ACCEPTED
06-14-00162-CR
SIXTH COURT OF APPEALS
TEXARKANA, TEXAS
1/26/2015 9:45:16 PM
DEBBIE AUTREY
CLERK
NO. 06 – 14 – 00162 – CR
FILED IN
6th COURT OF APPEALS
IN THE SIXTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS TEXARKANA, TEXAS
TEXARKANA, TEXAS 1/26/2015 9:45:16 PM
DEBBIE AUTREY
Clerk
DENETRA HARRIS
Appellant,
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
Appellee
On appeal from County Court at Law Number One, Gregg County, Texas
Trial Court Case No. 2014-0382
BRIEF OF THE STATE OF TEXAS
– ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED IF GRANTED TO APPELLANT–
CARL DORROUGH
Criminal District Attorney
Zan Colson Brown
Texas Bar No. 03205900
Assistant Criminal District Attorney
Gregg County, Texas
101 East Methvin St., Suite 333
Longview, Texas 75601
Telephone: (903) 236–8440
Facsimile: (903) 236–3701
Email:zan.brown@co.gregg.tx.us
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES .................................................................................3
STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT ...........................................4
STATEMENT OF FACTS ....................................................................................5
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT .......................................................... 8
The search of the vehicle ARGUMENT ...............................................................9
1. The search of the vehicle was based on the burnt
marijuana that Trooper Player smelled at first contact;
the inventory of the vehicle was based on the fact that
it was going to be towed. ............................................................................9
A. Legal Standard ......................................................................................9
A. Application of Law to this Case ..........................................................10
2. The search and inventory were both justified................................................13
A. Did the State prove that DPS had a policy and the
trooper followed the policy regarding the opening of
containers? ..................................................................................................13
B. Did the trooper begin the inventory before he decided
to impound the car? ....................................................................................13
3. Did the Trial Court abuse her discretion by conditioning
the bond on the defendant’s paying $40 per month for
her court-appointed attorney?...................................................................18
A. This issue alleging an abuse of discretion in ordering
attorney-fee payments has never been brought to the
attention of the court, and therefore was not
preserved. .................................................................................................19
B. The Code of Criminal Procedure allows a court to pay in
installments an amount intended to offset the cost to
the county for attorney’s fees. ..................................................................20
4. Was Denetra Harris indigent at the time she requested the
Court to pay for appellate counsel and the reporter’s
record? ......................................................................................................22
PRAYER ...................................................................................................... 26
1
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ............................................................................27
CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ...................................................................28
2
INDEX OF AUTHORITIES
Federal Cases
Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 129 S. Ct. 1710, 173 L. Ed. 2d 485
(2009) ...................................................................................................... 10
United States v. Ross 456 U.S. 798 820-821, 102 S Ct 2157, 72
L.Ed. 2d 572 (1993) ........................................................................... 10,11
State Cases
Ex parte Anderer, 61 S.W.3d 398 (Tex. Crim. App. 2001) .................... 21, 22
Gray v. Robinson, 744 S.W.2d 604 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988) ....................... 25
McFatridge v. State, 309 S.W.3d 1 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) ........... 23, 24, 25
Ramadan v. State, 89 S.W.3d 744 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st
Dist.] 2002, no pet.) ................................................................................ 23
Snoke v. State, 780 S.W.2d 210 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989) ............................. 23
Speth v. State, 939 S.W.2d 769(Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.]
1997, no pet.), ......................................................................................... 21
Whitehead v. State, 130 S.W.3d 866 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) ............... 24, 25
State Statutes
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 1.051(b) (Vernon) ..................................... 24
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.04(l) ..................................................... 25
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.04(m) (Vernon).................................... 25
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.05(g) (Vernon) ..................................... 21
State Rules
Appellate Procedure, Rule 9 (2012).............................................................. 29
Tex. R. App. P. 20.2...................................................................................... 24
3
STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT
The State does not recognize any of Appellant’s issues as being of
first impression, and believes the briefs and record should suffice to form the
bases of this Court’s decision. Only if Appellant’s request for oral argument
were to be granted would the State request to be able to respond in kind.
4
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Denetra Harris was charged with possessing a controlled substance.
CR 5. On January 11, 2014, she was stopped by Trooper Mike Player for a
brake light infraction. SX 1 at 1:43; 2 RR 7, 9-10. His intent at that time was
to warn her, not to give her a ticket. SX 1 at 2:51. He also asked her at the
beginning whether that was her car, and she said yes.SX1 at 2:59. When she
could not produce a driver’s license or insurance, Player asked her to have a
seat in the front passenger seat of his car and she complied. SX 1at 4:45; 2
RR 17at 12-23. She was not handcuffed then.
Trooper Player, while she was seated in the car, very early in their
conversation, was contemplating a search, because he asked her about things
he would or would not find when he looked inside the car. SX 1 at 8:20. He
asked her again if she owned the car when the dispatcher told him the car
was registered to someone else. She said she had recently bought the car.
SX1 at 6:19, 9:12- 10:10.
Encouraging her to be honest with him, he asked her about marijuana
and paraphernalia that might be in her car because he had smelled it. SX 1
6:17-7:10.
He gave her a preliminary breath test. SX1 at 10:55.
5
When dispatch told him she had two warrants and Dre had none, he
informs dispatch that the two warrants need to be sent to the jail. SX1at
12:25 -13:02. He promptly walked around the car and began the cuffing
process, asking if she had anything she wanted to leave with Dennis, and at
the same time explaining why he could not release the car to Dennis. SX1 at
13:11, approximately.
Trooper Player asks Dennis if he has a licensed driver nearby who can
take possession of the car, and Dennis replies “No.” SX1 13:52 to 14:14.
This causes Harris to ask, either “Can you call somebody to get you?” or
“Can he call somebody to get him?” then she added, “Somebody with a
driver’s license.”
Out of camera range, Trooper Player apparently searched Dennis, and
asked him if he had anything in his shoes. SX 1 15:07 to 15:18.
Next, Dennis can be seen talking on the phone and Player asks if he is
calling his mama to come get him. SX1 at 15:30. He follows that with a
question about his mother’s location, the answer to which is inaudible, but
Player immediately calls for a tow truck and notifies dispatch to “Show me
10-6 on a vehicle search.” SX1 at 15:44 and 16:00. He immediately began
the search.
6
He found the Xanax at minute 16:39. About a minute later he asked
Dennis how close he lived to their location, and tells Dennis that the car was
going to be towed. SX 1 at 17:45.
Player told Harris about adding the possession of Xanax charge to her
other ones, and that her car would be towed. SX1 at 19:50, 21:15.
Still searching the car, talking to himself or into the recorder, he says
he can still smell weed, and he smells it bad. 22:25.
The tow truck arrived. SX1 at 27.03. Player informed dispatch that
Harris was in custody and added possession of a controlled substance to the
other charges. SX1 at 28:00-28:11
Dennis left camera range because his ride was there, and Player
assured the other officer that he was good to go. SX1 at 29.05. No evidence
can be seen or heard on the video that indicates there was a second licensed
driver to drive Harris’ car away. Harris nevertheless asks again to let
someone else take the car. SX 1 at 29:09-29:27. The tow truck driver had
already pulled up in front of Harris’ car and had apparently begun the
preparations for attaching the car to the truck. The trooper concentrated on
writing his report rather than explaining it to her again. The tow truck driver
entered the car to prepare it for being lifted. SX 1 at 31.30.
7
SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENT
The trooper had two valid reasons to enter the car on the night of
Denetra Harris’ arrest: He had probable cause to search for evidence of
marijuana use because he smelled burnt marijuana at the first contact, and
after he decided to impound the car, he was required to inventory it. Her
counsel refers to the inventory as an inventory search. The judge correctly
ruled that the trooper was authorized to search for evidence of criminal
activity and was also required to inventory the car prior to a reasonable
impoundment. He gave the defendant a reasonable time to make
arrangements. No licensed driver showed up to take care of her car.
The search and inventory overlapped, but the trooper, whom the judge
found to be credible, testified that he followed the D. P. S. procedures. He
did not begin to search before he decided to impound the car, and he opened
all the containers, although he could not recall every container he opened.
The order for Harris to repay a portion of her attorney’s fees was a
part of her “pretrial” supervision obligations. She had an appointed attorney
“in the interests of justice,” not because she was indigent. The judge
believed that she could, with the help of her live-in boyfriend of seven years,
who helped support her, afford the monthly payment.
8
ARGUMENT
I. The search of the vehicle was based on the burnt marijuana that
Trooper Player smelled at first contact; the inventory of the vehicle
was based on the fact that it was going to be towed.
A. Legal Standard
In his first issue, Appellant contends that the inventory of the vehicle
violated the law. The United States Supreme Court ruled, in Gant, that a search
of an automobile’s passenger compartment incident to a recent occupant’s arrest
only if it is reasonable to believe that the arrestee might access the vehicle at the
time of the search or that the vehicle contains evidence of the offense of arrest.
Arizona v. Gant, 556 U.S. 332, 129 S. Ct. 1710, 173 L. Ed. 2d 485 (2009).
Although the Supreme Court in Arizona v. Gant rejected the previously
acceptable “incident to arrest” reason for a warrantless search of a vehicle, the
Gant Court nevertheless left intact the exception to the Fourth Amendment
warrant requirement set forth in United States v. Ross, 456 U.S. 798, 820-821, 102
S. Ct. 2157, 72 L. Ed. 2d 572 (1982), where, if there is probable cause to believe a
vehicle contains evidence of criminal activity, officers are still authorized to
search “any area of the vehicle in which the evidence might be found.” Gant, 556
U.S., 347.
The arresting officer had probable cause to search the vehicle for
evidence of a crime, which is an exception to the warrant requirement, even
after Gant.
9
If there is probable cause to believe a vehicle contains evidence of
criminal activity, Ross, 456 U.S., 820-821 authorizes a search of any area of
a vehicle in which the evidence might be found.
A. Application of Law to this Case
There are two different reasons why Trooper Mike Player entered Denetra Harris’
car. He had the right to search it to look for evidence of marijuana. 2 RR 27, 43. He had
smelled burnt marijuana from the very first contact with Denetra Harris at her car. SX 1;
2 RR 28. Additionally, she had admitted to having ingested marijuana. 2 RR 43. While
he was searching the car, looking for marijuana, he had authority to search inside any
container which could have contained marijuana. Searching for marijuana, he found the
four Xanax pills inside a bottle which had once held an over-the-counter pain reliever.
SX1. He continued searching for marijuana even after finding the Xanax.
He also had a second reason to be inside that car. He was required to
inventory the car prior to the car’s being towed. This inventory was the focus of
countless questions at the hearing on the motion to suppress, but it was not the
main reason for the search.
Appellant believed that the trooper was using the impound as a pretext to
search the car, but the trooper’s testimony refuted that.
Q. You know that when the car gets impounded, you're going to
search it, right?
A. I'm not going to search it. I'm going to inventory its contents.
Q. That's a search, is it not?
10
A. Inventory and search, two separate things. A search is I'm
looking for something specific.
Q. But when you impound a car, you're going to go through
every nook and cranny in that car and find out everything that's
inside it?
A. I'm going to inventory the contents, sir.
2 RR 23.
Additionally, when Mr. Wharton asked, “Okay. So you start searching
the car before an impound is even the decision in the case, before it's even
been decided?” The State did not object to the question as based on facts not
in evidence, but they might have. A close viewing of the video shows that he
made the decision to search from the very beginning and to inventory after
determining that the person Dennis had called would not arrive soon enough.
He made the decision to impound the car when he asked dispatch to call the
tow truck. After the tow truck was on its way, whenever he was asked about
it, he replied that the car was being towed. He started searching the vehicle
as soon as the tow truck was on its way, and the search gradually became an
inventory as he checked with Dennis to allow her to take the money in her
purse and agree with his report of the inventory.
When Wharton asked him the question about searching before the
decision to impound was made, Trooper Player responded, “There's
probable cause on the video, sir, to be in that car well before an impound
was ever called.” 2 RR 27. When Wharton asked for an explanation, the
11
trooper said, “The odor of burnt marijuana and alcohol beverages is probable
cause to search a vehicle.” 2 RR 28. Then the Trooper affirmed that
probable cause existed even without a warrant. 2 RR 28.
On appeal, Appellant still questions whether the impound was lawful,
challenging it by assuming that someone else was available to drive the car
away for Ms. Harris. The video, however, shows no such person. The
passenger, Dre Dennis, had no license. Appellant argues that Dennis started
making phone calls at Harris’ request. Appellant’s Brief at 6, citing SX1 at
13:50. On being asked by the trooper whether he knew a licensed driver
nearby who could come and take possession of the car, Dennis says “no.”
SX1 at 13:58 to 14:13. The next part of the conversation is out of camera
range, and not clearly audible. It is unclear whether Harris asked for Dennis
to be able to call someone to take the car or just to pick up Dennis, but she
clearly requests someone with a license. SX 1 at approximately14:20.
Dennis suggests his mother, and Harris agrees. SX 1 at approximately 14:24.
Whoever eventually arrived to pick up Dennis never came into view on
camera and no voice can be heard offering to show a license and take the
car. The trooper testified that he or she was a lone occupant. Contrary to the
defense attorney’s assertion about the timing of the decision, Trooper Player
had decided the car would have to be towed when Dennis responded to the
12
trooper’s question about how far away the mother was. SX 1 at 15:44. That
is when he told the dispatcher to send a tow truck—in the fifteenth minute of
the video. He told Dennis and Harris separately that the car was being
towed. SX 1 at 17:45 and 21.15. The tow truck had arrived and begun setting
up when Dennis’ ride finally arrived. SX 1 at 27:03 and 29:05.
Ms. Harris repeated her request that someone else be allowed to take
her car, but at that point, the tow truck was there and setting up, and no
licensed driver ever offered to drive Harris’ car away. The presumably
licensed driver who picked up Dennis was only one person and could not
have driven two cars away. 2 RR 26.
The trooper’s offer to allow another licensed driver to take the car was
reasonably extended until the time he determined that whoever might be coming
was too far away. He was not required to remain there indefinitely to wait. His
efforts to accommodate the defendant were reasonable.
II. The search and inventory were both justified.
A. Did the State prove that DPS had a policy and the trooper
followed the policy regarding the opening of containers?
and
B. Did the trooper begin the inventory before he decided to
impound the car?
13
The State finds it difficult to treat these two sub-issues separately, as
they are so intertwined.
The State’s witness, Trooper Mike Player testified that to the best of
his knowledge, he followed D.P. S. policy in conducting the inventory. 2 RR
34. He also said that an inventory is required when a car is impounded. 2 RR
23. He explained that the purpose of an inventory is to identify the contents
of the vehicle. 2 RR 24. A secondary purpose is to protect the owner and the
department from claims of lost property stolen property, vandalized
property, or even if there’s something dangerous in the car. 2 RR 24. When
asked, “It’s not to discover evidence in a case, right?” Player responded,
“It’s to inventory the contents, sir.”
The next questions followed after defense counsel read an excerpt
from the D.P.S. policy requiring the person impounding a vehicle to give
“prime consideration” to the owner or person in control of the vehicle. 2 RR
25. Player testified that Harris had made it clear that she wanted the car to be
released to a licensed driver, not impounded. 2 RR 26. He agreed that he had
at first offered to let a licensed driver take the car, if they could have been
there within a reasonable time—about fifteen to twenty minutes. Defense
counsel asserts that a licensed driver actually showed up to drive the car
14
away, but the trooper denied this, saying that the driver, a lone occupant,
arrived to pick up Dennis, but not to drive Harris’ car. 2 RR 26.
When defense counsel accused the trooper of starting to search the car
before deciding to impound the car, he was mistaken. The decision to
impound the car was made before that—when he called the tow truck—after
Trooper Player asked Dennis how far away his mother was. That was at
minute 15:44. He immediately told dispatch to call the tow truck and he then
began searching the vehicle. The search was based on the smell of burnt
marijuana he encountered at first contact. 2 RR 27, 28.
Defense counsel at trial, and again on appeal, continues to blend an
inventory and a search by referring to an “inventory search,” but in the
trooper’s mind, they are different procedures, with different purposes. 2 RR
28. He found the pills in a search for which he had probable cause. 2 RR 29.
Player did say it was a search incident to arrest, (2 RR 29), but what
he described was really a search for evidence, which is not prohibited by
Gant v. Arizona. See Legal Standard, in Issue One. See also 2 RR 27-28.
Defense counsel began talking about opening containers near the end
of his direct examination of Trooper Player 2 RR 36- 38. Three times he
said he opened all the containers in the car. 2 RR 36, 37. He could not name
every container he opened. 2 RR 37. Defense Counsel attempted to get
15
Player to say that because he could not quote the D.P.S. policy on opening
containers, and because he could not remember what containers were in the
car, that he did not know what the policy was. Player said he did know the
policy, but could not remember every container in the car. 2 RR 37 – 38. He
recalled some items of value she had and said he had noted them on the
video, but found nothing illegal after the Xanax. 2 RR 38. The video shows
a black bag and a purse. Nothing in the testimony or the video shows a
container he did not open.
On cross examination by the State, He twice again stated the
inventory was done according to D.P. S. standard inventory procedure. 2 RR
43, 45. That testimony by the experienced trooper was credible and
sufficient to convince the trial court. Her ruling should be affirmed.
Defense counsel based a portion of his argument on the false
assumption that the trooper first began searching the car before he actually
made the decision to impound it. 4 RR 6, 8. From the citations given earlier,
one can see that he made the decision to impound the car when he called for
a tow truck, which was just before he started his search for evidence of
marijuana combined with an inventory.
The prosecutor acknowledged that the search incident to arrest was
not the correct term to use in this case. She argued that the inventory was
16
reasonable as the alternative proffered by Ms. Harris on the night of her
arrest was not a reasonable alternative. There was no other licensed driver
available to take possession of the car.
The Court’s pertinent findings on the motion to suppress include the
following:
While standing at the driver's door, Trooper Player smelled a strong
odor of marijuana coming from the interior of the vehicle. He also
smelled an odor of an alcoholic beverage emitting from the defendant,
the driver of the vehicle. The defendant admitted, during the
investigation, the odor of marijuana was loud and admitted she had
consumed alcohol earlier.
....
The trooper was advised that the defendant had outstanding warrants
approximately 12 and-a-half minutes after the video began.
2 RR 13.
The evidence before the State does not show that the defendant nor
the passenger responded or suggested that they had a [licensed driver].
The trooper calls for a wrecker. The officer inventoried the vehicle
after calling for the wrecker, finding Xanax in an Advil bottle. The
wrecker arrived on the scene 27 minutes after the video began, State's
Exhibit No. 1. At this time, no one had arrived on the scene
suggesting they could drive the vehicle. At this time, the defendant
had not indicated to the trooper that she knew of anyone with a license
that could drive the vehicle.
A couple of minutes after the wrecker arrived and after the inventory
had been conducted, the defendant did ask to let someone take her car
so she wouldn't have to pay an impound fee, but the facts before the
Court at no time suggest that anyone was actually named or suggested
that they would actually be coming to take the vehicle. The facts in
evidence before the Court indicate that neither passenger or driver
ever advised Trooper Player that anyone was on their way or available
to take possession of the car with a license.
2 RR 14.
17
I find that the arrest of the defendant for outstanding warrants was
lawful. I find that the inventory of defendant's vehicle, prior to
releasing the vehicle to the wrecker service, was in accordance with
D.P.S. policy and was reasonable under all the circumstances of this
case. Additionally, I conclude that the strong odor of marijuana that
was emitting from the interior of the car also provided probable cause
for the trooper to search the vehicle.
2 RR 15.
Because the evidence showed and the Court ruled that Trooper Player
had not one, but two valid reasons to enter the car, the judge did not suppress
the evidence he found there. The ruling was correctly based on the evidence
from the video and the credible testimony from Trooper Player. This Court
should find that she did not abuse her discretion in denying the motion to
suppress.
III. It was not an abuse of discretion to order defendant to pay $40
per month for her court-appointed appellate attorney.
The judge issued an order placing Harris on pre-trial services on
August 27, 2014. CR 51. In that document, she ordered Harris to pay $40
per month to help defray the costs of her appellate attorney’s fee. She had
previously been ordered to pay $25 per month during the pendency of her
trial for her trial attorney, but had not been keeping up with that or with her
supervisory fees; she was $47 dollars behind on attorney’s fees at her
sentencing hearing. 5 RR 9. The judge also ordered conditions of appellate
bond on a separate sheet, in which she referenced the meeting the
18
obligations of pretrial supervision. CR. 57-59. She also appointed Mr.
Wharton to process the appeal on the same day. In the order appointing him,
there is a choice for the judge to indicate whether she is appointing him
because Harris is indigent or in the interest of justice. “Interest of justice” is
marked, not because the defendant is indigent. CR 52.
B. This issue alleging an abuse of discretion in ordering
attorney-fee payments has never been brought to the
attention of the court, and therefore was not preserved.
This issue has not been brought before the trial court. Consequently,
it was not preserved. A more appropriate remedy would have been a motion
to amend the bond conditions, which could have been made at any time she
was out on bond. If the trial court had been given an opportunity to address
the issue, she might have reconsidered. The appellant filed a motion for a
free appellate record on September 19, 2014. CR 67-69.1 In it she does not
mention her ability to pay attorney’s fees. In fact, her September 19, 2014,
affidavit says that “My boyfriend supports me, and my family has helped me
1
The undersigned attorney has diligently looked for a place in either the clerk’s
record or the reporter’s record where the judge actually ordered Harris to pay for the
record, and has not found it. There is a motion for a free record, but I can find no order
setting hearing on it and no written order granting or denying it. The record has
nevertheless been prepared, and there are blanks--not filled in on my copy—saying how
much the record costs to prepare, and who has been or will be ordered to pay for it.
19
pay for my bond and the other financial obligations involved in this case.”
CR 69.
C. The Code of Criminal Procedure allows a court to make
payments intended to offset in part, the cost to the county
for attorney’s fees.
The trial court is allowed, under certain circumstances, to order the
defendant to pay something toward the attorney’s fees during the pendency
of the case.
If the court determines that a defendant has financial resources that
enable him to offset in part or in whole the costs of the legal services
provided, including any expenses and costs, the court shall order the
defendant to pay during the pendency of the charges or, if convicted,
as court costs the amount that it finds the defendant is able to pay.
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.05(g) (Vernon) (Vernon).
Appellant’s cases are distinguishable; none deal with attorney’s fees
as a condition of pretrial supervision.
The Valenciano and Speth cases, cited by Appellant’s brief at page 17,
are not really on point. In Valenciano, the condition was that required the
appellant to stay from his family during the appeal, and in Speth, the trial
court prohibited appellant from working as a chiropractor during the appeal.
Neither of these was reasonable, according to the Speth opinion. Speth v.
State, 939 S.W.2d 769, 771 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 1997, no
pet.), disapproved of by Ex parte Anderer, 61 S.W.3d 398 (Tex. Crim. App.
20
2001), disapproved of by Ex parte Ex parte Anderer, 61 S.W.3d 398 (Tex.
Crim. App. 2001).
“In Easton, the court found that an appeal bond condition requiring
appellant to pay $ 44.50 in court costs was an abuse of discretion because it
had nothing to do with securing appellant's appearance in court.” . This
holding is distinguishable because court costs are not imposed until after a
conviction is final. The costs imposed here are to offset some of the costs of
the appeal, and they are payable during the pendency of the appeal, quite
different from court costs, which have nothing at all to do with securing
appellant’s appearance during the appeal.
Unlike the cases mentioned above, paying for one’s own attorney is a
way to keep the client invested in her appeal and in contact with her pretrial
supervisor and will encourage her to appear.
Appellant’s Issue III should be resolved in favor of the State.
21
IV. Denetra Harris was not presumed indigent at the time she
requested the Court to pay for appellate counsel and the reporter’s
record.
Appellant asserts as Issue IV that the State failed to rebut the
presumption that Harris is indigent and should not have to pay attorney’s
fees. Was it the state’s burden?
The defendant bears the initial burden when claiming indigence, once
the defendant meets the burden of production, the burden shifts to the State
to produce evidence that the defendant is not indigent See Snoke v. State,
780 S.W.2d 210, 213 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989); Ramadan v. State, 89 S.W.3d
744, 746 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2002, no pet.).
Once the State has produced evidence of the defendant’s assets that
would show non-indigence, the defendant may need to present rebutting
evidence. One defendant argued insufficient evidence of the trial court’s
finding of non-indigence because the State had failed to present evidence
that the antiques in question could be sold or whether the defendant owned
them. McFatridge v. State, 309 S.W.3d 1, 8 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010). The
Court of Criminal Appeals held that the issue should have been settled at the
trial level; the defendant had the burden to present additional, supporting
evidence at the indigence hearing. Id.
22
This Court has adopted a two-step process to guide courts in making
indigency determinations for purposes of a free record for appeal.
First, the defendant must make a prima facie showing of indigency.
n18 Once the defendant satisfies this initial burden of production, the
burden then shifts to the State to show that the defendant is not, in
fact, indigent. n19 This means, essentially, that unless there is some
basis in the record to find the defendant's prima facie showing to be
inaccurate or untrue, the trial court should accept it as sufficient to
find him indigent. After a defendant establishes a prima facie showing
of indigency, "an appellate court can uphold a trial court's
determination of non-indigence only if the record contains evidence
supporting such a determination." n21 In Whitehead, we recognized
that the two-step process outlined above also applies when
determining whether a person is indigent for purposes of appointed
counsel. A reviewing court should uphold a trial court's ruling
denying indigent status only if it finds that the trial court, having
utilized this two-step process, "reasonably" believed the defendant
was not indigent.
McFatridge, 309 S.W.3d at 6(internal references to footnoted citations
omitted.)
Standard of Review
A defendant claiming indigence in order to have appellate counsel
appointed must show that he is “not financially able to employ counsel.” n11
Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 1.051(b) (Vernon). A defendant claiming
indigence in order to get a free copy of the record must show that he is not
able to “pay or give security for the appellate record.” TEX. R. APP. P. 20.2.
A trial court makes a ruling when the issue is raised on a case-by-case basis.
Whitehead v. State, 130 S.W.3d 866, 874 (Tex. Crim. App. 2004) (quoting
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Gray v. Robinson, 744 S.W.2d 604, 607 (Tex. Crim. App. 1988)). There are
two separate questions to answer, but the answers will be based on the same
elements. See Whitehead, 130 S.W.3d at 878. It is possible for a trial court
to appoint counsel, but make the defendant pay for the record, or vice versa.
Id. Factors to consider in both decisions are these: “the defendant's income,
source of income, assets, property owned, outstanding obligations, necessary
expenses, the number and ages of dependents, and spousal income that is
available to the defendant." Tex. Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.04(m)
(Vernon). Each county should develop guidelines that it uses to determine
whether a defendant is indigent for purposes of appointing counsel. Tex.
Crim. Proc. Code Ann. art. 26.04(l). McFatridge, 309 S.W.3d at 5-6.
Application.
Appellate counsel bases his argument for indigence on a false
premise: “Ms. Harris has been indigent throughout the course of the case.
She was initially appointed a lawyer by the court for that reason.”
Appellant’s Brief at 19. He cites the court to page 16 of the Clerk’s Record,
which does not show indigence. In the order appointing counsel at the
bottom of the page, where the judge chooses to base the appointment on
either indigence or the interest of judgment, she selected “the interests of
justice.” CR 16.
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Additionally, the Court mentioned at the beginning of the Hearing on
Bond and Indigency that she had not held a prior hearing on indigence. 5 RR
6. There was therefore no presumption of continued indigence as Appellant
claims.
The State put on evidence that Randy Williams paid her bills. She
testified that he helped her with rent, utilities, clothing and food. 5 RR 26.
She also stated she received financial aid as a student, which allowed her the
discretion to allot to meet her needs, including legal fees, perhaps. 5 RR 25-
27. During the judge’s inquiry, Harris stated she and Williams had a
relationship that had lasted approximately seven years.
The judge signed the order appointing appellate counsel, again
declining to select indigence as a reason. CR 52. After the judgment, Harris
filed a post-judgment motion for a free record. In the attached affidavit, as
mentioned before, she swore “My boyfriend supports me, and my family has
helped me pay for my bond and the other financial obligations involved in
this case.” CR 69. Attorney’s fees, or at least a part of them, are a part of
the “other financial obligations involved in this case” and her family will
help her with these, or she will get a job, or she will use her financial aid
money to pay.
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This Court should resolve this issue in favor of the State and affirm
the trial court’s rulings.
PRAYER
For the foregoing reasons, there is no reversible error, and the State
prays that the sentence be affirmed in all respects.
Respectfully Submitted,
/s/Zan Colson Brown
Zan Colson Brown
Texas Bar No. 03205900
Assistant Criminal District Attorney
101 East Methvin St., Suite 333
Longview, TX 75601
Telephone: (903) 236–8440
Facsimile: (903) 236–3701
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I certify that a true and correct copy of the above and foregoing has
been forwarded to all counsel of record by certified mail, return receipt
requested and/or facsimile to:
Mr. Jonathan Wharton
SNOW E. BUSH, JR., P.C.
Texas Bar No: 24075764
420 N. Center Street
Longview, TX 75601
Email: jonathanwharton1@sbcglobal.net
this 22nd day of January, 2015.
/s/ Zan Colson Brown
Zan Colson Brown
Assistant Criminal District Attorney
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CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
I certify that the foregoing document complies with Texas Rules of
Appellate Procedure, Rule 9 (2014) regarding length of documents, in that
exclusive of caption, identity of parties and counsel, statement regarding oral
argument, table of contents, index of authorities, statement of the case,
statement of issues presented, statement of jurisdiction, statement of
procedural history, signature, proof of service, certification, certificate of
compliance, and appendix, it consists of 5,070 words.
/s/Zan Colson Brown
Zan Colson Brown
Assistant Criminal District Attorney
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