in Re the State of Texas Ex Rel. John F. Healey, Jr., District Attorney, 268th Judicial District v. Honorable Brady G. Elliott, Judge 268th District Court, Real Party in Interest Albert James Turner
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NOS. WR-82,875-01 & WR-82,875-02
IN RE THE STATE OF TEXAS EX REL. JOHN F. HEALEY, JR., DISTRICT
ATTORNEY, 268TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT, Relator
ON PETITIONS FOR WRIT OF MANDAMUS AND PROHIBITION
AGAINST THE HONORABLE BRADY ELLIOT
IN CAUSE NO. 10-DCR-054233 IN THE 268TH DISTRICT COURT
OF FORT BEND COUNTY
Y EARY, J., filed a dissenting opinion.
The issue here boils down to whether the judge of the trial court has the authority to
conduct a jury trial on the question of Turner’s present competency as part of his mandate
to determine the feasibility of making a retrospective competency determination. As this
Court today characterizes it, the trial court apparently believes that Turner must be presently
competent before it can be determined whether a retrospective determination of his
competency at the time of his trial is feasible. I reject that notion. Just as “[t]here is no
expectation that a defendant be competent during his competency trial[,]” Dissenting Opinion
of Presiding Judge Keller at 3, there is no reason to expect an appellant to be competent in
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order to determine whether it is currently feasible to litigate the question of whether he was
competent at the time of his initial trial.
Perhaps the trial court would simply like to have the benefit of a jury’s perspective on
Turner’s present competency to stand trial as that perspective would be relevant to its judicial
determination whether a retrospective competency determination is feasible. The Court today
seems to hold that there is nothing that clearly prohibits the trial court from convening a full-
blown competency trial in order to inform its judicial decision; therefore, the State is not
clearly entitled to the extraordinary relief it seeks. Like Presiding Judge Keller, however, I
do not view the question in this case as whether the law clearly prohibits the trial court from
holding a competency trial, but rather, whether our remand conferred upon the trial court the
authority to conduct such a competency trial. Since present competency to stand trial is not
currently an issue per se, such a competency trial could only serve an advisory function.
Like Presiding Judge Keller, I do not believe the trial court is authorized to convene
a jury to decide Turner’s present competency, under either the statute or the common law,
simply to serve such an advisory function. Because Turner’s present competency is not
currently in issue, invoking Article 46B.051 of the Code of Criminal Procedure to obtain a
jury verdict on present competency will not determine the issue that is currently pending
before the trial court.1 It would serve, at best, to resolve a kind of basic fact, to help the trial
1
See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46B.051 (“a jury shall make the determination” of
competency to stand trial upon the request of either party). The jury’s competency verdict under this
provision is apparently limited to the ultimate question of “whether the defendant is incompetent to
stand trial.” TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. art. 46B.052(a).
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court determine the ultimate fact for which we remanded the case. Thus, in that best case
scenario, it would seem to operate in much the same way as a special issue, to help inform
the determination (assigned to the trial court by our remand) whether a retrospective
competency determination is feasible. But verdicts in criminal actions in Texas, with certain
statutory exceptions, are required to be general, and special issues, designed to require juries
to expressly resolve certain basic fact issues along the way to a general verdict, are not
authorized. E.g., Stewart v. State, 686 S.W.2d 118, 124 (Tex. Crim. App. 1984) (“Other than
the provisions in Article 37.071, V.A.C.C.P., Texas jurisprudence has no authority allowing
the submission of special issues to a jury in a criminal case.”). Here, the trial court does not
even propose to convene a jury to decide the ultimate fact we remanded for—the feasibility
of a retrospective competency hearing. Instead, the trial court would inconvenience a jury to
render what is—essentially—an advisory verdict with respect to what is—at best—a
marginally relevant basic fact: is Turner competent now?
Federal trial courts in civil cases may have some authority to “try any issue with an
advisory jury[.]” See F ED. R. C IV. P. 39(c). However, I find no comparable authority for a
district court to do so in a criminal matter in Texas, even with the best of intentions.
Convening an advisory jury seems all the more indefensible considering that the trial court
has lost general jurisdiction over the case, and the terms of our order of remand returning
jurisdiction to the trial court is limited, explicitly assigning the role of deciding the ultimate
issue of feasibility to the trial court itself. Cf. State v. Patrick, 86 S.W.3d 592, 594-96 (Tex.
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Crim. App. 2002) (plurality opinion) (the limited jurisdiction that Chapter 64 of the Code of
Criminal Procedure confers on convicting courts to conduct post-conviction DNA testing
after it has lost general jurisdiction does not authorize them to order DNA testing beyond the
explicit terms of the statute); In re Medina, 475 S.W.3d 291, 296 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015)
(writs of mandamus or prohibition are appropriate extraordinary remedies when a trial court
acts beyond the scope of its jurisdiction or authority). Such a remand does not contemplate
the invocation of Article 46B.051 to conduct a full-blown jury trial on present competency
to stand trial when that is not the issue and it is not even determinative of what is the issue.
If the trial court believes that Turner’s present competency is so relevant, it is certainly free
to determine that basic fact for itself after hearing evidence on the issue.
None of this is to suggest, of course, that Turner’s present competency has no
relevance whatsoever to the question of the feasibility of conducting a retroactive
competency determination. But it is clear to me that it is far from determinative of that issue.
The judge of the trial court can certainly exercise his own judgment with respect to Turner’s
present competency if he thinks that such a determination is important to the feasability
question. Moreover, in deciding the feasibility question, the trial court will undoubtedly hear
from the same experts who would most likely inform an advisory jury verdict with respect
to Turner’s present competency to stand trial. There is neither any need to involve a jury nor
any legal authority to do so. Since its general jurisdiction has lapsed, I agree with Presiding
Judge Keller that the trial court currently lacks the authority to carry out a full-blown trial on
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Turner’s present competency to stand trial.
With these additional observations, I join Presiding Judge Keller’s dissent.
FILED: March 8, 2017
DO NOT PUBLISH