Hatter, Sanitha Lashay

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 11, 2023
DocketPD-0823-21
StatusPublished

This text of Hatter, Sanitha Lashay (Hatter, Sanitha Lashay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hatter, Sanitha Lashay, (Tex. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS OF TEXAS NO. PD-0823-21

THE STATE OF TEXAS

v.

SANITHA LASHAY HATTER, Appellee

ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW FROM THE FOURTEENTH COURT OF APPEALS HARRIS COUNTY

WALKER, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

OPINION

Appellee Sanitha Lashay Hatter was charged with felony assault against a peace officer,1 and

1 We note that the parties and the court of appeals have labeled Appellee’s charged offense as assault of a public servant. See, e.g., State v. Hatter, 634 S.W.3d 456, 458 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2021) (“Appellee . . . was arrested for felony assault of a public servant[.]”). However, the indictment’s language alleges that Appellee:

cause[d] bodily injury to S. Latham, hereinafter called the Complainant, a peace officer, by kicking the complainant with her foot, and at the time of the assault the defendant knew the complainant was a peace officer lawfully discharging an official duty.

This language invokes assault of a peace officer, not assault of a public servant. Compare TEX. 2

two misdemeanor cases of driving while intoxicated (DWI). The felony prosecutor and defense

counsel on the assault case reached an agreement in which the felony prosecutor promised to dismiss

the assault case in exchange for Appellee’s promise to plead guilty to the DWI cases. The felony

prosecutor later assured Appellee’s counsel that, no matter what happened to the DWI cases, he

would dismiss the assault case and not re-file it. The assault case was dismissed, but shortly

thereafter the DWI cases were also dismissed instead of Appellee entering guilty pleas. The felony

prosecutor re-filed the assault case. Appellee filed a motion for specific performance asking the trial

court to order the State to move to dismiss the assault case in accordance to the earlier promise not

to re-file. The trial court granted the motion, and the re-filed assault case was dismissed. The court

of appeals affirmed, finding that the State and Appellee had entered into an enforceable immunity

agreement.

Because the agreement between Appellee and the State was in the nature of a plea bargain

agreement—not an immunity agreement—the court of appeals applied an inapplicable test for

determining whether the trial court erred in granting the motion for specific performance. We reverse

the judgment of the court of appeals, and we remand this matter to the court of appeals to determine

whether the trial court’s order may be sustained by a theory of law applicable to the case. See

Romero v. State, 800 S.W.2d 539, 543 (Tex. Crim. App. 1990) (“If the trial judge’s decision is

correct on any theory of law applicable to the case . . . it will be sustained.”).

I — Background

PENAL CODE Ann. § 22.01(b-2) (“committed against a person the actor knows is a peace officer or judge while the officer or judge is lawfully discharging an official duty[.]”), with id. § 22.01(b)(1) (“committed against . . . a person the actor knows is a public servant while the public servant is lawfully discharging an official duty[.]”). 3

Appellee was charged with misdemeanor DWI as well as felony assault of a peace officer,

which occurred as part of the same incident. While those cases were pending, Appellee was arrested

and charged with a second misdemeanor DWI. The assault case proceeded separately and was

scheduled for trial earlier than the DWI cases. Different prosecutors represented the State on the

assault case and the DWI cases, and Appellee had different lawyers for the assault case and the DWI

cases.

The felony prosecutor filed a motion to dismiss the assault case. On the motion to dismiss

form’s section for reasons for dismissal, he marked the box labeled “Other” and provided the

explanation “State reserves right to refile.” The trial court granted the motion and ordered the case

dismissed, but the order did not state whether the dismissal was with or without prejudice.

Afterwards, the misdemeanor prosecutor, acting separately from the felony prosecutor, had the DWI

cases dismissed.

The felony prosecutor re-filed the assault case, and the grand jury indicted Appellee nearly

two months after the original case was dismissed. Appellee responded by filing a “Motion for

Specific Performance,” a brief in support of this motion, and an “affidavit” from defense counsel.2

Appellee’s motion claimed that the felony prosecutor had made a promise and that they had a

“gentleman’s agreement” to dismiss the assault case and not re-file it, and Appellee sought

enforcement of this promise. Counsel’s “affidavit” explained:

The offer from the State to my client in our felony case was that in exchange for a plea of guilty in her Driving While Intoxicated case(s), her Assault of a Public Servant case would be dismissed. Another attorney represented Ms. Hatter on both of her misdemeanor cases. That attorney did not want to plead Ms. Hatter to her Driving While Intoxicated charges so that she could get a dismissal on her felony

2 The “affidavit” was self-sworn by Appellee’s counsel but not notarized. 4

case. Because Ms. Hatter’s felony disposition was contingent on her misdemeanor dispositions and her misdemeanor attorney’s unwillingness to negotiate a plea in accordance with that agreement, I felt that Ms. Hatter was being treated unfairly.

I spoke on many occasions to the chief prosecutor on the felony case, Mr. James O’Donnell. Mr. O’Donnell understood the problem and unfairness surrounding the misdemeanor disposition affecting her felony disposition. After speaking to him on many occasions (of which I do not remember the dates), we were able to come to an agreement. Mr. O’Donnell agreed that regardless of the disposition of the misdemeanor Driving While Intoxicated cases, he would dismiss the felony Assault of a Peace Officer. He made multiple promises to me that he would not only dismiss the felony case regardless of the misdemeanor dispositions, but that he would promise to never re-file the felony case. He made this guarantee to me multiple times while in the 230th courtroom at 201 Caroline. This disposition was in the interests of justice since Ms. Hatter was being unfairly treated based on her misdemeanor attorney’s failure to cooperate with our plea. Such unfair treatment should not unfairly prejudice and hurt Ms. Hatter, and we agreed that this was ultimately the fairest result. Mr. O’Donnell told me that he would give the reason of “other” on the dismissal and would write “subject to re-file” although he again promised that he would not do so and no one else would do so either.

Mr. O’Donnell dismissed Ms. Hatter’s felony charge on January 22, 2020, before the dispositions of the misdemeanor Driving While Intoxicated cases. Those misdemeanor Driving While Intoxicated charges were both dismissed the following month on February 10, 2020, because both of those cases contained faulty blood vials, making the results of the blood tests unreliable and unusable. The misdemeanor prosecutors handling those misdemeanor cases determined that without the results of the blood tests, they could not prove and proceed on either case.

Subsequent to this, the arresting officer in these cases found out that all of the cases against Ms. Hatter were dismissed. She complained to the Harris County District Attorney’s Office and Mr. O’Donnell was ordered by a superior at the District Attorney’s Office to re-file the felony charge of Assault of a Peace Officer. Mr.

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