Anthony Paschall v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 2, 2009
Docket02-07-00461-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Anthony Paschall v. State (Anthony Paschall 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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Anthony Paschall v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 2-07-461-CR

ANTHONY PASCHALL APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

------------

FROM THE 16TH DISTRICT COURT OF DENTON COUNTY

OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

Appellant Anthony Paschall appeals his conviction for felony driving while

intoxicated for which he was sentenced to twenty-five years’ imprisonment.

Paschall filed a brief alleging thirteen points of error and later filed documents

with this court in which he waived his fifth through eleventh points. In his

remaining six points, Paschall argues that the trial court erred by allowing the

admission of two exhibits, that the evidence introduced at trial was legally and factually insufficient to prove that he had been convicted of the alleged

jurisdictional DWI enhancement paragraphs, and that the evidence was legally

and factually insufficient to support his conviction for driving while intoxicated.

We will affirm.

II. F ACTUAL AND P ROCEDURAL B ACKGROUND

A. The State’s Witnesses

Karen Morgan testified that on June 14, 2007, she was driving

northbound on I-35E from Dallas to Denton and noticed an SUV moving slowly

near the exit for Corinth Parkway. As soon as Morgan passed the SUV, the

driver sped up, swerved, and almost hit the guardrail. Morgan noticed that

after this near miss, the driver of the SUV “slowed way down” and seemed to

drift into a different lane. Then, suddenly, the driver of the SUV sped up again

and drove in between the left and the right lanes, such that he was not in either

lane. The SUV appeared to come within four or five inches of Morgan’s

bumper, so she swerved a little bit because she thought it was going to hit her.

At that point, Morgan decided to call 9-1-1 because she thought the driver of

the SUV was going to cause an accident. Morgan stayed on the phone with

the 9-1-1 operator until she reached the Loop 288 exit, and during that time,

the SUV continued to drift back and then catch up. When Morgan exited at

Loop 288, she told the 9-1-1 operator that the SUV continued northbound, and

2 the operator told her that the police had been called. Morgan testified that she

did not see the driver drinking; however, she said that the driver’s continual

slowing down and speeding up made her think that he was tired or had been

drinking because the pattern was not like someone who was on a cell phone or

who was putting on makeup and made a sudden, quick swerve.

Officer Brian Coast with the City of Denton Police Department testified

that he was on his way to work on June 14, 2007, between 6:30 and 6:45

p.m. in his marked patrol car when he heard a fire department calling in about

a reckless driver that was headed in Officer Coast’s general direction. The

police dispatch immediately started to broadcast information about the reckless

driver. Three civilians had called to report the reckless driver, along with the

fire truck. The dispatch described the vehicle in question as an older model

dark-colored Ford Explorer with its headlights on and said that the vehicle was

heading northbound at State School Road. Officer Coast made a u-turn and

headed towards that area to intercept the vehicle.

Officer Coast spotted the vehicle—a dark Ford Explorer with its headlights

on—at the intersection of Teasley Lane; Officer Coast knew that it was the

vehicle in question because one of the callers had stayed on the phone with the

9-1-1 operator and continued to relay the location. Officer Coast was

southbound on Teasley Lane, so he moved into the right-turn lane in order to

3 get behind the vehicle. Officer Coast noted that the driver of the vehicle had

stopped in the intersection blocking two lanes of traffic. When the light turned

green, the vehicle passed Officer Coast, and Officer Coast moved in behind it.

Before Officer Coast could initiate a traffic stop, the driver of the vehicle pulled

into the parking lot at a 7-Eleven convenience store and parked.

Officer Coast pulled up behind the SUV and walked up to contact the

driver, who was the sole occupant in the vehicle. When Officer Coast walked

up, the driver was in the process of getting out of the vehicle. Officer Coast

saw that the driver was fumbling and struggling with the seat belt, which was

“hung up” on his arm. After the driver got out, Officer Coast noticed that the

driver’s shorts were unzipped. Officer Coast asked the driver for identification,

and the driver provided it, revealing that he was Anthony Paschall.

Officer Coast asked Paschall why his pants were undone, and he replied

that he was on his way from Dallas to Oklahoma and had an urgent need to

urinate. Officer Coast asked Paschall if he had consumed anything to drink or

if he had taken any medication, and Paschall said that he had not taken any

medications nor consumed anything to drink. Officer Coast did not smell

alcohol on Paschall.

Officer Coast decided to initiate a DWI investigation because he had

noticed that Paschal’s speech was slurred and that he was swaying and

4 appeared to seek out something to hold onto to steady himself while they were

talking. At trial, Officer Coast explained the three field sobriety tests to the jury

and stated that the horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) test is important in a DWI

investigation because HGN is caused only by alcohol, depressants, inhalants,

PCP, or a brain stem injury. During the HGN test, Officer Coast noticed that

Paschall’s pupils were “very constricted” and that Paschall exhibited four clues

on the test, which was enough to indicate intoxication by an inhalant, a

depressant, or PCP.

Officer Coast then began to give Paschall the instructions for the walk-

and-turn test. Paschall, however, interrupted him and advised that he would

be unable to take the test because he had undergone surgery on his left foot.

Officer Coast omitted the walk-and-turn test and asked Paschall to perform the

one-leg stand after he had answered affirmatively when asked if he could stand

on one leg. After Paschall failed the test, he said that he had undergone

operations on both feet.

Officer Coast then asked Paschall what his highest level of education

was, and Paschall responded that he had earned an associate’s degree. Officer

Coast asked Paschall to recite the alphabet from D to Q, and Paschall said, “E,

F, G, H, Q.” Officer Coast asked Paschall to say the alphabet from beginning

5 to end, and Paschall said, “A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, Q, Z.” Paschall responded

correctly when asked how many letters are in the alphabet.

Officer Coast moved on to the counting test and asked Paschall to count

backwards from fifty-six to twenty-seven. Paschall started counting forward,

so Officer Coast interrupted him and allowed him to start over. Paschall said

the number fifty twice and then asked Officer Coast to repeat the instructions

again. Paschall eventually started with fifty and counted backward slowly to

forty-two and stopped.

At that point, Paschall asked, “Where are we going with this?” Officer

Coast said that he was trying to determine Paschall’s level of intoxication, and

Paschall told Officer Coast to search his car. Officer Coast again asked Paschall

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