IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
Eighth Court of Appeals,
Dallas County
We granted review of a decision that, in a trial without a jury, the trial court erred in permitting the evidence to be reopened after the argument was concluded. We shall remand the case to the Court of Appeals to decide the issue of whether the argument was concluded.
In the Trial Court
In the case now before us, the appellant was accused of driving while intoxicated and of having been convicted twice previously of such offenses, which enhanced to a felony an offense that would otherwise be a misdemeanor. (1) The case was tried, without a jury, on three days that were widely separated.
The first and most extensive evidence of guilt in the trial was presented in a pre-trial hearing on the appellant's motion to suppress evidence. The State called two police officers, each of whom described what he saw and heard at the scene of a motor-vehicle accident. One of the officers also testified about some tests for intoxication that the appellant attempted at the scene of the accident, and about some other tests (including an Intoxilyzer) that were recorded on videotape at the jail. The trial court denied the motion to suppress evidence.
Ten months later the parties agreed to have the court try the case without a jury. The appellant pleaded not guilty. The State introduced all the testimony from the hearing on the motion to suppress evidence. It also introduced the videotape recording from the jail. The court received a written stipulation in which the parties agreed that an individual would testify that, at the time and place alleged, he was "involved in a two car automobile accident" and the appellant "was operating the other motor vehicle involved in this accident." The court recessed the trial for another month.
When the trial resumed, the parties offered no further evidence, and the court closed the evidence. The State made no opening argument.
The appellant made an argument in three sentences, two of which asked the court to find the appellant not guilty. The third sentence was "an alternative argument; and it is that the Court, under the evidence as it is now, should find the defendant guilty only of the offense of driving while intoxicated, misdemeanor offense, first offense." He did not explain why the court should convict for only the lesser offense.
The State spoke one sentence of closing argument, asking that the court find the appellant guilty.
Then the Court said, "One thing I don't recall is, was evidence offered for the case in paragraphs?"
The State asked, "Maybe -- can we go off the record, please?"
The court granted the request, and there was a recess, after which the State said, "I would request to reopen."
Over the appellant's objection, the court granted the request, saying: "And it's always my policy if the defense or the State wants to reopen, especially on a TBC [trial before the court], that I just allow it that's just my standard practice. And if it's beyond the point when the law says it can happen in this case then -- I don't think it is, but if it is I'll let the Court of Appeals tell me it is because I don't think it is at this point."
The court then received evidence of the two prior convictions, found the appellant guilty of the felony offense, assessed punishment of five years in prison and a $500 fine, and suspended the imposition of the sentence for three years.
In the Court of Appeals
The appellant presented four issues to the Court of Appeals: (1) Evidence of his guilt should have been excluded because it was illegally obtained. (2) The evidence that he operated a motor vehicle was legally insufficient. (3) The evidence of one of his prior convictions was both inadmissible and insufficient because it was a case in which the conviction had been set aside under a section of the Community Supervision Statute, and therefore the trial court should be instructed to enter a judgment of conviction for a misdemeanor offense with only one prior conviction. (4) Allowing the State to present evidence after the arguments had concluded was error. (2)
The Court of Appeals rejected the first three issues and sustained the fourth. It said:
Article 36.02 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides:
The court shall allow testimony to be introduced at any time before the argument of a cause is concluded, if it appears that it is necessary to a due administration of justice.
Initially, we will address the State's contention that this article applies only to jury trials and has no application in a trial to the court. The State cites Case v. State, 624 S.W.2d 348, 350 (Tex. App. -- Dallas 1981, no pet.) to support its contention. In Case, the court held that Article 36.02 did not apply to a trial to the court and cited Reed v. State, 500 S.W.2d 497, 499-500 (Tex. Crim. App. 1973) to support its holding. In Reed, the prosecutor failed to read the enhancement portion of the indictment and the court failed to take the defendant's plea to the enhancement at a penalty stage of trial which was to the court. This was in apparent contravention of Tex. Code Crim. Proc. Ann. art. 36.01(1) (Vernon 1981). The Court of Criminal Appeals reasoned that as Article 36.01 was found in the chapter of the Code of Criminal Procedure entitled "Trial by Jury," Article 36.01(1) was inapplicable to a penalty stage of trial held to the court. Reed, 500 S.W.2d at 499-500. However, we note that there is authority that Article 36.02 applies to revocation of probations proceedings, a form of trial to the court. Cantu v. State, 662 S.W.2d 455, 458 (Tex. App. -- Corpus Christi 1983, no pet.). Further, early case law interpreting the statute indicated that it was error to allow the introduction of evidence after the conclusion of argument regardless of whether the trial was to the jury or to the court. Lockett v. State, 55 S.W. 336 (Tex. Crim. App. 1900).
Article 36.02 marks the limit beyond which no court is authorized to allow the introduction of testimony. See Williams v. State, 35 Tex. Crim. 183, 32 S.W. 893, 894 (1895) (construing substantially identical predecessor statute). Accordingly, a trial court errs by permitting additional testimony after the arguments of the parties have been concluded. See Reed v. State, 76 Tex. Crim. 335, 174 S.W. 1065, 1066 (1915); Lockett, 55 S.W. at 336; Ming v. State, 24 S.W. 29 (Tex. Crim. App. 1893). (3)
The Court of Appeals also made a fifth holding on an issue that the appellant had not raised: that "the evidence does not support felony DWI because the evidence of the prior convictions was not before the court at the guilt-innocence stage of trial." (4) It therefore reformed the judgment of guilt to one for a misdemeanor offense and remanded the case for a new trial on punishment.
In This Court
The State petitioned for discretionary review of only one issue, "Is art. 36.02 of the Code of Criminal Procedure applicable in a trial before the court?" (5) We granted review.
As the Court of Appeals' opinion said, the statute has not been amended in substance since 1856. (The only change was in 1965, when the initial letter of "court" became lower case.) During this time, the proportion of trials by jury has dwindled.
When the Sixth Legislature enacted the statute in 1856, (6) all accusations of crime were tried before a jury, whose verdict included an assessment of punishment as well as a finding of guilt unless the punishment was "absolutely fixed by law and beyond the discretion of the Jury to graduate in any manner." (7) In a trial before a jury, the jurors do not ask questions during argument, and it is clear when the argument has concluded.
In 1879, the Sixteenth Legislature limited the requirement of a jury on a plea of guilty to felony cases. (8) After the Supreme Court held in 1930 that the Sixth Amendment was not violated by the waiver of trial by jury in a criminal case in the federal courts, (9) the Forty-second Legislature quickly enacted a statute to permit the waiver of jury trial on guilt, as well as punishment, in all trials in which the death penalty was not possible. (10)
Since then, the trial by jury has become relatively infrequent. In the last state fiscal year, ninety-eight per cent of the judgments of conviction or acquittal in the district courts were entered without a trial by jury. (11) In the county-level courts, the figure was ninety-nine per cent. (12)
This issue of whether Article 36.02 applies to trial without jury is important. It is not clear that the issue is squarely before us. The subject of Article 36.02 is what a court must allow "before the argument of a cause is concluded." We are not sure whether the argument in this case was concluded, or how that should be determined.
In a trial without a jury, it is not so clear as in a jury trial that the argument of a cause has concluded. In this case the State argued, the trial court asked a question about the record, a party asked to go "off the record," and a recess was taken. Was the argument concluded?
On what basis can it be determined whether the argument was concluded? May a trial court ask questions during argument, or does the court's asking of a question conclude the argument? Is argument concluded if a party asks to speak "off the record"? Is argument concluded if a recess is taken? Is argument concluded only when the parties, or the court, say it has been concluded? Is it concluded only if they do not say that it has not been concluded? Is it concluded only when the court makes its finding of guilt? Is the determination that the argument has concluded made from a totality of the circumstances, from case to case? Whatever the basis, had the argument concluded in this case?
We think the parties should have the opportunity to brief the issue, and the Court of Appeals should have the opportunity to consider it. Therefore we shall remand the case to the Court of Appeals.
A remand also will give the parties an opportunity to brief, in light of a recent decision of this court, (13) the fifth issue that the Court of Appeals decided (that "the evidence does not support felony DWI because the evidence of the prior convictions was not before the court at the guilt-innocence stage of trial").
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is vacated and the case is remanded to that court for further consideration consistent with this opinion.
Delivered September 20, 2006.
Do Not Publish.
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