IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. PD-0383-14
ERIC RAY PRICE, JR., Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
FROM THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
HAMILTON COUNTY
Y EARY, J., filed a concurring opinion.
CONCURRING OPINION
I agree that we ought to affirm the judgment of the court of appeals in this case. But
my reasoning differs from the Court’s, which I find problematic. I write separately to explain
why I hesitate to join the Court’s opinion if not its judgment.
Tracking the statutory language, the indictment charged that Appellant:
intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly cause[d] bodily injury to [the victim],
a person with whom the defendant had or had had a dating relationship, as
described by Section 71.0021(b), Family Code, by intentionally, knowingly,
Price — 2
or recklessly impeding the normal breathing or circulation of the blood of the
said [victim] by applying pressure to the throat or neck of the said [victim].
The Court concludes that “the second set of culpable mental states applies only to the result
of impeding breathing or circulation of the blood[.]” Majority opinion at 9. Because the
Court concludes that this element, which raises the offense to third-degree-felony status, is
a result-of-conduct element for purposes of Section 6.03 of the Penal Code, T EX. P ENAL
C ODE § 6.03, it holds that the trial court did not err in neglecting to submit an abstract
instruction to the jury with respect to required culpability relating nature-of-conduct
elements.1 It was enough, the Court reasons, that the trial court gave an abstract instruction
with respect to how intentional, knowing, and reckless should each be understood to apply
to the result of conduct.
I am not so confident. To me, impeding the breath or circulation sounds a lot more
like the description of a type of conduct than the description of a particular result of conduct.
Certainly, causing bodily injury is a result-oriented offense. But when the statute goes on to
proscribe a very particular way of causing that result—by impeding breath or
1
“[T]he instruction properly defined the offense as solely a result of conduct and was not
erroneous.” Majority opinion at 9.
I presume that what Appellant would have had the trial court instruct the jury is that: “A person
acts intentionally, or with intent, with respect to the nature of his conduct when it is his conscious
objective or desire to engage in the conduct. A person acts knowingly, or with knowledge, with respect
to the nature of his conduct when he is aware of the nature of his conduct.” T EX. P ENAL C ODE §
6.03(a) and (b). I am not sure what Appellant would have had the trial court instruct the jury with
respect to recklessness, since Section 6.03(c) does not provide an abstract definition of recklessness
as it applies to the nature of conduct. T EX. P ENAL C ODE § 6.03(c).
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circulation—and then makes that particular way of causing bodily injury a more serious
offense, it seems to me that the Legislature has veered into nature-of-conduct territory. I
suppose one could say that the result of the actor’s conduct is that his victim’s breathing or
circulation has been impeded. But that does not seem the more natural reading to me. One
could just as readily argue that aggravated sexual assault (as that offense is variously defined
by statute) is a result-of-conduct offense because, after all, the result of the conduct is that
the victim has been sexually assaulted. But we do not say that. See Vick v. State, 991 S.W.2d
830, 832 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (“Article 22.021 [of the Texas Penal Code] is a conduct-
oriented offense in which the legislature criminalized very specific conduct of several
different types.”).
I realize that the culpable mental state of recklessness does not ordinarily apply to
nature-of-conduct offenses—at least not in contemplation of chapter six of the Penal Code.
Section 6.03(c) defines recklessness only in terms of result of conduct and circumstances
surrounding conduct, not nature of conduct. T EX. P ENAL C ODE § 6.03(c). But I doubt this
is the first time (or that it will be the last) that the Legislature has ascribed a reckless culpable
mental state to a nature-of-conduct-seeming offense, whether deliberately or inadvertently.
And we would be hard pressed to hold that the Legislature may not!
All of that said, in the final analysis, on the facts of this particular case, I do not think
it much matters whether the particular statutory aggravator (impeding the breath or
circulation) is a result-of-conduct element or a nature-of-conduct element. Appellant did not
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object, so he must demonstrate that any error caused him egregious harm. The application
paragraph required the jury to find, if it was to convict Appellant, that he:
intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly cause[d] bodily injury to [the victim]
. . . by intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly impeding the normal breathing
or circulation of the blood of [the victim] . . .
I find it difficult to conceive how the jury could have been seriously disadvantaged by the
absence of an abstract definition with respect to mental culpability as it applies to nature-of-
conduct offenses. The jury was told that, in order to convict, it must find that it was
Appellant’s conscious objective to cause the result (or that he was reasonably certain his
conduct would cause the result) that the victim’s breath or circulation would be impeded. The
difference between the instruction given and what Appellant now claims the trial court
should have submitted—that, before it could convict, the jury must find that it was
Appellant’s conscious objective or desire to engage in the conduct of impeding the breath or
circulation of the victim (or that he must have been aware he was engaging in that
conduct)—appears to me to be negligible. Perhaps it is not a coincidence that the difference
should seem negligible when it is so hard to distinguish, in the first place, whether the statute
with respect to the “impeding element” proscribes a particular type of conduct or, instead,
a particular result that is the product of undifferentiated conduct!2 Choking is choking; it is
2
The trial court undoubtedly deliberately avoided instructing the jury broadly under the terms
of Section 6.03 of the Penal Code out of a concern not to contravene the holding of cases such as Cook
v. State, 884 S.W.2d 485 (Tex. Crim. App. 1994). Cook held that it constitutes jury charge error to
submit culpable-mental-state definitions in the abstract portion of the jury charge that pertain to
elements of conduct that do not appear in the particular penal offense at issue in the case. For example,
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hard to imagine a jury that would find that Appellant intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly
caused an impediment to the victim’s breath or blood flow but would also fail to find that he
intentionally or knowingly engaged in conduct that impeded those bodily functions.
Whatever the difference may be, it is certainly not enough to say that Appellant has suffered
egregious harm. That is to say, it did not affect the very basis of the case, deprive Appellant
of a valuable right, or vitally affect a defensive theory. Stuhler v. State, 218 S.W.3d 706, 719
(Tex. Crim. App. 2007). For this reason, I concur in the Court’s judgment.
FILED: April 15, 2015
PUBLISH
Cook itself involved a prosecution for intentional murder, which is a purely “result of conduct”
offense. Id. at 490. We held that the trial court erred to submit language in the abstract-definitions
portion of the jury charge with respect to how culpable mental states should apply to nature-of-conduct
and circumstances-surrounding-conduct elements: “It is error for a trial judge to not limit the
definitions of the culpable mental states as they relate to the conduct elements involved in the particular
offense.” Id. at 491. Accordingly, we reversed and remanded for a harm analysis under Almanza v.
State, 686 S.W.2d 157 (Tex. Crim. App. 1985) (op. on State’s motion for reh’g). Id. at 491-92.
That our holding in Cook was misguided is, to my way of thinking, well illustrated by the facts
of the instant case. Had the jury been instructed under the complete terms of Section 6.03 with respect
to the proper application of culpable mental states regarding every conduct element, Appellant would
have no grounds for complaint today. Regardless of whether the jury regarded the impeding of the
victim’s breath or blood as nature of conduct or result of conduct, it would have been equipped to
apply the law to the facts. To the extent that the jury charge might also contain definitions that the jury
did not need, that information would have constituted no more than “merely superficial abstraction,”
which, we have held, “never produces reversible error in the court’s charge because it has no effect
on the jury’s ability fairly and accurately to implement the commands of the application paragraph or
paragraphs.” Plata v. State, 926 S.W.2d 300, 302-03 (Tex. Crim. App. 1996), overruled on other
grounds, Malik v. State, 953 S.W.2d 234, 239 (Tex. Crim. App. 1997) (overruling “the Benson/Boozer
line of cases”). I would invite the Court to revisit Cook at its earliest appropriate opportunity. Because
there is no egregious harm in any event in Appellant’s case, we need not do so today.