Bland, Timothy

417 S.W.3d 465, 2013 WL 5925719, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1651
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 6, 2013
DocketPD-1441-12
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 417 S.W.3d 465 (Bland, Timothy) 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
Bland, Timothy, 417 S.W.3d 465, 2013 WL 5925719, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1651 (Tex. 2013).

Opinions

KELLÉR, P.J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which KEASLER, HERVEY, COCHRAN and ALCALA, JJ., joined.

Appellant and the State agreed that appellant’s motion to suppress would be dispositive of the case. During the proceedings, appellant sought and obtained a ruling on a motion to disclose the identity of an informant. The two possible bases for the motion to disclose were that the informant could testify (1) at the motion to suppress hearing or (2) at the guilt phase of trial. Appellant now seeks relief on the second basis. We conclude that the dispositive nature of the motion to suppress was a term of appellant’s plea agreement and that it rendered moot the second basis for appellant’s motion to disclose. We also conclude that appellant failed to sufficiently apprise the trial court of his intent to challenge the motion to disclose on this second basis or to challenge (or renege on) the dispositive nature of the plea agreement. Consequently, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Trial

Appellant was charged with possession of a controlled substance (cocaine). He filed a motion to suppress evidence on the basis that the evidence (the cocaine) was illegally obtained. He also filed a motion to disclose the identity of the confidential informant. The latter motion cited two bases for disclosure: (1) that the informant’s identity was needed to show that the officers who conducted the arrest and search did not have probable cause based upon a reliable and credible informant, and (2) that the informant’s identity was necessary because the informant was a material witness to the defendant’s guilt or innocence and upon the possible defense of entrapment.

A hearing was held by a visiting judge on the motion to suppress. After the defense rested on the motion to suppress, the parties made arguments to the judge. During this discussion, defense counsel brought up the subject of the defense motion to reveal the identity of the confidential informant. She claimed that she was re-urging the motion based upon new evidence.

In response, the lead prosecutor remarked that the agreement was that the motion to suppress would be “dispositive”:

Your Honor, I would just like to make the court aware that the agreement was that this was a dispositive Motion to Suppress; and after the court ruled on that Motion to Suppress, the court would then make a decision as to sentencing. That the defendant would plead guilty; and going without an agreed recommendation, the judge will make the decision as to what the sentence would be at the conclusion of this hearing.... Judge Hill was present when we made this a dispositive Motion to Suppress; and the agreement was that we would go to the court — it wasn’t necessarily specified that it would be you or Judge Hill .... but that was the agreement at the conclusion of this as a dispositive Motion to Suppress.

[468]*468Defense counsel responded, “At the time when Judge Hill was here, we did not have the new information regarding the CI.” The prosecutor then responded with more details of the agreement:

Your Honor, just so the court is aware, the agreement between the State and the defense was that it was a dispositive Motion to Suppress; and at that point, there would be sentencing; and the court would decide the sentencing based on a two to twenty recommendation. The State will abandon the enhancement because the defendant is a habitual, and the court would sentence the defendant somewhere between the two to twenty range.

After some discussion of the status of the motion to reveal the confidential informant, the judge asked, “So will the result be that I hear additional evidence then?” Defense counsel responded that “we will need to provide additional information regarding the Cl’s identity because it goes to the reliability of the CI, Your Honor.” The judge then responded, “I am not sure of that because I have heard testimony that she was reliable because of the effectiveness of her past tips, the accuracy of them.”

Defense counsel then identified the case of Bodin v. State,1 which dealt with disclosing the identity of a confidential informant whose testimony may have been necessary to a fair determination of guilt. “This is no different from Mr. Bland,” defense counsel contended. Because the confidential informant was with appellant that day, defense counsel continued, “the confidential informant should be revealed ... because it goes to a critical defense of Mr. Bland’s ease.” Defense counsel elaborated:

If the CI set him up, that is critical to his defense. The fact that the CI was with him that day, her belongings were found in his car when it was released from evidence, that is critical to his defense. She is a material witness. It goes to his defense; and under Holmes v. South Carolina, we are entitled to put on a defense and have not been able to put on a true defense.

The trial judge then responded, “Aren’t most of what you have here defense matters for trial?” Defense counsel replied, “No, Your Honor. In regards to the CI, it doesn’t just go to the guilt or innocence, it goes to the reliability in regard to the probable cause.”

Subsequently, a different prosecutor asked, “Can I just ask a quick question for the record just to be clear? Was this, in fact, a dispositive Motion to Suppress?” Defense counsel replied, “It was. It is clear. I am not trying to — like I said, there is no trickery in what I am doing. It was a dispositive Motion to Suppress, but at lunch and this morning — ” The prosecutor interrupted, “So if it was a dispositive Motion to Suppress, what that typically means to the State is that the judge is going to litigate an issue; and if he rules in our favor, the defendant pleads; and if he rules not in the State’s favor, that we dismiss the case. Was that more or less your understanding?” Defense counsel responded, ‘You are clear in your understanding of the Motion to Suppress.” The prosecutor then explained that the effect of the Motion to Suppress being disposi-tive was that issues relating to guilt or innocence did not matter:

So then it seems that they want is the confidential informant revealed [sic] would be a matter of guilt or innocence in a trial; but since what we are here to determine was one specific issue on a [469]*469dispositive motion, for argument’s sake, judge, let’s say that you decided to disclose the confidential informant, it wouldn’t matter to what the agreement and what we were doing here today which was a dispositive motion which you have ruled on in our favor which means that he has to plea. If they wanted to have the confidential informant disclosed and then have that attacked, they should have had a trial.

Defense counsel responded that the issue was being re-urged because the documents had been received “yesterday.... So I will like that to be clarified.” Defense counsel then remarked that confidential informant’s identity was necessary to a determination of her reliability in connection with the motion to suppress:

[T]he confidential informant’s reliability is important even on a Motion to Suppress, even on a Motion to Suppress. That does not resolve the fact that he thinks she set him up is important even on a Motion to Suppress. Guilt or innocence or not, if she set him up, it goes to her reliability.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
417 S.W.3d 465, 2013 WL 5925719, 2013 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1651, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bland-timothy-texcrimapp-2013.