Leslie Goin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 15, 2011
Docket02-11-00031-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Leslie Goin v. State (Leslie Goin 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.

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Leslie Goin v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS FORT WORTH

NO. 02-11-00031-CR

LESLIE GOIN APPELLANT

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE

----------

FROM COUNTY CRIMINAL COURT NO. 5 OF DENTON COUNTY

MEMORANDUM OPINION1

I. INTRODUCTION

Appellant Leslie Goin appeals his conviction and sentence for felony DWI.

In three points, Goin challenges the first of two enhancement paragraphs and

argues that the trial court abused its discretion by admitting certain evidence.

We will affirm.

II. BACKGROUND

1 See Tex. R. App. P. 47.4. In the early morning hours of December 19, 2009, Goin called Kirsten

Williams, his girlfriend, and asked her to pick him up on the square in Denton.

Williams agreed, and she headed in that direction driving her son‘s white F-150

truck. Along the way, Williams saw Goin walking on the street; she stopped to

pick him up and noticed that he had been drinking.2 Williams initially drove Goin

to his nephew‘s house but then headed back to her house with Goin. On the way

to her house, Williams and Goin stopped at a RaceTrac convenience store to

purchase a few items. Shortly after leaving the store, Williams pulled the truck

over because Goin wanted to get out. Goin exited the truck, and after failing to

convince him to get back inside, Williams drove to her house and went to bed.

Williams later awoke when she heard her son‘s truck start and someone

drive it away. She ran to the door, saw the truck traveling down the street

towards a dead end and then back by her house, and noticed that her mailbox

had been knocked down. Williams called 911 and identified Goin as the person

driving the truck. She then spoke on the phone with Goin, who said that he was

at the RaceTrac and that he would get a ride to her house.

Deputy Jason Daniels arrived at Williams‘s house and spoke with her

before going to the RaceTrac, where her son‘s truck was located. Meanwhile,

Goin arrived at Williams‘s house—someone had given him a ride—and Goin and

Williams were arguing when Deputy Daniels returned. Deputy Daniels noticed

2 Goin also told Williams that he had been drinking.

2 an odor of alcohol on Goin‘s breath and that he was slurring his speech, and

Goin told Deputy Daniels that he had driven the truck to the RaceTrac and that

he had been drinking. Deputy Daniels administered three field sobriety tests to

Goin (the horizontal gaze nystagmus test, the walk-and-turn test, and the one-

legged stand test), formed the opinion that Goin was intoxicated, and arrested

him. After Goin refused to provide a breath or blood specimen for testing,

Deputy Daniels transported Goin to Denton Regional Medical Center, where

Tanaka Powell, a phlebotomist, performed a mandatory blood draw. A chemist

with the Texas Department of Public Safety tested the blood sample, which

contained .20 grams of alcohol per 100 milliliters of blood, more than twice the

legal limit.

At trial, Jason Hawke testified that he was the overnight manager at the

RaceTrac on December 19, 2009. Hawke observed Goin and a ―female

companion‖ engage in a verbal altercation in the parking lot, and they were

driving a white pickup truck. After the two left, Goin returned to the RaceTrac

with the white truck,3 and Goin argued with a person on the other end of the store

phone that he used. Hawke noticed an ―obvious smell of alcohol and

unsteadiness on his feet‖ about Goin.

3 Hawke recounted that only Goin was in the truck and that he saw Goin get out of the driver‘s side door of the truck.

3 The jury convicted Goin of felony DWI, and the trial court found true two

enhancement paragraphs alleging prior felony convictions and sentenced Goin to

fifty-four years‘ confinement. Goin appeals.

III. FIRST ENHANCEMENT ALLEGATION

In his first point, Goin argues that the State ―was clearly barred from

seeking an enhancement pursuant to the first enhancement paragraph‖ because

the conviction alleged in the first enhancement paragraph of the indictment was

barred by collateral estoppel. In his second point, Goin argues that a fatal

variance existed between the allegation contained in the first enhancement

paragraph, which alleged that the conviction occurred in Dallas County, and the

evidence at trial, which showed that the same conviction actually occurred in

Grayson County. The State responds that Goin forfeited his collateral estoppel

argument and that the variance was not material.

A. The Record

The first enhancement paragraph alleged in the indictment states the

following:

And it is further presented in and to said Court that before the commission of the offense alleged above, on the 21st day of September, 1988, in cause number 36518, in Dallas County, Texas, the defendant was convicted of the felony offense of Burglary of a Habitation in the 59th Judicial District Court[.] [Emphasis added.]

At punishment, the State questioned Brent Robbins, an investigator with

the Denton County District Attorney‘s Office, about State‘s Exhibit 18, a pen

packet containing the 1988 judgment on Goin‘s plea of guilty to burglary of a

4 habitation in cause number 36518. The judgment identifies that the conviction is

from the ―59th Judicial District Court of Grayson County,‖ not Dallas County.

[Emphasis added.]

Robbins also testified about State‘s Exhibit 19, a pen packet containing the

1998 judgment on Goin‘s plea of guilty to DWI in cause F-97-0380-D in the

362nd Judicial District Court of Denton County, the second prior felony conviction

that the State alleged in the indictment for enhancement purposes. For ―Findings

On Enhancement,‖ the judgment states, ―Not True,‖ with ―Not‖ written by hand.

Further, the portion of the judgment relating to the enhancement paragraph is

struck through, and the judge‘s initials are beside it. The prior conviction that the

State had attempted to use in that case for enhancement purposes was Goin‘s

1988 conviction for burglary of a habitation.

The following exchange took place during Goin‘s cross-examination of

Robbins,

Q. (By [defense counsel]) Officer, you understand that the packet that you have isn‘t even for an offense out of Dallas County, Texas, right?

A. When you say the packet that I have, what are you referring to?
Q. State‘s Exhibit 18.

A. Yes, as I stated this number 36518 is in the 59th Judicial District Court of Grayson County, Texas.

Q. So that doesn‘t match your indictment, does it?

5 A. As far as the notice to you or as far as the county being listed?

Q. Well, I don‘t -- I didn‘t see this until today, so --

[State]: Objection, sidebar.

THE COURT: I‘ll sustain the objection.

Q. Officer -- Officer, my point is that the indictment alleges that the burglary of a habitation is a conviction out of the 59th Judicial District Court in Dallas County, Texas. You understand that?

A. I understand that, yes.
Q. You understand that‘s not what this packet is for, State‘s Exhibit 18?
A. I understand that the county is not correct, yes, ma‘am.

Q. You understand not only is the county not correct, but the actual court isn‘t even correct?

A. Insomuch as there isn‘t a 59th J.D.C.

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