James Alan Jenkins v. State

468 S.W.3d 656, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 5667
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 4, 2015
DocketNO. 14-13-00662-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 468 S.W.3d 656 (James Alan Jenkins 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
James Alan Jenkins v. State, 468 S.W.3d 656, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 5667 (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

OPINION

Ken Wise, Justice

A jury convicted appellant James Alan Jenkins of illegally voting in an election in which he knew he was not eligible to vote. Jenkins was sentenced to three years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice and ordered to pay a $10,000 fine. Jenkins contends that the trial court erred by refusing to instruct the jury on the defense of mistake of law. Jenkins also contends that section 1.015 of the Election Code is unconstitutionally vague as applied to him. Because we conclude that Jenkins was entitled to a jury instruction on the statutory defense of mistake of law, we reverse and remand.

Factual and PROCEDURAL Background

This case arises out of an election held on May 8, 2010, for members of the Board of Directors of the Woodlands Road Utility District No. 1 in Montgomery County, Texas (the “RUD”). The RUD was created to provide for the construction and maintenance of roadways in and around the Woodlands. The RUD’s boundaries encompass primarily commercial properties that pay property taxes used to fund the RUD’s projects.

1. Events leading up to the trial

Adrian Heath, a politically active resident of Montgomery County and a longtime friend of Jenkins, learned of the RUD’s existence sometime in 2009 while researching issues of local government debt. Heath did not reside in the RUD. He did, however, regularly use the roads and frequent the businesses located in the RUD.

Heath learned that the RUD was formed in 1991 and was governed by a board of five directors who were appointed and then confirmed by an initial election in 1992.' Heath became concerned when he discovered that regularly contested elections for board members had not been held [659]*659since 1992.1 Heath ■ believed that the RUD’s board acted primarily to benefit the Woodlands Development Company, the developer of the Woodlands, rather than the interests of the local residents.

Heath learned that three of the RUD directors’ terms would expire in 2010, so he researched the residency requirements for voting and investigated whether, there were registered voters residing in the RUD. As part of his research, Heath contacted state and local:election officials and others, reviewed documents, and corn suited an attorney. Armed with what he had learned, Heath sought to raise awareness about the RUD through various media outlets. He made presentations to groups and actively encouraged people to run against the incumbent RUD directors. Heath, also shared what he had learned with Jenkins.

For nearly twenty years, Jenkins had lived with his family at 16 Pastoral Pond Circle in the Woodlands, which is not within the RUD. But, he used the roads and engaged in activities within the RUD. Jenkins was politically active but had been unaware of the RUD’s existence. Jenkins’s political activities included regularly attending political meetings and, at one point, running unsuccessfully for a county political party chairmanship. Before moving to the Woodlands, Jenkins served as a city councilmember of West University Place. Jenkins had also earned a master’s degree in laser physics and was the owner of World Wide Microsystems, Inc., a company that designs, manufactures, and sells control equipment for industry.

In late February or early March, Heath asked Jenkins to invite a group of people to attend a. meeting concerning the RUD at a public library in the Woodlands. Jenkins invited Richard McDuffee, Peter J. Goeddertz, Bill Bemtsen, and Jim Doyle, all of whom attended the meeting, along with Jenkins and a few other people. At the meeting, Heath gave a presentation about the structure of the RUD, the lack of contested elections for members of the RUD’s board of directors, and his understanding of the requirements for establishing a residency for voting.purposes in Texas. He also provided copies of a map of the RUD and a formal election law advisory opinion of the Texas Secretary of State.2 The January 22, 2004 opinion, titled Election Law Opinion GSC-1, addressed the application óf Texas residency requirements to college students attending Prairie View A & M University (the “Secretary of State opinion”).

The Secretary of State .opinion set out in full the Texas Election Code statutes governing voter eligibility and qualifications, and included the Election Code’s definition of “residence” as follows:

§ 1.015. Residence

(a) In this code, “residence” means domicile, that is, one’s home and fixed place of habitation to which one intends to return after any temporary absence.
(b) Residence shall be determined in accordance with the common-law rules, as enunciated by the courts of this state, except as otherwise provided by this code.
(c) A person does not lose the person’s residence by leaving the person’s home to go to another place for temporary purposes only.
[660]*660(d) A person does not acquire a residence in a place to which the person has come for temporary purposes only and without the intention of making that place the person’s home.
(e) A person who is an inmate in a penal institution or who is an involuntary inmate in a hospital or eleemosynary institution does not, while an inmate, acquire residence at the place where the institution is located.
Tex. ElegCode Ann. § 1.015 (Vernon 2003).

The Secretary of State opinion also included a discussion of applicable federal and state case law, including Mills v. Bartlett, 377 S.W.2d 636 (Tex.1964), which was cited for the following statements concerning a voter’s residence:

The meaning that must be given to [the term ‘residence’] depends upon the circumstances surrounding the person involved and largely depends upon the present intention of the individual. Volition, intention, and action are all elements to be considered in determining where a person resides and such elements are equally pertinent in denoting the permanent residence or domicile.
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Neither bodily presence alone nor intention alone will suffice to create the residence, but when the two coincide at that moment the residence is fixed and determined. There is no specific length of time for the bodily presence to continue.
Mills, at 637 (emphasis added).

The Secretary of State opinion concluded by noting that “[t]hese principles apply equally to college students as well as other voters, and no more can be required of them in order for them to register and vote in the State of Texas.”

After the meeting, Jenkins further investigated the RUD’s operations. Jenkins was concerned that although the RUD’s activities affected everyone in the Woodlands, the residents had no input into its activities. Jenkins continued to meet with McDuffee, Goeddertz, Bemtsen, and others about placing challengers on the ballot and encouraging people to change their residences to vote in the upcoming election. Some of the meetings were held at Jenkins’s business office. Ultimately, McDuf-fee, Goeddertz, and Bemtsen agreed to run against the incumbent directors.

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Bluebook (online)
468 S.W.3d 656, 2015 Tex. App. LEXIS 5667, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-alan-jenkins-v-state-texapp-2015.