James J. Trimble v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 23, 2024
Docket09-23-00183-CV
StatusPublished

This text of James J. Trimble v. the State of Texas (James J. Trimble v. the State of Texas) 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 J. Trimble v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-23-00183-CV __________________

JAMES J. TRIMBLE, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the 284th District Court Montgomery County, Texas Trial Cause No. 22-09-11628-CV __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Pro se Appellant James J. Trimble appeals the trial court’s order granting his

petition for expunction of records relating to four offenses.1 We affirm.

Background

On September 2, 2022, Trimble filed a pro se Petition for Expunction of

Criminal Records in cause number 22-09-11628 seeking expunction of criminal

1 We note that Appellant has another appeal pending before this court, James Trimble v. Hilda Theresa Muniz, No. 09-23-00212-CV. 1 records and files relating to four arrests: (1) criminal mischief, allegedly committed

in November of 1999 and dismissed in February of 2000, (2) harassment, allegedly

committed in April of 2012 and dismissed in September of 2013, (3) failure to

appear, allegedly committed in January of 2016 and dismissed in February of 2017,

and (4) misdemeanor assault, allegedly committed in January of 2016 and dismissed

in October of 2017. Although the petition alleges that copies of the orders dismissing

the charges were attached, our record does not reflect that any orders were attached

to the petition. The 284th District Court of Montgomery County set a hearing on the

Petition for November 17, 2022.

On September 15, 2022, Trimble filed a pro se motion to “recognize TCPA

27.001” on the grounds that “pro se plaintiff verification thru court coordinator

review of 22-09-11628.” The motion further stated, “cause is in support of job

ap[p]lication TCEQ misdemeanor offen[s]es older than 5 y may have affect (filed 8-

11-22 [TCEQ Review]).”

In its Original Answer, the Montgomery County District Attorney’s Office

asserted a general denial and asked the trial court to deny the Petition unless Trimble

established his statutory eligibility for relief.

On November 16, 2022, Trimble filed a Motion for Continuance and Notice

of Hearing due to “insufficient time to get record of complete requesters of

information on James Joseph Trimble[.]” The next day, Trimble filed a Motion

2 requesting equitable rescission “allowing those Texans the option of re-entering

Texas workplace.”

On November 18, 2022, Trimble filed five Notices of JP Documents and a

Motion for Expunction Relief. Attached to the Notices are uncertified documents

that appear to be case summaries for dismissed cases and from the Justice of the

Peace courts for Montgomery County Precincts One and Two, case histories for

convictions in Montgomery County Precinct Two Justice of the Peace Court, several

printed emails, and a spreadsheet listing misdemeanor cases for Trimble from the

Montgomery County Precinct Four Justice of the Peace Court.

On November 21, 2022, Trimble filed a notice to the trial court that included

what he represented as a “complete list of Class C misdemeanor” from Precinct One

that were eligible for expunction. The attachment appears to be an uncertified

spreadsheet with handwritten notations.

On December 6, 2022, Trimble filed a Notice to Court that purported to attach

a “complete list of rec[ei]pts to expunction order” and “123 cases w[ith] index

backpage[.]” The attachments include what appear to be certified copies of the

following cases dismissed in the Montgomery County Precinct Four Justice of the

Peace Court:

• failure to submit required reports, dismissed in 2016; • failure to call for required inspection, dismissed in 2015; • MVI inspection violation, dismissed in 2011; • MVI inspection violation, dismissed in 2012; 3 • failure to display Texas DOT cabcard, dismissed in 2012; • no medical certificate, dismissed in 2012; • display expired license plates, dismissed in 2013; • motor vehicle inspection violation, dismissed in 2014; • failure to appear, dismissed in 2014; • failure to appear, dismissed in 2016; • 4 counts of failure to submit required reports, dismissed in 2016; • violation of a non-CDL restriction, dismissed in 2018; • operating vehicle on flat tires, dismissed in 2018; • failure to secure heavy vehicle/equipment/machinery, dismissed in 2018; and • 3 counts of no county permit, dismissed in 2001.

On December 14, 2022, Trimble filed a First Amended Petition, requesting

the trial court to rule on his matter and grant expunction of criminal records.

Attached is a handwritten note stating there are no records of complaints against him

filed in the Montgomery County Health Department and Trimble’s Request for

Public Information to the Montgomery County Environmental Health Services

Department, with a handwritten notation, “Montgomery County Environmental has

no document responsive to Mr. Trimble[’s] request.”

On January 27, 2023, Trimble filed a Second Amended Petition for

Expunction of Criminal Records, again seeking expunction of the offenses listed in

his original petition: (1) criminal mischief, allegedly committed in November of

1999 and dismissed in February of 2000, (2) harassment, allegedly committed in

April of 2012 and dismissed in September of 2013, (3) failure to appear, allegedly

committed in January of 2016 and dismissed in February of 2017, and

4 (4) misdemeanor assault, allegedly committed in January of 2016 and dismissed in

October of 2017. The Second Amended Petition included no attachments.

Trimble filed a proposed Order Granting Expunction of Criminal Records on

April 27, 2023, that listed the same four offenses as his Original Petition and his

Second Amended Petition. The proposed order attached several documents,

including a letter dated March 23, 2023 to Trimble from the Texas Commission on

Environmental Quality, saying it intended to deny Trimble’s pre-evaluation request

for a license because TCEQ “became aware that [Trimble] continually received

citations from multiple Texas counties, primarily Montgomery County, in activities

related to [On-Site Sewage Facility]” installation and maintenance.

The matter was set for a hearing on April 27, 2023.2 The trial court signed an

Order Granting Expunction of Criminal Records on May 4, 2023, as to the four

offenses listed in the Second Amended Petition.

On June 2, 2023, Trimble filed a Motion to Reinstate Case on Docket, which

referenced without elaboration the FCRA and TCPA. On June 5, 2023, Trimble filed

his Notice of Appeal. On July 11, 2023, the Montgomery County Attorney’s Office

filed a Response to Expunction Order stating that, after making a diligent search,

“[a]ny records of the criminal prosecution described in the expunction order and the

2 Our appellate record lacks a reporter’s record of this hearing, and the court reporter informed this Court that she did not receive a Designation of Record from the Appellant. 5 expunction proceeding itself have been destroyed, deleted, or are attached to this

response.” No documents were attached to the Response.

Issues

Appellant’s pro se brief on appeal maintains that the trial court erred because

it did not “find an equitable solution” for “123 Class C Misdemeanor[]” offenses

presented in his petition. At another place in his brief, he appears to ask whether the

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James J. Trimble v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-j-trimble-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2024.