IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
FROM THE SECOND COURT OF APPEALS
TARRANT COUNTY
DISSENTING OPINION
The trial court did not prohibit appellant from giving a voice exemplar. The trial court simply held that giving a voice exemplar would subject him to cross-examination by the State. The alleged error, then, is not the exclusion of a voice exemplar but the allowance of cross-examination. But the cross-examination never occurred because appellant did not give a voice exemplar. The trial court should not be reversed for permitting cross-examination when that cross-examination never occurred.
This case is similar to Luce v. United States (1) and Jackson v. State. (2) In Luce, the defendant wanted to testify free from impeachment by a prior conviction. (3) The trial court decided the prior conviction was in the category of permissible impeachment evidence and refused to foreclose its use. In declining to review the merits of the alleged error, the United States Supreme Court observed that reviewing the trial court's ruling was fraught with difficulty, requiring speculation about:
(1) the precise nature of the defendant's testimony, (2) whether the trial court's ruling would have remained the same or would have changed as the case unfolded, (3) whether the government would have sought to impeach the defendant with the prior conviction, (4) whether the accused would have testified in any event, and (5) whether any resulting error in permitting impeachment would have been harmless. (4)
The Court held that to raise and preserve for review the claim of improper impeachment with a prior conviction, a defendant must testify.
In Jackson, the defendant asked to be allowed to testify at the punishment phase of his death penalty trial without being cross-examined about prior extraneous offenses. (5) The trial court denied his request. (6) Relying upon Luce, we held that error was not preserved because the defendant did not in fact testify (and thus, was not impeached with extraneous offenses). (7)
The parallels in this case, Luce, and Jackson are striking. All involve: (a) the defendant's attempt to introduce certain evidence free from impeachment, (b) the trial court's ruling that the evidence, if introduced, would be subject to impeachment, and (c) the defendant's decision not to introduce his evidence.
This case embodies the concerns expressed in Luce. Although appellant submitted by bill of exception a tape-recorded reading of the jury charge, we do not know that appellant's voice exemplar would have been the same in the courtroom in front of a jury.
We also do not know for certain that the State would have chosen to cross-examine appellant, and more importantly, we do not know what that cross-examination would entail. The State may have wished to submit its own material for appellant to read. That form of cross-examination would have been no more testimonial than appellant's own proffer. Moreover, the State might have engaged appellant in a patently irrelevant line of questioning to determine whether the voice characteristics exhibited in reading materials aloud were also present in conversation. Assuming the line of questioning was truly irrelevant (e.g. the Rice Owls' chances of beating the Texas Longhorns), then it would have no incriminating value apart from its tendency to show appellant's voice characteristics. Of course, the State might have tried to cross-examine appellant about the facts of the case, but we will never know. Appellant has not preserved for review his claim of improper impeachment.
And even if we could determine with reasonable certainty that an improper cross-examination would have occurred, we would then be required to speculate about the question of harm. Without the State's cross-examination before us, we cannot know how that cross-examination would have affected the trial.
We should follow Jackson and Luce and hold that error was not preserved. Because the Court does not, I respectfully dissent.
KELLER, Presiding Judge
Date filed: October 1, 2003
Publish
1. 469 U.S. 38 (1984).
2. 992 S.W.2d 469 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999).
3. Jackson, 992 S.W.2d at 479 (citing Luce, 469 U.S. at 39-40).
4. Id. (citing Luce, 469 U.S. at 41-42).
5. Id. at 479.
6. Id.
7. Jackson, 992 S.W.2d at 479.