                                                                                                   ACCEPTED
        FILED                                                                                 13-14-00301-CR
                                                                                THIRTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS
IN THE 13TH COURT OF APPEALS
                                                                                      CORPUS CHRISTI, TEXAS
        CORPUS CHRISTI                                                                   2/23/2015 3:21:34 PM
                                                                                            DORIAN RAMIREZ
          2/23/15                                                                                      CLERK
DORIAN E. RAMIREZ, CLERK
                                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
BY DTello
                               FOR THE THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
                                      Cause No.13-14-00301-CR RECEIVED IN
                                                            13th COURT OF APPEALS
                                      Cause No.13-14-00171-CR
                                                         CORPUS CHRISTI/EDINBURG, TEXAS
                                      Cause No.13-14-00172-CR2/23/2015 3:21:34 PM
                                                                  DORIAN E. RAMIREZ
                                       MICHAEL DAVID RAMIREZ           Clerk
                                                V.
                                           STATE OF TEXAS

                                       On Direct Appeal from:
                                       THE DISTRICT COURT OF
                                   THE 445TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT IN
                                        CAMERON COUNTY, TEXAS

                                       CAUSE NO. 09-CR-2098-I
                                      CAUSE NO. 2013-DCR-02246
                                       CAUSE NO. 10-CR-2650-I

                                         * * * * * * * * * *
                                          APPELLANT'S BRIEF
                                         * * * * * * * * * *
                                                LARRY WARNER
                                                Counsel for Michael Ramirez
                                                COA No.13-14-00171-CR
                                                3109 Banyan Circle
                                                Harlingen, Tx 78550 7443
                                                Phone (956) 454 4994
                                                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)

             APPELLANT REQUESTS ORAL ARGUMENT,
             PURSUANT TO TEX.R.APP.PROC.39.7
Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(a),Appellant provides
the following identity of parties and counsel:

             PARTIES AND INTERESTED PERSONS

    1.   Michael David Ramirez, Appellant.

    2.   Hon. Julie Allen, State Bar No. 24055096,
         Assistant District Attorney, Cameron County
         Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville,
         Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849.
         PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

    3.   Hon. Carlos Martinez, State Bar No. 24081022,
         Assistant District Attorney, Cameron County
         Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville,
         Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849.
         PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

    4.   Hon. Gustavo Elizondo, State Bar No. 24086827,
         Assistant District Attorney, Cameron County
         Courthouse, 964 East Harrison, Brownsville,
         Texas 78520, Phone (956) 544-0849.
         PROSECUTING ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

    5.   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

    6.   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

    7.   Hon. Alfredo Padilla, State Bar No. 15404600,
         Law Offices of Alfredo Padilla, 777 East
         Harrison St., 2nd Floor, Brownsville, Texas
         78520, Phone (956) 544-7100

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 2
     DEFENSE ATTORNEY AT TRIAL

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




                  INITIAL BRIEF - 3
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...................................4-6

TABLE OF AUTHORITIES................................7-9

STATEMENT OF CASE.................................10-11

ISSUES PRESENTED..................................12-14

    1.   Did egregious harm result from the following
         error in the instructions to the jury at
         guilt/innocence?

             EGREGIOUS HARM IN JURY INSTRUCTIONS?

             In order to return a verdict, each verdict
             (sic) must agree thereto, but jurors have
             a duty to consult with one another and to
             deliberate with a view to reaching an
             agreement if it can be done without
             violence to individual judgment. Each
             juror must decide the case for himself but
             only after an impartial consideration of
             the evidence with his fellow jurors. (RR 7
             17)

    2.   Did reversible error result from the Trial
         Judge’s submitting theft as a lesser included
         offense of robbery over defense’s timely and
         specific objections? (RR 7 11/5)

    3.   Did Egregious harm result from failure to
         instruct jury on what to do if they find that
         he is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 4
     they are not sure which, then find him guilty
     of theft? (RR 7 16)

4.   Is the following closing argument of the
     prosecutor one of “community expectations”?

         “So what do we have to do now? You’ve got
         to send a message to the community that if
         you go into our property, our gated
         property -- Mr. Gaubatz told you it was
         closed -- if you go into our property, you
         disregard any sort of right for the
         victim.” (RR 7 48)

5.   Did the following argument asking the jurors to
     take the place of the complaining witness
     deprive the defendant of a fair trial?
     U.S.CONST.amend.VI;TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10


         “Wouldn’t you be in fear at 3:00 in the
         morning? The dog is barking, he gets up,
         he’s scared. And what happened then? He
         sees somebody there. He sees an individual
         going onto his property. Think about how
         traumatic that was. Think about how
         traumatic that could have been for all the
         other victims that raised their hands
         during voir dire.” (RR 7 48)

6.   Was the following harmless error beyond a
     reasonable doubt?

         The prosecutor asked the jury to imagine
         what would have happened if the
         complaining witness had not simply stopped
         in his tracks instead of pursuing the
         defendant. (RR 7 51/18) Defense counsel
         objected that the argument was outside the
         record. (RR 7 51/21) The judge overruled
         the objection. (RR 7 52/1) The prosecutor

                  INITIAL BRIEF - 5
             continued to ask the jury to imagine what
             might have happened. (RR 7 51-52)

    7.   Was the trial court’s bringing back the jury to
         the courtroom and responding orally, rather
         than in writing, to their request for evidence
         fundamental error? TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27
         Did counsel’s inquiry constitute an objection?
         Was any error harmless beyond a reasonable
         doubt?

STATEMENT OF FACTS................................15-17

SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT...............................18-23

ARGUMENT..........................................24-38

CONCLUSION AND REQUEST FOR RELIEF....................39

CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE...............................40

CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE............................40




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 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
Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, Kansas, 347 U.S.
483 (1954) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    26
    The Court of Criminal Appeals adopted and rejected
    factual sufficiency review of the evidence.
Brooks v. State,323S.W.3d893(Tex.Crim.App.2010) . .   26
    The Court of Criminal Appeals changed its mind,
    twice, in adopting and then, twenty years later,
    rejecting factual sufficiency review of the
    evidence
Chandler v. State,689 S.W.332,334hn4(Tex.App.–Fort
Worth1985,pet.ref’d) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .    33
    “It is improper in argument for a prosecutor to ask
    members of the jury to place themselves in the
    shoes of the victim."
Cosio v. State,353 S.W.3d766(Tex.Crim.App.2011) . 24,25
    Failing to instruct the jury that they must return
    a unanimous verdict is fundamental error.
Day v. State,No. 2-06-005-CR(Tex.App.–Fort Worth May
17, 2007) 2007 WL1441078 at*2fn7 . . . . . . . . .    24
    “Jury verdicts in criminal cases must be
    unanimous.”
Francis v. State, 36 S.W.3d 121, 126 (Tex.Crim.App.
2000) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   24
    “Jury verdicts in criminal cases must be
    unanimous.”
Fuentes v. State, 991S.W.2d267, 274hn16(Tex.Crim.App.
1999) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28,29
    “If you believe from the evidence beyond a
    reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of
    either capital murder or aggravated robbery, but
    you have a reasonable doubt as to which of said
    offenses he is guilty, then you must resolve that


                      INITIAL BRIEF - 7
    doubt in the defendant's favor and find him guilty
    of the lesser offense of aggravated robbery.
In re Committment of Hill,334 S.W.3d236(Tex.Sup.2011)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35,36
    A party preserved error by asking a specific and
    proper question, stating the basis on which it
    sought to ask that question, and obtaining an
    adverse ruling from the trial court.
In re Winship,397U.S.358(1958) . . . . . . . . . .    29
    Giving instruction on giving the defendant the
    benefit of the doubt if the jury was unsure of
    which offense he was guilty, implicates his right
    to proof beyond a reasonable doubt.
Lawrence v. State,240 S.W.3d 912,917 hn12 fn24(Tex.
Crim.App.2007) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32,33
    “Numerous decisions of other appellate courts,
    including Texas courts of appeals and courts of
    other jurisdictions, are in accord with our
    holdings....”
Ngo v.State,175 S.W.3d 738(Tex.Crim.App.En Banc 2005)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24,25
    Failing to instruct the jury that they must return
    a unanimous verdict is fundamental error.
People v. Davis, 7 Cal.4th 797, 30 Cal.Rptr.2d 50, 872
P.2d 591, 598–99 (1994) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   33
    Texas appellate courts have relied on decisions of
    California courts.
People v. Vance, 116 Cal.Rptr.3d 98,102hn1(2010) .    33
    “We conclude that the prosecutor made a sustained
    Golden Rule closing argument so blatant that it
    alone requires reversal.”
Plessy v. Ferguson,163 U.S.537(1896) . . . . . . 25,26
    Counsel may advocate for a position taken by a
    minority of Judges.
Rushing v. State,50 S.W.3d 715,742hn42(Tex.App.–Waco
2001,pet.ref’d) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29,30
    “Anything more than a scintilla of evidence is
    sufficient to entitle a defendant to a lesser
    charge.”
Sanders v. State,664S.W.2d705,710(Tex.Crim.App.1982)

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 8
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25,26
    An offense that must be submitted as lesser
    included if requested by the accused, may not be
    submitted at behest of the State over a defense
    objection.
Thomas v. State, 578 S.W.2d 691,695(Tex.Crim.App.1979)
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33,34
    There was an instruction to disregard in Ramirez.
    It was ineffective to cure the harm done.

CONSTITUTIONS & CODES:
TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27   .   .   .   6,14,17,22,24,29,35,37
TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10 .    .   .   . . . . . . 5,13,16,21,30
Tex.Const.art.V,§13 . . .   .   .   . . . . . . . . . . .   24
U.S.CONST.amend.VI . . .    .   .   . . . . . . 5,13,16,21,30

OTHER:
Criminal Law News November 1, 2010 27 No. 22 West's
Criminal Law News 29 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31,32




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 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 charged by indictment with

robbery.(CR4;42)

    He pleaded not guilty and tried the case to the

jury.(CR42)

    The defendant rested without presenting any

evidence; the defendant did not testify.

        “MR. PADILLA: We rest, Your Honor.”

        (RRvol.7,p.4,line11) (subsequently RR 4,7/11)

    The jury found him guilty of robbery.(CR42)

    He had elected to have the judge impose

punishment.(CR42)

    The judge imposed a sentence of six years’

imprisonment, no probation.(CR42)

    The judge held a hearing on motions to revoke prior

probations.

        “Plea of Not True on MTR's 32 9
        13 Defendant sentenced in 2013-DCR-2246 33 9
        14 Defendant Sentenced on MTR's 34 9" (RR 9 3)


                        INITIAL BRIEF - 10
    The judge plainly considered the evidence at the

jury trial in determining the motions to revoke. He

revoked the two prior probations, sentenced the

defendant to six years confinement on each of the two

prior probations, and ran the two sixes on the

probation revocations concurrently with the six for the

weedeater robbery.

        “I am to going find the
        22 allegations in the Motions to Revoke to be
        true, and find
        23 you guilty of the offenses stated therein,
        and I'm going
        24 to sentence you to six years TDC in each of
        those cases,
        25 but it is to run concurrent with the 2013
        case.” (RR9 34/21-25)

    Defendant gave timely notice of appeal to this
Court of Appeals.(CR 46)




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 11
Pursuant to Tex.R.App.Proc.38.1(e), Appellant presents
this statement of issues presented:

                    ISSUES PRESENTED

    1.   Did egregious harm result from the following
         error in the instructions to the jury at
         guilt/innocence?

         EGREGIOUS HARM IN JURY INSTRUCTIONS?

    In order to return a verdict, each verdict (sic)

must agree thereto, but jurors have a duty to consult

with one another and to deliberate with a view to

reaching an agreement if it can be done without

violence to individual judgment. Each juror must decide

the case for himself but only after an impartial

consideration of the evidence with his fellow jurors.

(RR 7 17)


    2.   Did reversible error result from the Trial
         Judge’s submitting theft as a lesser included
         offense of robbery over defense’s timely and
         specific objections? RR7 11/5

    3.   Did Egregious harm result from failure to
         instruct jury on what to do if they find that
         he is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but
         they are not sure which, then find him guilty
         of theft? RR 7 16

    4.   Is the following closing argument of the
         prosecutor one of “community expectations”?

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 12
             “So what do we have to do now? You’ve got
             to send a message to the community that if
             you go into our property, our gated
             property -- Mr. Gaubatz told you it was
             closed -- if you go into our property, you
             disregard any sort of right for the
             victim.” (RR 7 48)

    5.   Did the following argument asking the jurors to
         take the place of the complaining witness
         deprive the defendant of a fair trial?
         U.S.CONST.amend.VI;TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10

             “Wouldn’t you be in fear at 3:00 in the
             morning? The dog is barking, he gets up,
             he’s scared. And what happened then? He
             sees somebody there. He sees an individual
             going onto his property. Think about how
             traumatic that was. Think about how
             traumatic that could have been for all the
             other victims that raised their hands
             during voir dire.” (RR 7 48)

    6.   Was the following harmless error beyond a
         reasonable doubt?

    The prosecutor asked the jury to imagine what would

have happened if the complaining witness had not simply

stopped in his tracks instead of pursuing the

defendant. (RR 7 51/18) Defense counsel objected that

the argument was outside the record. (RR 7 51/21) The

judge overruled the objection. (RR 7 52/1) The




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 13
prosecutor continued to ask the jury to imagine what

might have happened. (RR 7 51-52)


    7.   Was the trial court’s bringing back the jury to
         the courtroom and responding orally, rather
         than in writing, to their request for evidence
         fundamental error? TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27
         Did counsel’s inquiry constitute an objection?
         Was any error harmless beyond a reasonable
         doubt?




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 14
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.   Did egregious harm result from the following
         error in the instructions to the jury at
         guilt/innocence?

             EGREGIOUS HARM IN JURY INSTRUCTIONS?

    In order to return a verdict, each verdict (sic)

must agree thereto, but jurors have a duty to consult

with one another and to deliberate with a view to

reaching an agreement if it can be done without

violence to individual judgment. Each juror must decide

the case for himself but only after an impartial

consideration of the evidence with his fellow jurors.

(RR 7 17)


    2.   Did reversible error result from the Trial
         Judge’s submitting theft as a lesser included
         offense of robbery over defense’s timely and
         specific objections? RR7 11/5

    3.   Did Egregious harm result from failure to
         instruct jury on what to do if they find that
         he is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but
         they are not sure which, then find him guilty
         of theft? (RR 7 16)


                      INITIAL BRIEF - 15
    4.   Is the following closing argument of the
         prosecutor one of “community expectations”?

             “So what do we have to do now? You’ve got
             to send a message to the community that if
             you go into our property, our gated
             property -- Mr. Gaubatz told you it was
             closed -- if you go into our property, you
             disregard any sort of right for the
             victim.” (RR 7 48)


    5.   Did the following argument asking the jurors to
         take the place of the complaining witness
         deprive the defendant of a fair trial?
         U.S.CONST.amend.VI;TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10


             “Wouldn’t you be in fear at 3:00 in the
             morning? The dog is barking, he gets up,
             he’s scared. And what happened then? He
             sees somebody there. He sees an individual
             going onto his property. Think about how
             traumatic that was. Think about how
             traumatic that could have been for all the
             other victims that raised their hands
             during voir dire.” (RR 7 48)

    6.   Was the following harmless error beyond a
         reasonable doubt?

    The prosecutor asked the jury to imagine what would

have happened if the complaining witness had not simply

stopped in his tracks instead of pursuing the

defendant. (RR 7 51/18) Defense counsel objected that

the argument was outside the record. (RR 7 51/21) The


                      INITIAL BRIEF - 16
judge overruled the objection. (RR 7 52/1) The

prosecutor continued to ask the jury to imagine what

might have happened. (RR 7 51-52)


    7.   Was the trial court’s bringing back the jury to
         the courtroom and responding orally, rather
         than in writing, to their request for evidence
         fundamental error? TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27
         Did counsel’s inquiry constitute an objection?
         Was any error harmless beyond a reasonable
         doubt?




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 17
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. Did egregious harm result from the following
error in the instructions to the jury at
guilt/innocence?

        “In order to return a verdict, each verdict
        (sic) must agree thereto, but jurors have a
        duty to consult with one another and to
        deliberate with a view to reaching an agreement
        if it can be done without violence to
        individual judgment. Each juror must decide the
        case for himself but only after an impartial
        consideration of the evidence with his fellow
        jurors.” (RR 7 17)

    Jury verdicts in criminal cases must be unanimous.

The Judge has a duty to instruct the jury on the   law

applicable to the case. Failing to instruct the jury

that they must return a unanimous verdict is

fundamental error. The jury asked for evidence, but the

Judge could not give it to them. Their having rendered

a verdict does not make the error in the instructions

moot.




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 18
    2.   Did reversible error result from the Trial
         Judge’s submitting theft as a lesser included
         offense of robbery over defense’s timely and
         specific objections? (RR 7 11/5)

    There was no evidence that the defendant was only

guilty of theft. That defendant was not convicted of

theft does not obviate the error in submitting theft.

The error is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt

because submitting the theft as well as the robbery

made it more likely that the jury would convict the

defendant of robbery.


    3.   Did Egregious harm result from failure to
         instruct jury on what to do if they find that
         he is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but
         they are not sure which, then find him guilty
         of theft? (RR 7 16)

             Failure to instruct jury on what to do if
             they find that he is either guilty of
             robbery or of theft, but they are not sure
             which, then find him guilty of theft is
             fundamental error. (RR 7 16)

    The Judge has a duty to instruct the jury on the

law applicable to the case. The error is not harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt because the instructions are

fundamentally incomplete.      They do not tell the jury



                        INITIAL BRIEF - 19
what to do if they are not sure of which offense the

defendant is guilty.

    The indictment charged robbery. Theft is a lesser,

as a matter of law. The defense argued that Appellant

was only guilty of theft, that the Complaining Witness

had come up with the threats and fear statement after

the Harlingen Police did not devote any effort to theft

of a weedeater case. The defense argument was based on

the evidence that the Complaining Witness did not

maintain that he felt threatened at first, that the HPD

did nothing on the theft of the weedeater case until

the CW maintained that he felt threatened, turning

theft into robbery. The instructions as a whole submit

robbery and submit theft.


    4.   Is the following closing argument of the
         prosecutor one of “community expectations”?

             “So what do we have to do now? You’ve got
             to send a message to the community that if
             you go into our property, our gated
             property -- Mr. Gaubatz told you it was
             closed -- if you go into our property, you
             disregard any sort of right for the
             victim.” (RR 7 48)



                       INITIAL BRIEF - 20
    Saying “Send a message” is akin to “the community

expects”.


    5.   Did the following argument asking the jurors to
         take the place of the complaining witness
         deprive the defendant of a fair trial?
         U.S.CONST.amend.VI;TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10

             “Wouldn’t you be in fear at 3:00 in the
             morning? The dog is barking, he gets up,
             he’s scared. And what happened then? He
             sees somebody there. He sees an individual
             going onto his property. Think about how
             traumatic that was. Think about how
             traumatic that could have been for all the
             other victims that raised their hands
             during voir dire.” (RR 7 48)

    It did deprive the defendant of a fair trial. The

verdict is supposed to be based on the evidence, not on

taking the place of the victim, the complaining

witness. Asking the jurors to take the place of the

victim called for a verdict based on inflamed passions,

rather than one based on reason and the evidence.


    6.   Was the following harmless error beyond a
         reasonable doubt?

    The prosecutor asked the jury to imagine what would

have happened if the complaining witness had not simply

stopped in his tracks instead of pursuing the

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 21
defendant. (RR 7 51/18) Defense counsel objected that

the argument was outside the record. (RR 7 51/21) The

judge overruled the objection. (RR 7 52/1) The

prosecutor continued to ask the jury to imagine what

might have happened. (RR 7 51-52)

    The argument was erroneous because it was outside

the record. It was harmful because it called upon the

jury to rely upon matters outside the record in

reaching their verdict. It was harmful because it

called upon the jury to speculate on what might have

happened instead of basing their verdict on the

evidence. It was not harmful beyond a reasonable doubt

because it called upon the jury to violate the court’s

instructions to base its verdict on the evidence.    It

inflamed the passions of the jury and prompted a

verdict based on speculation and emotion rather than

reason.


    7.    Was the trial court’s bringing back the jury to
          the courtroom and responding orally, rather than
          in writing, to their request for evidence
          fundamental error? TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27 Did
          counsel’s inquiry constitute an objection? Was
          any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?

                       INITIAL BRIEF - 22
    Counsel’s   inquiry     was    an    objection.   The   Court’s

action amounted to overruling the objection. The error

was fundamental because the statute requires a written

response to the jury, not an oral one.          Calling the jury

into the courtroom tends to emphasize the instruction

given in the courtroom and to deëmphasize the written

instructions.




                          INITIAL BRIEF - 23
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.   Did egregious harm result from the following
         error in the instructions to the jury at
         guilt/innocence?

    Egregious harm did result from this instruction:

         “In order to return a verdict, each verdict
         (sic) must agree thereto, but jurors have a duty
         to consult with one another and to deliberate
         with a view to reaching an agreement if it can
         be done without violence to individual judgment.
         Each juror must decide the case for himself but
         only after an impartial consideration of the
         evidence with his fellow jurors.” (RR 7 17)

    “Jury verdicts in criminal cases must be unanimous.”

Day v. State,No. 2-06-005-CR(Tex.App.–Fort Worth May 17,

2007)(not selected for publication)2007WL1441078at*2fn7

See: TEX.CONST.art.V,§13; Francis v. State, 36 S.W.3d

121, 126 (Tex.Crim.App.2000). The Judge has a duty to

instruct the jury on the law applicable to the case.

TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.14 Failing to instruct the jury

that they must return a unanimous verdict is fundamental




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 24
error. Ngo v.State,175 S.W.3d 738(Tex.Crim.App.En Banc

2005) Cosio v. State,353 S.W.3d766(Tex.Crim.App.2011)


    2.     Did reversible error result from the Trial
           Judge’s submitting theft as a lesser included
           offense of robbery over defense’s timely and
           specific objections? RR7 11/5

    There was no evidence that the defendant was only

guilty of theft. That defendant was not convicted of

theft does not obviate the error in submitting theft. The

error is not harmless beyond a reasonable doubt because

submitting the theft as well as the robbery made it more

likely that the jury would convict the defendant of

robbery.

    Three Judges of the Court of Criminal Appeals of

Texas noted that the status of the law was: “an offense

that must be submitted as lesser included if requested by

the accused, may not be submitted at behest of the State

over       a        defense        objection!”             Sanders       v.

State,664S.W.2d705,710(Tex.Crim.App.1982)(Clinton,J.dis

sent) Counsel may advocate for a position taken by a

minority       of   Judges.   That     sort        of   advocacy   is   what


                              INITIAL BRIEF - 25
happened to Plessy v. Ferguson,163 U.S.537(1896) when

Brown   v.    Board   of     Education          of    Topeka,    Kansas,

347U.S.483(1954) was argued, successfully.                That is what

happened when the Court of Criminal Appeals changed its

mind, twice, in adopting and then, twenty years later,

rejecting factual sufficiency review of the evidence.

Brooks v. State,323S.W.3d893(Tex.Crim.App.2010)

    The sequence in Sanders is what happened here. The

defendant was indicted for robbery. The state wanted to

submit theft as a lesser. The defendant objected, the

Trial Court overruled the objection. (RR 7 11/5)

    Harm     resulted.   Theft      was    not       mentioned   in   the

indictment. Of course it is true that robbery is assault

plus theft. But there was no evidence that the defendant,

if guilty of anything, was only guilty of misdemeanor

theft. The jurors must have thought that since there were

two charges, robbery and theft, and theft was not even

mentioned in the indictment, then he must be guilty of

one or the other.




                           INITIAL BRIEF - 26
    The Court of Appeals should find error, find that

harm did result, and find that the error was not harmless

beyond a reasonable doubt.



    3.   Did Egregious harm result from failure to
         instruct jury on what to do if they find that he
         is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but
         they are not sure which, then find him guilty of
         theft? (RR 7 16)


    Failure to instruct jury on what to do if they find

that he is either guilty of robbery or of theft, but they

are not sure which, then find him guilty of theft is

fundamental error. (RR 7 16)

    The Judge has a duty to instruct the jury on the law

applicable to the case. The error is not harmless beyond

a   reasonable   doubt     because       the   instructions   are

fundamentally incomplete.       They do not tell the jury what

to do if they are not sure of which offense the defendant

is guilty.

    The indictment charged robbery. Theft is a lesser, as

a matter of law. The defense argued that Appellant was

only guilty of theft, that the Complaining Witness had


                         INITIAL BRIEF - 27
come up with the threats and fear statement after the

Harlingen Police did not devote any effort to theft of a

weedeater case. The defense argument was based on the

evidence that the Complaining Witness did not maintain

that he felt threatened at first, that the HPD did

nothing on the theft of the weedeater case until the CW

maintained that he felt threatened, turning theft into

robbery. The instructions as a whole submit robbery and

submit theft.

           “It wasn’t only until they went in and the
           Judge gave them his advice that he thought they
           should treat it as a robbery, then they decided
           at that point to make it -- to make it into a
           robbery but originally it was a theft. And what
           did the Harlingen Police Department do in
           investigating this case? Absolutely nothing.
           Absolutely nothing.” (RR 7 34/1-7)

       Typically, the trial judge gives an instruction like

this    one   when   there    are    two     offenses   of   which   the

defendant might be convicted:

           “If you believe from the evidence beyond a
           reasonable doubt that the defendant is guilty of
           either capital murder or aggravated robbery, but
           you have a reasonable doubt as to which of said
           offenses he is guilty, then you must resolve
           that doubt in the defendant's favor and find him
           guilty of the lesser offense of aggravated

                             INITIAL BRIEF - 28
             r o b b e r y . ”       F u e n t e s       v .
             State,991S.W.2d267,274hn16(Tex.Crim.App.1999)


    Giving that instruction on giving the defendant the

benefit of the doubt if the jury were unsure of which

offense he was guilty, implicates both his right to proof

beyond            a   reasonable                doubt,        In     re

Winship,397U.S.358(1958), and to have the Judge instruct

the jury on the law applicable to the case. TEX.CODE

CRIM.P.art.36.14

    Harm resulted, since theft of an $80 weedeater is “a

class    B    misdemeanor”,TEX.PEN.CODE          §31.03(e)(2)(A)(i),

while robbery without a deadly weapon is a “felony of the

second degree” TEX.PEN.CODE.§29.03(b)

    It       is   reversible   error      not     to   give   such   an

instruction if there is some evidence that the defendant

is guilty of the lesser-included offense:

             “If there is some evidence that if a defendant
             is   guilty,    he   is   guilty   only   of   a
             lesser-included offense, then the defendant is
             entitled to have the jury instructed that it may
             find   the   defendant  guilty   only   of   the
             lesser-included offense. Wesbrook v. State, 29
             S.W.3d 103, 113 (Tex.Crim.App.2000), cert.
             denied, 532 U.S. 944, 121 S.Ct. 1407, 149

                           INITIAL BRIEF - 29
         L.Ed.2d 349 (2001). “The evidence must establish
         the lesser-included offense as a valid rational
         alternative to the charged offense.” Id. (citing
         Rousseau v. State, 855 S.W.2d 666, 672–73
         (Tex.Crim.App.1993)). “Anything more than a
         scintilla of evidence is sufficient to entitle a
         defendant to a lesser charge.” Bignall v. State,
         887 S.W.2d 21, 23 (Tex.Crim.App.1994).” Rushing
         v. State,50 S.W.3d 715,742hn42(Tex.App.–Waco
         2001,pet.ref’d) [internal quotations unchanged]

    The Court of Appeals should find egregious harm,

should find that the error is not harmless beyond a

reasonable doubt, and should require a new trial.



    5.   Did the following argument asking the jurors to
         take the place of the complaining witness
         deprive   the  defendant   of  a   fair   trial?
         U.S.CONST.amend.VI;TEX.CONST.art.I,sec.10


             “Wouldn’t you be in fear at 3:00 in the
             morning? The dog is barking, he gets up,
             he’s scared. And what happened then? He sees
             somebody there. He sees an individual going
             onto his property. Think about how traumatic
             that was. Think about how traumatic that
             could have been for all the other victims
             that raised their hands during voir dire.”
             (RR 7 48)


    It did deprive the defendant of a fair trial. The

verdict is supposed to be based on the evidence, not on

taking the place of the victim, the complaining witness.

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 30
Asking the jurors to take the place of the victim called

for a verdict based on inflamed passions, rather than one

based on reason and the evidence.

       The prosecutor’s “golden rule” argument, asking the

jury    to   put   itself   in    the   victim’s   shoes”    required

reversal      of   a   murder    conviction.     Criminal   Law   News

November 1, 2010 27 No. 22 West's Criminal Law News 29

That is precisely what the prosecutor’s argument did at

the weedeater trial.



       6.    Was the following          harmless   error    beyond   a
             reasonable doubt?


       The prosecutor asked the jury to imagine what would

have happened if the complaining witness had not simply

stopped in his tracks instead of pursuing the defendant.

(RR 7 51/18) Defense counsel objected that the argument

was outside the record. (RR 7 51/21) The judge overruled

the objection. (RR 7 52/1) The prosecutor continued to

ask the jury to imagine what might have happened. (RR 7

51-52)



                            INITIAL BRIEF - 31
    The argument was erroneous because it was indeed

outside the record. It was harmful because it called upon

the jury to rely upon matters outside the record in

reaching their verdict. It was harmful because it called

upon the jury to speculate on what might have happened

instead of basing their verdict on the evidence. It was

not harmful beyond a reasonable doubt because it called

upon the jury to violate the court’s instructions to base

its verdict on the evidence.            It inflamed the passions of

the jury and prompted a verdict based on speculation and

emotion rather than reason.

    In a trial on the issue of the defendant's guilt of

murder, the prosecutor committed misconduct by making an

improper “Golden Rule” argument inviting the jury to put

itself   in   the    victim's       position.       Criminal   Law   News

November 1, 2010 27 No. 22 West's Criminal Law News 29

    The Court of Appeals may consider the opinions and

decisions     of    Courts     of    other        jurisdictions.     Texas

appellate Courts have relied on opinions of California

appellate courts before. The Court of Criminal Appeals

may rely upon opinions of other jurisdictions. “Numerous

                             INITIAL BRIEF - 32
decisions of other appellate courts, including Texas

courts of appeals and courts of other jurisdictions, are

in accord with our holdings....”Lawrence v. State,240

S.W.3d   912,917        hn12   fn24(Tex.Crim.App.2007)            Texas

appellate courts have relied on decisions of California

courts: People v. Davis, 7 Cal.4th 797, 30 Cal.Rptr.2d

50, 872 P.2d 591, 598–99 (1994)

         “We conclude that the prosecutor made a
         sustained Golden Rule closing argument so
         blatant that it alone requires reversal.” People
         v. Vance, 116 Cal.Rptr.3d 98,102hn1(2010)

    Texas’ Second Court of Appeals did note that                       a

“Golden Rule” argument is improper.

         “It is improper in argument for a prosecutor to
         ask members of the jury to place themselves in
         the shoes of the victim. *335 United States v.
         Cook, 592 F.2d 877 (5th Cir.1979)”
-        C h a n d l e r          v .        S t a t e , 6 8 9
         S . W . 3 3 2 , 3 3 4 h n 4 ( T e x . A p p . – F o r t
         Worth1985,pet.ref’d)

    There was an instruction to disregard in Ramirez. It

was ineffective to cure the harm done.                 Thomas v. State,

578 S.W.2d 691,695(Tex.Crim.App.1979). An instruction to

disregard   is   ineffective        when        “the   remarks   are   so

inflammatory     that     their     prejudicial         effect   cannot

                           INITIAL BRIEF - 33
reasonably be removed by such an admonition.” Thomas v.

State,578 S.W.2d 691,695(Tex.Crim.App.1979).

    The instruction to disregard was ineffective because

of the prosecutor’s portrayal of the complaining witness

as a poor old man who was assaulted in his home by one

who even struck the old man’s dog, and further that the

old man could not get any help from the police.

         “Mr. Ramirez escalates the situation. From just
         the taking of a weedeater and a brief
         confrontation with Mr. Gaubatz, he escalates it
         to a threat. He puts his hand behind his back,
         and again pardon me for my language but this is
         what was said. He puts his hand behind his back
         and he looks at Mr. Gaubatz directly in the eyes
         and he says, “It’s not worth it, I'll fuck you
         up,” intending to get him to back off so that he
         can take off with that weedeater. He didn’t want
         to drop it. He’d been asked to put it down, to
         leave it. He wasn’t going to. He was trying to
         get out of there with that weedeater and he was
         trying to scare Mr. Gaubatz into stopping, to
         not coming out. You heard, Mr. Gaubatz told us
         that his dog got a hold of Mr. Ramirez. Mr.
         Ramirez hit his dog with the weedeater in his
         hands, got into his truck, into his white Jeep
         Liberty, and drove off.” (RR 7 24)


    So, when the prosecutor asked the jurors to take the

place   of   the   complaining    witness,    a   person   in   that

situation would be faced with one who had been threatened


                         INITIAL BRIEF - 34
verbally    and   who   was      confronted      by    another    whose

additional threat was veiled...a hand behind his back.

The Judge’s instruction to disregard could not have cured

the effect of asking a jury to imagine being accosted by

a robber.

    The Court of Appeals should require a new trial.

    7.     Was the trial court’s bringing back the jury to
           the courtroom and responding orally, rather than
           in writing, to their request for evidence
           fundamental error? TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27 Did
           counsel’s inquiry constitute an objection? Was
           any error harmless beyond a reasonable doubt?


    Counsel’s     inquiry     was    an    objection.     The    Court’s

action amounted to overruling the objection. The error

was fundamental because the statute requires a written

response to the jury, not an oral one.                Calling the jury

into the courtroom tends to emphasize the instruction

given in the courtroom and to deëmphasize the written

instructions.

    Counsel’s inquiry was an objection.

           “A party preserves error by a timely request
           that makes clear—by words or context—the grounds
           for the request and by obtaining a ruling on
           that request, whether express or implicit. TEX.
           R. APP. P. 33.1. Thus, in Babcock, we held that

                            INITIAL BRIEF - 35
         a party preserved error by asking a specific and
         proper question, stating the basis on which it
         sought to ask that question, and obtaining an
         adverse ruling from the trial court. 767 S.W.2d
         at   708.”  In   re  Committment   of   Hill,334
         S.W.3d236(Tex.Sup.2011)

     The interaction between counsel and the Court in

Ramirez was more subtle, but the result was the same. It

was obvious that Counsel did not agree with bringing the

jury back into the courtroom to answer their note.



         “The Court has received a note through the
         bailiff obviously at 11:07 a.m. It reads as
         follows,
             “Need copy of police report to read, need
             copy of victim affidavit to read,”
         and it’s signed by the presiding juror. (RR 7
         54/1-5)
         ***


     Defense counsel at trial made it clear that he

objected to bringing the jury back into the courtroom to

be   instructed   instead    of     giving   them   a   written

instruction.

     “THE COURT: I'll tell you what, why don’t we bring
     them -- let’s start making arrangements so we can
     bring them in.
     MR. PADILLA: For what purpose, Judge? You're going to
     give them a written answer and response?
     That’ll probably be faster than bringing them in,
     Judge.

                       INITIAL BRIEF - 36
    THE COURT: I’m thinking now the verbal admonishment
    will be faster, but --
    MR. PADILLA: Well, there is a record, but -- you
    know, what happens in the past, Judge, and I know
    this Court has a lot of experience in trying cases,
    but they’ll start nitpicking different items, you
    know, so --
    THE COURT: That’s fine. We’ll just --
    MR. PADILLA: They won’t ask for any other evidence
    that was not introduced once you give them that
    written instruction.
    THE COURT: We’ll just -- all right. Let’s bring them
    in. (Jury enters courtroom.)” (RR 7 55/4-23)


    The trial court plainly overruled the objection that

the instruction be in writing by saying:

        “THE COURT: We’ll just -- all right. Let’s
        bring them in. (Jury enters courtroom.)” (RR 7
        55/4-23)


    Defense counsel at trial pointed out the harm of not

complying with the plain words of the statute and the

positive effects of complying with the Rule.

        “but they’ll start nitpicking different items,
        you know, so --
        ***
        MR. PADILLA: They won’t ask for any other
        evidence that was not introduced once you give
        them that written instruction.” (RR 7 55/4-23)


    The Court of Appeals should not be seduced by the

Sophist’s characterization of TEX.CODE CRIM.P.art.36.27

                      INITIAL BRIEF - 37
as “not a mandatory statute.” Why bother with statutes,

then?   Shall the Legislature now designate each statute

as “mandatory”, just as it declares every enactment an

emergency?   This is the “children’s law” one speaking

from the Judgment Seat rejected. Julius Caesar,




                      INITIAL BRIEF - 38
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

For the failure of proof, the Court of Appeals should

acquit the Appellant.

    Failing an acquittal, the Court of Appeals should

remand for a new trial.


                             RESPECTFULLY SUBMITTED
                             February 23, 2015.

                             /s/Larry Warner
                             Larry Warner,
                             Counsel for Michael Ramirez
                             COA No.13-14-00171-CR
                             3109 Banyan Circle
                             Harlingen, Tx 78550 7443
                             Phone (956) 454 4994
                             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)




                        INITIAL BRIEF - 39
                  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 23RD 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 23, 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 4254 words as
counted by the WordCount Tool of this software program.

                               Respectfully Submitted,
                               February 23, 2015.

                               /s/Larry Warner
                               Larry Warner,
                               Counsel for Appellant




                          INITIAL BRIEF - 40
