Levincer Swanson v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 30, 2006
Docket01-05-01125-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Levincer Swanson v. State (Levincer Swanson 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
Levincer Swanson v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

Opinion issued November 30, 2006










In The

Court of Appeals

For The

First District of Texas


NO. 01-05-01125-CR

____________

LEVINCER SWANSON, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee


On Appeal from the 209th District Court

Harris County, Texas

Trial Court Cause No. 1006136


MEMORANDUM OPINION

          A jury found appellant, Levincer Swanson, guilty of the offense of possession of cocaine weighing less than one gram. After finding true the allegations in two enhancement paragraphs that appellant had previously been convicted of two felony offenses, the trial court assessed punishment at confinement for three years. In three points of error, appellant contends that the evidence is legally and factually insufficient to support his conviction and that the trial court erred in assessing his punishment “without a fact-finding that the second prior conviction was for an offense that occurred after the first prior conviction became final.”

          We affirm.

Factual and Procedural Background

          Houston Police Officer R. B. Rodriguez testified that at approximately 11:45 p.m. on November 3, 2004, he and Officer J. Crawford, in two separate, marked patrol cars, pulled into a convenience-store parking lot where, from “20 to 25 feet” away, they “observed three males in a vehicle and one was drinking a beer inside the vehicle.” Rodriguez and Crawford observed the three males in the car for “maybe two minutes or so” before approaching the car. Inside the car were appellant and two other men. The two officers exited their patrol cars, and Crawford walked up to the driver’s side of the car and Rodriguez walked up to the passenger side. As he got closer to the passenger side of the car, Rodriguez “noticed that all three occupants were watching Officer Crawford, and then the back-seat passenger began stuffing something down, and [Rodriguez] dealt with him.” Rodriguez did not see appellant doing anything because Rodriguez “was dealing with the back seat passenger.” Rodriguez identified appellant as the front-seat passenger in the car.

          Houston Police Officer J. Crawford testified that he went to the parking lot with Officer Rodriguez for the purpose of investigating narcotics activity. Although there were several cars in the parking lot, Crawford pulled up behind the car in which appellant sat because it “was the only one that had people sitting in it.” At that time, Crawford’s marked patrol car was “[w]ithin five feet” of the car in which appellant sat. Crawford was suspicious of the situation because “there is a high level of narcotics activity that takes place at that location” and he “saw the three people sitting there and [he] observed the passenger drinking beer as [he] was sitting and watching them.” At that time, Crawford was “[n]o more than . . . 20 feet” from the front seat of the vehicle. He could tell that the passenger was drinking a beer because Crawford’s “headlights were flashed inside [appellant’s] vehicle.” He noted that a city ordinance prohibits the consumption of alcohol on the store’s premises because “they don’t have a license for it” and there are “signs in front of the business that say you’re not allowed to consume alcoholic beverages on the premises.”

          Crawford further testified that as he “approach[ed] the driver’s side of the vehicle and Officer Rodriguez was approaching the passenger side,” he saw that appellant, the front-seat passenger, “had something in his hand, cupped in his hands, his left hand and was looking at [Crawford] and put it underneath his left leg.” Appellant had a closed fist, and Crawford “didn’t see anything sticking out” of appellant’s hand. Appellant then placed his left hand “underneath his left leg, then he came out with it open.” At that point, Crawford “then went around the front of the vehicle and approached the passenger side” and “asked [appellant] to step out of the vehicle” because Crawford “didn’t know what [appellant] had placed under his leg.” After appellant exited the car, appellant did not have anything in either hand, but Crawford noticed that “[t]here was a small straw . . . sitting underneath [appellant’s] leg where he was sitting.” Based on his training and experience, Crawford opined that “[a] straw that small” is only “used for one purpose and that is to use illegal drugs.” The length of the straw was approximately “[a]n inch, maybe a little bit more,” and was melted on one end for presumably the purpose “to keep from hurting their nose when they stick it up there.” After he found the straw, Crawford saw “a white substance inside the straw” and “tested it with a cocaine tester, the residue” and “found it to test positive for cocaine.” Crawford noted that the driver’s hands “didn’t


go anywhere near the passenger seat” and that he did not see the back-seat passenger make any movements toward the front-passenger seat.

          Houston Police Department Crime Lab chemist J. Miller testified that he performed a scientific analysis on the straw in question. After examining the straw, he “found that there was a white residue inside of the straw” and “performed a microchemical test and GCMS test on that residue.” When Miller “examined [the straw], [he] found that there wasn’t enough of [the] white powdery residue to simpl[y] dump it out, if you will, and test what came out of the straw, so [he] had to scrape a small portion of it out, and it was actually the scrapings of that residue that [he] tested.” He “found that the residue contained cocaine.” Miller testified that it was not possible to weigh the scrapings using conventional means, such as a balance. Therefore, he “reported it out as a trace amount, less than one gram,” and described this as standard procedure in residue cases.

          During the punishment phase of the trial, after the jury returned a guilty verdict, appellant pleaded “not true” to the allegations in the two enhancement paragraphs. After appellant entered his pleas, he objected to proceeding further because “the charging instrument by which [he was] given notice has left out significant language, namely that the second previous felony conviction is for an offense that occurred subsequent to the first previous conviction having become final. In other words, the second enhancement paragraph does not have language saying the conviction in Cause No. 9418227 occurred after the conviction in 579650 became final, which is required under Section 12.42 in order to enhance the punishment range to that of a second degree felony.” The trial court then allowed the proceedings to continue, and in the presence of the jury, entered on appellant’s behalf a plea of “not true” to both enhancement paragraphs.

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Levincer Swanson v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levincer-swanson-v-state-texapp-2006.