Ex Parte Swanda Marie Lewis

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 16, 2003
Docket02-02-00126-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Ex Parte Swanda Marie Lewis (Ex Parte Swanda Marie Lewis) 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 Swanda Marie Lewis, (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

EX PARTE SWADA MARIE LEWIS

COURT OF APPEALS

SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS

FORT WORTH

NO.  2-02-126-CR

EX PARTE

SWANDA MARIE LEWIS

------------

FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 1 OF TARRANT COUNTY

OPINION

  1.  INTRODUCTION

Swanda Marie Lewis appeals the denial of her application for a pretrial writ of habeas corpus.  In one point, Lewis complains that the trial court erred in denying relief upon her claim of double jeopardy.  Because we agree that a second trial is jeopardy-barred, we reverse and render.

II.  FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Swanda Lewis met and married Kenneth Wiley in 1999.  Marital problems quickly developed, and Lewis found out that Wiley had had an affair with his ex-wife.  Wiley also began disappearing for days at a time, and during one such absence, the Health Department informed Lewis that Wiley had contracted A.I.D.S.  As a result of this discovery, Wiley and Lewis sought counseling through the Health Department, and Lewis agreed to continuing sexual relations with her husband, so long as he wore a condom.  At first Wiley abided by their arrangement; however, in the early morning hours of August 10, 2000, Wiley violently raped Lewis without a condom.

The morning after the assault, Wiley left the house.  When he came home that afternoon, he and Lewis argued.  During an ensuing fight, Lewis shot and killed Wiley in their home.  Lewis was charged with murder, and her trial began in November 2001.  The State offered the testimony of a jail house informant; a paramedic, who responded to the 911 call; investigating and arresting police officers; the medical examiner; and Wiley’s brother, none of whom witnessed Wiley’s death.  At trial, the medical examiner opined that Wiley died as a result of a contact gunshot wound to the back of his head. (footnote: 1)

After the State rested, Lewis took the stand in her own defense.  Lewis testified that Wiley raped her multiple times.  She stated when Wiley returned in the afternoon, they began to argue.  Lewis said that she was scared, so she ran to her bedroom, located her husband’s pistol, and placed the gun in her pants.  Lewis testified that as she was about to leave the house, Wiley grabbed her arms and started bouncing her up and down.  When Wiley released her, Lewis said she pulled the gun out from under her clothing, and as they struggled, the gun went off.  Lewis called 911 and was placed in the patrol car when officers arrived.  While Lewis admitted to shooting Wiley, she testified that she did not intend to pull the trigger.

On three occasions, the trial court sustained defense counsel’s objections to questioning from the State concerning Lewis’s pretrial silence.  First, during the State’s direct examination of Detective Cheryl Johnson, the prosecutor asked Detective Johnson, “When you met with Swanda Wiley, is that the name that she was giving you then?”  Defense counsel objected under article 38.08 of the code of criminal procedure; article 1, section 10 of the Texas Constitution; and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, and the trial court sustained the objection.  Defense counsel did not, however, request a jury instruction or move for a mistrial.

Second, during the State’s cross-examination of Lewis, the following exchange occurred:

Q. Did you ever tell the 911 operator [Kenneth Wiley] had been raping [you], he had been attacking [you]?

A. No.

Q. In fact, you never told any law enforcement about the rape?

[DEFENSE]:    Objection, Your Honor, as to the violation of 38.08, Article One, Section Ten of the Texas Constitution and the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.

This time, the trial court sustained the defendant’s objection, gave an instruction to disregard, and denied Lewis’s motion for mistrial.

The State continued its cross-examination of Lewis, concerning the period of time while she was in a police car after police responded to her 911 call:

Q. Were you under arrest at that point?
A. I never could get out [of the police car].
A. I believe I was.
Q. Had they told you, ma’am, you are under arrest?

[DEFENSE]:  Objection as to what they told her, Your Honor.

THE COURT:  Sustained.

Q. (By [State]) Did you have handcuffs on?
A. No, I don’t think so.

. . . .

Q. Were you spoken to by officers?

[DEFENSE]:   Objection, Your Honor, 38.08, Article One, Section Ten of the Texas Constitution, Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution. (footnote: 2)

THE COURT:  Then, I don’t understand your objection.  Want to come up here?

[DEFENSE]:  Yes. . . .  Any question or statements by [the] police to her would imply silence.  It would imply she definitely testified that she is not free to leave.

THE COURT:  I understand.

[STATE]: I’m not getting into silence.  She made a statement to the police officer and it is contrary to what she testified to on direct.  So this is being offered for impeachment because ground work has already been laid.

THE COURT: Give me the statements.  Give me the question and the statement.

[STATE]: The question is, after Miranda, Officer Matt Moore asked her what happened and she told him, and it’s nothing like what she testified to under oath.

[DEFENSE]: Jackson v. Denno hearing would be necessary for that.

The court then asked the jury to retire to the jury room while the prosecutor conducted a voir dire examination of Lewis concerning her conversations with police at the scene of the crime and later at the police station.  Following further questioning of Lewis and an objection by defense counsel that the State’s questioning was an improper attempt at impeachment, the prosecutor stated:

I’m not offering -- this is being offered for impeachment, but we can’t even get the grounds for impeachment because this witness has got a memory lapse.  So this Jackson v. Denno, the response to that is it is not applicable.  This is being offered for impeachment purposes.  I’m not offering it as direct testimony to what she said.  Yes, it was very broad when I asked her, have you ever stated differently. . . .  In order to lay the proper area for impeachment, yes, it was done globally.  We can do it more specifically; however, this witness is not --

THE COURT:  Well, you can’t do it globally legally.

[STATE]:  I understand.

On the next morning of trial, the trial court, for a third time, sustained an objection by defense counsel based on the State commenting on Lewis’s silence when the prosecutor asked Lewis:

Q. After speaking with [Detective]John McCaskill on August 10 th of the year 2000, did you have occasion to learn the next day, on August 11 th

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