Johnston v. State of Tex.

750 F. Supp. 236, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15316, 1990 WL 177016
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1990
DocketCiv. A. H-90-3198
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 750 F. Supp. 236 (Johnston v. State of Tex.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnston v. State of Tex., 750 F. Supp. 236, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15316, 1990 WL 177016 (S.D. Tex. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION ON DENIAL OF A WRIT OF HABEAS CORPUS

HUGHES, District Judge.

1. Introduction.

Ann T. Johnston has applied for a writ of habeas corpus contesting the validity of her conviction for the involuntary manslaughter of a young woman in a car wreck. Johnston complains that she was incapacitated at the time of trial. Her complaint is simple: Because she was in a self-induced alcohol and drug stupor during the trial, she was able neither to know what was happening nor to assist her counsel in her own defense. The application will be denied.

2. The Conviction.

In 1986, Johnston ran a red light while drunk, ramming the side of a car crossing the intersection. The driver of the other car was injured and the passenger was killed. After confessing her intoxication to people who came to help, Johnston fled the scene on foot 40 minutes after the accident but before the police arrived. Johnston was convicted of involuntary manslaughter for the death of the passenger.

3. Johnston.

Johnston has an undergraduate degree and a law degree. At the time of the trial, she was 34 years old, and she had been practicing law at a major corporation for 9 years. She worked in New York for a while; then after a transfer to Houston for 4 years, she was reassigned to Connecticut in 1987. Despite her emotional problems, she has capably performed as a highly-paid corporate lawyer.

Johnston has been an alcoholic since about 1978. She was convicted of driving while intoxicated in 1982. Since 1983, she has been under the care of psychiatrists, one in Texas and one in New York. Her New York doctor had seen her before her move to Houston, and he resumed her treatment when she moved back to Connecticut.

During the two-year delay between her indictment and trial, Johnston moved to New York and married Jerry Johnston. The husband has a matching alcohol problem. Because of the marriage, some of the records and references are in the name Ann R. Troitino and some in Ann T. Johnston.

4. Counsel.

Johnston was represented at the trial by William W. Burge and J. Richard Treva-than. Burge has taught at South Texas College of Law as an adjunct professor for seventeen years, and Trevathan served as a Texas criminal district judge in the early 1980s. After the verdict, she retained David H. Berg, another distinguished Houston lawyer, for her appeal. In anticipation of her appeal being denied, Johnston *238 acquired the services of two new lawyers, both eminently capable, for this action.

5. Preparation.

In July of 1987, there was an initial trial setting. Although it was passed, by that time counsel and the accused had conferred and substantially prepared strategies and understood the case. After that, Johnston moved to Connecticut, but she kept writing and calling counsel with detailed questions and suggestions about the case. The case was tried two years after the incident.

No claim is made by Johnston that her counsel were not fully competent. Her principal complaint is that she was not competent. The particular deficiency was that she wanted to testify, but in her trance at trial, she was talked out of it by her lawyers.

As a minor complaint, Johnston says the lawyers could have called her companion from earlier in the night of the wreck if she had been competent to help them. The testimony of this witness, Robert Long, was known by the lawyers over a year before trial, but in their judgment, he was at least as dangerous as potentially helpful. There was no neglect nor error.

The technical question is whether she was competent at the time of trial, not whether she was competent in the two years she had to prepare before trial. Her competence at the trial was enhanced, however, by her opportunity to confer and to prepare, recall, reconstruct, and discuss her trial strategy for two years before she was actually called to trial.

6. Trial.

The jury was selected the week before Easter in 1988. During the five day recess over Easter, the Johnstons flew from Houston to a Mexican resort, where by their admission, they drank themselves silly. The trial was completed the week after Easter. The jury’s verdict was guilty.

Johnston claims to have been incompetent during the trial. Her claim is that her secret consumption of alcohol at night and sedatives during the day, both to excess, reduced her to an automaton. Johnston says that her lawyers should have noticed the change in her personality as disabling and should have sought a postponement of the trial. The drugs Johnston was consuming were either legal, the alcohol, or prescription medicine, the sedative.

7. Hospital.

In June, shortly after the trial, Johnston admitted herself to a hospital for drug and alcohol treatment. She stayed about six weeks and was discharged.

8. Appeal.

Johnston hired new counsel, David H. Berg, to pursue her appeal. The court of appeals and the court of criminal appeals rejected it on the merits.

9. Legal Issue.

Because this is a collateral attack on a final conviction, Johnston must show that her trial violated her rights to due process of law. The specific process that was due her under the constitution is her right to be informed of the proceedings, to confront witnesses, and to have assistance of counsel, under the sixth amendment as applied and amplified by the fourteenth amendment against the states.

The question is: At the time of the trial, did Johnston have sufficient rational faculty to (a) understand the proceedings and (b) assist counsel?

The requirement that she understand the proceedings is addressed to the principle that one should not be tried in absentia. Trials that are held without the accused’s presence seriously increase the likelihood of an erroneous or arbitrary result. The government must proceed through regular processes that are reasonably calculated to eliminate errors. There also is a vestige of the spiritual concern that crazy people were not actually present. Today it merely means that it is an element of fundamental fairness that the accused understand the nature, seriousness, and potential consequences of the ceremony in modest recognition of her humanity.

*239 Second, she needs to have the aspect of her rational faculty that would enable her to assist her lawyer. Because of the complexity of modern procedures, the constitution requires counsel to assist the accused, but before counsel can effectively assist, the client must be able to help the lawyer. She needs to be able to tell her side of the story to the lawyer and to answer questions about other evidence. This is the practical and critical test of competence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
750 F. Supp. 236, 1990 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15316, 1990 WL 177016, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-state-of-tex-txsd-1990.