Humberto Molina v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 2019
Docket01-18-00604-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Humberto Molina v. State (Humberto Molina 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
Humberto Molina v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

Opinion issued October 22, 2019

In The

Court of Appeals For The

First District of Texas ———————————— NO. 01-18-00604-CR ——————————— HUMBERTO MOLINA, Appellant V. THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

On Appeal from the County Criminal Court No. 6 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court Case No. 1516719

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

Humberto Molina was convicted of possession of less than two ounces (the

exact quantity was .14 ounce) of marijuana found in his truck during a traffic stop.

1 The Texas Supreme Court transferred this case from the Second Court of Appeals to this Court. We are unaware of any relevant, substantive differences in law on the topic of this appeal between these two intermediate appellate court jurisdictions. The trial evidence established that it was worth about $6. At his trial, the State

spent a great deal of time discussing the significantly larger amount of contraband

it attributed to Molina’s passenger, suggesting two handguns found in the vehicle

were there to protect a “drug investment,” and arguing Molina had to have known

about the $6 in marijuana given how much contraband his passenger had, all the

while acknowledging that none of the passenger’s contraband belonged to Molina.

Molina objected to the admissibility of evidence of the passenger’s contraband on

multiple grounds, and the trial court overruled his objections.

In four issues, Molina contends the trial court abused its discretion in

admitting evidence of contraband the State conceded belonged to his passenger.

Concluding that the probative value of the evidence of the passenger’s contraband

was significantly outweighed by the danger of unfair prejudice, we conclude the

trial court abused its discretion in admitting the evidence. We further conclude that

the admission affected Molina’s substantial rights and warrant reversal.

Background

The Fort Worth police were positioned outside a house, waiting for a known

fugitive to leave. They intended to follow him until he committed a traffic

violation, engage him to confirm his identity, and then arrest him. That is not what

happened. Instead, when they stopped the Toyota Tundra truck they were

2 following, they discovered the driver was Humberto Molina—someone different

than the fugitive they were looking for.

As Sergeant B. Farmer with the Fort Worth Police Department approached

the truck to confirm the driver’s identity, Farmer smelled marijuana. Farmer

determined that the odor of marijuana provided probable cause to search the truck

unrelated to the original reason for the stop.

To conduct the search, Farmer detained Molina and his passenger, J. Soto.

He then searched the backseat area of the truck, where he found a box and bag on

the floorboard behind the passenger’s seat and a backpack on the floorboard

behind the driver’s seat. Inside the box and bag on the passenger’s side of the truck

were a handgun, $211 in cash, and various baggies containing cocaine, marijuana,

and prescription medication. The drugs were later analyzed and confirmed to be 30

grams of cocaine, 6.5 ounces of marijuana, and 88 Xanax pills.

Inside the backpack on the driver’s side of the vehicle were a handgun, a

magazine for a different weapon, and $1,714 in cash. There were no drugs in the

backpack.

Farmer and accompanying officers then searched the front-seat area of the

truck. In a built-in sunglasses holder near the rearview mirror, which was exactly

in the middle of the front of the cab, the officers found a baggie containing .14

ounce of marijuana. The police also found three cell phones in the truck.

3 Having found drugs and weapons in the truck, Farmer arrested both Molina

and Soto and searched their pockets. In Molina’s pants pocket, Farmer found 1.2

grams of cocaine (worth about $100, according to trial evidence) and a wallet

containing $682 in cash. In Soto’s pocket, the officers found $2,553 in cash.

Farmer testified about any investigation done of evidence found in the truck.

He stated that the police did not investigate to determine which phone(s) belonged

to which occupant. Farmer simply noted that recovery of more cell phones than

there were people was suspicious. Likewise, the police did not undertake

fingerprint analysis or any other investigative measures to determine which

weapon might have belonged to which person. Farmer was asked about this at trial:

Question: But you would agree with me that the government has the ability to make a call that takes a couple of minutes and then have somebody run to see if there’s fingerprints on any of these guns . . .

Farmer: If they wanted to, yes, I guess they could.

***

Question: Would have been a good idea, don’t you think?

Farmer: Misdemeanor UCW [unlawfully carrying a weapon], normally if we get them on it, we just put them in jail for it.

Farmer explained how he charged the two men for various contraband found

in the truck. He charged Soto with possession of the items found on the

passenger’s side of the truck based on their proximity to Soto and his furtive

4 movements during the traffic stop when he turned to the backseat and reached

toward something behind him. Farmer charged Molina with possession of the

items found in the sunglasses holder ($6 worth of marijuana) and on Molina’s side

of the truck (the handgun in the backpack).2 Farmer noted that Molina did not

make any furtive movements in any direction during the traffic stop and had been

cooperative, but Molina was in possession of the truck, the backpack holding the

gun was within Molina’s reach, and, in Farmer’s view, the sunglasses holder

generally would be used by a vehicle’s driver. Farmer also noted that, during

questioning at the time of arrest, Molina admitted that he smokes marijuana,

though not in his vehicle. Thus, Molina and Soto were not tried for joint possession

of all contraband in the vehicle. The State divvied up the contraband as Farmer

described. Each truck occupant was criminally charged for the contraband as

divvied up,3 and the two were tried separately.

In Molina’s trial, the State “conceded” to the trial court and the jury that

everything the officer assigned to Soto was, in fact, Soto’s contraband. The State,

nonetheless, sought to have all that contraband admitted in presenting its case 2 As was explained at trial, possession of the handgun would only be a criminal offense if Molina was engaging in criminal activity while in possession, meaning if the $6 in marijuana was his, the possession of the otherwise legal handgun would be an offense as well. 3 A grand jury no billed Molina on the possession charge for the cocaine removed from Molina’s pants pocket. Molina, therefore, was only charged with possession of the .14 ounce of marijuana found in the sunglasses holder and the handgun in the backpack behind his driver’s seat. 5 against Molina. The State explained the reason for admitting evidence of

contraband it conceded belonged to Soto: “The State seeks to admit all of the items

that were found in the truck to show that there was a motive and intent for this

Defendant to have the [$6 in] marijuana [found in the sunglasses holder] as well as

the firearm that he is charged with.”

Molina objected that the evidence was irrelevant, impermissible character

evidence and was more prejudicial than probative. The trial court overruled the

objections and let in evidence of everything found in the truck except the cash

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