Janeen Denise Smith v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 20, 2012
Docket03-10-00725-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Janeen Denise Smith v. State (Janeen Denise Smith 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
Janeen Denise Smith v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN

NO. 03-10-00725-CR

Janeen Denise Smith, Appellant

v.

The State of Texas, Appellee

FROM COUNTY COURT AT LAW NO. 1 OF CALDWELL COUNTY NO. 39055, HONORABLE EDWARD L. JARRETT, JUDGE PRESIDING

OPINION

Following a bench trial, appellant Janeen Denise Smith was convicted of the offense

of failure to identify and sentenced to 90 days’ confinement in county jail. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. § 38.02(b) (West 2011). The conviction was based partly on proof that she had identified

herself to a law enforcement officer using a nickname by which she had undisputedly been known,

both professionally and personally, for almost two decades. On appeal, Smith contests whether her

nickname was either “false” or “fictitious” within the meaning of the statute and, in turn, whether

evidence that she used it was legally sufficient to sustain her conviction. Smith also asserts that the

trial court abused its discretion in refusing to permit her to withdraw a prior waiver of her right to

jury trial. On the record here, we will overrule both complaints and affirm the trial court’s judgment.

BACKGROUND

The State alleged that on November 25, 2007, Smith intentionally gave a false or

fictitious name to Jeff Ferry, a person Smith knew to be a peace officer who had lawfully arrested or detained Smith at a time when a valid arrest warrant had been issued for her. See id. § 38.02(b)

(“A person commits an offense if he intentionally gives a false or fictitious name, residence address,

or date of birth to a peace officer who has: (1) lawfully arrested the person; [or] (2) lawfully

detained the person”), (d) (offense is class A misdemeanor if person is “fugitive from justice” at time

of offense); see also id. § 38.01(5) (West 2011) (“fugitive from justice” is “a person for whom a

valid arrest warrant has been issued”). Following a lengthy procedural history that we will detail as

it becomes relevant to our analysis, Smith was eventually tried for the offense in April 2010. Only

two witnesses testified during trial—Ferry, who at the time of the offense had been employed with

the Caldwell County Sheriff’s Office, and Smith. The following recitation of facts is taken from the

transcript of the trial.

Ferry testified that while on patrol on November 25, 2007, at approximately

6:15 p.m., he was dispatched to a residence in Caldwell County to investigate a report of a

missing vehicle. When Ferry arrived at the residence, he encountered a female complainant and

requested her name and date of birth. According to Ferry, the complainant told him that her name

was “Jay Smith” and that her date of birth was June 21, 1971.

At some point, Ferry “determined the complaint was not a criminal issue, it was a

civil issue and there was no involvement on the sheriff’s office behalf we can assist her with.”

(From Smith’s subsequent testimony during the trial, it appears that the vehicle had been in the

possession of an ex-boyfriend of the complainant.) However, according to Ferry, he “did advise her

if we located the vehicle through patrol, I’d make a phone call back to her.” Ferry then returned to

his patrol.

2 “During the course of that patrol,” Ferry recounted, he located the vehicle that

the complainant had described to him. Ferry then ran a license plate check and ascertained that the

registered owner was a “Janeen Smith.” Given that the vehicle had matched the description the

complainant had given him, Ferry surmised that the registered owner, Janeen Smith, was likely the

same “Jay” Smith with whom he had spoken. However, “it seemed odd” to Ferry “that someone

would be deceitful about their name,” so he ran a warrant check on Janeen Smith. It revealed that

Janeen Smith had three active warrants through the City of Lockhart.1 The warrants had been signed

by a magistrate several months earlier, on March 23, 2007.

Smith was subsequently advised that her vehicle had been found “in a safe spot” and

that there was no reason for law enforcement to take further action because “no criminal offense”

had occurred. Smith thereafter made several “hang up calls” to 911 “demanding that we do

something about her vehicle.” Ferry characterized these calls as “abusive” and a “criminal offense.”

In response to the calls, Ferry returned to Smith’s residence on the following day.2 Upon his arrival,

Ferry noticed the vehicle he had observed on the preceding day.3 This fact, according to Ferry,

seemed further confirmation “that Janeen Smith and Jay Smith were, in fact, the same person.”

Then, Ferry recounted:

1 Copies of the arrest warrants were admitted into evidence. The offenses described in the warrants—all of which were classified as fine-only misdemeanor offenses—were “failure to maintain financial responsibility” (i.e., not carrying insurance on her motor vehicle); having an expired or “no registration” license plate; and “failure to appear / bail jumping.” 2 Ferry did not specify the time that he returned to Smith’s residence. However, Smith later testified that Ferry had returned to her residence approximately “24 hours later.” 3 Smith later explained that “the person [who] had possession of the vehicle [had] brought it back.”

3 I spoke with Ms. Smith briefly about the abusive 911 warning, repeated calling harassments of that and the criminal offense that was present with that [sic]. And then advised her she was being lawfully detained. Requested her name. Heard her say Jay Smith. I then asked her if that was the name on the driver’s license. She said it was. I then asked her if that was the name on the warrants through the City of Lockhart and she just kind of stared at me.

Ferry elaborated that he had detained Smith for “multiple reasons. . . . She had at least three

warrants. We believed one of them [was] for failure to appear. We had the abusive 911 [calls] we

were investigating and then we had the initial complaint for the vehicle. So I wanted to make sure

that [the vehicle] was returned to the right person and the right place.” Further, according to Ferry,

“I believed she was committing an offense by lying to me with her information and I wanted to make

it very clear that she was detained and that she was being lawfully detained. And that I just wanted

to make sure that we were—we met all the elements to the offense of failure to ID.” Ferry also

described Smith’s reaction when confronted with the outstanding warrants as “dumbfounded and

upset,” adding that “[s]he protested going to jail, but not that she had warrants.”

Ferry also testified that the name on Smith’s driver’s license was “Janeen Denise

Smith.” While acknowledging that Smith never misstated or misled him regarding her surname,

Ferry perceived that she had intentionally provided what he believed to be a false first name because

she “knew she had active warrants out of Lockhart” and “didn’t desire to go to jail that night.”

On cross-examination, defense counsel challenged the inference that Smith had ever

intended to deceive Ferry regarding her identity. Counsel elicited Ferry’s acknowledgment that he

did not have any direct evidence that Smith had received notice of the outstanding warrants before

he confronted her with them. Ferry likewise admitted that none of Smith’s representations regarding

her missing vehicle had turned out to be false. On redirect, however, Ferry testified that Smith had

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