Gaines v. State

99 S.W.3d 660, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 883, 2003 WL 193075
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 30, 2003
Docket14-01-01254-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 99 S.W.3d 660 (Gaines 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
Gaines v. State, 99 S.W.3d 660, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 883, 2003 WL 193075 (Tex. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

JOHN S. ANDERSON, Justice.

Appellant Donnie Bernard Gaines was charged with the felony offense of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, namely cocaine, weighing over 400 grams. See Tex. Health & Safety Code Ann. § 481.112(f) (Vernon Supp. 2003). After the trial court denied his motion to suppress, appellant pleaded guilty pursuant to a plea bargain agreement with the State. In accordance with the plea agreement, the trial court sentenced appellant to 15 years confinement in the Texas Department of Corrections, Institutional Division, and fined appellant $1,000. Appellant filed a notice of appeal, “excepting to the ruling of the court on [appellant’s] pre-trial motion to suppress evidence.” We affirm.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

On February 15, 2001, Houston Police Department narcotics interdiction officer Sgt. Hans Meisel was working at Hobby Airport with Harris County Sheriffs Deputy Henry Palcios. Sgt. Meisel had ten years experience with the Houston Police Department. He was assigned to the public transportation task force and had worked at Hobby Airport for approximately four years. Deputy Palcios had thirteen years experience with the Sheriffs Department and had been working on the narcotics force at the airport for about a year and three months.

Both officers were in plain clothes at the airport. As they walked past the Southwest Airlines ticket line, appellant, who was standing in the line, turned around and stared at them, something the officers thought was unusual. According to Sgt. Meisel, there were people in front of appellant, and appellant was tiptoeing in an obvious attempt to see where the officers were going. The officers separated, and Deputy Palcios went to the ticket counter where appellant was not looking at the ticket agent who was attempting to give appellant his ticket. When Deputy Palcios told Sgt. Meisel about this behavior, Sgt. Meisel thought it unusual.

After receiving his ticket, appellant made no attempt to go through a security check or down the concourse to board a plane. Instead, appellant hurried outside to the parking garage, at one point nearly jogging. Appellant was wearing a t-shirt, a denim jacket, and long pants, and was wearing or carrying a Titan’s overcoat.

The officers followed appellant, and Sgt. Meisel approached him in the parking garage, identified himself as a Houston police officer, and asked to talk with appellant. Appellant asked why and continued walking. Without specifying what he had observed, Sgt. Meisel then explained he worked at the airport on a regular basis and found appellant’s actions suspicious. Sgt. Meisel again asked to talk with appellant. Appellant again asked, ‘Why?” Sgt. Meisel repeated he was a police officer, and appellant replied, “I am going home,” and continued walking. Appellant had a Southwest ticket in his hand, and when *664 Sgt. Meisel asked whether it was his ticket, appellant said, “Yes.”

Appellant went down the parking garage stairs, with Sgt. Meisel alongside, and Deputy Palcios behind. Appellant appeared nervous as he descended the stairs. When appellant turned right onto the parking lot from the stairs, Sgt. Meisel saw a bulge on appellant’s lower waist area. Based on his training and experience, Sgt. Meisel thought the bulge was a weapon and was concerned for their safety. He informed Deputy Palcios he thought appellant had a weapon. At that point, appellant stopped and “kind of raised his arms.” A uniformed Houston police officer, Officer Spears, was directing traffic a few yards away, and Sgt. Meisel also told Officer Spears he thought appellant had a gun. Officer Spears immediately came over, placed appellant against a truck, and patted appellant down.

After not finding anything when Spears patted appellant down from the back, Spears turned appellant around, discovered the bulge, and said, “Yeah, here it is,” a statement Sgt. Meisel interpreted as referring to a weapon. Sgt. Meisel lifted appellant’s shirt and saw a brick of cocaine in appellant’s waistband. Appellant was placed in custody and taken to the police office at the airport, where Sgt. Meisel removed the cocaine. The substance field-tested positive for cocaine and weighed a kilogram.

Appellant testified he saw the officers for the first time in the parking lot stairwell. He testified Sgt. Meisel touched him three times during the interaction, once “chucking” appellant waist high. According to appellant, Sgt. Meisel told Spears to check appellant’s waistband, Officer Spears then did so, and said “Oh, I feel something.” At that point, Sgt. Meisel walked up, raised appellant’s shirt, and said, “Oh, here it is.”

The trial court denied appellant’s motion to suppress and entered a written order to that effect. Appellant then pleaded guilty. The plea form contains a handwritten statement, “Defendant reserves his right to appeal the adverse ruling on defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress evidence.” Appellant initialed the preprinted provision indicating, if the punishment did not exceed that recommended by the prosecutor and agreed to by appellant and his attorney, the court must give its permission for appellant to appeal “on any matter in this case except for those matters raised by you by written motion filed prior to trial.” The form also contains a preprint-ed statement, “I waive any right of appeal which I may have should the court accept the foregoing plea bargain agreement between myself and the prosecutor.” The latter statement is not lined out. In the judgment, in the section under special instructions or notes, the following, handwritten, statement is lined out: “Appeal waived, No permission for appeal granted.”

DISCUSSION

In a single issue, appellant challenges the trial court’s denial of his motion to suppress the evidence seized as a result of his warrantless arrest. He argues the officers had no reasonable suspicion or probable cause to detain him and no evidence to support a reasonable concern for their safety such as would justify a Terry search. 1 He also contends there was no evidence to justify seizure of the cocaine discovered during the Terry search. The State responds (1) appellant, by virtue of the terms of his plea agreement, has waived his right to appeal and this court lacks jurisdiction over the appeal, (2) the *665 detention and frisk of appellant were lawful, and (3) the cocaine was legally seized under the “plain view” doctrine.

I. Threshold Issues

A. Waiver. To support its waiver argument, the State relies on a single pre-printed sentence on the plea form, which reads, “I waive any right of appeal which I may have should the court accept the forgoing plea agreement between myself and the prosecutor.” The State argues this provision controls over the following handwritten notation on the plea form: “Defendant reserves his right to appeal the adverse ruling on defendant’s pretrial motion to suppress evidence.” The State contends the handwritten notation, just above the preprinted waiver, was a pre-plea attempt to reserve his appeal rights, which did not survive the trial court’s acceptance of the plea bargain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 S.W.3d 660, 2003 Tex. App. LEXIS 883, 2003 WL 193075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gaines-v-state-texapp-2003.