Barfield v. State

63 S.W.3d 446, 2001 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 132, 2001 WL 1626916
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 2001
Docket1303-99
StatusPublished
Cited by203 cases

This text of 63 S.W.3d 446 (Barfield 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
Barfield v. State, 63 S.W.3d 446, 2001 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 132, 2001 WL 1626916 (Tex. 2001).

Opinions

WOMACK, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which KELLER, P.J., and KEASLER, HERVEY, HOLCOMB, and COCHRAN, JJ., joined.

The resolution of this appeal turns on an issue of the value of evidence given at the [448]*448“punishment stage” of a trial without a jury-

An indictment charged the appellant with committing felony DWI and being an habitual felony offender. DWI is a felony when the suspect has been twice previously convicted of DWI (or similar offenses).1 A person is an habitual felony offender when it is proved on the trial of certain felony offenses, including DWI, that the person is guilty and that the person had previously been finally convicted of two felony offenses, the second of which was for an offense committed after the first conviction became final.2 To convict the appellant for a felony it was therefore necessary for the State to prove that the appellant committed DWI as alleged, and that he had been twice previously convicted of DWI as alleged. To enhance his punishment to that of an habitual offender, the State had to prove that he had been twice previously convicted of other felonies in the sequence prescribed by law as alleged.

The appellant waived trial by jury.

The trial began with the prosecuting attorney’s reading of the portion of the indictment that alleged felony DWI, that is, that the appellant had committed DWI and that he had been twice previously convicted of DWI. The appellant pleaded not guilty. Then the court asked him, “And to the Paragraphs, the First and Second which enhances this to a felony, how do you plead? Are they true or not true?” The appellant pleaded, “Not true.”

This separate plea was, of course, unnecessary. The two previous convictions of DWI are jurisdictional elements of the offense of felony DWI, which must be alleged to invoke the jurisdiction of the felony court and which must be proved to obtain a conviction of felony DWI.3 The appellant’s plea of not guilty was a denial of those allegations.

The parties presented their evidence on the issue of the instant DWI, but they did not present evidence of the prior convictions for DWI. Then they rested.

The court asked the State, “At what point do you prove up the Enhancement paragraphs on the DWI?” The prosecutor answered, “After a verdict, if there’s a guilty verdict.” This was incorrect in two respects. Proof of the prior DWI convictions is authorized in the State’s case-in-chief on the issue of guilt.4 And, strictly speaking, there is no “verdict” in a trial without a jury; the court makes findings and enters judgment.

The attorneys argued the issue of guilt, and the court found the appellant guilty.

After a recess, the prosecuting attorney read the allegations of previous felony convictions. The appellant pleaded that they were not true. The State presented documentary proof of the previous convictions for DWI and the previous convictions for two felony offenses. The evidence was closed. The court heard arguments, found that the allegations of previous DWI convictions and previous felony convictions were true, and sentenced the appellant to 35 years in prison.

The appellant’s only point on appeal is that the evidence to prove the offense of felony DWI was insufficient because there was no evidence of the jurisdictional prior convictions of DWI at the [449]*449“guilt stage” of the trial. The court of appeals sustained the point:

Because the State failed to put on evidence of appellant’s two prior convictions in the guilt-innocence phase of trial, it did not prove the essential elements of the offense of felony DWI. Thus, the evidence is legally insufficient to support appellant’s conviction. Accordingly, we are required to reverse the judgment of the trial court and order Lonnie Ray Barfield acquitted of the crime for which he was convicted.5

All the justices of the panel of the court of appeals agreed with this holding.

One justice dissented to ordering a judgment of acquittal, saying that the judgment should be reformed to a conviction for misdemeanor DWI, that is, DWI without prior convictions for similar offenses. The State’s petition for discretionary review raises the same argument. We granted review.

We find that our grant of the State’s petition was improvident because the record does not present a case in which the evidence was insufficient to prove the jurisdictional allegations of prior convictions for DWI. We have ordered the parties to brief two questions: (1) whether the bifur-eated-trial provisions of Code of Criminal Procedure article 37.07, section 2(a) apply in a trial without a jury, and (2) whether an appellate review of the sufficiency of evidence on guilt must exclude evidence that was introduced after the trial court announced its finding of guilt in a trial without a jury.6

The bifurcated-trial procedure that the district court used is not authorized in a trial without a jury. “Prior to the 1965 Code of Criminal Procedure all trials before the court or jury regardless of plea were unitary trials”;7 that is, the issues of guilt and punishment were submitted at the same time. A bifurcated trial procedure was authorized in the 1965 revision of the Code of Criminal Procedure.8 The bifurcation statute provides, “In all criminal cases, other than misdemeanor cases of which the justice court or municipal court has jurisdiction, which are tried before a jury on a plea of not guilty, the judge shall, before argument begins, first submit to the jury the issue of guilt or innocence of the defendant of the offense or offenses charged, without authorizing the jury to pass upon the punishment to be imposed.” 9 The bifurcation statute “is applicable only to pleas of not guilty before a jury.”10 The statute “ha[s] no application [450]*450to a trial before the court on a plea of not guilty.”11

This is not the first case in which courts have failed to notice that the bifurcation statute applies only to pleas of not guilty before a jury.

[S]ome confusion has existed among the bench and bar since the advent of Article 37.07, V.A.C.C.P. Records reaching this court frequently show courts bifurcating bench trials where the plea is guilty. Often the court will hear evidence, declare the defendant guilty, order a pre-sentence investigation and sometimes months later re-convene the “penalty stage” of the guilty plea, allowing the State and defense to offer evidence as to punishment or guilt.12

This practice became common after the legislature authorized pre-sentence investigation reports to be used in assessing punishment. Although a bifurcated trial without a jury is not authorized, it is not necessarily a harmful error. “The fact, however, that the proceeding was not so converted [to a unitary trial] was irregular but does not in and of itself call for reversal.” 13

But the unauthorized “bifurcation” of a trial without a jury does not mean that a genuinely separate punishment phase exists.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
63 S.W.3d 446, 2001 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 132, 2001 WL 1626916, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barfield-v-state-texcrimapp-2001.