IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. PD-0268-21
DARYL JOE, Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
ON APPELLANT’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
FROM THE TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
NAVARRO COUNTY
WALKER, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
DISSENTING OPINION
In reviewing the sufficiency of the evidence to support Appellant’s conviction for cargo theft,
the Court today finds the evidence sufficient to show that the mattresses here were “cargo.” I
disagree. The mattresses here were not yet “cargo” within the meaning of the statute—the mattresses
had not yet left their point of origin and were not yet a commercial shipment of freight moving in
commerce. The evidence is insufficient to support cargo theft, and there is no need to have the court
of appeals examine the “conducted an activity” element of cargo theft. Cargo theft is done. What we
should be remanding for is a determination of whether the conviction can be reformed to attempted
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cargo theft, regular theft, or attempted theft. I respectfully dissent.
I — “Cargo”
To be guilty of one kind of cargo theft, a person must have knowingly or intentionally
conducted, promoted, or facilitated an activity in which he received, possessed, concealed, stored,
bartered, sold, abandoned, or disposed of stolen cargo, or cargo explicitly represented to him as being
stolen cargo. TEX. PENAL CODE Ann. § 31.18(b)(1).1 The statute gives a specific definition for
“cargo,” as:
goods, as defined by Section 7.102, Business & Commerce Code, that constitute,
wholly or partly, a commercial shipment of freight moving in commerce. A shipment
is considered to be moving in commerce if the shipment is located at any point
between the point of origin and the final point of destination regardless of any
temporary stop that is made for the purpose of transshipment or otherwise.
Id. § 31.18(a)(1).
In Appellant Daryl Joe’s case before us, the evidence showed that the mattresses were
manufactured at the mattress company’s factory. The finished mattresses go on a line down to the
mattress company’s shipping dock within the same premises. At the shipping dock, the mattresses
are loaded into trailers. Once a trailer is completely full, the employees put the paperwork for the
shipment, including a red seal, inside the trailer. Using a yard truck (or “yard dog”),2 they pull the
trailer out onto the shipping yard, close the trailer’s doors, and “drop it.”3 The employees then seal
1
The statute also provides a second form of cargo theft, specifically targeting persons
employed as drivers lawfully contracted to transport specific cargo, who fail to deliver the entire
cargo or who cause the seal of the of the cargo’s container to be broken. TEX. PENAL CODE Ann. §
31.18(b)(2).
2
Rep. R. vol. 3, 102.
3
Id. at 101.
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the trailer with a yellow seal. When a driver comes to take the trailer, he breaks the yellow seal,
opens the trailer, retrieves the paperwork including the red seal, and then seals the trailer using the
red seal.
Appellant drove his truck to the shipping yard of the mattress company and backed his truck
under a sealed trailer loaded with mattresses. Before he could connect the lines and raise the jacks
on the trailer, he was stopped by employees of the mattress company. Appellant then drove away
without the trailer.
The Court today concludes that the evidence was sufficient to show that the mattresses were
cargo, as defined by the statute, because the mattresses were moved from the factory to the shipping
yard by the yard truck. As the Court sees it, the shipping yard was not part of the “point of
origin”—the factory alone is the “point of origin,” regardless of how close the shipping yard was to
the factory or the fact that both were owned by the mattress company. Additionally, the Court
suggests the shipping yard was a temporary stop for the trailer. Thus, from the moment the
mattresses were moved from one part of the facility to another, they had left their point of origin and
were moving in commerce.
II — “Point of Origin” Is Where The Shipment Begins
Viewed entirely in a vacuum, there is some merit to the Court’s interpretation. But “point of
origin” does not exist in a vacuum. Based upon the language of the statute itself, based upon the
Legislature’s use of “point of origin” elsewhere, and based upon the statute’s history, “point of
origin” is not a phrase to be read according to its ordinary meaning. It must be viewed in the context
of shipping.
Although the statute does not provide a definition for “point of origin,” the statute gives
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strong clues as to the meaning of “point of origin” by the very words used, which all heavily imply
the shipping industry. The statute defines “cargo” as goods that constitute a commercial shipment
of freight moving in commerce. TEX. PENAL CODE Ann. § 31.18(a)(1). It provides that the
shipment of freight is considered moving in commerce even if it is temporarily stopped for
transshipment. Id. A “shipment” is “The act of shipping goods . . . The goods shipped.” WEBSTER’S
II NEW COLLEGE DICTIONARY 1019 (Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston 1999). “Freight” is “Goods
transported by a vessel or vehicle, esp. goods transported as cargo by a commercial carrier . . .
Commercial transportation of goods.” Id. at 447. The mattresses can hardly be called a shipment of
freight (the commercial transportation of goods by a commercial carrier) when they are individual
mattresses going down the line from the factory to the shipping dock, all the while managed by the
mattress company’s own employees. Other words may be more accurate, such as “product,”
“merchandise,” or “goods” in its ordinary meaning. The mattresses are a “shipment of freight” when
they are inside a loaded trailer being driven on the highway by a truck to a mattress store, after they
have already been picked up by the truck driver and taken away.
“Transshipment” appears only once in the Penal Code (this statute, § 31.18), but it appears
in three other statutes.4 None of those statutes gives “transshipment” a definition, but they all clearly
4
TEX. AGRIC. CODE Ann. § 122.352 (“It is the policy of this state to not interfere with the
interstate commerce of hemp or the transshipment of hemp through this state.”).
TEX. INS. CODE Ann. § 1807.001(2)(A)(i)(b)(4) (“In this chapter: . . . (2) ‘Marine insurance’ means:
(A) insurance and reinsurance that covers: (I) loss or damage to: . . . (b) insurable property and
interests in respect to, appertaining to, or in connection with a risk or peril of navigation, transit, or
transportation: . . . (4) during any delay, storage, or transshipment or reshipment incident to the
initial shipment”).
TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE Ann. § 9.312(f)(2) (“(f) A perfected security interest in a negotiable
document or goods in possession of a bailee, other than one that has issued a negotiable document
5
implicate the shipping industry. Indeed, the ordinary definition of “transshipment” reflects that it is
a term in the shipping industry to reflect a change of the boat or vehicle after the cargo has already
been shipped. See Transshipment, BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY (11th ed. 2019) (“(18c) Maritime law.
The act of taking cargo out of one ship and loading it on another. Transshipment may also involve
transfer of cargo to another mode of transportation, such as rail or truck.”); Transship, WEBSTER’S
II NEW COLLEGE DICTIONARY 1172 (Houghton Mifflin Co., Boston 1999) (“To transfer from one
vessel or vehicle to another for reshipment. . . . To transfer cargo from one vessel or vehicle to
another”).
The statute also explicitly tells us that “goods” has the definition provided by § 7.102 of the
Business and Commerce Code. TEX. PENAL CODE Ann. § 31.18(a)(1). That statute says:
“Goods” means all things that are treated as movable for the purposes of a contract
for storage or transportation.
TEX. BUS. & COM. CODE Ann. § 7.102(a)(7). As relevant to the cargo theft statute, “goods” are
“things that are treated as movable for the purposes of a contract for . . . transportation.” There
is no “contract for transportation” when goods are moved from one part of the mattress company’s
premises to another. The employees overseeing the mattresses going down the line from the factory
to the shipping dock do not negotiate and execute contracts to transport the mattresses with the
factory and the shipping dock, nor does the driver of the yard truck moving the loaded trailer from
the shipping dock to the shipping yard negotiate and execute contracts to transport the mattresses
with the shipping dock and the shipping yard. He just moves them from one part of his job site to
for the goods, remains perfected for 20 days without filing if the secured party makes available to
the debtor the goods or documents representing the goods for the purpose of: . . . (2) loading,
unloading, storing, shipping, transshipping, manufacturing, processing, or otherwise dealing with
them in a manner preliminary to their sale or exchange.”).
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another as part of his job duties with the mattress company. Who negotiates and executes contracts
to transport the mattresses with the mattress company? The trucking companies who take the loaded
and sealed trailers from the shipping yard.5
The definition of “goods” neatly dovetails into § 31.18(a)’s use of “cargo,” being a
“commercial shipment of freight” that is moving in “commerce,” even if it is temporarily stopped
for “transshipment.”
As for “point of origin” itself, that phrase appears only twice in the Penal Code, with both
instances occurring within § 31.18. Section 31.18(b)(2) sets out another way of committing cargo
theft:
(b) A person commits an offense if the person:
(2) is employed as a driver lawfully contracted to transport a specific cargo
by vehicle from a known point of origin to a known point of destination and,
with the intent to conduct, promote, or facilitate an activity described by
Subdivision (1), knowingly or intentionally:
(A) fails to deliver the entire cargo to the known point of destination
as contracted; or
(B) causes the seal to be broken on the vehicle or on an intermodal
container containing any part of the cargo.
TEX. PENAL CODE Ann. § 31.18(b)(2) (emphasis added). This provision clearly refers to truck drivers
5
I do not dispute that the mattresses in the trailer were “goods” within the meaning of
Business and Commerce Code § 7.102(a)(7). There was testimony that the J.B. Hunt trucking
company was the in house third party carrier for the mattress company; that the trailer loaded with
mattresses in this case was a J.B. Hunt trailer; and that the J.B. Hunt trailer was awaiting pickup by
a J.B. Hunt driver. The mattresses were things treated as movable for the purposes of a contract for
transportation.
But the J.B. Hunt trailer full of mattresses—the goods—were not yet a commercial shipment of
freight moving in commerce, located at any point between the point of origin and the final point of
destination.
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in the cargo shipping industry.
Additionally, the Legislature has used “point of origin” several places outside of the Penal
Code.6 The vast majority of these instances are found in the Transportation Code and the Agriculture
Code. The Transportation Code provisions directly implicate and refer to things that are already
moving on the roads. See, e.g., TEX. TRANSP. CODE Ann. §§ 622.041 (providing that vehicles
carrying timber may operate on the road if the distance between point of origin and point of
destination is under 125 miles), 623.123 (application for permit to move portable building units must
indicate where the portable building unit is from), 623.0172 (requiring intermodal shipping
containers to be continuously sealed while in transit from point of origin to point of destination). The
Agriculture Code provisions similarly involve shipping, specifically of animals and plants. See, e.g.,
TEX. AGRIC. CODE Ann. §§ 146.005 (permits to transport animals), 71.0091 (providing for seizure
of infected or infested citrus plants transported through the state, with return to the point of origin
if feasible). Notably, § 622.041 of the Transportation Code defines “point of origin” for the purposes
of that statute:
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TEX. TRANSP. CODE Ann. §§ 502.095, 502.492, 503.001, 503.069, 551A.057, 551A.058,
622.041, 623.0172, 623.123, 623.406.
TEX. AGRIC. CODE Ann. §§ 71.009, 71.0091, 71.103, 71.111, 146.005, 164.063, 167.027, 167.028,
167.105.
TEX. TAX CODE Ann. §§ 162.115, 162.116, 162.118, 162.216, 162.217, 162.219, 162.224.
TEX. HEALTH & SAFETY CODE Ann. §§ 382.003, 753.005.
TEX. GOV’T CODE Ann. §§ 51.806, 660.092.
TEX. CODE CRIM. PROC. Ann. art. 18A.001.
TEX. LOC. GOV’T CODE Ann. § 235.003.
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A person may operate over a highway or road of this state a vehicle or combination
of vehicles that is used exclusively for transporting poles, piling, or unrefined timber
from the point of origin of the timber (the forest where the timber is felled) to a wood
processing mill . . . .
TEX. TRANSP. CODE Ann. § 622.041(a) (emphasis added). The point of origin for timber is the forest
where the timber is felled, not the location of the tree stump. If mattresses were trees, it could stand
to reason that the point of origin for the mattresses is the forest where the mattresses are felled (the
mattress company’s premises, factory and shipping yard), not the stump of the mattress tree (the
factory alone).
If the Legislature’s aim was to have the offense of cargo theft apply any time goods are
moved, it would not have gone to the effort of speaking in terms of shipments, of freight, of
commerce, of point of origin, of point of destination, and of transshipment. Viewed in the light of
these provisions, and the very nature of the offense of cargo theft, the import is clear: the statute
should be read as specifically covering activity in the cargo shipping industry. “Point of origin”
should be read in the light of that context, and it means the place where shipment begins, not the
birthplace of the goods. The “point of origin” is the place where the goods have been transferred
from the shipper to the carrier, and from the point of origin, the carrier transports the goods to the
goods’ final point of destination. The majority of the Court, construing “point of origin” to mean the
place where the mattresses originated, ignores everything around “point of origin” indicating that
“point of origin” is a term of art for the shipping industry.
Viewed in strict isolation, however, the majority’s interpretation is not unreasonable.
Assuming that our differing interpretations are both reasonable, the meaning of “point of origin” is
arguably ambiguous, and if that is the case, extratextual factors would be helpful to figure out what
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“point of origin” means. See Boykin v. State, 818 S.W.2d 782, 785–86 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991) (“if
the language is not plain but rather ambiguous, then . . . is it constitutionally permissible for a court
to consider, in arriving at a sensible interpretation, such extratextual factors as executive or
administrative interpretations of the statute or legislative history.”). The Bill Analysis for § 31.18
provided:
Cargo theft by organized crime rings has become a very serious problem in this state.
By some estimates, Texas leads the nation in the incidence of cargo theft, with losses
valued at $23 million between 2012 and 2014. Furthermore, existing Penal Code
provisions addressing theft and organized crime present significant impediments to
the prosecution of this activity. For example, an element of the crime of theft is the
appropriation of property without the owner’s effective consent. In cargo theft cases
involving collusive drivers, however, the initial bailment of the property is consented
to by the owner, making it difficult to establish at what point the driver’s conduct
vitiates the owner’s consent for purposes of charging theft. This bill would remedy
that problem by creating a separate category of offense called “cargo theft” and
providing that failure to deliver cargo to its destination as contracted, or causing the
seal to be broken on a vehicle containing the cargo, completes the offense, subject
to general mens rea provisions.
Another impediment to prosecuting cargo theft under current law results from the
fact that most cargo theft is undertaken by sophisticated, organized crime rings.
Under current law, a person found in possession of stolen property may be prosecuted
individually, but to reach others involved in the theft under Texas’ organized crime
statue would require the prosecutor to establish a “combination” of “three or more
persons who collaborate in carrying on criminal activities”—a very difficult showing
to make. What’s more, under the standard punishment “ladder” for theft, low-value
thefts can be prosecuted as misdemeanors. While this might be a suitable deterrent
for amateur or opportunistic criminals, it is radically under-deterrent against
organized crime syndicates that employ expendable “pawns.” This bill would address
both issues by making any theft of cargo a state jail felony at a minimum, and up to
a first degree felony for thefts of $200,000 or more, and by providing that anyone
who “knowingly or intentionally conducts, promotes, or facilitates an activity”
involving the receipt, possession, concealment, storage, sale, or abandonment of
stolen cargo is guilty of the offense of cargo theft.
S. Comm. on Crim. Just., Bill Analysis at 1, Tex. S.B. 1828, 84th Leg., R.S., (2015). While not
determinative, this statement of intent aligns with the statute’s focus on goods that are already being
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shipped, and not merely waiting at a shipping yard for a trucker to pick them up.
For the mattresses, their “point of origin” will be where the mattresses are picked up by a
carrier to be transported to their destination. It is not merely the factory where they were made. Until
the mattresses are taken away by a truck driver, they do not leave their point of origin. The entire
mattress company premises—factory and shipping yard—were the point of origin. The mattresses
did not move in commerce, and they do not count as “cargo” for the purposes of the cargo theft
statute.
III — Conclusion
“Cargo” involves “goods,” consisting of a “shipment” of “freight” moving in “commerce”
between its “point of origin” and its final “point of destination.” The clear implication is that the
cargo theft statute focuses upon goods that are in shipping containers and that are actively being
transported on our roads, our highways, our railways, and our waterways. They are not goods that
have been moved from a factory to a shipping yard within the same premises, where they are
prepared for and are waiting to be picked up and shipped. The mattresses in this case did not leave
their point of origin, and they were not moving in commerce. The evidence is not sufficient to show
the mattresses were “cargo” within the meaning of § 31.18, and the evidence is not sufficient to
support Appellant’s conviction for cargo theft.
Accordingly, there is no need to remand this case for the court of appeals to consider the
evidence of another element of cargo theft. At most, the court of appeals on remand should consider
whether Appellant’s conviction should be reformed to attempted cargo theft, regular theft, or
attempted theft. See Thornton v. State, 425 S.W.3d 289, 299–300 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014). I
respectfully dissent.
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Filed: June 22, 2022
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