Bradley v. State
This text of 235 S.W.3d 808 (Bradley 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.
Opinion
CONCURRING STATEMENT
filed a statement concurring in the refusal of the petition,
I concur in the Court’s refusal of discretionary review based on appellant’s failure to comply with the rules of appellate procedure and Degrate v. State. 1 From time to time, various members of this Court issue a reminder that petitions for discretionary review must set forth “grounds for review” stating how the court of appeals erred in the particular case, coupled with “arguments” specifically addressing that error and explaining its general significance to the jurisprudence of Texas. 2 This reminder has the salubrious effect of temporarily decreasing the number of Degrate petitions that this Court receives. It is, alas, of only temporary effect. This past week, for example, we reviewed fifty-nine petitions for discretionary review. Nine of those — almost 17% of the total — fell into the Degrate category. Thus, once more unto the breach, dear friends.
In the present case, appellant pled guilty to shoplifting about $158.00 worth of goods from Wal-Mart, and she pled “true” to two enhancement paragraphs, making the offense a state jail felony. 3 She elected to have a jury assess her punishment, and it sentenced her to twenty months’ imprisonment. Appellant raised one claim on appeal: The trial court erred in allowing the State to cross-examine appellant’s mother about an unadjudicated theft. 4 The court of appeals did not address the merits of that complaint because appellant failed to object at the time her mother testified. 5
In her petition for discretionary review, appellant properly poses the issue:
*809 The Court of Appeals erred in holding that the Appellant’s pretrial objection to an extraneous offense failed to preserve error regarding the State’s cross-examination of the Appellant’s mother about that unproven extraneous offense. 6
Depending upon appellant’s argument as to why this preservation issue is of importance to the jurisprudence of the state, 7 the petition would not run afoul of Degrate and might be considered worthy of review.
Unfortunately, appellant’s argument section focuses exclusively upon the merits of the original claim that she brought to the court of appeals: whether the trial court erred in allowing the State to cross-examine appellant’s mother about an unadjudi-cated act of theft. Appellant does not explain why this Court should address her preservation claim or why the jurisprudence of the state will be adversely affected by the court of appeals’s decision. In fact, appellant makes no mention of the decision or reasoning of the court of appeals in her argument section. But appellant’s issue or ground for review properly deals with preservation of the claim, not the underlying merits of the claim. If this Court were to accept this petition, we, too, would deal only with the preservation issue, not the merits of the claim. Therefore, appellant’s argument section of the petition must deal with the preservation issue. It does not do so. It is deficient under Degrate. We will not exercise our discretionary review authority to address the underlying merits of a claim that the court of appeals declined to address because of a failure to preserve that claim, especially when an appellant fails to even discuss the preservation issue in the argument section. 8
Converting a direct appeal claim into a discretionary review ground entails considerably more time, effort, and analysis than a minor tinkering with the original direct appeal brief. “Instead, it involves a change of character, a recognition that this Court wants to know why we should, as a matter of sound discretion, expend our scarce judicial resources to review the court of appeals’ reasoning about a particular legal issue.” 9 Practitioners can keep themselves from falling over the Degrate cliff if they begin the argument section of their petitions with a brief quote from the court of appeals’s opinion and an explana *810 tion of why this legal issue is of great importance to the jurisprudence of the state: it is a novel issue, but one that is likely to arise in many other cases; the reasoning or result in this case runs directly counter to that of a prior case by this Court or to that of another court of appeals; the reasoning or result runs counter to (though is not in direct conflict with) prior precedent; the court of appeals has arguably misconstrued a constitutional provision, statute, or other law. And so forth. A non-exhaustive list of reasons for granting discretionary review is set out in Rule 66.3 of the Texas Rules of Appellate Procedure. 10 Practitioners should craft the argument section of their petitions with this rule staring them in the face. It is not, however, necessary to quote it woodenly; rather, the able practitioner will use Rule 66.3 to guide his arguments in a logical and persuasive manner. The argument section will then be firmly anchored in the court of appeals’s opinion. 11
As a corollary, petitions for discretionary review rarely should present more than one or two distinct claims of error by the court of appeals. It is exceedingly rare for a court of appeals to commit numerous errors, each of which is likely to adversely impact the jurisprudence of the state. Quantity is not a substitute for quality. One is best served by formulating one or two strong grounds for review rather than scattering pellet shots across the entire target of the direct appeal opinion.
This is not a court of “error correction.” We do not exist merely to re-do that which the court of appeals has already done on direct appeal. “Our principal role as a court of last resort is the caretaker of Texas law, not the arbiter of individual applications.” 12 Thus, the focus is not upon the specific “error” or the consequences to a specific defendant, but upon the legal ramifications and ripple effect of the lower court’s opinion.
A petition for discretionary review need not (and should not) attempt to resolve the merits of the question presented. It need only attract the interest of at least four judges concerning the legal issue. If the petition is granted, both sides will have ample opportunity to present persuasive facts, authority, and reasoning to support a proposed resolution and request specific relief. In short, a petition for discretionary review should be a highly polished small jewel that invites the reader to request a view of the entire necklace. It should not be a lump of coal that merely repeats the direct appeal brief.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
235 S.W.3d 808, 2007 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1467, 2007 WL 3010418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bradley-v-state-texcrimapp-2007.