Fuller v. State

835 S.W.2d 768, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1998, 1992 WL 179380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 30, 1992
DocketNos. 11-91-120-CR, 11-91-121-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 835 S.W.2d 768 (Fuller 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.

Bluebook
Fuller v. State, 835 S.W.2d 768, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1998, 1992 WL 179380 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[769]*769OPINION

McCLOUD, Chief Justice.

The jury convicted Dino Eugene Puller1 and Brenda Darlene Williams,2 co-defendants tried jointly, of the offense of murder. The jury assessed punishment for Fuller at confinement for 25 years and for Williams at confinement for 35 years. We affirm.

On November 14, 1988, Fuller notified the Smith County Sheriff’s Department that he and Williams, his mother, discovered the victim’s body on the floor of the victim’s home. The victim was the husband of Williams and the step-father of Fuller. Fuller and Williams gave statements to officers that morning, in which they each insisted they did not know who might have shot and killed the victim.

The next day, Fuller and Williams met with attorney Bill Frizzell. They discussed with Frizzell their participation in the shooting. They then left Frizzell’s office and retrieved the guns used in the shooting. After they left, Frizzell contacted the sheriff’s department, and officers came to Frizzell’s office. Frizzell told them that appellants had shot the victim in self-defense. Later the same day, Frizzell and appellants went to the sheriff’s department to turn in the weapons, to waive the necessity of arrest warrants, and to seek a recommendation from the sheriff’s department for low bail bonds. At the sheriff’s department, Frizzell again made brief references to the facts of the shooting. At trial, the court permitted the State, over appellants’ objections, to introduce into evidence certain information that Frizzell told the officers.

Appellants have filed identical briefs. In three points of error, appellants contend that the trial court erred in permitting testimony based upon privileged attorney-client conversations between appellants and Frizzell because the conversations were not within any of the exceptions to the privilege and because the privilege had not been waived.

The trial court conducted a hearing outside the jury’s presence regarding appellants’ assertion of attorney-client privilege. The State expressly did not seek to delve into attorney-client conversations in Friz-zell’s office between appellants and Frizzell privately; it only elicited testimony concerning conversations published to third parties, urging a waiver of attorney-client privilege. Appellants contend that the privilege was not waived because appellants did not authorize the disclosures by Frizzell to the officers.

The attorney-client privilege, set out in TEX.R.CRIM.EVID. 503(b), prohibits disclosure of confidential communications and prohibits disclosure of “any other fact which came to the knowledge of the lawyer ... by reason of the attorney-client relationship.” TEX.R.CRIM.EVID. 511, however, provides that the privilege is waived if the holder of the privilege “voluntarily discloses or consents to disclosure of any significant part of the privileged matter.” If a fact issue is raised as to waiver of privilege, the party asserting the privilege has the burden of disproving the waiver or establishing the limited scope of the waiver. Jordan v. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Supreme Judicial District, 701 S.W.2d 644 (Tex.1985); State ex rel. Simmons v. Peca, 799 S.W.2d 426 (Tex.App.— El Paso 1990, no pet’n). The court in Burnett v. State, 642 S.W.2d 765 at 770 (Tex. Cr.App.1982), stated:

The law is “perfectly plain that the waiver [of the client-attorney privilege], like the privilege, belongs solely to the client, and not to the attorney.” 8 Wig-more (McNaughton Revision) § 2327. “Since ... it is the client who is the holder of the privilege, the power to waive it is his, and he alone, or his attorney or agent acting with his authority, may exercise this power.” E. Cleary, McCormick’s Handbook of the Law of Evidence 194 (2d ed. 1972). (Emphasis in original)

[770]*770Frizzell disclosed to officers facts that he learned by reason of the attorney-client relationship. The trial court ruled at the conclusion of the hearing that appellants waived their privilege by voluntarily consenting to Frizzell’s disclosure of the information, both in his office and in the sheriff’s office.

At the hearing concerning waiver of the attorney-client privilege, Frizzell testified that one of the concerns was the amount of the bond. The victim had died of multiple gunshot wounds, a fact that would have been considered in setting bonds. Appellants were not wealthy people. The entire purpose behind all of the conversations, the surrendering of the guns, and the waiving of the requirement for arrest warrants was to negotiate for lower bonds and to save the sheriff’s office both investigation time and expense.

Frizzell testified that in his first conversation with sheriff's deputies, outside appellants’ presence, he stated appellants’ position and version of facts, although such conversation was not “expressly” authorized by appellants. Frizzell considered that it was his role and job to act as an advocate on appellants’ behalf to try to convince the sheriff’s department “what in actuality happened.” Later that day, appellants brought him two guns in a paper sack. Frizzell then accompanied appellants to the sheriff’s department where Frizzell delivered the bag containing the guns to the officers. Before making the trip to the sheriff’s office, Frizzell discussed with appellants his prior conversation with officers about the bonds and the waiver of the arrest warrants. He also discussed with appellants their surrendering before a magistrate. Appellants understood that he had discussed some of the facts with the sheriff’s department that appellants had related to Frizzell.

At the sheriff’s office, Frizzell again discussed with the officers that appellants shot the victim in self-defense. Frizzell testified that the conversation took place in a small office next to where appellants waited. Frizzell stated that all the offices had open doors and that his clients could have overheard the conversation. As Friz-zell made these statements to the officers, appellants did not interrupt him or disagree with him. Frizzell described appellants as very much aware of what was going on and testified that “they were listening to my advice and following my advice in whatever we did.”

Deputy Sheriff Jason Waller testified that Frizzell telephoned him the morning of November 15. Together with Lieutenant Greg Wilson and Chief Deputy Johnny Beddingfield, he went to Frizzell’s office for a 10 to 20 minute discussion. Later that day, Frizzell came with appellants to the sheriff’s office. Frizzell handed him a brown paper sack containing two firearms and told him that the guns had been in a ditch on the side of a highway. Appellants were with Frizzell in Wilson’s office when Frizzell repeated in front of appellants a brief synopsis of the information Frizzell had earlier given the officers in Frizzell’s office: that Fuller and the victim struggled over a gun, that the gun discharged, and that Williams fired a different gun at the victim in defense of Fuller, thinking that Fuller had been shot. Frizzell told officers that the two guns delivered were the guns used in the shootings.

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Bluebook (online)
835 S.W.2d 768, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1998, 1992 WL 179380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-state-texapp-1992.