Ex Parte Cross

69 S.W.3d 810, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307, 2002 WL 244624
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 21, 2002
Docket08-01-00209-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 69 S.W.3d 810 (Ex Parte Cross) 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
Ex Parte Cross, 69 S.W.3d 810, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307, 2002 WL 244624 (Tex. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

SUSAN LARSEN, Justice.

In this appeal, relator Michael Cross (“Cross”) seeks reversal of the trial court’s denial of his application for a pretrial writ of habeas corpus. For those reasons detailed below, we dismiss the appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction because it is not yet ripe for adjudication.

Facts

The facts of this case are undisputed and concern a series of events which led to Cross’s arrest for criminal trespass at the Sunland Park Mall (“the Mall”) in El Paso, Texas in April 2000. At that time, Cross was attempting to collect signatures at the Mall without its permission to put Pat Buchanan on the ballot for the 2000 presidential election. Cross has not denied he did not obtain permission from the Mall, nor that he was engaged in partisan political activity. Via a pretrial habeas application, he instead asserts that the criminal trespass statute, as applied to him, imper-missibly infringes on his First Amendment right to free political speech.

Several employees of the Mall testified at the habeas hearing, including Sylvia Hernandez (“Hernandez”), the Mali’s marketing director. She testified the Mall has a “common area” at its center. There are tables and chairs in the common area and people who use those facilities do not have to be customers of any commercial establishment in the Mall. Daily organ concerts are also given at the Mall and any member of the public can attend those concerts for free. Mall walkers are also allowed unrestricted use of the Mall when it is regularly open. Public access to the parking lots surrounding the Mall is equally unrestricted, although the Mall does not allow hand bills to be put on parked vehicles.

The Mall requires that anyone who wants to use the common area must first fill out a common area application (“the application”). The Mall’s management then determines whether the application is approved and permission for the use granted. Hernandez testified that in the past, the Elections Bureau had set up voting booths for early voting at the Mall. The public has always been given free access to the voting booths.

In general, the Mall does permit noncommercial, promotional, and community service activities in the common area. Other activities to which the public has free access include children’s concerts and health fairs. However, those groups must still fill out the application and receive permission before such performances or events can be held.

Final decisions concerning common area applications are made by the Mall manager. The application contains a general release and indemnity provision and details thirteen rules and regulations which ap *812 proved applicants must follow. For example, common area users must conduct their activities within the time frame allowed by the Mall. Their activities must also not offend customers or impede business conducted in the Mall. Under its own policies, the Mall retains complete discretion in making common area use decisions.

The Mall has turned down some common area applicants in the past, including a request by the local Jaycees to collect signatures for a petition concerning a bond issue. The Mall does not like to create the perception that it as a corporate entity is taking a stance on partisan political issues. For these reasons, it refuses all applications that involve any partisan political activity.

The Mall also retains booth space for lease to non-commercial community groups such as U.S. Marines, El Paso Police Department, and U.S. Border Patrol recruiters. Although these entities pay the Mall rent for that space, they must still file an application and receive Mall approval.

Sometime in late April 2000, Hernandez and Mall manager Connie Warner (“Warner”) met with Cross and several associates at the Mall office. Cross came to the Mall office after an initial attempt to gather signatures on a petition to have Pat Buchanan’s name placed on the 2000 presidential ballot. Hernandez told the group they would have to fill out an application as the first step to receiving permission to conduct activities in the Mall. Hernandez understood the men wished to collect signatures for Pat Buchanan. She also believed that she knew at the time that she asked them to fill out an application it would not be granted because it involved partisan political activity. She nevertheless felt she had to offer them the opportunity to apply.

Warner testified that when she spoke with Cross he refused to fill in an application, that he wanted several locations in the Mall, and that when he was told that at most he might only be allowed one, he left Warner’s office. Warner testified that had she received an application, she would have denied it.

A few days after this initial meeting, Hernandez was on her way into the Mall when she observed Cross standing outside the Mall at the main entrance with a clipboard. She also saw Cross approach someone who had walked through the doors of the Mall. After that person walked away, Hernandez approached Cross and asked him what he was doing. He told her he was gathering signatures to have Buchanan placed on the ballot.

Hernandez recognized Cross from their meeting in the Mall office and asked him whether he had filled out an application. Hernandez also asked Cross if someone at the Mall had given him oral permission to collect the signatures. He replied that he did not need permission to gather signatures. Hernandez told him that since he did not have permission from the Mall he would have to leave.

Hernandez then called Warner and let her know what was happening. Warner instructed Hernandez to call security and to tell Cross that he had to leave or the police would be called. Hernandez took a member of the Mali’s security force with her to talk to Cross again. By this time, two other men were assisting Cross in gathering signatures. Hernandez again asked Cross to leave, he again refused, and she called the police. Ultimately the police arrested Cross.

Hernandez testified that the main purpose of the Mall is to make money and that those non-commercial, community activities which the Mall does authorize increase traffic flow and promote good community relationships. Voting booths *813 increase traffic flow and the potential that people will shop after they have voted. The voting booths do not impede traffic and are purely voluntary on the part of any person using them in the Mall. Warner testified that Cross was impeding traffic and disturbing people in the Mall. Some people who Cross approached were offended and reported that to the Mall office.

Sergeant Harry Farlow (“Farlow”) of the El Paso Police Department testified he had been involved in a similar incident with Cross at a local Target store about two weeks prior to the Mall incident. Cross had agreed to leave the Target premises and was therefore not arrested at that time.

When Farlow arrived at the Mall after being called by Mall personnel, he found Cross directly inside one of the main entrances to the Mall talking to other police officers. Cross had already refused to leave the Mall and asserted that he was going to continue with his activity. Farlow spoke with Mall personnel who agreed they were willing to prosecute if Cross refused to leave.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 S.W.3d 810, 2002 Tex. App. LEXIS 1307, 2002 WL 244624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-cross-texapp-2002.