Ex Parte David William Watson

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 2005
Docket09-05-00151-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ex Parte David William Watson (Ex Parte David William Watson) 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 David William Watson, (Tex. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

In The



Court of Appeals



Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont



____________________



NO. 09-05-151 CR



EX PARTE DAVID WILLIAM WATSON



On Appeal from the County Court at Law Number 1

Montgomery County, Texas

Trial Cause No. 04-192190-01



MEMORANDUM OPINION

David William Watson prosecutes this direct appeal from the denial of relief he requested in a pretrial application for writ of habeas corpus. Watson was charged with the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated and opted to have a jury decide his guilt. During the course of the trial, Watson twice objected to a State's witness's mention of a numerical alcohol concentration level hypothesized from horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) indicators. Watson argued the testimony violated a motion in limine. Upon the second objection, the trial court granted Watson's motion for mistrial. Prior to his retrial, Watson filed an application for writ of habeas corpus alleging further prosecution was barred by double jeopardy. The trial court granted the writ, held a hearing, and denied the relief sought by Watson. We affirm the trial court's denial of relief.

BACKGROUND

Watson was charged with the misdemeanor offense of driving while intoxicated ("DWI") on or about December 8, 2003. See TEX. PEN. CODE ANN. § 49.04(a), (b) (Vernon 2003). Watson requested a jury trial and the record appears to indicate that a jury was selected on January 24, 2005, with testimony beginning on January 26, 2005. On January 24, 2005, Watson filed, inter alia, a "motion in limine" requesting the trial court

preclude the State from presenting any evidence attempting to use Horizontal Gaze Nystagmus (HGN) test results to . . . [a.] quantify Defendant's breath or blood alcohol content; [b.] quantify a number of alcoholic beverages consumed; [or, c.] quantify alcohol consumed as a little or a lot, or, as a low or a high dose, or, as any degree more than a mere presence[.]

The trial court granted these three requests.

On the day testimony began, the trial court sustained Watson's objection to the admissibility of the breath test slip that was generated when Trooper Steve Hoppas administered a breath test to Watson following Hoppas's arrest of Watson for the DWI offense. (1) The State was left with its alternate allegation that Watson's intoxication was based upon loss of "the normal use of [his] mental and physical faculties . . . ." Thereafter, the two incidents that form the basis for Watson's claim of prosecutorial misconduct took place, with each involving the testimony of Trooper Hoppas.

The first instance took place during the State's detailed questioning of Hoppas regarding Hoppas's personal observations while administering the HGN to Watson as part of the battery of field sobriety tests. At this point in his testimony, Trooper Hoppas had already explained to the jury that "nystagmus" was an "involuntary jerking of the eyes during movement, resting and at different points[,]" and that when a person's central nervous system is depressed, possibly because of alcohol intoxication, the eyes will not move smoothly from side to side. The HGN test checks for such involuntary "jerking" of the eyes as a possible indicator of intoxication. During further examination, in response to the State's questioning, the trooper testified as follows:

Q. How many clues are involved with the HGN?



A. Six possible clues.



Q. How many clues did you see with this particular defendant?


A. Six.


Q. What does that tell you?


A. Due to the standard by the tests, it's 81 percent chance of being over .10.


[Defense Counsel]: May we approach?



At that point, Watson interposed his strong objection to the testimony that there was an 81% chance that Watson's alcohol concentration was .10 at the time of the HGN test. Watson argued this testimony was a violation of his previously filed motion in limine. The trial court sustained Watson's objection, provided a very specific instruction to the jury to "disregard any response [by the trooper] as to any number that was given by him in response to what the six clues indicated to you as far as a quantitative amount." The trial court then denied Watson's motion for mistrial. Shortly after the first incident, the State resumed questioning the trooper when trial counsel again requested a bench conference. At that point, the defense requested the witness be admonished of the court's prior ruling. While the record reflects thereafter that the lead prosecutor, defense counsel, and Trooper Hoppas were whispering to each other, the record does not reflect what admonishments, if any, were given to Trooper Hoppas by the State and trial counsel during the "whispering" episode. Furthermore, the record does not reflect any admonishment made to Trooper Hoppas by the trial court.

The second incident with Trooper Hoppas precipitated the trial court's grant of Watson's second mistrial motion. However, this second incident occurred during cross-examination of the trooper by Watson's trial counsel.

Q. So we can stick with alcohol here. And just because you have six clues on the HGN does not guarantee that someone has lost normal use of their mental and/or physical faculties, does it? It's a sign you look at, right?



A. A sign they are over .08.




THE COURT: You may.



Watson's trial counsel again strenuously objected arguing to the trial court that Hoppas "was informed again not to mention that and once again he's done it. I've tailored my questions about loss of normal use of physical, mental faculties. The officer, once again, blurted out for the jury of being .08." The jury was retired and a hearing was held outside their presence, during which defense counsel moved again for a mistrial. The trial court granted Watson's motion for mistrial and dismissed the jury.



THE WRIT HEARING

At the writ hearing, trial counsel for Watson and the lead prosecutor testified. Prior to his testimony, trial counsel requested that all testimony and evidence presented at the jury trial be admitted, and the trial court granted his request. Also admitted for purposes of the hearing were certain written motions and responses filed by the parties prior to the jury trial, including Watson's motion in limine regarding the HGN evidence. Watson's trial counsel testified to the sequence of events, as he recalled them, surrounding the two mistrial motions, and included his observations as to why he considered the State to be ultimately responsible for the mistrial, viz:

It's my belief that the State's actions were reckless in not warning this witness.

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