    After appellant was in custody, Proctor took digital photographs of Almaguer’s
    injuries. Proctor also took statements from Stephanie, Brittany, and Jeffrey about the family
    4
    disturbance that brought the police to the Gross household in the first place. However, Proctor did
    not inquire about the incident involving Almaguer and appellant.
    In his first issue on appeal, appellant argues that the evidence was factually
    insufficient to support a conviction. Specifically, he argues that the only evidence that appellant
    struck Almaguer was Almaguer’s testimony. Appellant argues that Almaguer’s testimony was self-
    serving because at the time of the criminal trial Almaguer had a pending civil lawsuit against
    appellant for money damages arising out of the incident in question. In his second issue, appellant
    argues that the trial court erred by allowing the State to impeach Jeffrey by introducing two
    contradictory statements that Jeffrey made about the initial family disturbance—one made to Proctor
    on the day of the incident, and one made to appellant’s lawyer over a month later. Appellant argues
    that this constituted improper impeachment on a collateral matter. In his third issue, appellant argues
    that the trial court erred by allowing the State to question appellant about his previous long-running
    disputes with the Deer Park Police Department and the Harris County Sheriff’s Department.
    Appellant argues that this line of questioning was improper impeachment on a collateral matter and
    that the danger of unfair prejudice substantially outweighed any probative value.
    DISCUSSION
    Factual Sufficiency
    In conducting a factual sufficiency review, only one question is presented:
    Considering all the evidence in a neutral light, was the jury rationally justified in finding guilt
    beyond a reasonable doubt? Zuniga v. State, 
    144 S.W.3d 477
    , 484 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004).
    5
    However, there are two ways in which the evidence may be insufficient. First, evidence supporting
    the verdict, considered by itself, may be too weak to support a finding of guilt beyond a reasonable
    doubt. 
    Id. Second, evidence
    contrary to the verdict may be so strong that the beyond-a-reasonable-
    doubt standard could not have been met, despite the evidence supporting the verdict. 
    Id. at 484-85.
    Where, as here, most of the evidence is testimonial, unless the record clearly reveals that a different
    result is appropriate, an appellate court must defer to the jury’s determination concerning what
    weight to give contradictory testimonial evidence because resolution often turns on an evaluation
    of credibility and demeanor, and the jurors were in attendance when the testimony was delivered.
    Johnson v. State, 
    23 S.W.3d 1
    , 8 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000).
    Almaguer’s testimony, considered by itself, is enough to support a finding of
    appellant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. See Goodman v. State, 
    66 S.W.3d 283
    , 285-86 (Tex.
    Crim. App. 2001) (stating that the testimony of a person with five perjury convictions, standing
    alone, is factually sufficient to support a beyond-a-reasonable-doubt finding). But we must
    determine whether appellant presented contrary evidence so strong that the beyond-a-reasonable-
    doubt standard could not have been met. The evidence that appellant presented was his testimony
    and the testimony of his wife and children. Appellant argues that the testimony that he was carrying
    a can of soda in his right hand and the videotape showing him carrying the can as he entered the
    house show that it was impossible for him to have struck Almaguer with his right hand. The State
    argued at trial that appellant could have dropped the can before striking Almaguer.
    The jury apparently concluded that Almaguer was a credible witness and that
    appellant and his family were not credible witnesses. Appellant argues that Almaguer’s testimony
    6
    was self-serving because of the civil lawsuit he had filed against appellant. However, defense
    counsel questioned Almaguer about the civil suit; the jurors were aware of its existence when they
    made their credibility determination. There is nothing in the record that indicates that the jury could
    not have rationally believed Almaguer and disbelieved appellant and his family. With regard to the
    soda can, it is for the jury to choose between two equally competing theories of the case. 
    Goodman, 66 S.W.3d at 287
    ; LaPointe v. State, 
    196 S.W.3d 831
    , 838 (Tex. App.—Austin 2006, no pet.). We
    overrule appellant’s first issue.
    Improper Impeachment of Jeffrey
    The State concedes that the trial court erred by allowing the State to question Jeffrey
    about two contradictory statements he made concerning the initial family disturbance. This line of
    questioning constituted improper impeachment on a collateral matter. A matter is collateral if it
    could not be shown in evidence for any purpose other than contradiction. Gutierrez v. State, 
    764 S.W.2d 796
    , 798 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989). Here, Jeffrey’s statements concerned a collateral matter
    because the State could not have proved the details of the initial family disturbance as part of its
    case-in-chief. Generally, using prior inconsistent statements to impeach a witness on a collateral
    matter is impermissible. Flannery v. State, 
    676 S.W.2d 369
    , 370 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984). An
    exception applies when a witness testifies gratuitously as to a collateral matter. Hammett v. State,
    
    713 S.W.2d 102
    , 105 (Tex. Crim. App. 1986). In that situation, the witness may be impeached by
    showing that he lied or is mistaken about that collateral matter. 
    Id. However, the
    State may not
    bootstrap its way to such impeachment by eliciting the offending statement on cross-examination.
    
    Id. at 105
    n.4. The other exception allowing impeachment as to a collateral matter occurs when a
    7
    witness leaves a false impression concerning a matter related to his credibility. Daggett v. State, 
    187 S.W.3d 444
    , 453 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005). But this exception does not apply when the false
    impression is created by the State’s cross-examination. Shipman v. State, 
    604 S.W.2d 182
    , 184-85
    (Tex. Crim. App. 1980). As the State concedes, neither exception applies here. However, the State
    contends that the error was harmless.
    The erroneous admission of evidence is nonconstitutional error if the trial court’s
    ruling merely offends the rules of evidence. Solomon v. State, 
    49 S.W.3d 356
    , 365 (Tex. Crim. App.
    2001). This Court must disregard nonconstitutional error unless it affected substantial rights of the
    defendant. Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(b). Substantial rights are not affected by the erroneous admission
    of evidence if the appellate court, after examining the record as a whole, has fair assurance that the
    error did not influence the jury or had only a slight effect. 
    Solomon, 49 S.W.3d at 365
    .
    Appellant argues that this impeachment was harmful because Jeffrey was the first of
    the family members to testify, and the impeachment of Jeffrey caused the jury to discredit the
    substantially similar testimony of the other family members. While this may have had some effect
    on the jury, the mere fact that the family members’ testimony was so similar may itself have aroused
    the jury’s suspicions. Furthermore, Brittany and Jeffrey were also impeached on permissible
    grounds. On cross-examination, Jeffrey admitted that his parents pay for his school, his car, and his
    apartment. Jeffrey also stated that Brittany gets excited too quickly on occasion and that she
    overreacts “a lot.”    On cross-examination, Brittany was questioned about the contradictory
    statements she made about the family disturbance preceding appellant’s alleged assault on Almaguer.
    Like Jeffrey, Brittany made a statement about the family altercation to police on the day of the
    8
    incident that contradicted her statement to appellant’s lawyer over a month later. Appellant did not
    object to the State’s questioning of Brittany about the inconsistencies between the two statements.
    Also, appellant himself undermined the credibility of Jeffrey and Brittany. Appellant
    testified that Jeffrey “probably . . . fabricated” his statement to the police because of his emotional
    state and that Brittany was “storytelling” in the statement she gave police.
    The jury also heard Almaguer’s testimony that he was assaulted, and the jury was
    provided with copies of Almaguer’s medical records from his hospital visit on the day in question,
    which corroborated his version of events. The medical records indicate that Almaguer was
    diagnosed with a chest wall contusion and neck contusions. This is consistent with Almaguer’s
    testimony that he was hit in the chest and the throat by appellant. Appellant argues that the injuries
    are also consistent with merely falling down the stairs, but he did not present any evidence on this
    point.
    Because the jury heard substantially similar testimony from others, including
    Stephanie, who was not impeached, because Jeffrey and Brittany’s testimony was otherwise
    impeached in a permissible manner, and because the jury heard sufficient evidence to find appellant
    guilty beyond a reasonable doubt apart from Jeffrey’s testimony, we hold that appellant’s substantial
    rights were not affected by the improper impeachment of Jeffrey. We overrule appellant’s second
    issue.
    Improper Impeachment of Appellant
    Appellant argues in his third issue that the following exchange constituted improper
    impeachment of appellant on a collateral matter and that any probative value from this line of
    questioning was substantially outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice:
    9
    Q.                   Okay. Have you ever filed a $5 million lawsuit against a
    police department for harassment?
    A.                   Yes.
    Q.                   The Houston Press has a chronicle out—it’s actually—
    [Defense counsel]:   Your Honor, I am going to object to that type of
    impeachment. That’s not a sworn statement to impeach by.
    The Court:           If he hasn’t offered a statement yet.
    [Defense counsel]:   And the proper way, if I understand correctly, Your Honor, is
    that he asked, have you ever made that statement.
    The Court:           No, he asked him if he had ever filed a lawsuit.
    [Defense counsel]:   Oh.
    Q.                   The Houston Press is a periodical out of Houston, isn’t it?
    A.                   Correct.
    Q.                   And you have been interviewed by a person who writes for
    that named Richard Connelly; isn’t that correct?
    A.                   I don’t remember his name. I have been interviewed by him.
    Q.                   And this was back in 1998; isn’t that correct?
    A.                   That’s correct.
    Q.                   And in that, you explained to him how you have been
    basically harassed by the Deer Park police; isn’t that right?
    A.                   That’s correct.
    Q.                   And so you sued them for $5 million?
    A.                   That is correct.
    Q.                   Now, your wife knew about this lawsuit, right?
    10
    A.   Not really.
    Q.   Not really?
    A.   No.
    Q.   Husband files a suit for $5 million and the wife doesn’t know
    about it; is that right?
    A.   That’s correct.
    Q.   Okay. So when you told me a second ago that when you
    made the statement, “I have taken on better police
    departments than you,” you said, “I didn’t really mean
    anything by that,” you actually have done that, haven’t you?
    A.   No.
    Q.   Well, you sued them, right?
    A.   I sued them and I dropped it.
    Q.   Well, that is not what I am asking. You sued them?
    A.   I sued them.
    Q.   For $5 million?
    A.   That’s correct.
    Q.   Okay. You made allegations about all kinds of harassment by
    the police department, didn’t you?
    A.   Yes, sir.
    Q.   You made allegations of beating by the Deer Park police; is
    that correct?
    A.   May I see it?
    Q.   Sure. If you can, read that statement that he attributed to you.
    
    11 A. I
    didn’t accuse Deer Park of doing it.
    Q.                   Oh, excuse me, Harris County Sheriff’s Department.
    A.                   That’s correct.
    Q.                   So you have accused Harris County Sheriff’s Department of
    beating you?
    A.                   That’s correct.
    Q.                   But you sued Deer Park police?
    A.                   I sued both.
    Q.                   So you have sued both. So you have taken on the Harris
    County Sheriff’s Department and the Deer Park Police
    Department?
    A.                   That’s correct.
    Q.                   You also made the allegation that at one point the police—
    [Defense counsel]:   Judge, I am going to object to this being impeachment on a
    collateral issue.
    [Discussion between the attorneys and the trial court, and question and answer
    outside the presence of the jury]
    Q.                   May I continue, Your Honor?
    The Court:           You may.
    Q.                   Mr. Gross, when this reporter interviewed you, you made
    allegations that on one occasion the Deer Park police got a
    Harris County deputy to beat on you, and that you told the
    reporter when he started beating on you, you started counting,
    and he struck you 27 times; is that correct?
    A.                   That is correct.
    12
    Q.   You said you have been fighting with the police department
    for ten years; is that correct?
    A.   That sounds right.
    Q.   So you had a ten-year long fight with the Deer Park police and
    the Harris County Sheriff’s Department?
    A.   Not the Harris County Sheriff’s Department.
    Q.   But they are the ones that beat you—
    A.   That’s correct.
    Q.   —at Deer Park’s instructions; is that right?
    A.   Correct.
    Q.   You made allegations that a deputy at the Deer Park police’s
    instructions grabbed you by the ankle and dragged you across
    the floor because—
    A.   I think that’s what it says incorrectly. It was a Harris County
    deputy.
    Q.   Okay. So it was a Harris County deputy that dragged you
    across the floor at the Deer Park police’s—
    A.   No, at the Harris County facility.
    Q.   So a Harris County deputy did it because the Harris County
    wanted to do that to you?
    A.   I have no idea why.
    Q.   You made allegations on that same occasion when you were
    dragged that the police took 5,000 in cash from you; is that
    right?
    A.   That is correct.
    Q.   But you have no way to prove that because it was just cash?
    13
    A.   That is correct.
    Q.   And this was just an allegation by you, right?
    A.   It was the truth by me.
    Q.   And it was basically a six-page article, and the only purpose
    of the interview is the police are harassing you; isn’t that
    right?
    A.   The purpose of the article?
    Q.   Yeah.
    A.   I don’t know what the purpose of the Houston Press coming
    out and interviewing me was.
    Q.   Well, I mean, that was the whole topic of this interview that
    was—
    A.   Well, I don’t know what their purpose was.
    Q.   Okay. My question is now, that’s the whole topic, is you
    making allegations that can’t be proved by anybody but you,
    correct?
    A.   No, there’s other people.
    Q.   Well, you dropped your lawsuit?
    A.   I dropped my lawsuit.
    Q.   Would you agree with me that if anybody was beat 27 times
    by a police department, that would be pretty easy to prove?
    I mean, you would have injuries all over; agree?
    A.   I did.
    Q.   Okay. But you dropped the lawsuit?
    A.   That’s correct.
    14
    Q.                      The police department just flat out said you were lying about
    all of that; isn’t that correct?
    A.                      They did; they denied everything.
    The State first argues that appellant opened the door to this line of questioning by
    testifying that “I would not ever hit a police, nor would I ever challenge a police.” See Daggett v.
    State, 
    187 S.W.3d 444
    , 453 (Tex. Crim. App. 2005) (holding that impeachment on a collateral matter
    is permissible to correct a false impression created by the witness). In response to a follow-up
    question by the State, appellant testified, “I think you are talking about a verbal as opposed to a
    physical, and I would never challenge a police officer with a physical.” Appellant made clear that
    he was testifying that he would not physically challenge a police officer. This did not leave a false
    impression that appellant would not challenge a police department in court. We reject the State’s
    argument that appellant opened the door to such questioning.
    The State next argues that any error in allowing this line of questioning was rendered
    harmless by appellant’s testimony prior to the impeachment on a collateral matter objection made
    by defense counsel. See Leday v. State, 
    983 S.W.2d 713
    , 718 (Tex. Crim. App. 1998) (holding that
    the erroneous admission of evidence will not result in reversal when the same evidence was
    elsewhere received without objection). We agree. When the State began to ask appellant questions
    about his lawsuit against the Deer Park Police Department and the Harris County Sheriff’s
    Department, appellant objected on a different basis than he raises on appeal and did not receive an
    adverse ruling. Thus, appellant has failed to preserve error for review regarding the testimony prior
    15
    to appellant’s impeachment on a collateral issue objection. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a)(2) (providing
    that error is preserved only if the trial court made an adverse ruling or refused to rule and the
    complaining party objected to the refusal). The trial court overruled appellant’s objections that this
    line of questioning constituted impeachment on a collateral matter and was more unfairly prejudicial
    than probative. Thus, appellant preserved error from that point forward.
    Appellant failed to preserve error regarding his testimony that he sued the Deer Park
    Police Department and Harris County Sheriff’s Department for $5 million for harassment and for
    a beating, and that he eventually dropped this lawsuit. Appellant preserved error regarding his
    testimony that he was struck 27 times during the beating, that the harassment by the Deer Park police
    lasted for ten years, that the Deer Park police instructed a Harris County deputy to beat him, that the
    police stole $5,000 from him on the same day the beating took place, and that the police denied all
    his allegations.
    We hold that any error regarding the testimony for which error was preserved was
    harmless.    See Tex. R. App. P. 44.2(b) (providing that appellate courts must disregard
    nonconstitutional error that does not affect substantial rights). The jury had already heard evidence
    that appellant sued two police departments for $5 million because they harassed and beat him, and
    that he eventually dropped the lawsuit before the testimony in question. The testimony that is
    properly preserved for review by this Court includes the duration of the conflict between appellant
    and the Deer Park police, the number of times he was struck during the beating, the reason for the
    beating, an allegation of theft by the police, and the denial of these allegations by the police. We
    have fair assurance that this testimony did not influence the jury or had only a slight effect in
    producing appellant’s conviction for assault against a public servant. See Solomon v. State, 49
    
    16 S.W.3d 356
    , 365 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001). This is because the testimony in question merely fleshed
    out some details regarding an issue that was already before the jury without objection. We overrule
    appellant’s third issue.
    CONCLUSION
    Having overruled all of appellant’s issues on appeal, we affirm the judgment of
    conviction entered by the trial court.
    ______________________________
    Bea Ann Smith, Justice
    Before Justices B. A. Smith, Puryear and Waldrop
    Affirmed
    Filed: October 3, 2006
    Do Not Publish
    17