Site icon Thomas J. Daley

CROSSOVER: Text-Message Authentication & Best-Evidence Gatekeeping: Criminal Robbery‑Capital Murder Opinion Offers Civil Playbook for Digital Evidence in Texas Family Violence/Divorce Trials

New Texas Court of Appeals Opinion - Analyzed for Family Law Attorneys

Christopher Peoples v. The State of Texas, 12-25-00094-CR, March 25, 2026.

On appeal from 369th Judicial District Court, Cherokee County, Texas

Synopsis

The Twelfth Court of Appeals affirmed a robbery-based capital murder conviction and held the trial court correctly refused a self-defense instruction on capital murder (while allowing it on the lesser-included murder charge). Under settled Texas law, when the capital theory is murder “in the course of” robbery, a robber has no right of self-defense against the intended victim—foreclosing the justification at the capital level.

Relevance to Family Law

Although this is a criminal opinion, it is unusually useful in divorce and SAPCR trials because it lays out—cleanly and at length—the current “gatekeeping” framework for authenticating text-message evidence and satisfying the best-evidence rule for electronically stored information. In family-violence protective-order hearings, custody modification trials, and fault-based divorce disputes where digital communications drive intent, coercive control, or credibility, Peoples is a ready-made roadmap for (1) admitting partial extractions when attachments are missing and (2) defeating overbroad “best evidence” objections that are often deployed tactically to keep damning texts away from the factfinder.

Case Summary

Fact Summary

The State charged Christopher Peoples with capital murder under Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2), alleging he intentionally killed Valentine Sanchez with a knife while in the course of committing or attempting to commit robbery. The evidence showed Sanchez was found outside his home with his throat slit, pants pockets turned inside out, and his truck missing. In a recorded interview, Peoples admitted cutting Sanchez’s throat but claimed he acted in self-defense after Sanchez became angry, produced a pistol, and the pistol misfired. Peoples further admitted that after the killing he searched Sanchez’s pockets and left in Sanchez’s truck with various items.

Over objection, the State introduced two text-message chains. The investigating witness conceded that the data extraction did not capture all message attachments because attachments are often unrecoverable. The messages included statements about “just robbing someone,” overdrawn accounts, and making a “move of desperation just to live”—evidence the State used to support the robbery intent component necessary for robbery-based capital murder.

At the charge conference, Peoples requested a self-defense instruction as to capital murder. The trial court granted self-defense on the lesser-included murder charge but refused it for capital murder. The jury convicted on capital murder and assessed life without parole.

Issues Decided

Rules Applied

Application

On the jury-charge question, the court framed the dispute as a mismatch between Peoples’s narrative (self-defense in response to an alleged gun presentation) and the legal consequence of the charged theory (capital murder predicated on robbery). Even if Peoples produced “some evidence” supporting classic self-defense elements as to a homicide, the court treated the robbery predicate as dispositive: once the State proceeds on a robbery-based capital murder theory, Texas law does not allow the accused—cast as the robber—to claim self-defense against the intended victim of the robbery. In that posture, a self-defense instruction on capital murder would misstate the law; the correct vehicle is submission of self-defense only on murder, leaving the jury to decide whether the robbery predicate (and thus capital murder) was proved.

On the digital-evidence question (the portion family litigators should read twice), the opinion walks through the modern evidentiary path: authentication under Rule 901 is a threshold “support a finding” showing, not a requirement of conclusive proof. The court also addresses the real-world problem that forensic extractions frequently do not retrieve every component of a message thread, especially attachments. That limitation did not render the text chains per se inadmissible; instead, it went to weight and the jury’s ultimate assessment, so long as the proponent could sufficiently link the messages to the purported author and show that the proffered output accurately reflected what was recovered.

Holding

The court held the trial court did not err by limiting the self-defense instruction to the lesser-included offense of murder and refusing to submit self-defense as to capital murder alleged under Penal Code § 19.03(a)(2). Because the capital theory was robbery-based, and because Texas law treats a robber as lacking a right of self-defense against the intended victim, submission of self-defense on capital murder was legally improper.

The court further held the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting the text-message chains over objections grounded in authentication and the best-evidence rule. Rule 901’s liberal standard and the ESI “original” definitions in Rules 1001–1002 allowed admission of the printout/output that accurately reflected the extracted data, even though not all attachments were recoverable.

Practical Application

For Texas family-law litigators, Peoples is less about robbery-capital murder and more about how to win (or stop) the text-message fight—especially in cases where the other side tries to rebrand evidentiary weight issues as admissibility defects.

Checklists

Text-Message Authentication (Rule 901) Foundation

Best-Evidence / “Original” for ESI (Rules 1001–1002) Predicate

Offense/Allegation Theory Control (Lesson for Pleadings and Trial Themes)

Opposing Texts: How to Make the Objection Stick

Citation

Christopher Peoples v. The State of Texas, No. 12-25-00094-CR (Tex. App.—Tyler Mar. 25, 2026) (mem. op.).

Full Opinion

Read the full opinion here

Family Law Crossover

Family litigators can weaponize Peoples in two strategic ways. First, it is a turnkey brief for admitting “imperfect” digital extractions: when the opposing party argues that missing attachments, incomplete threads, or extraction limitations render texts inadmissible, Peoples re-centers the analysis on Rule 901’s low threshold and Rule 1001(d)’s definition of an ESI “original”—pushing the dispute to credibility and weight where you can win with corroboration. Second, it models how theory selection can foreclose defenses: just as the robbery predicate legally blocked self-defense at the capital level, in family-violence and custody litigation the way you frame the predicate conduct (coercive control pattern, stalking course of conduct, waste/fraud intent) can narrow the other side’s “explanations” and keep the court focused on the legally operative elements rather than sympathetic narratives.

~~260f93aa-2adc-4d8d-a4b0-8192308ea1c1~~

Share this content:

Exit mobile version