Agrence Delance Smith v. State of Texas

84 S.W.3d 36, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4541, 2002 WL 1369095
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 25, 2002
Docket06-01-00070-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 84 S.W.3d 36 (Agrence Delance Smith v. State of Texas) 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.

Bluebook
Agrence Delance Smith v. State of Texas, 84 S.W.3d 36, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4541, 2002 WL 1369095 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion by

Justice ROSS.

Agrence Delance Smith appeals his conviction for aggravated perjury. After a bench trial, the court found Smith guilty of the third degree felony offense of aggravated perjury, and finding both enhancement paragraphs of the indictment true, assessed punishment at twenty-five years’ imprisonment. Smith appeals, alleging three points of error. He contends: 1) the State was estopped from prosecuting him for aggravated perjury; 2) the evidence is factually insufficient to support the conviction; and 3) he received ineffective assistance of counsel.

Smith was convicted of aggravated perjury, an offense stemming from his trial on June 17,1999, for misdemeanor theft and a plea agreement entered incident to the disposition of that case. Smith perjured himself when he signed a sworn application for probation in that case, stating he had never before been convicted of a felo *39 ny offense. After the trial court accepted Smith’s plea of guilty to the theft accusation and assessed his punishment at one year of deferred adjudication community supervision, the State discovered Smith had ten previous felony convictions. The State also learned Smith had been confined in prison on at least two prior occasions under the name “Agrenee Delance Johnson, aka Tracy Johnson.”

In his first point of error, Smith contends the State is estopped from prosecuting him for aggravated perjury. Smith contends because the untruthful statement occurred in the plea agreement in the theft case, and because the State received a substantial benefit from that agreement, the State was limited in its remedies to denying deferred adjudication or seeking revocation of his community supervision. Smith also contends public policy should prevent the prosecutor from assisting defendants, and because the prosecutor in effect served as Smith’s attorney in the theft case, the State should be estopped from bringing the aggravated perjury case.

The plea agreement in the theft case was signed June 17, 1999. Smith was represented by counsel in that case through mid-May 1999. It was Smith’s counsel who communicated with the assistant district attorney and negotiated the plea agreement. Smith’s counsel was permitted to withdraw from the case, and Smith acted pro se at his trial on June 17. The evidence shows that all communications the assistant district attorney had directly with Smith were on June 17, and according to the assistant district attorney’s testimony, she explained the application for probation to Smith on that day. She testified specifically as follows:

Every time we do a plea I bring paperwork to the courtroom and present it to pro se defendants and explain to them what the papers say, where they’re expected to sign, and what decisions they have to make.
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When I hand the stack of paperwork to a defendant, [the application for probation] is always the top document in the stack, and my standard explanation which I gave something very similar to it, I can’t recite word for word what I said, but I hand the documents to each defendant and sometimes there’s more than one seated at the table and I’ll say the top document is an application for probation, if you are asking the judge to give you probation instead of jail time and if you have never been convicted of a felony anywhere in the United States, then you need to sign this document where it says defendant, notice that there are two places that you will need to sign, the first signature Line is your statement that you want probation and that you have never been convicted of a felony, the second signature Line is ... an oath and you are swearing under oath that what you said at the top of the page is the truth.
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I always tell [pro se defendants] that if they have been convicted of a felony, it does not mean they cannot be given probation. It simply means that they must mark out the word “never” before they sign their name. And that’s also part of my standard statement that I make to a pro se defendant before we do the pleas. If Mr. Smith had in fact marked out the word never, I would have changed his papers and recommended a straight probation instead of deferred.

Smith is correct that public policy generally prevents the prosecutor from assisting a defendant at trial. Under our adversarial system, it is inappropriate in a *40 criminal case for anyone other than the defendant’s own counsel to give legal advice to the defendant. Smith waived his right to counsel and did not contest guilt at the trial of the underlying misdemeanor offense. Because he did not contest his guilt, the trial court therefore was only required to determine whether his waiver of the right to counsel was knowing, intelligent, and voluntary, but was not required to admonish him of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation pursuant to Faretta. 1 Hatten v. State, 71 S.W.3d 332, 334 (Tex.Crim.App.2002). Nonetheless, it is inconsistent with our adversarial system for the prosecuting attorney to explain to defendants what legal documents “say,” or “what decisions [the defendants] have to make,” or what words they should or should not “mark out” in a legal document, or even whether they are required to sign, or should sign, a particular document. These are all matters on which the accused should have the advice of his or her own independent counsel, unless such person has made a knowing, intelligent, and voluntary waiver of the right to counsel, with full knowledge of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation. If an accused has made such waiver, with such knowledge, then he or she should be held to the same standards as a licensed attorney and, unless standby counsel has been appointed, left alone to deal with these matters.

This case is a good example of where mere determination of whether the accused voluntarily and intelligently waived the right to counsel, without a corresponding admonishment on the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation, should not qualify as satisfying the right to counsel guarantees of the United States and Texas Constitutions. Since a defendant who has waived the right to counsel is necessarily relegated to self-representation, a determination of the voluntariness and intelligence of the waiver should not— and perhaps cannot — be made without some determination of the defendant’s knowledge of the dangers and disadvantages of self-representation. We urge the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to reexamine its holding in Hatten.

Smith does not make adequacy of the trial court’s admonishment in the theft prosecution a part of his estoppel argument, and his own testimony at the trial of the instant case clearly shows he did not, in signing the application for probation, rely on any actions by the assistant district attorney. Rather, Smith contends that, even though he made an untrue statement in the application for probation, the State is limited to the remedies provided in the application: either denying probation or revoking his probation based on his untruthful statements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.W.3d 36, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 4541, 2002 WL 1369095, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/agrence-delance-smith-v-state-of-texas-texapp-2002.