ACCEPTED
03-14-00633-CR
3954837
THIRD COURT OF APPEALS
AUSTIN, TEXAS
1/29/2015 4:19:52 PM
JEFFREY D. KYLE
CLERK
No. 03-14-00633-CR
In the FILED IN
3rd COURT OF APPEALS
Court of Appeals for the Third District of Texas AUSTIN, TEXAS
at Austin 1/29/2015 4:19:52 PM
___________________________ JEFFREY D. KYLE
Clerk
On Appeal from the 368th Judicial District Court, of
Williamson County, Texas
In Cause No. 13-0197-K277
____________________________
THE STATE OF TEXAS
Appellant
v.
JOHN ALLEN WACHTENDORF, JR.,
Appellee
_____________________________
STATE’S RESPOSNSE TO APPELLANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
_____________________________
TO THE HONORABLE COURT:
COMES NOW Appellant, the State of Texas, by and through the
undersigned assistant district attorney, and files this response to Appellant’s
Motion to Dismiss.
The State contends that this Court should hear this appeal because it is
fundamentally unfair to deny any party, including the State, its right to appeal
when it had no notice of a signed order from which it could appeal. This is
particularly true when the State, unlike a defendant, cannot appeal an oral ruling,
leaving the State no option for appeal prior to the signing of said order.
In support hereof, Appellant would show this Court the following:
I.
Appellee filed his Motion to Suppress on January 16, 2014. The trial court
held a hearing on the Motion to Suppress on February 14, 2014, but did not
announce its ruling until a further hearing on July 7, 2014. This announcement
was made orally, in open court, and the State immediately announced its desire to
appeal the trial court’s decision. R.R. vol. 3 p.51. On August 19, 2014, the State
filed a Motion to Reconsider the granting of the motion to suppress.
The trial court subsequently held a hearing on the State’s motion on
September 25, 2014 and heard additional evidence regarding its decision. At the
conclusion of that hearing, trial counsel for Appellee argued that the state had
waived its right to appeal by failing to timely file notice of appeal. R.R. vol. 4 p.64.
The trial court then stated, “the only issue is whether it needs to be in writing,”
indicating the court was not clear on whether there yet existed a signed order. R.R.
vol. 4 p.65. Defense counsel then stated that there was, in fact, a signed, written
order, dated July 7, 2014, to which both attorneys representing the State
immediately responded they had no notice or knowledge of the existence of any
such order. R.R. vol. 4 p.66. The trial court looked, then found the order and noted
that it had not been file-stamped by the clerk. R.R. vol. 4 p.67. That signed order
1
Although Appellee attached portions of the transcript as exhibits, Appellant will cite directly to the reporter’s
record for clarity as Appellant notes that the reporter’s record was filed with the court in this case on January 9,
2015.
was then filed by the clerk on September 25, 2014, eighty days after the judgment
was apparently signed. The State filed its notice of appeal five days after this
hearing on September 30, 2014.
II.
While Appellee cites Rodarte v. State, 860 S.W.2d 108 (Tex. Crim. App.
1993) for the general proposition that an oral ruling prevails over a written order,
the court in Rodarte was addressing a defendant’s right to appeal and drew a
distinction between the procedures for that right and the State’s right to appeal.
The court specifically stated:
The court of appeals construed the rule to provide: “When a defendant appeals from a
conviction in a criminal case, the time to file notice of appeals runs from the date sentence
is imposed or suspended in open court. When some other action of the trial court is
appealed, such as that from which the State may appeal in article 44.01[, V.A.C.C.P.] or a
habeas corpus matter from which the applicant may appeal, the appellate timetable begins
with the signing of the particular order.² Rodarte, supra at 784-85.” We agree. Rodarte at
109.
and
Appellant reminds us that in State v. Rosenbaum, 818S.W.2d 398 (Tex.Cr.App. 1991), we
held that a State’s notice of appeal from an order dismissing a portion of the indictment
begins on the day the trial court signed the order. For purposes of Article 44.01(d),
V.A.C.C.P., we construed entered by the court to mean signed by the trial judge. Rodarte
at 110.
The Rodarte court then held that the Rosenbaum decision’s requirement of written
order for State’s ability to appeal “does not impede our conclusion that notice of
appeal following a judgment of conviction must be filed within thirty days after the
sentence is imposed or suspended in open court, according to the plain terms of
Rule 41(b)(1).” Id.
Under Rodarte and Rosenbaum, the latter being the primary case on this
issue generally, the Court of Criminal Appeals has held that an order must be
signed to be entered for the purposes of starting the calculation of the State’s
deadline to file its notice of appeal. Further, more recently in 2012, the Court of
Criminal Appeals again reaffirmed this general principle in holding, directly on
point in this case, that the State cannot appeal an oral ruling granting a motion to
suppress. State v. Sanavongxay, 407 S.W.3d 252 (Tex. Crim. App. 2012).
Therefore, the State could not appeal the trial court’s oral pronouncement granting
the Motion to Suppress on July 7, 2014.
Further, it is clear from the record that the State expressed in open court,
without objection or contest, that the State’s attorneys received no notice that the
trial court actually signed any such order. In fact, the State filed its notice of
appeal in this cause, five days after it learned, on September 25, 2014, of the
existence of the signed order.
The Court of Criminal Appeals did hold in State ex rel Sutton v. Bage, 822
S.W.2d 55 (Tex. Crim. App. 1992) that the State’s notice of appeal was untimely
where a clerk did not file an appealable order until four days after the trial judge
signed it and where the date the State filed their notice of appeal was late based off
the date the order was signed but not off the date the order was filed by the clerk.
However, this decision came in the context of a Writ of Mandamus, a
“drastic remedy” requiring “a clear right to relief sought,” such that the relator is
“seeking to compel a ministerial duty.” Id at 57. Certainly, whether to grant that
kind of relief is a different question than whether the State is entitled to relief when
the actions or inaction of a court or a clerk work to deny the State notice of its
ability to assert its right to appeal.
Presiding Judge McCormick’s dissent in Sutton, succinctly describes the
very problem at issue here, saying,
when the law imposes a time limitation upon a party, it should concomitantly provide
some notice to that party . . . Clearly, a party may be denied a right to appeal in any case
where a judge, without notice to the party, signs an appealable order which does not get
filed (entered) of record within the time required for notice of appeal. Id at 58.
The Court of Appeals in Amarillo, cited this dissent, in finding a State’s
notice of appeal timely where the court directed its ruling to become entered and
final after singing, State v. Poe, 900 S.W.2d 442, 444 (Tex. App.—Amarillo 1995).
In so doing, the Amarillo Court said, “Indeed, any other result would be
tantamount to allowing a trial court to implicitly and lawfully deny the State its
statutory right to appeal specific criminal matter by signing yet withholding the
order until the appellate period lapsed. A court’s inherent power should not extend
so far.” Id.
Appellee is correct that State v. Cowsert, 207 S.W.3d 347 (Tex. Crim. App.
2006) makes clear that the hearing held on September 25, 2014, in response to the
State’s Motion to Reconsider does not change the statutory limits on the State’s
right to appeal. Rather, that hearing merely provided the trial court with additional
evidence on the merits of the Motion to Suppress. Appellee is also correct that
State v. Cullen, 195 S.W.3d 696, 699 (Tex. Crim. App. 2006), makes clear the trial
court’s failure to provide the findings of fact and conclusions of law the State
requested does not change the requirement that the State file its notice of appeal
timely.
None of that, however, changes the fundamental fact that the State received
no notice of the signing of the order and had no other way to effectively assert its
right to appeal the trial court’s ruling other than to file timely notice of appeal from
a signed, written order. The fact that the State did file its notice of appeal five days
after becoming aware of the signed, written order, is evidence both of its desire to
appeal and its attempt to comply with the rules of appellate procedure given the
circumstances in this case.
The State here is in exactly the situation that so worried Judge McCormick
in his dissent in Sutton. To dismiss the instant appeal as Appellee requests would
defy the fundamental and obvious principle of justice that a deadline to assert a
right is only enforceable upon notice to the party having such a right that the clock
on that deadline has begun ticking. The Amarillo Court of Appeals was persuasive
and correct when it stated in Poe that the no court’s power should extend to the
point of denying a party its right simply by withholding that notice.
This court should not, in the name of clarity of rules and process, work such
an unfair denial of any party’s right to appeal.
III.
WHEREFORE PREMISES CONSIDERED, Appellant respectfully requests
that this Court deny Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss.
Respectfully submitted,
Jana Duty
District Attorney
Williamson County, Texas
/s/ John C. Prezas
John C. Prezas
Assistant District Attorney
State Bar Number 24041722
405 Martin Luther King #1
Georgetown, Texas 78626
(512) 943-1248
(512) 943-1255 (fax)
jprezas@wilco.org
Certificate of Service
This is to certify that on January 29, 2015, a copy of the foregoing motion
was sent to Appellee’s attorney of record, Ms. Kristen Jernigan, via certified mail
to 207 S. Austin Ave., Georgetown, TX 78626.
/s/ John C. Prezas
John C. Prezas