Justia Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Opinion Summaries

Articles Posted in January, 2013
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A jury convicted appellant David Cook of manslaughter and returned a verdict of six years' confinement with a recommendation that it be probated. The trial judge then formally sentenced appellant. Forty-five minutes later, the same "jury" returned a second punishment verdict of six years' confinement with no recommendation that it be probated. The trial judge again sentenced appellant. What happened between those two formal sentencing pronouncements was only partially reflected in the record. On appeal, appellant sought reinstatement of his probated sentence. The court of appeals held that the trial judge's decision to reconvene the jury under the particular facts in this case was harmful error, and it remanded the case to the trial court for a new punishment hearing. Both the State and appellant appealed that decision. The State argued that the court of appeals should have found the error forfeited. Appellant argued that the court of appeals should have reinstated his original, probated sentence. Upon review, the Supreme Court concluded that appellant preserved the re-sentencing issue for appellate review, and reinstated his original, probated sentence. View "Cook v. Texas" on Justia Law

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This mandamus action arose from a capital-murder prosecution that reached the jury-charge portion of the guilt stage of trial. The trial judge's proposed charge would have submitted to the jury the "conspiracy" theory of the law of parties but not the "intent to promote or assist" theory of the law of parties. In submitting the "conspiracy" theory, the trial judge's proposed charge would have required the State to prove that the defendant should have anticipated the particular manner and means by which his co-conspirator killed the victim. The State sought the writ of mandamus to require the submission of the "intent to promote or assist" theory and to require the submission of the "conspiracy" theory without any manner-and-means restriction. The Supreme Court conditionally granted relief: with respect to the "intent to promote or assist" theory, the court of appeals concluded that the trial judge's "assessment of the evidence to determine whether it supported the inclusion of an instruction under section 7.02(a) in the court's charge was not a ministerial act, but rather an exercise of [his] judgment and judicial determination" and "to the extent that there is a dispute about the state of the evidence, [the Supreme Court] may not resolve it in an original mandamus proceeding." Irrespective of the indictment's manner-and-means allegation, no statutory or case law supported its inclusion. Furthermore, two of the recognized criminal pattern jury charge books did not include it. Accordingly, the Supreme Court conditionally granted mandamus relief and ordered the court of appeals to grant mandamus relief directing the trial court to submit the theory of party liability in the jury charge without requiring the State to show that the defendant should have anticipated the particular method by which the murder was carried out. The writ of mandamus would issue only in the event that the court of appeals failed to comply with this opinion. View "In re Texas ex rel David Weeks" on Justia Law

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Pursuant to a plea bargain with the State, the applicant was placed on deferred adjudication for the offense of sexual assault of a child. The convicting court later found the applicant guilty and sentenced him to five years' imprisonment because, among other things, he allegedly committed two new offenses. Applicant did not appeal. The applicant then filed an initial post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus pursuant to Article 11.07 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, where he claimed that there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction. The Supreme Court denied the initial writ application without written order. This case was a subsequent post-conviction application for writ of habeas corpus. Here, applicant alleged that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to revoke his deferred adjudication community supervision because the capias for his arrest did not issue until three days after his community supervision period expired. While the Court was "not unsympathetic to the applicant's claim," it lacked authority to grant him relief through the "abuse of the writ doctrine," codified by Section 4 of Article 11.07. Applicant failed to state facts that contain facts that established either new law, new facts, or actual innocence. Accordingly, the Court dismissed applicant's application. View "Ex Parte Casey Sledge" on Justia Law

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Appellant, David Mark Temple was convicted of the murder of his wife, Belinda Temple, and sentenced to life imprisonment. The Fourteenth Court of Appeals affirmed Appellant's conviction. On direct appeal Appellant argued, among other issues, that the evidence was insufficient to support his conviction. Upon review, the Supreme Court held that the evidence was sufficient to support Appellant's conviction for murder and that the jury was rationally justified in finding Appellant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The Court affirmed the judgment of the court of appeals. View "Temple v. Texas" on Justia Law

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The issue before the Supreme Court in this case was whether the evidence showed that appellant violated a "no contact" condition of probation, when the condition allowed contact by telephone regarding issues of child custody and when appellant and his wife had an arrangement for appellant to babysit their children at his wife's home while she was at work. "What the State had here was just linking-type evidence. Appellant had motive and opportunity for prohibited contact because he expressed buyer's remorse about pleading guilty and his wife did not want the 'no contact' order." The State also had other circumstantial evidence that was "perhaps suspicious," but did not establish the fact of prohibited contact; none of this evidence established that prohibited contact occurred. Without that, all of this evidence was mere "suspicion linked to other suspicion." The Court held that that the evidence was legally insufficient to meet the State's allegation in its motion to revoke, and therefore, the trial court abused its discretion in revoking appellant's probation. Furthermore, the Court held that the court of appeals erred in upholding the trial court's judgment in doing so. The Court reversed the lower courts' judgments and ordered that the State's motion to revoke probation be dismissed. View "Hacker v. Texas" on Justia Law

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Appellant Tonya Daughtery signed a construction-service contract with a general contractor to build out office space for her and her husband's window-tinting company. Appellant wrote a $1,657 check as a deposit. The rest of the approximately $48,000 contract price was not due until the project was completed. At that time, however, appellant no longer had the money and gave the contractor an "insufficient funds" check. A jury convicted her of theft of services for obtaining the contractor's service by deception when she gave him the insufficient-funds check after he had completed the build-out. The court of appeals reversed the jury's verdict and rendered a judgment of acquittal because it determined that the evidence was legally insufficient to support the conviction. The Supreme Court granted the State's petition to decide whether the failure to prove that appellant secured the performance of the contract with a "worthless check" was merely an "immaterial variance" or whether the State failed to prove the essential element that an act of deception secured performance of the contractor's services. Upon review, the Court concluded that the State failed to prove the offense of theft of service by deception, so it affirmed the court of appeals. View "Daugherty v. Texas" on Justia Law

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The issue before the Supreme Court in this case was whether a law-enforcement officer seeking to obtain a search warrant, under Article 18.01 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure, must swear out the affidavit in support of that warrant in the physical presence of the magistrate or whether he may do so telephonically. On June 29, 2008, the appellant was arrested and charged with misdemeanor driving while intoxicated. The stipulated facts established that the appellant was stopped by State Trooper J. Ortega for traveling 80 miles per hour in a 70 mile-per-hour zone. When probable cause to suspect the appellant of driving while intoxicated arose in the course of the stop, Ortega placed appellant under arrest and requested that she provide a breath specimen for testing. The appellant refused, so Ortega filled out an affidavit for a search warrant to obtain a specimen of her blood. Ortega then called Hill County Court at Law Judge A. Lee Harris on the telephone. Ortega and Harris "each recognized the other's voice[,]" and in the course of the telephone conversation, Ortega "swore to and signed" the search warrant affidavit. The trial court denied the appellant's motion to suppress. On appeal, appellant argued that the search warrant was invalid because the affidavit in support of the warrant was not sworn to in the physical presence of the magistrate, as she contends is required by Article 18.01 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. The Court of Appeals disagreed, holding that "a face-to-face meeting between the trooper and the judge was not required and the making of the oath over the telephone did not invalidate the search warrant." The Supreme Court concluded that because Ortega and Judge Harris recognized one another's voices on the telephone at the time Ortega swore out his warrant affidavit, it was properly solemnized. And because Ortega reduced the affidavit to writing and faxed it to Judge Harris for filing, the basis for probable cause was properly memorialized. Under these circumstances, the Court held that Article 18.01(b)'s requirement of a "sworn affidavit" was satisfied. View "Clay v. Texas" on Justia Law

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A Relator filed an application for a writ of mandamus to the Supreme Court after the Court of Appeals dismissed his petitions for writs of mandamus filed in that court for want of jurisdiction. He argued that the appellate court had jurisdiction and its dismissal was in error. He sought issuance of the writ of mandamus to require the court of appeals to consider his petitions on their merits. Upon review, the Supreme Court granted relief: "we perceive no reason why our exclusive Article 11.07 jurisdiction divests an appellate court of jurisdiction to decide the merits of a mandamus petition alleging that a district judge is not ruling on a motion when the relator has no Article 11.07 application pending." The Court conditionally granted mandamus and directed the Fifth Court of Appeals to rescind its decision dismissing relator's petitions for writ of mandamus for want of jurisdiction and to consider the merits of the issues raised. View "Padieu v. Court of Appeals of Texas, Fifth District" on Justia Law

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A jury convicted appellant James Sullivan of four sexual assaults against three victims and sentenced him to eighteen years of imprisonment in each case. The trial judge ordered some of the sentences to run concurrently and some to run consecutively. One of the sentences that was stacked was not eligible for stacking. The issue before the Supreme Court in this case concerned the question of the proper remedy when one of a series of sentences is improperly stacked and whether it matters where in the series the improperly stacked sentence appears. The Court reformed the trial court's judgment to reflect that the improperly stacked sentence was not stacked and that the two sentences involving different victims were stacked. The Court also reformed the sequence of stacking to conform to the trial judge's oral pronouncement of sentence. View "Sullivan v. Texas" on Justia Law

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In this case, the issue before the Supreme Court was whether an applicant must prove harm to obtain relief in a writ of habeas corpus premised on an illegal-sentence claim. Here, Jimmie Mark Parrott raised an illegal-sentence claim based on the State's improper use of a prior conviction for enhancement purposes. The Court denied relief because the habeas record established that applicant was previously convicted of other offenses that supported the punishment range within which he was admonished and sentenced; therefore, he failed to demonstrate harm. View "Parrott v. Texas" on Justia Law