Bobby Carl Lennox AKA Bobby Carl Leanox v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 20, 2020
Docket06-19-00164-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Bobby Carl Lennox AKA Bobby Carl Leanox v. State (Bobby Carl Lennox AKA Bobby Carl Leanox 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.

Bluebook
Bobby Carl Lennox AKA Bobby Carl Leanox v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana

No. 06-19-00164-CR

BOBBY CARL LENNOX AKA BOBBY CARL LEANOX, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the 6th District Court Lamar County, Texas Trial Court No. 28256

Before Morriss, C.J., Burgess and Stevens, JJ. Opinion by Chief Justice Morriss OPINION After a Lamar County jury found Bobby Carl Lennox 1 guilty of three counts of forgery of

a financial instrument, the trial court sentenced him to seventeen years’ imprisonment on each

count, with the sentences to run concurrently. Lennox appeals, maintaining that his sentence was

outside the applicable punishment range, that the evidence was insufficient to show that he had the

ability to pay court-appointed attorney fees, and that the trial court erred when it failed to hold an

evidentiary hearing on his motion for new trial. 2

We conclude that (1) Lennox’s sentences exceeded the applicable punishment range,

(2) assessing court-appointed attorney fees was improper, and (3) denying Lennox’s motion for

new trial without a hearing was not error. Therefore, we modify each such judgment to correct

recitation of the “Degree of Offense” and “Statute for Offense.” As to Count One, we modify the

trial court’s judgment and the bill of costs by deleting $390.00 of court-appointed attorney fees,

however characterized. We affirm those portions of all three judgments, as modified, finding

Lennox guilty of the respective, modified, offenses. Because we find error in the punishment

portion of the judgments, we reverse the portion of the judgments imposing punishment, and we

remand the causes to the trial court for new punishment hearings.

After James Maurice McKnight passed away in 2018, his daughter, Fran King, closed

McKnight’s bank account at Guaranty Bank. Later, in December 2018, King asked Frank

Norwood to have his auction company organize a sale of McKnight’s estate. Among other

1 Appellant was also known as Bobby Carl Leanox. 2 Lennox does not challenge the sufficiency of the evidence as to any of the three charges against him. 2 individuals, Brandon Crawford, Destiny Brush, and Janae Lewis helped Norwood with the estate

sale. 3 Before the sale, King’s family placed some items, including a checkbook, in a “safe room”

in McKnight’s home so that the items would not be sold. The evidence demonstrated Lewis’s

awareness that those items had been placed in the “safe room.” The estate sale was conducted

December 29, 2018.

Crawford testified that he and Lennox were “pretty good friends” and that he had worked

with Lennox “a couple of times.” Crawford also testified that Lennox admitted to him that he

received the checks from the estate sale from Lewis, “from the dead guy,” and to having passed

the checks.

In January 2019, Nima Sherpa (Nima) was the manager of the Quick Track convenience

store in Paris, Texas. Nima testified that she knew Lennox because he regularly came into the

store and that Lennox often brought checks to the store in order to cash them. According to Nima,

in January 2019, Lennox “passed” checks in the store that had been dated January 7, January 9,

and January 12, 2019. The three checks were from McKnight’s bank account and had been made

payable to Bobby Lennox. Nima said that, because Lennox was a regular customer, she did not

ask him to endorse the checks or to pay the normal check-cashing fee. Nima later learned that the

bank “rejected” the three checks for insufficient funds.

Gyalbu Sherpa (Gyalbu), also a manager at Quick Track, stated that he knew Lennox

because Lennox sometimes did “small jobs” for Quick Track stores. Gyalbu explained that, after

Lennox cashed the checks and Gyalbu realized there were insufficient funds in the account, Gyalbu

3 Norwood knew Lennox “[j]ust in passing,” but Lennox had not helped with the McKnight estate sale. 3 asked Lennox, “I said your checks are bad, why do you pass those checks?” Lennox responded

that “[he] worked for somebody and those [were the employer’s] checks.” According to Gyalbu,

Lennox claimed not to have known the checks were “bad.”

McKnight’s daughter, King, stated that, after she closed her father’s account at Guaranty

Bank, she received a telephone call from an employee of the bank informing her that one of her

father’s bank account checks had gone “through” the bank. King said she reported the incident to

law enforcement. She stated that she did not write the check and had never written any check to

Lennox. King also said that, as far as she was aware, her father had not known Lennox or hired

him to do any work.

(1) Lennox’s Sentences Exceeded the Applicable Punishment Range

There is no question that the jury convicted Lennox of three counts of forgery of a financial

instrument by passing three forged checks, each valued at $100.00 but less than $750.00. Lennox

maintains that the three charges should have been categorized as Class B misdemeanors and that

punishment enhancement was supported. Instead, the jury was instructed that the charges were

state jail felonies. Accordingly, Lennox maintains that the three sentences of seventeen years’

imprisonment exceeded the applicable punishment range. We agree with Lennox.

“Forge” is defined, in relevant part, to mean “to alter, make, complete, execute, or

authenticate any writing so that it purports: (i) to be the act of another who did not authorize that

act.” TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 32.21(a)(1) (Supp.). In this case, Lennox was charged with cashing

three financial instruments he had forged. Count One of the indictment alleged, in relevant part,

that Lennox,

4 did then and there, with intent to defraud or harm another, pass to Nima Sherpa, a forged writing, knowing such writing to be forged, and such writing had been so made or completed that it purported to be the act of James McKnight, who did not authorize the act, and the writing was a check of the tenor following:

.”

Count Two, using similar language, alleged that Lennox passed a forged check to Sherpa “of the

tenor following:

5 Count Three, also using similar language, alleged that Lennox passed a forged check to Sherpa “of

the tenor following:

The State contends that it appropriately indicted Lennox on three counts of forgery

pursuant to Section 32.21(d) of the Texas Penal Code. See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 32.21(d)

(Supp.). Section 32.21, subsection (d), states, “Subject to Subsection (e-1), an offense under this

section is a state jail felony if the writing purports to be a . . . check[.]” See id.

Yet, Lennox points out that the three offenses, as charged and as proven, were Class B

misdemeanors. In support of his position, he directs us to Section 32.21, subsection (e-1), of the

Texas Penal Code, which states,

If it is shown on the trial of an offense under this section that the actor engaged in the conduct to obtain or attempt to obtain a property or service, an offense under this section is . . . (2) a Class B misdemeanor if the value of the property or service is $100 or more but less than $750.

TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 32.21(e-1) (emphasis added). Further, subsection (2) of Section 32.01

makes clear that, within the statutory scheme, the definition of property includes money. TEX.

6 PENAL CODE ANN. § 32.01(2)(C). When Lennox forged the three checks, took them to the

convenience store, and cashed them, the uncontroverted evidence suggests that he obtained

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