Irby v. State

327 S.W.3d 138, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 725, 2010 WL 2382594
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 2010
DocketPD-1097-08
StatusPublished
Cited by139 cases

This text of 327 S.W.3d 138 (Irby v. State) 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
Irby v. State, 327 S.W.3d 138, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 725, 2010 WL 2382594 (Tex. 2010).

Opinions

OPINION

COCHRAN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court

in which KELLER, P.J., and MEYERS, JOHNSON, and KEASLER, JJ., joined.

In this case we hold that a defendant must show some causal connection or logical relationship between a witness’s probationary status and his potential bias to testify favorably toward the State before the witness may be cross-examined with that status.1 Evidence that a witness with a juvenile record might be testifying because of a need to “curry favor” with the State or shift suspicion away from himself is constitutionally relevant and admissible under the Confrontation Clause.2 But the mere fact that a witness is on probation is not sufficient, by itself, to establish a potential bias or motive to testify. . We therefore affirm the court of appeals.3

I.

A. Trial Proceedings.

Appellant was charged with the sexual assault of W.P., a sixteen-year-old child, enhanced with a prior conviction for indecency with a child.

Before trial, appellant’s counsel told the trial judge that he wanted to cross-examine W.P. about the fact that he was on deferred-adjudication probation for aggravated assault with a deadly weapon. He stated that W.P.’s “vulnerable status” was relevant to show bias and motive under Davis v. Alaska,4 The trial judge deferred his ruling because he had not yet heard any of the facts. During the trial, the judge gave the defense two more hearings outside the presence of the jury to show a plausible connection between W.P.’s “vulnerable status” and a possible bias or motive to fabricate his story, but the judge ultimately disallowed the proposed cross-examination. He concluded that W.P.’s “juvenile records” were irrelevant to show a possible motive to fabricate because the two matters were “completely separate.”

W.P. testified that he was sixteen years old in January of 2005. He worked part-time for his contractor-father, Bobby, after he was expelled from school.5 W.P. first met appellant sometime around January 8th, when his friend, James, asked appel[141]*141lant if the boys could do some cleaning work for him. Appellant agreed and put W.P. and James to work cleaning blinds at a lady’s house. Afterwards, appellant had the boys spend the night in his apartment. James had appellant buy some “Apple Pucker” alcohol to celebrate James’s birthday. W.P. had never drunk much alcohol before, but he thought it was “cool” to sit around drinking with James and appellant. W.P. and James got drunk and threw up. Afterwards, W.P. lay down on a futon, while James stretched out on the floor. After James fell asleep, appellant put a “hardcore porno” videotape in the TV and came over to W.P. and asked if he could “help” him. W.P. didn’t know what he meant. But then appellant “kind of pulled the covers off of me and he came down and started to mess with my penis.... He eventually sucked my penis.” W.P. pushed him away, turned over, and went to sleep.

The next morning W.P. did not say anything to appellant because he “was freaked out and [he] didn’t know what to do.” He waited around for his money for washing the blinds the day before. Appellant paid W.P. for the blinds and then gave him some extra money “for what he had done and that [W.P.] should not tell James or anyone.” But that very afternoon W.P. did tell James. James made W.P. feel bad because he “was talking down on me like that I was gay and like I was wrong and I shouldn’t have done it.” W.P. was hurt by James’s reaction, so he did not tell anyone else about what had happened.

About three or four weeks later, appellant started calling and asking if W.P. could come over and let appellant watch him masturbate. At first, W.P. did not want to see appellant, but he later called and asked to borrow some money. Appellant said that if W.P. “came over there and let him watch [W.P.] masturbate that he would pay [him] some money and [he] wouldn’t have to borrow it.” W.P. figured that this was “easy money,” so he went over to appellant’s apartment. Appellant gave him oral sex, then paid him $100. This happened again one or two more times. The last time it happened — in March or April — appellant said that he would pay W.P. $200, but he only gave him $100.

On April 6th, W.P. told William, a lifelong family friend, what he and appellant had done and how appellant owed him money. At first, William didn’t believe W.P., but when he did, he was “shocked” and angry: “Oh, man, it tore me up,” but W.P. told him to “keep his cool whenever he came over” to appellant’s apartment.

W.P. spent the night of April 6th at appellant’s house, along with William, another friend, Marcus, and Jason Dennis, a friend of Marcus’s. They were all drinking and smoking marijuana.6 The four boys left around noon and walked back to W.P.’s house because he was supposed to work for his father that day. After Marcus and his friend left, W.P. and William decided to go back to appellant’s apartment to get the $100 that appellant owed him. They told W.P.’s father that appellant owed W.P. money and they were going to go get it. When the two boys did not immediately return, W.P.’s father drove over to appellant’s apartment to collect them. Appellant opened the door and [142]*142told Bobby that W.P. was not there. Bobby then drove back home, and about ten minutes later W.P. and William returned. W.P. seemed “perplexed,” and both boys were “agitated.” W.P. said that he wanted his money from appellant, so Bobby said that he would drive him over to appellant’s apartment to “check on” the money, and then they would go to work.

William, however, had already started back to appellant’s apartment to get W.P.’s money. He was angry at appellant. W.P. told his mother that William was going to “jack” appellant for some money.7 W.P.’s mother told Bobby that William was angry and going to appellant’s to collect W.P.’s money, so all three of them drove toward appellant’s apartment and found William along the way. William got into the truck with them. Bobby stopped at appellant’s apartment complex, saw him in the parking lot, and asked him if he would have W.P.’s money later that day. Appellant said that “more than likely he would,” so Bobby said that they would come back later.

Meanwhile, W.P. whispered to his mother, telling her what he and appellant had been doing. As Bobby drove down the street, W.P.’s mother told him that she and W.P. had something to tell him. Bobby pulled into a washateria parking lot, and W.P. told his father exactly why appellant owed him the $100 and why William was angry and ready to “jack” appellant. Bobby called 911 on his cell phone, but the dispatcher told him to come to the police station to make a statement.

Officer Burke, a patrol officer, happened to be driving by the washateria, and he stopped because he saw the family arguing.8 They were relieved to see him and said that the reason they were upset was because W.P.’s father had just found out that his son had been receiving oral sex from an adult man. W.P. told him that some videotapes in Jason Dennis’s car might contain footage of the “sex acts.”9 Officer Burke radioed other officers to go to appellant’s apartment10 while he escorted W.P. and his family to the police station.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
327 S.W.3d 138, 2010 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 725, 2010 WL 2382594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irby-v-state-texcrimapp-2010.