In the Matter of L.D.C., a Child

400 S.W.3d 572, 56 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 598, 2013 WL 2278968, 2013 Tex. LEXIS 412
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 2013
Docket12-0032
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 400 S.W.3d 572 (In the Matter of L.D.C., a Child) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of L.D.C., a Child, 400 S.W.3d 572, 56 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 598, 2013 WL 2278968, 2013 Tex. LEXIS 412 (Tex. 2013).

Opinion

Justice HECHT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question in this juvenile delinquency proceeding is whether the trial court committed reversible error by submitting ele *573 ments of an offense to the jury disjunctively, allowing for a non-unanimous verdict. We answer no and therefore reverse the court of appeals’ judgment 1 and render judgment for the State.

L.D.C., age 16, admitted that during a street party near a middle school, he fired five or six shots from an AK-47 rifle “in the air”. A bullet fragment was later found in the sun visor of a vehicle parked nearby. Officer Martin heard the shots and drove up as L.D.C. and a friend, T.J., were running through a field behind the school. When Martin yelled “police” and ordered them to stop, one of the two turned and fired toward him and the row of houses behind him. Martin and T.J. testified it was L.D.C.; L.D.C. testified it was T.J. Martin returned fire, the rifle fell to the ground, and L.D.C. and T.J. continued running away. The two were found hiding outside the school.

L.D.C. was charged with three criminal offenses: attempted capital murder (Count I), aggravated assault on a public servant (Count II), and deadly conduct (Count III). The jury answered “not true” to Count I and “true” to Counts II and III, assessing determinate sentences of forty years for Count II and ten years for Count III. Based on the verdict, the trial court committed L.D.C. to the Texas Youth Commission. 2 The court of appeals affirmed the aggravated assault adjudication but reversed on deadly conduct. 3 Only the State has petitioned for review. Thus, we are concerned only with L.D.C.’s adjudication for deadly conduct.

“A person commits [deadly conduct] if he knowingly discharges a firearm at or in the direction of ... a habitation ... or vehicle and is reckless as to whether the habitation ... or vehicle is occupied.” 4 “Jury verdicts [in cases under the Juvenile Justice Code] must be unanimous.” 5 In criminal cases, in which the jury verdict must also be unanimous, “when a single crime can be committed in various ways, jurors need not agree upon the mode of commission.” 6 Had the State alleged only that L.D.C. shot the rifle during the party, surrounded by both vehicles and habitations, the jury would not have been required to agree that he shot at one or the other. But the State alleged that L.D.C. shot the rifle on two occasions, first during the party, as L.D.C. admitted, “at and in the direction of a vehicle” while being “reckless as to whether [it] was ... occupied”, and later in the field, toward Martin and a row of homes, which L.D.C. denied. The trial court instructed the jury they could find that L.D.C. engaged in deadly conduct if, with the requisite intent and recklessness, he shot either toward a vehicle, apparently referring to the first shooting, or toward a habitation, referring to the second. While the jury did not have to agree on how an offense was committed, it had to agree “on the same act for a conviction”, not “mere[ly] ... on a violation of a statute”. 7 The court did not instruct the *574 jury that they had to be unanimous in finding that L.D.C. committed an offense either in shooting at a vehicle (during the party), or in shooting at a habitation (in the field), or both. Theoretically, at least, the jury could agree that L.D.C. committed deadly conduct even though only some believed it occurred during the party and the rest believed it occurred in the field. The court of appeals concluded that the disjunctive jury instruction was error:

[T]he jury convicted [L.D.C] of the offense of deadly conduct by choosing between disjunctive paragraphs in the jury charge that were likely intended as alternative means of committing the offense. Nevertheless, the alternate means were actually separate offenses because the jury was presented with the two separate shooting incidents from which to choose. Thus, it is possible some jurors chose to convict appellant based on the shooting at the party, while other jurors chose to convict him based on the shooting directed towards Officer Martin and the houses behind the officer. Additionally, the trial court failed to specifically instruct the jury it must be unanimous as to the offense supporting Count III. Therefore, it cannot be said the jury in this case rendered a unanimous verdict with regard to Count

III, as required by the Texas Family Code. 8

L.D.C. did not object to the disjunctive jury instruction for Count III, so the question then became whether the error was reversible when it was not preserved. The Family Code provides that in juvenile justice eases, “[t]he requirements governing an appeal are as in civil cases generally.” 9 In civil cases, unobjected-to charge error is not reversible unless it is fundamental, which occurs only “in those rare instances in which the record shows the court lacked jurisdiction or that the public interest is directly and adversely affected as that interest is declared in the statutes or the Constitution of Texas.” 10 Fundamental error is reversible if it “probably caused the rendition of an improper judgment [or] probably prevented the appellant from properly presenting the case to the court of appeals.” 11 But we have stated that “a juvenile proceeding is not purely a civil matter. It is quasi-criminal, and ... general rules requiring preservation in the trial court ... cannot be applied across the board in juvenile proceedings.” 12 In criminal cases, unob-jected-to charge error is reversible if it was “egregious and created such harm that his trial was not fair or impartial”, considering essentially every aspect of the case. 13 If, for example, “[i]t is ... highly *575 likely that the jury’s verdicts ... were, in fact, unanimous”, unobjected-to charge error is not reversible. 14 Without analyzing differences between these standards for civil and criminal cases, the court of appeals followed other courts in applying the criminal standard and concluded that the error was reversible. 15 The court remanded the case for a new trial on Count III. 16

We granted the State’s petition for review 17 to decide the proper standard for reviewing unpreserved charge error in a juvenile delinquency case. We have concluded, however, that under any standard, the error in this case was not harmful.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In the Matter of D. L. A. v. the State of Texas
Tex. App. Ct., 1st Dist. (Houston), 2026
In Re J.P.S. v. the State of Texas
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2025
In the Matter of J.P. v. the State of Texas
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2025
in the Matter of J.E.N., a Juvenile
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2022
in the Matter of D.M.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2022
in the Matter of A.M., a Juvenile
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019
in the Matter of M.S., a Juvenile
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2019
State of Tennessee v. Christopher Desmond Simpson
Court of Criminal Appeals of Tennessee, 2019
In re I.F.M.
525 S.W.3d 884 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2017)
In the MATTER OF M.I.S., a Juvenile
498 S.W.3d 123 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2016)
in the Matter of N. G.-D.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2016
in the Matter of C.Z.S.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2015
in the Matter of R.D.R. III, a Juvenile
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2014
Ashmita Unni Prakash v. Ashish and Aparna Kamat
420 S.W.3d 890 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 2014)
in the Matter of D.X.S.
Court of Appeals of Texas, 2013

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
400 S.W.3d 572, 56 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 598, 2013 WL 2278968, 2013 Tex. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-the-matter-of-ldc-a-child-tex-2013.