Jason Eric Guidry v. State
This text of Jason Eric Guidry v. State (Jason Eric Guidry 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.
Opinion
Opinion issued January 13, 2005
In The
Court of Appeals
For The
First District of Texas
NO. 01-03-00171-CR
NO. 01-03-00172-CR
JASON ERIC GUIDRY, Appellant
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee
On Appeal from the 177th District Court
Harris County, Texas
Trial Court Cause Nos. 930281, 913534
O P I N I O N
Appellant, Jason Eric Guidry, was charged by separate indictments with two offenses of aggravated robbery. Appellant pleaded guilty to both offenses without an agreed recommendation from the State. After a pre-sentence report was prepared, the trial court held a sentencing hearing and assessed appellant’s punishment at 30 years in prison for each offense, but ordered the sentences to run concurrently. Appellant filed motions for new trial asserting that he received ineffective assistance of counsel. The trial court denied the motions without conducting a hearing.
On appeal, in response to appellant’s complaint that the trial court abused its discretion by failing to hold a hearing on appellant’s motions for new trial, we abated the appeals and remanded the causes to the trial court for a hearing on his motions for new trial. The trial court conducted the hearing and denied appellant’s motions. We ordered the appeals reinstated. Appellant and the State each filed a supplemental appellate brief. In his sole point of error for both of his convictions, appellant contends that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel during the “plea bargain process.” Because appellant has failed to demonstrate any nexus between the alleged ineffective assistance of counsel concerning plea-bargain negotiations and the judgment of guilt, appellant has waived the right to appeal his conviction. We affirm.
Background
On October 3, 2002, the State offered a plea bargain of 15 years in prison to run concurrently for appellant’s two offenses. According to appellant’s trial attorney, the offer was conveyed to appellant that day, while appellant was in court. The plea-bargain offer remained open until the next day, October 4, 2004, when appellant appeared in court and rejected the offer, which the State then withdrew. The October 4, 2002 reset form, which was signed by the Assistant District Attorney, appellant’s trial attorney and appellant, had a handwritten note stating, “[Defendant] rejected 15 yrs [sic] TDC [;] offer [is] withdrawn[.] State to file additional charges. 40 [sic] yrs [sic] TDC - motion to stack.”
Later that same day, appellant changed his mind and decided that he wished to accept the State’s plea-bargain offer. Appellant contacted his attorney, who visited him in jail. When appellant’s attorney told appellant that the 15-year plea-bargain offer was no longer available, appellant said that he would plead guilty to 20 years in prison. The State, however, refused to offer 20 years in prison, offering instead only a plea bargain of 40 years in prison, to run concurrently. Appellant pleaded guilty to both offenses on December 2, 2002, without an agreed recommendation from the State, and received concurrent sentences of 30 years in prison from the trial court.
At the hearing on the motion for new trial conducted by the trial court after we abated the appeal, the trial court considered evidence in the form of affidavits from appellant, appellant’s trial attorney, and the State’s attorney. Appellant’s affidavit acknowledged that he received and rejected the 15-year plea-bargain offer on October 4, 2002. Appellant’s affidavit is silent concerning any events that may or may not have transpired on October 3, 2002, but asserts that his trial counsel was ineffective by not conveying the appellant’s accepted plea-bargain offer of 20 years in prison, to run concurrently, before November 15, 2002, when it was withdrawn and replaced with a new plea-bargain offer of 30 years in prison. On December 2, 2002, when appellant’s case was scheduled to go to trial, appellant pleaded guilty because, according to appellant’s affidavit: “I was not dressed for trial and Mr. Duer told me that I could have my trial, I could take the 30 years or I could plead to a pre-sentence investigation. I decided to plead to the pre-sentence investigation.”
The State’s attorney and appellant’s trial attorney both stated that they did not recall that any 20-year prison offer by the State had ever been made, and both recalled that, after appellant rejected the 15-year plea-bargain offer on October 4, 2002, the only plea-bargain offer made was an offer of 40 years in prison, to run concurrently. Appellant’s trial attorney stated that he conveyed all plea-bargain offers to appellant. Following the hearing, the trial court denied appellant’s motion for new trial.
Appellant’s issue in this appeal states generally that he complains of ineffective assistance of counsel during the “plea bargain process.” Appellant specifically complains of ineffective assistance concerning his counsel’s alleged failure on October 3 to convey the 15-year plea-bargain offer made by the State; appellant argues that he lacked sufficient time to consider the offer that he admittedly rejected on October 4. At the hearing on his motion for new trial, however, appellant complained of ineffective assistance of counsel that occurred around November 15, 2002, when the State allegedly withdrew the 20-year plea-bargain offer that appellant had purportedly accepted.Waiver of Right to Appeal In its reply brief, the State contends that any alleged errors concerning the “plea bargain process” have been waived by appellant’s pleas of guilty because the complaints of ineffective assistance of counsel have no nexus with appellant’s pleas of guilty. Whether entered with or without an agreed recommendation of punishment by the State, a valid plea of guilty or nolo contendere waives, or forfeits, the right to appeal a claim of error only when the judgment of guilt was rendered independently of, and is not supported by, the alleged error. Young v. State, 8 S.W.3d 656, 666-67 (Tex. Crim. App. 2000) (holding that because judgment of Young’s guilt was not rendered independently of trial court’s ruling on motion to suppress evidence of offense, and judgment would not be supported without that evidence, error not waived by plea of guilty).
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