Doyle, Sybil Lea

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 13, 2016
DocketPD-0321-16
StatusPublished

This text of Doyle, Sybil Lea (Doyle, Sybil Lea) 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
Doyle, Sybil Lea, (Tex. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

PD-0321-16

In The Court of Criminal Appeals SYBIL LEA DOYLE, Petitioner/Appellant, v.

STATE OF TEXAS, Respondent/Appellee, On Petition for Discretionary Review from the Ninth Court of Appeals, Beaumont, Texas, No. 09-14-00458-CR

PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW CASEY LAW OFFICE, P.C. Stephen D. Casey Oral Argument State Bar No. 24065015 Requested stephen@caseylawoffice.us 595 Round Rock West Drive, Suite 102 Round Rock, Texas 78681

June 13, 2016 June 13, 2016

1 IDENTITIES OF JUDGE, PARTIES, AND COUNSEL

Trial Court Judge: Hon. John Stevens, 359th District Court

Petitioner/Appellant: Sybil Lea Doyle

Counsel for Pet/App: Stephen Casey CASEY LAW OFFICE, P.C. info@caseylawoffice.us 595 Round Rock West Drive, Suite 102 Round Rock, Texas 78681 Phone: (512) 257-1324 Fax: (512) 853-4098

Respondent/Appellee: State of Texas

Counsel for Respondents: David Glickler Jonathan White ATTORNEY GENERAL OF TEXAS jonathan.white@texasattorneygeneral.gov P.O. Box 12548 Austin, TX 78711 Phone: (512) 475-2547 Fax: (512) 370-9723

Court of Appeals: Ninth Court of Appeals, Beaumont Panel: Steve McKeithen, C.J., Hollis Horton and Leanne Johnson, JJ.

2 TABLE OF CONTENTS

INDEX OF AUTHORITIES ........................................................................................... 6 STATEMENT REGARDING ORAL ARGUMENT ........................................................... 8 STATEMENT OF THE CASE ........................................................................................ 9 STATEMENT OF PROCEDURAL HISTORY ................................................................ 10 GROUNDS FOR REVIEW .......................................................................................... 11

I. The Court of Appeals Failed to Accord Federal Constitutional Protection When It Addressed Vagueness, Particularly When It Omitted Texas Election Code § 1.015(b) from Its Analysis. (TEX. R. APP. P. 66.3(b), (c), (d)). ...................................................................................................... 11

II. The State relied upon plainly perjured, and “manufactured” testimony of Richard McDuffee for each criminal trial in this episode, testimony that changed and got “better” for the prosecution with each trial, violating Doyle’s due process rights and unacceptable as a matter of law. (TEX. R. APP. P. 66.3(f)). ......................................................... 11

III. The Court of Appeals had no discretion to refuse judicial notice when Texas Rule of Evidence 201(c)(2) requires it to take judicial notice when “supplied with the necessary information.” (TEX. R. APP. P. 66.3(a))............................................... 11

IV. This Court can take judicial notice of the official public records, including (1) the “Gaultney” letter, and (2) the records ignored by the court of appeals and based on those records and the other evidence, GRANT the petition. ............................................................................................... 11

Standard for Legal Insufficiency ................................................................... 11 Standard for Directed Verdicts .................................................................... 12 Standard for Perjured Testimony ................................................................. 12

ARGUMENT ............................................................................................................. 12

3 1. The Court of Appeals Failed to Accord Federal Constitutional Protection When It Addressed Vagueness, Particularly When It Omitted Texas Election Code § 1.015(b) from Its Analysis................................................................. 12

A. Section 1.015(b) critically incorporates unavoidable case law definitions within the context of interpreting “residence,” making the criminal analysis vaguely circular and thus unconstitutional. ................ 14

B. Likewise, the remaining sections that attempt to define “temporary” and “purpose” leave wide— and unconstitutional—discretion to law enforcement, judges, and juries, making it a political bully club as happened here. .......................................... 16

C. Even the learned branches of Texas government cannot fully define “residence,” which makes it an inappropriate standard for criminal notice and conviction. ................................................................................ 19

2. The State relied upon plainly perjured, and “manufactured” testimony of Richard McDuffee for this trial, testimony that changed and got “better” for the prosecution from the earlier Jenkins and Heath trials, violating Doyle’s due process rights and unacceptable as a matter of law. ................................................................................... 20

A. As a baseline, McDuffee testified in two earlier criminal cases from this same episode that he had no doubt on the day he voted that his vote was legal. ......................................................................................... 21

B. Later, after gearing up for the Doyle trial, McDuffee changed his testimony and perjured himself to aid in a conviction. .................................................. 23

3. The Court of Appeals had no discretion to refuse judicial notice of 193 voting records in which people didn’t “vote where they live,” when under Texas Rule of Evidence

4 201(c)(2) the court “must” take judicial notice. .................................. 26

A. Contrary to the Court of Appeals’ reluctance, it must take notice of the facts provided. ..................................... 26

B. The records serve under Rule 201 for proof of the federal constitutional challenge, a non-jury issue for which notice of 193 non-residential voting registrations demonstrate the very constitutional danger of arbitrary enforcement and selective prosecution the Constitution’s Due Process clause prohibits. .................................................................................. 27

4. This Court should take judicial notice of both (1) the “Gaultney letter,” and (2) the public records demonstrating selective prosecution that are critical in supporting the vagueness challenge.................................................... 28

A. Inherent to Petitioner’s “mistake of law” defense is the “Gaultney letter,” an official public record from the Montgomery County Voter Registrar Carol Gaultney, which expressly certified Doyle and others to vote from the Six Pines location. This Court should take judicial notice of this letter. ........................ 28

B. The official public records of Montgomery County demonstrate this case is all about a public political vendetta and not following the law, regardless of its constitutional infirmity. ............................................................ 29

CONCLUSION .......................................................................................................... 29 PRAYER FOR RELIEF ................................................................................................ 29 CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE ............................................................................... 31 CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE ....................................................................................... 32

5 INDEX OF AUTHORITIES

CASES Allen v. State, 249 S.W.3d 680 (Tex. App.—Austin 2008).................................................. 10

Anderson v. Celebrezze, 460 U.S. 780 (1983) ...................................................................................... 18

Coury v.

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Doyle, Sybil Lea, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doyle-sybil-lea-texapp-2016.