Archie v. State

340 S.W.3d 734, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 796, 2011 WL 2200809
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 2011
DocketPD-0189-10
StatusPublished
Cited by227 cases

This text of 340 S.W.3d 734 (Archie v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Archie v. State, 340 S.W.3d 734, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 796, 2011 WL 2200809 (Tex. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

PRICE, J.,

delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

Trent Archie, the appellant, was convicted by a jury of murder, and the judge assessed punishment at forty years’ imprisonment. In a published opinion, the Tenth Court of Appeals in Waco reversed the appellant’s conviction and remanded the cause to the trial court, concluding that the trial court abused its discretion by denying the appellant’s motion for a mistrial. 1 In its petition for discretionary review, the State Prosecuting Attorney (SPA) argues that the court of appeals erred when it found that the prosecutor improperly commented on the appellant’s failure to testify during his closing argument. Moreover, even assuming the prosecutor’s argument was improper, the SPA contends, it was within the trial court’s discretion to deny the motion for mistrial. We granted the SPA’s petition for discretionary review to address these issues, and we now reverse..

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL POSTURE

At Trial

The appellant and the victim, Anthony Williams, were competing drug dealers in the Huntsville area. In the early morning hours of October 9, 2004, the appellant shot Williams through a window at Williams’s home while his girlfriend, Angela Kizzee, and their child were in the room. Dixie Willis, the appellant’s co-defendant, was the primary witness for the State. He testified that the appellant wanted to steal drugs and money from Williams and that the appellant was in possession of a 12-gauge shotgun. The two parked their car at a friend’s house, started walking, and eventually made their way to Williams’s house. The plan was for the appellant to distract Williams by calling him outside so that they could talk while Willis was to go inside the house through the back door to steal the drugs and money. Should Williams “get[ ] tripping,” then the appellant was to shoot Williams to “slow him down.” Willis testified that as he approached the back of the house in pursuit *737 of the plan, he heard a gunshot and took off running, and the appellant followed soon after.

Because Willis was an accomplice to the murder, his testimony required corroboration. 2 There was other evidence in the record to support Willis’s description of the events tending to connect the appellant with the offense. For example, Vince Johnson testified that the appellant called him shortly after the murder and told him that Williams had been shot and that the appellant needed to find Willis and the car. Several days after the murder, the police attempted to stop the appellant for a routine traffic violation in a car belonging to his girlfriend, and the appellant fled on foot, evincing a consciousness of guilt for an offense greater than a mere traffic infraction. Jessica James, a witness who lived near the appellant’s father in Houston, testified that she overheard the appellant say that he had “cancelled a guy through a window” because “he was moving in on his turf.” Willis’s girlfriend, Ashley Wyatt, testified that she and her roommate found the shotgun that Willis testified the appellant had been carrying on the night of the murder hidden in a closet in their home. 3 The appellant was heard in phone conversations from the jail giving Willis instructions to bury the murder weapon and to keep quiet about what had happened. Finally, Paul Lewis, a jail informant, was initially passing “kites,” or letters written in jail, between the appellant and Willis. In one of these kites, the appellant wrote that Kizzee was sitting on the bed while Williams was standing in front of the window, and that Kizzee screamed when Williams was shot — information that presumably only Kizzee and the shooter would know.

During closing argument at the guilt-innocence phase of the trial, the prosecutor reminded the jury about the kite in which the appellant stated that he had heard Kizzee scream on the night of the offense:

[PROSECUTOR]: But the only person who heard her scream, the only person who said she screamed was Trent Archie. Do you still hear it, Trent? Do you still hear her screaming? How do you know she screamed?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Your Hon- or, I object. I have to move for a mistrial.
[PROSECUTOR]: Because you were there that night.
TRIAL COURT: Approach the bench.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: Judge, I move for a mistrial. It’s an improper jury argument.
TRIAL COURT: Sustained.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I’m going to ask that you — in front of the jury, instruct Mr. Weeks to not ever — to refrain from ever—
TRIAL COURT: You can’t ask him questions.
*738 [PROSECUTOR]: I didn’t. I’m making argument.
TRIAL COURT: You can’t do that.
[PROSECUTOR]: Judge, I’ve done it before.
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TRIAL COURT: The objection is sustained and the jury is ordered to disregard [the prosecutor’s] argument to which the objection was sustained.
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: And a motion for mistrial—
TRIAL COURT: Denied. Other instructions?
[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: I ask that you instruct that that doesn’t happen again.
TRIAL COURT: [The prosecutor] is so instructed.

Later, at a hearing on the appellant’s motion for new trial, defense counsel testified that, as the prosecutor was making the objected-to argument above, he had “turned from the jury, faced defense counsel table and pointing, taking a step or two towards [the appellant],” asked the objected-to questions. The SPA does not challenge the accuracy of this description. The jury found the appellant guilty, and he appealed.

In the Court of Appeals

On appeal, the appellant raised the denial of his motion for mistrial. The court of appeals held that the prosecutor’s argument, coupled with his physical actions, constituted an improper comment on the appellant’s failure to testify in violation of his state and federal rights against self-incrimination. 4 Having found the argument improper, the court of appeals went on to address whether the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to grant a mistrial. The court of appeals found that the argument was highly prejudicial, that any curative instructions would not have ameliorated the prejudice, and the evidence was not so strong that the appellant would necessarily have been convicted absent the improper argument. 5 Accordingly, the court of appeals reversed the appellant’s conviction and remanded the cause to the trial court. 6

ANALYSIS

The Law

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 S.W.3d 734, 2011 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 796, 2011 WL 2200809, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/archie-v-state-texcrimapp-2011.