Ex Parte Shutter

868 S.W.2d 383, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3250, 1993 WL 502681
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 9, 1993
Docket01-92-00930-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 868 S.W.2d 383 (Ex Parte Shutter) 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 Shutter, 868 S.W.2d 383, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3250, 1993 WL 502681 (Tex. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

OPINION

DUGGAN, Justice.

This is an appeal from the trial court’s denial of habeas corpus relief. Appellant had urged a plea in bar to his further prosecution for driving while intoxicated, claiming double jeopardy under article I, section 14 of the Texas Constitution. Appellant asserts that prosecutorial overreaching during his first trial compelled him to move for a mistrial, which the trial court granted. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Appellant was charged in a first information with the offense of driving while intoxicated due to “introduction of alcohol into his body.” He proceeded to trial before a jury.

In both voir dire and his opening statement, appellant’s trial counsel told venire members and jurors — thereby putting the State on notice — that the defense theory was that appellant’s impairment, if any, was due to prescription medication.

The trial court elected to carry appellant’s motion to suppress evidence along with the ease. The State’s first witness, Seabrook Police Officer David C. Imbrie, testified that on April 26, 1991, he saw appellant’s erratic driving; he stopped, questioned and observed appellant; he administered field sobriety tests that appellant failed; and he then arrested appellant for DWI and transported him to the Harris County Court House — Clear Lake Annex, to the intoxilizer testing facility.

The prosecutor then approached the bench, advised the court and defense counsel of his intended next questions, and obtained the court’s permission to question Officer Imbrie about unsolicited statements appellant made while he was being transported to the Clear Lake Annex.

Following those questions, the prosecutor again approached the bench and advised the court and defense counsel that he intended to offer statements made by appellant to Imbrie at the police station. The court retired the jury and allowed both attorneys to question Imbrie on voir dire. After hearing Imbrie’s testimony outside the jury’s presence, and after watching the videotape, the court ruled that (1) appellant’s unsolicited statements made before and after the videotape were admissible, and (2) the audio portion of the video occurring after appellant received a Miranda warning was inadmissible.

The jury was recalled, and the State’s evidence resumed. After the edited videotape was shown, the prosecutor began to elicit testimony from Imbrie about events occurring immediately after the videotape was concluded. Imbrie testified that he took appellant from the Clear Lake Annex to the Seabrook jail. The colloquy continued:

[Prosecutor]: Okay. Let’s go to the Sea-brook Jail. What happened first at the Seabrook Jail?
[Witness]: After being unhandcuffed at the Jail, we attempted to book [appellant] in.
[Prosecutor]: Okay. Were you successful in booking [appellant] into Jail?
[Witness]: Not completely, no, sir.
[Prosecutor]: And, why not?
[Witness]: Well, [appellant] refused to answer many questions on the — on the booking sheet.
[Prosecutor]: What type of questions did you ask him?
[Witness]: Normal questions — name and address, social security number, religion, if *385 he was under a doctor’s care or taking any prescribed medication.
[Defense counsel]: Excuse me a moment, your Honor. May we approach the bench?

(Emphasis added.) Out of the jury’s presence, appellant’s counsel moved for a mistrial, asserting that the prosecutor had injected before the jury, as evidence of appellant’s guilt, the fact that appellant had exercised his post-Miranda right to remain silent at the police station and that his silence, when questioned about “taking any prescribed medication” was being used “as evidence to prove up [the State’s] theory of the case,” contradicting what appellant had suggested as its own theory in opening statement.

The trial court acknowledged that police have the right to ask booking questions. Sims v. State, 735 S.W.2d 913, 917-18 (Tex.App.-Dallas 1987, pet. ref'd) (no fifth amendment violation shown where police asked defendant’s name, address, telephone number, place of employment, and physical condition). However, he opined that appellant’s post-arrest silence was being inadmis-sibly offered against him, 1 and granted appellant’s motion for mistrial.

Within two weeks of the mistrial, the prosecutor filed a new information, cause number 92-01359, which alleged in six paragraphs that appellant drove while intoxicated due to the introduction into his body of: (1) alcohol; (2) a combination of alcohol and drugs; (3) a combination of alcohol and benadryl; (4) a combination of alcohol and darvaset; (5) a combination of alcohol, darvaset, and bena-dryl; or (6) a combination of darvaset and benadryl. It was undisputed that the State learned of the possible additional or alternate combinations from appellant’s trial counsel’s jury panel voir dire and opening statement.

Appellant then filed his application for ha-beas corpus relief in the trial court, requesting an evidentiary hearing and discharge from further prosecution under either the original or the new information. The trial court granted the application for writ and conducted an evidentiary hearing. During the hearing, the trial court stated, in colloquy with counsel, his earlier mistaken understanding that the prosecutor had asked Officer Imbrie specifically whether appellant refused to answer a question about his medication. In fact, the prosecutor did not ask, and Officer Imbrie did not state, which questions on the booking sheet appellant answered or declined to answer. The prosecutor testified that he had sought to elicit from Officer Imbrie, based on their pretrial or recess conversations, that appellant was unable to answer some routine booking questions because he was too intoxicated to do so. At the conclusion of the habeas hearing, the trial court found the following facts:

(1) the prosecutor “was very inexperienced at the time [of trial]”; (2) Officer Im-brie’s response was “somewhat unresponsive” to the question asked; (3) the prosecutor “did not intend to cause a mistrial or provoke [appellant’s counsel] to seek a mistrial ” by the question; (4) the prosecution under the original information “could have gone either way”; and (5) based on the credible evidence at the hearing, “[there was no] gross negligence or intentional misconduct by the State in asking that question that caused the mistrial.”

(Emphasis added). The trial court then denied appellant’s requested relief on his plea in bar.

In his first point of error, appellant asserts the trial court erred in denying his plea of double jeopardy by using an erroneous standard, or test, for determining whether jeopardy has attached.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
868 S.W.2d 383, 1993 Tex. App. LEXIS 3250, 1993 WL 502681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-shutter-texapp-1993.