Jackson v. State

139 S.W.3d 7, 2004 WL 1218800
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 6, 2004
Docket2-02-446-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 139 S.W.3d 7 (Jackson 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
Jackson v. State, 139 S.W.3d 7, 2004 WL 1218800 (Tex. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

ANNE GARDNER, Justice.

Appellant Vickie Dawn Jackson pleaded guilty to theft between $1,500 and $20,000, a state jail felony, and was assessed a one-year sentence in the State Jail Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. With the trial court’s permission, Appellant raises five points on appeal concerning her guilty plea. We will affirm.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History

On July 16, 2002, Appellant was charged with two counts of capital murder in Montague County, Texas. 1 On July 19, 2002, Appellant was indicted in Cooke County, Texas for the state jail felony offense of theft of over $1,500 but less than $20,000. The 235th District Court of Cooke County appointed James Martin to represent Appellant in the theft case. Martin, however, did not represent Appellant in any capacity in the Montague County cases. On August 23, 2002, Appellant pleaded guilty to the Cooke County theft offense, and the court sentenced her to a one-year term of confinement in state jail. Prior to being sentenced, Appellant signed written admonishments, waivers, and a judicial confession.

Soon thereafter, Appellant’s court-appointed Montague County attorneys, Bruce Martin and Michael Curtis, filed a motion for new trial in the Cooke County theft case asserting that her plea of guilty was not made knowingly, intelligently, and voluntarily and that James Martin had rendered ineffective assistance in the plea proceedings. Appellant attached an affidavit to her motion for new trial alleging that, despite James Martin’s knowledge of the capital murder charges, “[he] did not advise me against entering a plea of guilty,” and “[he] did not advise me of the consequences that entering a guilty plea and receiving a felony theft conviction would have in regard to my pending Capital Murder case[s].” Appellant further alleged that if James Martin had advised her “that a plea of guilty and a conviction could be used against me in the Capital Murder cases, I would never have entered a plea of guilty.”

James 'Martin also signed an affidavit, which was attached to Appellant’s motion for new trial. 2 He stated that he was Appellant’s court-appointed attorney in the Cooke County case and that he knew “that she was the nurse accused of Capital Murder in ... Montague County, Texas.” Martin alleged that he “did not advise her of the consequences that entering a guilty plea and receiving a felony theft conviction would have in regard to her Capital Murder cases.” Further, Martin stated that he did not advise her against entering a plea of guilty and did not “even think *11 about the consequences of such a plea.” According to Martin’s affidavit, “[h]ad [he] given real thought to such consequences, [he] should have, and would have, advised her against entering her plea of guilty in this case.”

On October 29, 2002, the court conducted a hearing on the motion for new trial. 3 During the hearing, Appellant subpoenaed two witnesses: James Martin and Tim Cole, the District Attorney for the judicial district that encompasses Montague County. While the clerk’s record also indicates that the trial court issued a bench warrant to secure Appellant’s presence at the October 29 hearing, Appellant did not testify at the hearing. Further, Appellant did not introduce either affidavit attached to her motion for new trial into evidence.

Martin testified that he knew Appellant was accused of capital murder in Montague County. Martin also testified that he did not advise Appellant of the consequences that a guilty plea in the theft case would have on her capital murder cases. Martin stated that the theft charge was a state jail felony and carried a maximum of two years’ imprisonment. He said that the State’s plea bargain offer was one year, which is the sentence Appellant received. Martin stated that, in his opinion, “she was probably going to be convicted one way or another of the theft charge here prior to the trial in the capital murder.” Martin acknowledged that, among other consequences, a felony conviction would prohibit Appellant from filing an application for probation or community supervision in the Montague County cases. 4

In hindsight, Martin testified that if he had thought about the consequences of the guilty plea, he would have advised Appellant against entering a guilty plea in the theft case.

On cross-examination, the State questioned Martin about the timing of the theft indictment and his appointment. When Martin could not remember the exact dates and said he needed to see the records, the State said it “could just skip this area” if the court would take judicial notice of “not only the specific items mentioned, but the court’s entire file.” The court stated, “All right. I’ll take judicial notice of my file.”

The State resumed its cross-examination and inquired about the scope of Martin’s representation of Appellant and the nature of the theft charges against her. Martin testified that he was appointed to represent Appellant only in the theft case. Martin agreed that the evidence in the theft case was “essentially overwhelming,” in that she was accused of stealing $5,000 in cash from her employer, Wal-Mart, had confessed to the police, and had led the police to the money in her home, where it was recovered. He said that Appellant repeatedly instructed him, starting at her arraignment, that she was guilty and wanted to enter a guilty plea.

Martin also agreed on cross-examination that any strategy in “chang[ing] this case from a guilty plea into a trial would have essentially been for nothing but the purpose of delay” because “[b]arring some *12 unforeseen circumstance, [Appellant] was going to be convicted.” On redirect examination, however, Martin testified that it probably would have been better “for [Appellant] to be able to file the application for probation based on the possibility and likelihood of her getting a lesser included instruction on murder in the Montague County case[s] than ... to run one year off her time on the state jail felony case.”

Cole, the district attorney in Montague County, testified that Appellant was indicted on two counts of capital murder in Montague County in July 2000 before she was indicted on the theft offense in Cooke County. Cole stated that when he found out about the guilty plea and the motion for new trial in the theft case, he became concerned about how ongoing proceedings in the theft case would affect the pending capital murder cases, especially “if some appellate court should decide that [Appellant] received ineffective assistance.”

Consequently, Cole made an agreement with Appellant’s Montague County attorneys that he would not use Appellant’s final conviction in the capital murder trials.

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Bluebook (online)
139 S.W.3d 7, 2004 WL 1218800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-state-texapp-2004.