Eddie Charles Reed v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 2007
Docket06-06-00098-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Eddie Charles Reed v. State (Eddie Charles Reed 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.

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Eddie Charles Reed v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion



In The

Court of Appeals

Sixth Appellate District of Texas at Texarkana



______________________________



No. 06-06-00098-CR



EDDIE CHARLES REED, Appellant



V.



THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee





On Appeal from the 202nd Judicial District Court

Bowie County, Texas

Trial Court No. 04F0318-202





Before Morriss, C.J., Carter and Moseley, JJ.

Memorandum Opinion by Justice Moseley



MEMORANDUM OPINION



Eddie Charles Reed was convicted of indecency with a child as an habitual offender and sentenced to life imprisonment. He appeals from that conviction and sentence.

Under the testimony given, Reed had been living with his girlfriend, Brenda Zachary, for about three and one-half years.

Zachary testified that she entered a bedroom of the house where Reed and Zachary's six-year-old granddaughter were located and discovered the granddaughter standing about three feet in front of Reed. Reed's pants were unzipped; he was holding his penis (in a state of erection) in his hand. Zachary testified that Reed was instructing the granddaughter to come closer to him and perform fellatio on him. The jury found Reed guilty.

At the punishment phase, evidence was introduced of Reed's two prior felony convictions and the jury responded by assessing life imprisonment.

Reed raises three points of error:

(1) he complains that the court failed to allow him to impeach the testimony of Zachary regarding the chronology of certain events by the use of her statement to the police;

(2) he takes the position that it was error for the trial court to refuse to allow him to testify that Reed had mistakenly previously entered a plea of guilty to a prior felony, believing he was pleading, instead, to a state-jail felony; and

(3) he alleges that the evidence was factually insufficient to sustain his conviction.

ABILITY TO IMPEACH USING PRIOR INCONSISTENT STATEMENTS

As to the first issue, Reed believed that the point in time at which he began to weep and threaten suicide was vitally important. Initially, Zachary testified that Reed exhibited this conduct upon having been confronted with his conduct with Zachary's granddaughter. Reed tried first to question her about her prior statement to police that Reed had cried and made his threat of suicide after she had told him that she was throwing him out of her house (as opposed to when he was discovered with his hardened penis in his hand). Reed explained that he believed it vitally important to demonstrate that he was not evidencing distress because of remorse over his actions with the child but, rather, because his relationship with Zachary was coming to an end. It is not necessary to engage in an analysis of whether the initial ruling of the court was correct in determining that cross-examination of Zachary was proper or not because--after an extended discussion regarding the issue outside the presence of the jury--Zachary changed her testimony to reflect that Reed began to weep and threaten suicide only after Zachary had told him to clear his things out of her house. After the change in her rendition of the sequence of events, Reed's counsel, apparently satisfied, indicated his satisfaction by stating, "Okay. We've clarified that issue." Therefore, if there was any error in the initial ruling, it was cured by the fact that Reed was allowed to question Zachary again and, this time, the chronology of the actions as stated in her trial testimony completely coincided with the time frames set out in the police statement. Accordingly, if error existed, the error was cured.



EVIDENCE OF MISTAKE IN PREVIOUS GUILTY PLEA TO FELONY

Reed testified that, although he acknowledged that he had been convicted of the felony offense of burglary of a habitation in 1979, he also took the position that he had intended to enter a plea in 1997 (actually 1998) to a state-jail felony offense, not to the second-degree felony of which he was actually convicted. Immediately after Reed announced that it was his desire to provide testimony as to his intentions in 1998, the State was granted an oral motion in limine which barred Reed from making reference to the 1998 conviction as a state-jail offense, rather than a second-degree felony. (1)

Reed relies on Parr v. State, 557 S.W.2d 99 (Tex. Crim. App. 1977), for the proposition that a defendant has the ability to explain the details of the prior convictions. However, Parr has no application to the facts of this case. In Parr, the defendant took the stand and admitted to two prior convictions for the possession of illicit drugs; on cross-examination, the State went much farther than it should have gone. During questioning which would ordinarily be characterized as badgering, the State pushed its point too far, asking the defendant, "Oh, you weren't [guilty]? Why did you plead guilty then?" Id. at 101. When, on redirect, Parr's attorney attempted to expand on the answer to this question, the State objected, saying, "Why he pled guilty is of no concern to this jury. The record speaks for itself, we have had hearings on this." Id. The court sustained the objection, barring any further inquiry into the issue. Id. The court observed that once the State had opened the inquiry into why Parr had pled guilty, Parr was then entitled to further explore the issue; in other words, the actions of the State had permitted a line of inquiry which would have otherwise not been allowed.

In this case, however, the State opened no door to allow Reed to enter into that area of inquiry. Rather, it simply introduced evidence of the fact of the convictions and used a fingerprint expert to tie those convictions to Reed. It is plain that Reed was unilaterally attempting to revisit one of his prior convictions and show that it was not truly what the record showed that it was. In other words, when Reed was attempting to testify that, under the evidence which existed that he really should not have been convicted of the crime of burglary of a habitation, he was attempting a collateral attack on a final judgment. Although a prior conviction that was alleged in a later offense may be collaterally attacked if it is void or if it is tainted by a constitutional defect, it may not be attacked for an alleged insufficiency of the evidence or irregularities in the judgment or sentence. Galloway v. State, 578 S.W.2d 142, 143 (Tex. Crim. App. [Panel Op.] 1979); In re Altschul, 207 S.W.3d 427 (Tex. App.--Waco 2006, pet. filed).

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