In The
Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-18-00182-CR _______________________
DANNY SMITH, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-27304
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury found appellant Danny Smith guilty of burglary of a building. Smith
pleaded “true” to two enhancement paragraphs, the jury assessed Smith’s
punishment as a habitual offender at twenty years of confinement, and the jury
imposed a $500 fine. On appeal, Smith argues that reversible error occurred when
the State elicited hearsay evidence (1) from an unidentified detective identifying
1 appellant as the perpetrator of the offense, and (2) by implication from a civilian
identifying appellant as the perpetrator of the offense.
Background
Deputy Bianey Torres with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department
testified that on the morning of April 9, 2017, she was dispatched to the Longhorn
convenience store in Hampshire that had reportedly been burglarized. According to
Deputy Torres, when she arrived at the store, she observed that although the padlock
on the store doors was still intact, the bottom glass panel of one of the doors was
broken in a way making it appear as if someone may have entered the store. Deputy
Torres testified that while the clerk who reported the burglary waited outside the
store, Deputy Torres entered the store through the hole in the glass and determined
that nobody was in the store. According to Deputy Torres, the safe under the cash
register was pulled out, Marlboro cigarette boxes were on the floor, and drawers in
the manager’s office were pulled out. Deputy Torres testified she was at the store
about thirty minutes and then handed the investigation over to deputies assigned to
the case.
Deputy Hazleton with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office testified that
when she was dispatched to the convenience store, Deputy Torres was at the end of
her shift, and Deputy Hazleton took over the investigation. According to Deputy
2 Hazleton, she spoke to store personnel and determined that $27.66 was stolen from
the store cash register. Deputy Hazleton testified that she watched surveillance video
and observed an older-model gold four-door passenger car drive up to the building.
She then observed a white male break into the right bottom of the glass door with a
crowbar, hurriedly run into the back behind the register, touch the safe and cash
register, and enter the back room and grab cartons of cigarettes before leaving the
store. Deputy Hazleton testified that she viewed the video on the hard drive but she
was unable to get a copy of it “on a disk or anything like that.”
The owner of the convenience store testified that about $29 dollars was taken
from the cash register, and thirty-three or thirty-four cartons of cigarettes were
missing from the store, which amounted to approximately $2,000 of goods. He
testified that he downloaded the surveillance video from the store to a CD. The CD
was admitted into evidence.
Detective Powell with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office testified that he
was an investigator on the case. Detective Powell testified he obtained video footage
from the store owner and part of the video was crucial in that it depicted the suspect’s
face and physical attributes. According to Detective Powell “still shots” from the
video were posted on the sheriff department’s Facebook page to identify the suspect.
Detective Powell believed that, based on the direction from which the vehicle arrived
3 and departed on the video, the suspect was in or from an adjacent county. Detective
Powell contacted a Chambers County detective, provided the photographs to the
Chambers County detective, and the Chambers County detective immediately
identified the subject as Danny Ray Smith.
Powell then testified as follows:
[Detective Powell:] . . . I then received a phone call from Kathy who contacted the sheriff’s office and said, “Hey the person on that video camera is” --
[Defense counsel:] Judge, at this point, anything that he’s going to say that she tells him, I’m going to object to on the basis of hearsay.
THE COURT: Sustained.
[Prosecutor:] You had talked to the Chambers County -- some Chambers County deputies, correct?
[Detective Powell:] Correct.
[Prosecutor:] And part of that investigation le[]d you to a suspect of Danny Ray Smith, right?
Detective Powell then testified that he received a call from Kathy Hoffpauir and
visited Kathy at a car dealership in Winnie. According to Detective Powell, Kathy
identified Smith from a photo line-up Detective Powell had prepared as the person
depicted in the photographs on the sheriff’s Facebook page. The photo line-up was
admitted into evidence at trial. 4 Kathy testified that she works at Winnie Dodge in Winnie and she identified
the defendant and the person she identified in the photo line-up as Danny Smith,
whom she testified she had known “since [they] were kids.” Kathy testified that she
saw pictures from the burglary on Facebook and recognized the suspect as Danny
Smith and called and reported it to Crime Stoppers. According to Kathy, Detective
Powell called her and set up a meeting at her place of employment in Winnie and
she identified Smith from a photo line-up Detective Powell provided to her.
Detective Arredondo with the Chambers County Sheriff’s Office testified that
Detective Powell sent him photographs in April 2017 about an investigation.
Detective Arredondo testified that he had “not a doubt in [his] mind []” that the
person in the photographs was Danny Ray Smith and Arredondo testified that he
“dealt with [Smith] back when I worked with patrol[,]” he had seen Smith’s face
several times, they “had several contacts[,]” and Detective Arredondo stated he “just
knew him through [his] experience.” Detective Arredondo testified he showed the
pictures to Sergeant King, who King informed Detective Arredondo about a traffic
stop earlier in the day. Detective Arredondo testified that he then contacted Detective
Powell about the suspect’s identity.
Sergeant J.W. King with the Chambers County Sheriff’s Office testified that
he was on patrol on April 12, 2017, and initiated a stop based on a call that an
5 individual at the Speedy Stop was selling cigarettes out of the trunk of his car.
Sergeant King testified that the car was described as a “tan vehicle” and he was given
a possible license plate number. According to Sergeant King, he did not locate the
vehicle in the first parking lot he went to but then located the vehicle at a nearby gas
station. Sergeant King testified that when he pulled up, individuals were walking out
of the store toward the tan vehicle with the same license plate number that had been
reported. One of the individuals, whom Sergeant King knew outside of his job for
years, identified himself with a Texas ID card as Danny Smith. Sergeant King
testified he asked Smith about the cigarettes and Smith showed him ten to fifteen
cartons of Marlboro and Newport cigarettes in the trunk of the gold sedan. According
to Sergeant King, Smith told him he found the cartons in the ditch over by Terrell
Park. Sergeant King told Smith he was not allowed to sell the cigarettes and then
told him he was free to go.
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In The
Court of Appeals Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont ____________________ NO. 09-18-00182-CR _______________________
DANNY SMITH, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the Criminal District Court Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. 17-27304
MEMORANDUM OPINION
A jury found appellant Danny Smith guilty of burglary of a building. Smith
pleaded “true” to two enhancement paragraphs, the jury assessed Smith’s
punishment as a habitual offender at twenty years of confinement, and the jury
imposed a $500 fine. On appeal, Smith argues that reversible error occurred when
the State elicited hearsay evidence (1) from an unidentified detective identifying
1 appellant as the perpetrator of the offense, and (2) by implication from a civilian
identifying appellant as the perpetrator of the offense.
Background
Deputy Bianey Torres with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department
testified that on the morning of April 9, 2017, she was dispatched to the Longhorn
convenience store in Hampshire that had reportedly been burglarized. According to
Deputy Torres, when she arrived at the store, she observed that although the padlock
on the store doors was still intact, the bottom glass panel of one of the doors was
broken in a way making it appear as if someone may have entered the store. Deputy
Torres testified that while the clerk who reported the burglary waited outside the
store, Deputy Torres entered the store through the hole in the glass and determined
that nobody was in the store. According to Deputy Torres, the safe under the cash
register was pulled out, Marlboro cigarette boxes were on the floor, and drawers in
the manager’s office were pulled out. Deputy Torres testified she was at the store
about thirty minutes and then handed the investigation over to deputies assigned to
the case.
Deputy Hazleton with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office testified that
when she was dispatched to the convenience store, Deputy Torres was at the end of
her shift, and Deputy Hazleton took over the investigation. According to Deputy
2 Hazleton, she spoke to store personnel and determined that $27.66 was stolen from
the store cash register. Deputy Hazleton testified that she watched surveillance video
and observed an older-model gold four-door passenger car drive up to the building.
She then observed a white male break into the right bottom of the glass door with a
crowbar, hurriedly run into the back behind the register, touch the safe and cash
register, and enter the back room and grab cartons of cigarettes before leaving the
store. Deputy Hazleton testified that she viewed the video on the hard drive but she
was unable to get a copy of it “on a disk or anything like that.”
The owner of the convenience store testified that about $29 dollars was taken
from the cash register, and thirty-three or thirty-four cartons of cigarettes were
missing from the store, which amounted to approximately $2,000 of goods. He
testified that he downloaded the surveillance video from the store to a CD. The CD
was admitted into evidence.
Detective Powell with the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office testified that he
was an investigator on the case. Detective Powell testified he obtained video footage
from the store owner and part of the video was crucial in that it depicted the suspect’s
face and physical attributes. According to Detective Powell “still shots” from the
video were posted on the sheriff department’s Facebook page to identify the suspect.
Detective Powell believed that, based on the direction from which the vehicle arrived
3 and departed on the video, the suspect was in or from an adjacent county. Detective
Powell contacted a Chambers County detective, provided the photographs to the
Chambers County detective, and the Chambers County detective immediately
identified the subject as Danny Ray Smith.
Powell then testified as follows:
[Detective Powell:] . . . I then received a phone call from Kathy who contacted the sheriff’s office and said, “Hey the person on that video camera is” --
[Defense counsel:] Judge, at this point, anything that he’s going to say that she tells him, I’m going to object to on the basis of hearsay.
THE COURT: Sustained.
[Prosecutor:] You had talked to the Chambers County -- some Chambers County deputies, correct?
[Detective Powell:] Correct.
[Prosecutor:] And part of that investigation le[]d you to a suspect of Danny Ray Smith, right?
Detective Powell then testified that he received a call from Kathy Hoffpauir and
visited Kathy at a car dealership in Winnie. According to Detective Powell, Kathy
identified Smith from a photo line-up Detective Powell had prepared as the person
depicted in the photographs on the sheriff’s Facebook page. The photo line-up was
admitted into evidence at trial. 4 Kathy testified that she works at Winnie Dodge in Winnie and she identified
the defendant and the person she identified in the photo line-up as Danny Smith,
whom she testified she had known “since [they] were kids.” Kathy testified that she
saw pictures from the burglary on Facebook and recognized the suspect as Danny
Smith and called and reported it to Crime Stoppers. According to Kathy, Detective
Powell called her and set up a meeting at her place of employment in Winnie and
she identified Smith from a photo line-up Detective Powell provided to her.
Detective Arredondo with the Chambers County Sheriff’s Office testified that
Detective Powell sent him photographs in April 2017 about an investigation.
Detective Arredondo testified that he had “not a doubt in [his] mind []” that the
person in the photographs was Danny Ray Smith and Arredondo testified that he
“dealt with [Smith] back when I worked with patrol[,]” he had seen Smith’s face
several times, they “had several contacts[,]” and Detective Arredondo stated he “just
knew him through [his] experience.” Detective Arredondo testified he showed the
pictures to Sergeant King, who King informed Detective Arredondo about a traffic
stop earlier in the day. Detective Arredondo testified that he then contacted Detective
Powell about the suspect’s identity.
Sergeant J.W. King with the Chambers County Sheriff’s Office testified that
he was on patrol on April 12, 2017, and initiated a stop based on a call that an
5 individual at the Speedy Stop was selling cigarettes out of the trunk of his car.
Sergeant King testified that the car was described as a “tan vehicle” and he was given
a possible license plate number. According to Sergeant King, he did not locate the
vehicle in the first parking lot he went to but then located the vehicle at a nearby gas
station. Sergeant King testified that when he pulled up, individuals were walking out
of the store toward the tan vehicle with the same license plate number that had been
reported. One of the individuals, whom Sergeant King knew outside of his job for
years, identified himself with a Texas ID card as Danny Smith. Sergeant King
testified he asked Smith about the cigarettes and Smith showed him ten to fifteen
cartons of Marlboro and Newport cigarettes in the trunk of the gold sedan. According
to Sergeant King, Smith told him he found the cartons in the ditch over by Terrell
Park. Sergeant King told Smith he was not allowed to sell the cigarettes and then
told him he was free to go. A video recording of the stop was admitted into evidence
and played for the jury. Sergeant King testified that later that morning Arredondo
showed him pictures, one of which included the burglary suspect’s vehicle that
matched the vehicle that King had stopped earlier that day. Arredondo said there
were cigarettes stolen in Jefferson County, and King told him that he had talked to
Danny Smith that morning and Smith had cigarettes in the trunk of his car.
6 Hearsay
In issue one, Smith argues that “[r]eversible error occurred when the State
elicited hearsay evidence from an unidentified detective identifying appellant as the
perpetrator of the offense.” In issue two, Smith argues “[r]eversible error occurred
when the State elicited hearsay evidence by implication from a civilian identifying
appellant as the perpetrator of the offense.”
In issue one, Smith refers to Detective Powell’s testimony about the
conversations Powell had with the Chambers County deputies that led him to Smith
as a suspect. According to Smith, “the hearsay testimony of the unidentified
detective directly implicating appellant was clearly inadmissible, and so harmful that
no instruction to disregard the evidence could have cured the error.” Smith waived
error as to the admission of this evidence because Detective Arredondo later testified
that he was one of the Chambers County deputies to whom Detective Powell sent
photographs and that Detective Arredondo contacted Detective Powell and
identified Smith as the person in the photographs and as the suspect in the case. See
Rogers v. State, 853 S.W.2d 29, 35 (Tex. Crim. App. 1993) (“[E]rror regarding
improperly admitted evidence is waived if that same evidence is brought in later by
the defendant or by the State without objection.”). The record also does not reflect
that the defense ever made a hearsay objection at trial to Detective Powell’s
7 statement about his conversation with the Chambers County deputies that then led
to the identification of Smith as the perpetrator. Therefore, Smith failed to preserve
this alleged error and we need not address it. See Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a); Wilson v.
State, 311 S.W.3d 452, 473-74 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (per curiam, op. on reh’g)
(quoting Ford v. State, 305 S.W.3d 530, 532-33 (Tex. Crim. App. 2009)). We
overrule issue one.
In issue two, Smith refers to his sustained hearsay objection to Detective
Powell’s testimony that “Kathy” contacted the sheriff’s office and said, “Hey the
person on that video camera is . . . .” According to Smith, “the follow-up hearsay of
a statement made by Kathy, although not completed in the testimony, was clearly
for the purpose of similarly identifying appellant.” Smith contends that even though
Detective Powell’s testimony as to the identification by Kathy “was not reached
before the sustained objection[,] [t]he obvious implication from the context
immediately following the damaging identification testimony from the unidentified
detective, was that she identified appellant.” Just after the trial court sustained the
hearsay objection, Detective Powell continued to testify and again stated that Kathy
called the sheriff’s office, Detective Powell met with Kathy at her place of
employment, and Kathy identified Smith from a photo line-up. Smith did not make
a hearsay objection during this part of the Detective’s testimony. In addition, Kathy
8 testified that she saw pictures from the burglary on Facebook, recognized the suspect
as Danny Smith, and that she called and reported it to Crime Stoppers. She also
testified that the defendant in the courtroom and the person she identified in the
photo line-up provided by Detective Powell was Danny Smith, a person she had
known “since [they] were kids.” Smith failed to contemporaneously object each time
the objectionable evidence was proffered and failed to preserve the alleged error.
See Valle v. State, 109 S.W.3d 500, 509 (Tex. Crim. App. 2003); Rogers, 853 S.W.2d
at 35; see also Tex. R. App. P. 33.1(a). We overrule issue two.
The trial court’s judgment is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
_________________________ LEANNE JOHNSON Justice
Submitted on January 24, 2019 Opinion Delivered April 17, 2019 Do Not Publish
Before McKeithen, C.J., Kreger and Johnson, JJ.