Glenn Edward Champagne v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 28, 2012
Docket13-11-00657-CR
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Glenn Edward Champagne v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

NUMBERS 13-11-00657-CR

COURT OF APPEALS

THIRTEENTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS

CORPUS CHRISTI - EDINBURG

GLENN EDWARD CHAMPAGNE, Appellant,

v.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On appeal from the 260th District Court of Orange County, Texas.

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before Justices Benavides, Vela, and Perkes Memorandum Opinion by Justice Perkes

Appellant, Glenn Edward Champagne, appeals his conviction for criminal

nonsupport, a state-jail felony.1 See TEX. PENAL CODE ANN. § 25.05(a) (West 2011).

Following a jury trial, appellant was found guilty of three counts of failure to pay child

support. For each count, appellant was sentenced to eighteen months of confinement in 1 Pursuant to a docket-equalization order issued by the Supreme Court of Texas, this case is before us on transfer from the Ninth Court of Appeals in Beaumont, Texas. See TEX. GOV'T CODE ANN. § 73.001 (West 2005). the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, State Jail Division. The three sentences were

ordered to run concurrently.

By two issues, appellant argues that the evidence is legally and factually

insufficient to support the jury’s implied negative finding on his affirmative defense of

inability to pay support. See id. § 25.05(d). We affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

Appellant and Brandi Champagne divorced in December 1996. At the time, they

had one child together who was born during their marriage. Pursuant to the terms of

their divorce decree, appellant was ordered to pay child support on the first day of each

month. After they divorced, appellant and Brandi had a second child together and in

March 2005, an order was entered in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship. That

order modified appellant’s child-support obligation and required appellant to pay $350 per

month in child support on the first day of every month.

In civil contempt proceedings for failure to pay child support, appellant was

sentenced in December 2008 to serve 180 days in the Jefferson County Jail, with time

credit for time served starting in November 2008. In July 2010, appellant was indicted in

this case for criminal nonsupport for failure to pay child support on January 1, 2009 (count

one), July 1, 2009 (count two), and December 1, 2009 (count three).

At trial, the State presented testimony from Brandi Champagne and Karl

Pottkotter. Pottkotter was a regional field investigator with the Texas Attorney General’s

Office and he was assigned to work on appellant’s case. Pottkotter testified that the

attorney general’s office initiates a criminal nonsupport proceeding after civil efforts to

enforce a child-support obligation fail. Pottkotter testified that appellant failed to pay 2 child support on the dates alleged in the indictment. Pottkotter admitted that he did not

know whether appellant was incarcerated on January 1, 2009, the date alleged in count

one of the indictment. He also testified that people may still have access to money to

pay child support while in jail and that he believed a person is obligated to pay child

support whether or not they are incarcerated. Pottkotter admitted on cross-examination

that he could be wrong that a person is obligated to pay child support while incarcerated,

but expressed confidence that a person is obligated to pay child support even while

incarcerated.

Pottkotter testified that the attorney general’s office generally inquires about an

obligor’s possible inability to pay. Pottkotter explained to the jury that his file contained

no evidence that appellant had a physical or mental disability that would render him

unable to pay child support. On cross-examination, Pottkotter conceded that the

attorney general’s office makes its inability-to-pay determination early on in a case, and

that he started working on appellant’s case after such a determination would have been

made. Pottkotter did not have first-hand knowledge of whether his predecessor on the

case made an inability-to-pay determination concerning appellant.

Pottkotter testified to specific child-support payments appellant made between

October 1, 2006 and August 2007. These payments ranged in amount from a low of

$138.34 to a high of $775, with the majority of the payments being $500 or more. During

this time period, appellant often made more than one payment per month. However,

between December 1, 2008 and January 31, 2009, appellant paid no child support.

Brandi Champagne testified that she had no relationship with appellant between

2006 and 2010 and admitted she could not say what he was like in that time period. She 3 testified that during the time she knew him, she never saw any signs of a physical or

mental limitation or handicap. Brandi testified that after they divorced in 1996, appellant

worked at Elton Mire Cabinet Shop in Groves, Texas, which he owned and operated for

several years. Appellant did cabinetry work. After that shop closed, according to

Brandi, appellant owned and operated a second cabinet shop for two or three years, and

that shop later closed.

Appellant presented testimony from his sister Lynnette McVey. McVey testified

appellant was incarcerated in the Jefferson County Jail for six months starting in

December 2008, so that he would have been incarcerated at the time alleged in the first

count of the indictment (January 1, 2009). After his release from jail in 2009, appellant

lived with McVey and did not work because he was in a “very, very deep depression.”

According to McVey, appellant could not get out of bed and sought treatment at

“M.H.M.R.” McVey testified appellant “was going to be tested for the fungus of the lungs

of being in the cabinet shop” and “[w]e’ve had major prostate trouble. He’s had his

shoulder, the rotor (sic) cuff injured.” McVey testified appellant was diagnosed at

“M.H.M.R.” with depression. Appellant presented no medical records or expert

testimony to support his medical claims. McVey testified that due to a subsequent

incarceration related to child support (starting in February 2011), appellant never finished

the testing necessary to determine whether he would qualify for disability benefits.

McVey testified that while appellant lived with her, he owned nothing and had very

little money. He did not have a bank account or a trust account. She described

appellant as destitute and testified he would have been homeless but for her help during

this time period. McVey admitted on cross-examination that despite his depression, it 4 would have been possible for appellant to hold a simple job while he was living with her

such as being a greeter at Wal-Mart.

McVey testified that when appellant worked, he had financial savings, but it was

not kept in a bank account. He would give it to McVey and another sister to make

child-support payments. McVey testified that the money appellant used to make

child-support payments between November 2006 and August 2007 was a “mixture” of

appellant’s money, McVey’s money, and the other sister’s money.

II. ANALYSIS

A. Legal Sufficiency

By his first issue, appellant argues the evidence is legally insufficient to support the

jury’s implied negative finding on his affirmative defense that he was unable to pay child

support. Appellant characterizes the record as devoid of evidence of his ability to pay

child support.

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