Joshua Orcasitas v. State ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                                                                                            ACCEPTED
    04-14-00130-CR
    FOURTH COURT OF APPEALS
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    6/4/2015 2:50:48 PM
    KEITH HOTTLE
    CLERK
    NO. 04-14-00130-CR
    FILED IN
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE4th COURT OF APPEALS
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    FOURTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS                6/4/2015 2:50:48 PM
    KEITH E. HOTTLE
    Clerk
    SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS
    JOSHUA ORCASITAS,
    Appellant
    V.
    STATE OF TEXAS,
    Appellee
    Appealed From The
    175th Judicial District Court
    Of Bexar County, Texas
    APPELLANT’S MOTION FOR REHEARING
    TO THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS:
    JOSHUA ORCASITAS, the Appellant in Cause Number 2012-CR-7776 in the
    175th District Court of Bexar County, Texas, pursuant to Rule 49 of the Texas Rules
    of Appellate Procedure, submits this Motion for Rehearing moving this Honorable
    Court to reconsider its Opinion of May 20, 2015 affirming the judgment and sentence
    of conviction.
    1
    GROUND FOR REVIEW NUMBER ONE
    THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED BY RULING
    THAT A PROSECUTOR, DURING INITIAL
    CLOSING ARGUMENT, MAY STRIKE AT A
    DEFENDANT OVER SHOULDERS OF DEFENSE
    COUNSEL PRIOR TO ANY ARGUMENT BEING
    MADE BY DEFENSE COUNSEL.
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    In the case at bar, this Court held that a prosecutor, during initial closing
    argument, may strike at a defendant over shoulders of defense counsel prior to any
    argument being made by defense counsel. Orcasitas v. State, No. 04-14-00130-CR
    at 7-8 (Tex. App. - San Antonio, May 20, 2015). The only case cited by this Court in
    support of allowing a prosecutor, during initial closing argument, to strike at a
    defendant over shoulders of defense counsel prior to any argument being made by
    defense counsel, is Garcia v. State, 
    126 S.W.3d 921
     (Tex. Crim. App. 2004). During
    oral argument in the case at bar, however, the state conceded that all cases on this
    issue cited by the state in its brief (including Garcia) involved prosecution argument
    following argument by defense counsel. Undersigned counsel, in fact, was the trial
    defense counsel in Garcia, and the complained of argument was after argument by
    defense counsel. Garcia v. State refers to defense counsel’s arguments in that case and
    the state’s comments regarding “defense counsel’s arguments” and the state’s
    “opinion regarding the merits of defense counsel’s arguments.” Id. at 924.
    2
    The following cases cited by the state in its brief on this issue are also contrary
    to the opinion of this Court. “We have consistently held that argument which strikes
    at a defendant over the shoulders of defense counsel is improper.” Dinkins v. State,
    
    894 S.W.2d 330
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1995). “Although the prosecutor’s statements may
    have been intended as a rebuttal, they also cast aspersion on defense counsel’s
    veracity with the jury.” Id. The reviewing court then looks to see if the prosecution
    made any “further comments impugning defense counsel’s veracity.” Id. With respect
    to comments such as “rabbit trials,” the Court of Criminal Appeals has stated, “. . .
    legitimate arguments by defense counsel cannot serve as a basis for permitting
    prosecutorial comments that “cast aspersion on defense counsel’s veracity.” Mosley
    v. State, 
    983 S.W.2d 249
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1998).
    In Satterwhite v. State, 
    858 S.W.2d 412
     (Tex. Crim. App. 1993), the state’s
    argument was directed at the credibility of a witness, not at counsel’s argument. In
    Nevels v. State, 
    954 S.W.2d 154
     (Tex. App. - Waco 1997, pet. ref’d), the state’s
    argument at issue was after the defense closing argument. The court held that “when
    an improper jury argument strikes at the accused over the shoulders’ of his defense
    counsel a curative instruction cannot cure the harm and a harm analysis . . . is
    required.” Id. There is a “presumption that an improper jury argument which strikes
    at the accused over defense counsel’s shoulders is so egregious that a curative
    3
    instruction has no impact on the error.” Id. Such argument does not “fall within one
    of the four permissible areas of jury argument.” Id.
    In the case at bar, however, this Court failed to recognize that the prosecutor’s
    “rabbit trails” argument, prior to argument by the Appellant, struck at the Appellant
    over shoulders of defense counsel and was therefore improper. Orcasitas v. State,
    supra at 7-8. Given the above case law, such argument by the state does not fall
    within one of the four permissible areas of jury argument. Yet this Court attempts to
    protect such improper argument by claiming that the “rabbit trails” argument “was
    made in response to the defense’s theories and was therefore proper argument.” Id.
    Counsel is unaware of any case law allowing such a conclusion prior to argument by
    a defendant, and no such case law has been cited by this Court or by the state.
    Based upon the above, this Honorable Court should withdraw its opinion of
    May 20, 2015, hold that the “rabbit trails” argument by the state, prior to any
    argument by the defense, was error, sustain the Appellant’s Point of Error One, and
    remand this cause to the trial court for a new trial.
    GROUND FOR REVIEW NUMBER TWO
    THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED BY RULING
    THAT AN OBJECTION THAT THE
    PROSECUTOR’S CLOSING ARGUMENT IS
    “OUTSIDE THE RECORD” PRESENTS NOTHING
    FOR APPELLATE REVIEW.
    4
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    In the case at bar, the prosecutor argued in closing argument that defense
    counsel was sending signals to defense witnesses during cross-examination by the
    prosecutor. (R - v.5 - 55-56). The defense objected that this argument was “outside
    the record and it is completely false.” Id. The Appellant argued in his brief before this
    Court that this closing argument was improper since it was outside the record and
    harmful since it attacked the ethics of defense counsel. This Court held that the
    objection “outside the record and it is completely false” does not allow a claim on
    appeal that the argument was an attack on the ethics of defense counsel. Orcasitas v.
    State, supra at 8-10. This holding by this Court is contrary to the holding in
    McMurrough v. State, 
    995 S.W.2d 944
     (Tex. App. - Fort Worth 1999, no pet.). In that
    case, the prosecutor in closing argument stated that defense counsel created a defense
    for his client, and the defendant objected that such argument was “outside the record.”
    Id. The court considered the four permissible areas of closing argument and reiterated
    that reviewing courts are “disturbed about final arguments that result in uninvited and
    unsubstantiated accusations of improper conduct directed at a defendant’s attorney.”
    Id. The court was concerned that such argument was an “attack on defense counsel’s
    integrity” and “[s]triking at the defendant over the shoulders of his counsel . . .” Id.
    The Appellant in the case at bar argued, just as in McMurrough, that the
    sending signals part of the state’s closing argument was outside the record and an
    5
    attack on defense counsel’s integrity. This Court incorrectly ruled that an “outside the
    record” objection followed by an argument on appeal that such closing argument was
    an attack on defense counsel’s integrity “does not comport with the objection made
    at trial, [so] we conclude that it presents nothing for our review.” Such a ruling is in
    direct contradiction with McMurrough and should be removed from this Court’s
    published opinion in the case at bar.
    GROUND FOR REVIEW NUMBER THREE
    THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED BY RULING
    T H A T T H E P R OSECUTOR’S CLOSI N G
    ARGUMENT, CLAIMING THAT DEFENSE
    COUNSEL SENT SIGNALS TO DEFENSE
    WITNESSES DURING CROSS-EXAMINATION,
    WAS MERELY A COMMENT ON THE DEMEANOR
    OF THE WITNESSES.
    ARGUMENT AND AUTHORITIES
    In the case at bar, the prosecutor argued in closing argument that defense
    counsel was sending signals to defense witnesses during cross-examination by the
    prosecutor. (R - v.5 - 55-56). This Court held that such closing argument was proper
    because it merely commented on the demeanor of the witnesses. Orcasitas v. State,
    supra at 8-10. The Court of Criminal Appeals has held, however, that closing
    argument that “impugns the integrity of defense counsel has been repeatedly
    condemned by this Court.” Satterwhite v. State, supra. The closing argument in the
    case at bar clearly impugned the integrity of defense counsel when the prosecutor
    6
    argued that when two defense witnesses were tripped up on cross-examination, “they
    looked at Mr. Gross [defense counsel] to help them. Why are they looking at him?”
    (R - v.5 - 55-56). This closing argument implied that the defense witnesses looked at
    defense counsel because counsel sent them signals on how to answer questions. This
    argument clearly impugned the integrity of defense counsel and was improper.
    The prosecutor had already spent a considerable amount of time attacking the
    credibility of the witnesses and problems with their testimony, but the prosecutor then
    went on to name defense counsel as the person sending signals to the witnesses. This
    was an improper claim regarding the conduct of defense counsel, not the conduct of
    the witnesses. Why name defense counsel if the argument goes solely towards the
    conduct of the witnesses? It is because the prosecutor was improperly impugning the
    integrity of defense counsel. The theme of the prosecutor’s closing argument was to
    portray defense counsel as trying to “confuse” the jury, asking the jury to do what it
    was “prohibited from doing,” making “misstatements” to the jury, making
    “inflammatory statements,” and doing “anything and everything” to change the focus
    off the Appellant. (R - v.5 - 32, 49, 53, 65).
    This closing argument by the prosecutor implying defense counsel sent signals
    to the witnesses improperly injected harmful facts outside the record and was
    designed to arouse the passion of the jury. Such argument is manifestly improper and
    7
    injected new facts harmful to the Appellant. This argument was at the close of the
    guilt-innocence portion of the trial and immediately prior to deliberations, so the
    harmful effect could not have been attenuated by argument of defense counsel. This
    argument by the prosecutor was not merely mildy inappropriate. Based upon the
    above, this Honorable Court should withdraw its opinion of May 20, 2015, hold that
    this argument by the state was error, sustain the Appellant’s Point of Error One, and
    remand this cause to the trial court for a new trial.
    PRAYER
    WHEREFORE, for the reasons stated above and for the reasons stated in the
    Brief for the Appellant, this Court should grant the Appellant’s Motion for Rehearing
    and upon rehearing, reverse the judgment of the trial judge and remand this cause for
    a new trial.
    Respectfully submitted,
    GROSS & ESPARZA, P.L.L.C.
    /s/ Michael C. Gross
    Michael C. Gross
    State Bar No. 08534480
    106 South St. Mary’s Street, Suite 260
    San Antonio, Texas 78205
    (210) 354-1919
    (210) 354-1920 Fax
    Attorney for the Appellant,
    JOSHUA ORCASITAS
    8
    CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
    I hereby certify that a true and correct copy of the foregoing was emailed to
    Laura Durbin, Assistant District Attorney, on the 4th day of June 2015.
    /s/ Michael C. Gross
    CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
    1.    The brief complies with the type-volume limitation imposed by Rule 9.4(i) of
    the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure because the brief contains 1,701 words
    excluding the signature, proof of service, certification, certificate of compliance, and
    appendix.
    2.     The brief complies with the typeface and the type style requirements of Rule
    9.4(e) of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure because this brief has been prepared
    in a proportionally spaced typeface using WordPerfect 6.1 in 14 point font and Times
    New Roman type style.
    /s/ Michael C. Gross
    9