.39 Acres, .748 Acres, and .5 Acres (With Improvements) in the J. Johnson Survey, Marion County, Texas, and a .22 Caliber Ruger Semi-Automatic Pistol v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2008
Docket06-07-00101-CV
StatusPublished

This text of .39 Acres, .748 Acres, and .5 Acres (With Improvements) in the J. Johnson Survey, Marion County, Texas, and a .22 Caliber Ruger Semi-Automatic Pistol v. State (.39 Acres, .748 Acres, and .5 Acres (With Improvements) in the J. Johnson Survey, Marion County, Texas, and a .22 Caliber Ruger Semi-Automatic Pistol v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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.39 Acres, .748 Acres, and .5 Acres (With Improvements) in the J. Johnson Survey, Marion County, Texas, and a .22 Caliber Ruger Semi-Automatic Pistol v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

______________________________

No. 06-07-00101-CV ______________________________

.39 ACRES, .748 ACRES, AND .5 ACRES (WITH IMPROVEMENTS) IN THE J. JOHNSON SURVEY, MARION COUNTY, TEXAS, AND A .22 CALIBER RUGER SEMI-AUTOMATIC PISTOL, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 276th Judicial District Court Marion County, Texas Trial Court No. 0500127

Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ. Opinion by Justice Moseley OPINION

Henry Doke appeals from a judgment after a bench trial of the forfeiture pursuant to

Chapter 59 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure of three contiguous tracts of .39 acres, .748

acres, and .5 acres in Marion County. Although a .22 caliber Ruger pistol is also subject to the

forfeiture proceedings, no mention is made of it in the proceedings except to declare its forfeiture.

Some kind of establishment generally known in the area as the "Dew Drop Inn" was located

in Marion County, Texas. The evidence adduced at trial never fully developed the nature of any

overt legal business activity which was represented to the public to be conducted on the premises,

but it is apparent that it was a gathering place of sorts and that it seemed to have been attractive to

people having criminal records. Suffice it to say that, judging from the criminal records of the

patrons of the business and Doke's renters of the place, the Dew Drop Inn was never intended to be

a competitor of the Chuck E. Cheese family fun restaurants.

On appeal, Doke raises five issues, each of which deals with the sufficiency of the evidence

as to different elements which the State was obligated to prove in urging the forfeiture or which

Doke was obligated to show in combating the forfeiture.1

More specifically than previously mentioned, the issues raised by Doke on appeal are:

(1) That the acquittal of Lamarcus Morton raised a presumption pursuant to Article 59.05

of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure that the property is nonforfeitable and that there was no

1 One of these, issue number four, purports to deal with whether only one of the three tracts of land (as opposed to all three) should have been the subject of forfeiture.

2 evidence raised to rebut that presumption. See TEX . CODE CRIM . PROC. ANN . art. 59.05 (Vernon

2006).

(2) That there was no evidence that Doke was not an "innocent owner" of the Dew Drop

Inn as defined by Article 59.02(h)(1)(C) of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure. See TEX . CODE

CRIM . PROC. ANN . art. 59.02(h)(1)(C) (Vernon 2006).

(3) That the evidence was factually insufficient to prove that the realty was subject to

forfeiture.

(4) That any forfeiture should include only the tract of realty upon which the domed

building (the only site on the property wherein drugs were located) is located and not the other two

parcels of land.

(5) That there is no evidence that the realty described in the petition is the same property

allegedly used in the commission of a felony which would generate a cause of action for forfeiture.

EVIDENCE AT TRIAL

At the trial to the court, it was shown that Ricky Blackburn (who had previously been

employed with the Ark-La-Tex Narcotics Task Force) spoke with Doke on two occasions about

reputed drug use at the Dew Drop Inn before having obtained a search warrant and conducting the

drug raid which resulted in the discovery of cocaine on the premises. During the first interview, in

April 2005, Blackburn mentioned the reported drug use at the Dew Drop Inn and called Doke's

attention to the detritus of drug use scattered about the premises. On the second of those interviews,

3 one of the participating officers mentioned to Doke near the beginning of their conversation that the

property could be subject to forfeiture. Doke, who distrusts law enforcement officers, insisted on

videotaping the balance of the interview. Present with Doke at the second interview was Terrance

"Toot" Banks, who was represented as being the person who ran the Dew Drop Inn; Banks had at

least one previous conviction of possession of a controlled substance and had previously assaulted

one of the interviewing officers during a clandestine drug operation in which the officer had

participated.

After the interviews, on June 17, 2005, a confidential informant working with the Ark-La-

Tex Narcotics Task Force purchased cocaine from Banks at the Dew Drop Inn.

After these encounters, Blackburn and others obtained a search warrant to the Dew Drop Inn

and conducted a drug raid on the premises on June 30, 2005, during which cocaine was found

dissolved in a liquid in a microwave oven that was located in the "dome" building on the premises,

a building on the premises which is a geodesic dome structure with projecting arms which radiate

from it. Rathel Doddy was found with rock cocaine on his person in a nearby structure on the Dew

Drop Inn premises. In addition, there was drug paraphernalia located in and around the "smoke

house" structure located elsewhere on the site and the grounds were littered with small plastic bags,

propane lighters, steel wool, and other items commonly used in the drug culture. The drug task force

arrested four individuals for possession of controlled substances, those being Lamarcus Morton,

Frederick Hopkins, and Jeremy Byrd (found outside the dome building), and Doddy. Morton went

4 to trial before a jury and was acquitted; the charges against Hopkins, Byrd, and Doddy were

dismissed.

Before the raid and the arrests, Doke had never had a written lease agreement with a tenant,

preferring month-to-month oral rental agreements of his various rental properties on the basis of, "If

you don't pay, you don't stay." Subsequent to the raid which precipitated the forfeiture proceedings,

Doke had instituted a policy of obtaining written lease agreements which admonished his tenants to

refrain from unlawful conduct on the demised premises.

At a time before the raid occurred, Doke had rented the Dew Drop Inn to Gloria Robbins,

who had been twice previously convicted of delivery of a controlled substance, and to Charles

Melvin Douglas, convicted of delivery of a controlled substance in 2003. In the immediately-

preceding five-year period, there had also been other tenants, some of whose names Doke indicated

that he could not remember. At the time of the raid and arrests, Doke was renting the place to

Arthur C. Gregory, who was the father of Morton. Morton likewise had previous drug convictions

and was one of those arrested as a result of the drug raid. Doke further testified that he had no reason

to believe that drugs were being used or sold on the Dew Drop Inn property and that he would not

have permitted it had he known. He also testified that the three parcels of property described on tax

renditions to which reference was made on the petition for forfeiture as being the .39 acres, .748

acres, and .5 acres were collectively known as the Dew Drop Inn property; the entire premises were

rented as a whole entity.

5 The State called Blackburn, Johnny Phillips, Lori McCullough, Harry Washington, Lance

Cline, Jeff McCullough, and Dale Sherrill, all law enforcement officers who had worked with the

Ark-La-Tex Narcotics Task Force, as witnesses. Speaking generally of the testimony of these

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