Dancy v. Cave

760 S.W.2d 40, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2693, 1988 WL 113882
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 28, 1988
Docket07-88-0163-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 760 S.W.2d 40 (Dancy v. Cave) 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
Dancy v. Cave, 760 S.W.2d 40, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2693, 1988 WL 113882 (Tex. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, Chief Justice.

We permitted the filing of relator Willie Lee Dancy’s petition for writ of mandamus to determine whether respondent, Honorable David Cave, Judge of the 110th Judicial District Court, had a ministerial duty to sign judgments proposed to settle two pending cases for the forfeiture of an automobile and currency. Based on the record before us, relator has not demonstrated his right to the mandamus relief requested.

While driving his 1981 BMW automobile in Dickens County, relator Dancy was stopped by a Texas Department of Public Safety trooper. The trooper, with assistance from a deputy sheriff, seized less than .04 grams of cocaine concealed in the dashboard or console of the automobile and currency in the amount of $15,151.97 on relator’s person and in the automobile trunk. Relator was arrested and charged with, so far as the record reveals, “the possession of cocaine.”

The district attorney, in the name of the State of Texas acting by and through the trooper and the deputy sheriff, filed two notices of seizure and forfeiture in the 110th Judicial District Court of Dickens County. One notice, filed in cause no. 3649, sought the forfeiture of the BMW automobile to the Texas Department of Public Safety because the vehicle was used for the purpose of transporting, or facilitating possession or concealment of a controlled substance. See Tex.Rev.Civ.Stat. Ann. art. 4476-15, § 5.03(a)(5) (Vernon Supp.1988). The other notice, filed as cause no. 3650, sought the forfeiture of the $15,151.97 to the Texas Department of Public Safety and to the Sheriff’s Department of Dickens County because the currency was derived from the sale, distribution or delivery of a controlled substance or was used or intended for use in violation of the Controlled Substance Act. See Tex. Rev.Civ.Stat.Ann. art. 4476-15, § 5.03(a)(6) (Vernon Supp.1988).

Relator filed verified denials that the automobile and the currency were subject to seizure under the Controlled Substances Act, and one Donna Renee Hodges intervened to claim an unfiled lien on the BMW automobile. Subsequently, relator moved for dismissal of the causes on the ground that testimony at his examining trial, and at a suppression hearing in a federal district court, showed there was no evidence that the currency was the fruit of or was intended for use in any transaction made subject to the Controlled Substance Act, and that there was no evidence he knew about the presence of the contraband in the automobile dashboard or console.

On the day set for a hearing before respondent on relator’s motion to dismiss, the State was represented by the district attorney and relator and Hodges were represented by their respective attorneys. The district attorney announced in open court that a settlement had been reached in each cause, expressing that:

For and in exchange for the payment of two thousand dollars, the one thousand be applied in each case, your Honor, the state has agreed to dismiss each of the causes. And further an agreement has been reached in the matter of a plea bargain involving the Defendant [Dan-cy], uh, would not be directly a part of this, but was a consideration in setting the amount.

*42 Upon respondent’s inquiry about the plea bargain, the district attorney replied, “Your Honor, the plea bargain will not be directly a part of this settlement,” and then added, “But the plea bargain — we have entered a plea bargain. It was a consideration in reaching this settlement.”

At this point, respondent stated his understanding that he had no control over what the State does about its civil obligations or choice in what to do about the car and money, but was obligated by law to approve or disapprove plea bargains. Then respondent said, “So, if it is an integral part of your negotiations, you might better let the Court know about what the plea bargain is, .because I may either tell you right now whether I will accept or object [sic ] such plea bargain.”

Upon being made aware of the plea bargain arrangements, respondent said he will refuse to accept the plea bargain, and asked if that has any bearing on the civil action. After counsel conferred, the district attorney announced a settlement in these words:

The settlement is for and in exchange for the payment of one thousand dollars in each cause number, the State will agree to dismiss the causes. An order to be prepared be [szc ] myself doing such, your Honor, and I would anticipate sending that order to the Court, uh, on or near the time that we try the other case.

Following a discussion about when the order could be prepared, the following is recorded:

THE COURT: Whatever y’all do, y’all prepare an order and send it to each other and sign and approve it as to contents and form and then you can send it on to my office in Spur. Then I’ll sign it and get the clerk to send everybody a file stamped copy whenever y’all get your settlement. That’s your agreement?

Receiving a response of “That’s correct” from relator's attorney, respondent asked if he correctly understood that the court was going to decide who gets the $2,000. The district attorney replied affirmatively, adding that as the suits were filed requesting forfeiture, “by offering one thousand dollars in each cause each [the Texas Department of Public Safety and the Dickens County Sheriff’s Department] would receive one thousand dollars.”

Responding, “Okay,” respondent inquired whether there were any storage charges for the BMW automobile. Told that “was not a part of the agreement,” respondent concluded the hearing.

Two days later, respondent notified the attorneys by letter that, having had the opportunity to review the law, he now was of the opinion that the settlement agreement must be approved by the court. He advised that he refused to approve the settlement agreement presented to the court.

Still, relator moved for judgment pursuant to the settlement agreement announced in open court, which was “approved” by respondent who “ordered a judgment prepared accordingly.” However, the judgment form submitted with each motion did not carry the approval of the parties, and they differed from the language of the settlement agreement announced in open court. Particularly, the judgment submitted in the automobile forfeiture proceeding ordered that the BMW automobile be returned to relator and that he pay $1,000 to the State of Texas, the judgment submitted in the money forfeiture proceeding adjudged that relator was to recover $14,-151.97 from the State of Texas, and neither judgment submitted mentioned the dismissals previously proposed in open court. Later, the district attorney moved to dismiss the forfeiture cases for the reason that the evidence is insufficient.

Subsequently, a hearing was held on the State’s motion to dismiss and relator’s motions to dismiss and for judgment filed in the forfeiture cases. The district attorney, stipulating that the record in the examining trial on the charge of relator’s possession of cocaine would be the testimony, noticed the agreement reached with relator’s attorney and suggested the court should consider that the facts appear to be similar to the facts of the Humason case. 1 Relator’s *43

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Bluebook (online)
760 S.W.2d 40, 1988 Tex. App. LEXIS 2693, 1988 WL 113882, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dancy-v-cave-texapp-1988.