Hebert Clarence Phillips A/K/A Hubert Phillips v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 9, 2012
Docket14-11-00415-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Hebert Clarence Phillips A/K/A Hubert Phillips v. State (Hebert Clarence Phillips A/K/A Hubert Phillips 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
Hebert Clarence Phillips A/K/A Hubert Phillips v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Affirmed and Memorandum Opinion filed October 9, 2012.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-11-00415-CR

HERBERT CLARENCE PHILLIPS, A/K/A HUBERT PHILLIPS, Appellant,

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee.

On Appeal from the 178th District Court Harris County Trial Court Cause No. 1256685

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant Herbert Clarence Phillips, a/k/a Hubert Phillips, appeals his conviction by a jury of possession with intent to deliver a controlled substance, namely dihydrocodeinone, weighing more than 200 grams and less than 400 grams by aggregate weight, including any adulterants or dilutants. After finding two enhancement paragraphs true, the court sentenced Phillips to 25 years‘ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division. On appeal, Phillips raises four issues: (1) the indictment is fundamentally defective because it failed to identify a penalty group for the dihydrocodeinone; (2) the trial court erred by denying Phillips‘s requested jury instruction on the defense of lawful possession with a valid prescription; (3) Phillips‘s consent to search his residence was given involuntarily; and (4) Phillips limited or revoked any consent with respect to a locked safe located inside his residence. We affirm.

I

In the early afternoon of March 25, 2010, Houston Police Department narcotics officers John Kowal and Jerry McClain conducted surveillance on Phillips‘s residence after receiving information that lead the officers to develop reasonable suspicion that Phillips was illegally selling prescription drugs from his residence. During the surveillance, officers viewed Phillips and his common-law wife, Elizabeth Camacho, return to the residence in a Pontiac vehicle. Shortly after that, the officers saw Phillips leave the apartment and drive away in the Pontiac. Kowal and McClain then informed other Houston police officers in the area, Officers Smith and Wagner, that Phillips had left his apartment in the Pontiac and instructed them to initiate a traffic stop if Phillips committed any traffic violations.

Smith soon observed Phillips making a right turn without using his right-turn signal indicator. At this point, Smith and Wagner stopped the vehicle. After entering Phillips‘s information into the police computer system, the officers learned that Phillips was driving with a suspended driver‘s license.

Smith asked Phillips to step out of the vehicle and also asked for his consent to search the vehicle. Phillips orally agreed. The officers placed Phillips, who was not handcuffed, in the rear of the patrol vehicle. Kowal and McClain arrived at the location within a few minutes and took over the investigation. Kowal testified that he approached Phillips, identified himself as a police officer, and explained the nature of the officers‘ narcotics investigation. Kowal gave Phillips his Miranda warnings1 and asked for his cooperation. Phillips told Kowal that he would ―be happy to cooperate‖ with the police 1 See Miranda v. Arizona, 384 U.S. 436, 478–79 (1966).

2 and agreed to sign a written consent form to search his apartment. Kowal gave Phillips the consent form, asked him to read it, and watched as Phillips signed it.

Meanwhile, after Smith told McClain that Phillips had consented to the search of his vehicle, those two officers began the search and found in the Pontiac‘s center console three completed prescription forms written for three individuals who were not Phillips. Officers then brought appellant back to his apartment where they met Camacho at the front door and told her they had received Phillips‘s consent to search the apartment. Once inside, the officers saw ―several pill[] bottles in the living room‖ and many more in Phillips‘s master bedroom, including ―eight prescription vials . . . in eight different patient names‖ on the window sill, and fifteen empty hydrocodone prescription bottles elsewhere in the bedroom. Some of the bottles had Phillips‘s or Camacho‘s names on them.

While searching the master bedroom, officers located a small, ―lockbox-type‖ safe. Camacho told the officers the safe belonged to Phillips and that she did not know the combination to open it. The officers brought Phillips into the bedroom and asked him about the safe, and he confirmed that it was his. After Phillips made several unsuccessful attempts to open the safe, he claimed that he had recently purchased the safe and was contemplating returning it to the store where he purchased it after experiencing problems with it. The officers told Phillips they could take the safe to a local fire department to have them open it. Phillips eventually entered the correct combination to allow the police to open and search the safe after he admitted the safe contained pills, marijuana, and a handgun.

Inside the safe, the police found: a purple velvet Crown Royal bag, which contained a loaded revolver; a couple of clear plastic baggies of marijuana; four one- hundred-dollar bills; and four prescription vials with prescription controlled substances in them. Two of the prescription bottles were labeled for ―Vonda Busby‖ and ―Helen Caesar,‖ while the labels of the other two bottles had been scratched off. All of the pills in the bottles contained some amount of dihydrocodeinone combined with other non-

3 narcotic ingredients. In total, the officers seized 520 pills containing dihydrocodeinone weighing 369.9 grams, including adulterants and dilutants. They also discovered that Phillips had about $1,100 in his pocket, consisting of bills in small denominations, consistent with prescription-drug trafficking.

II

In his first issue, Phillips contends that the indictment against him was fundamentally defective because it did not specify a penalty group for dihydrocodeinone and therefore it ―failed to allege all of the statutory elements of a crime.‖ Phillips maintains that this omission deprives the trial court of subject matter jurisdiction over the case, rendering his prosecution and the judgment of conviction void. The State responds that the indictment was not fundamentally defective and Phillips waived his objection to any alleged defect in the indictment by failing to make it before trial.

A

The Texas Constitution requires that the State must obtain a grand-jury indictment in a felony case unless this requirement is waived by the defendant. TEX CONST. art. I, § 10. Absent an indictment or valid waiver, a district court does not have jurisdiction over the case. Teal v. State, 230 S.W. 3d 172, 174–75 (Tex. Crim. App. 2007); Martin v. State, 346 S.W.3d 229, 230–31 (Tex. App.—Houston [14th Dist.] 2011, no pet.). An indictment also provides a defendant with notice of the offense and allows the defendant to prepare a defense. Teal, 230 S.W.3d at 175; Martin, 346 S.W.3d at 231.

Article 1.14 of the Texas Code of Criminal Procedure provides that: [i]f the defendant does not object to a defect, error, or irregularity of form or substance in an indictment or information before the date on which the trial on the merits commences, he waives and forfeits the right to object to the defect, error, or irregularity and he may not raise the objection on appeal or in any other postconviction proceeding.

Tex. Code Crim. Proc. art. 1.14(b). Indictments charging a person with committing an offense, once presented, invoke the jurisdiction of the trial court, and jurisdiction is not contingent on whether the indictment contains defects of form or substance. Teal, 230 4 S.W.3d at 177. Thus, Texas law ―requires the defendant to object to any error in the indictment before the day of trial and certainly before the jury is empaneled.‖ Id.

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Hebert Clarence Phillips A/K/A Hubert Phillips v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hebert-clarence-phillips-aka-hubert-phillips-v-sta-texapp-2012.