Menard v. State

193 S.W.3d 55, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1144, 2006 WL 317832
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 9, 2006
Docket01-04-01207-CR
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 193 S.W.3d 55 (Menard 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
Menard v. State, 193 S.W.3d 55, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1144, 2006 WL 317832 (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

JANE BLAND, Justice.

A jury found appellant, John Charles Menard, guilty of aggravated robbery. 1 After finding two enhancement paragraphs true, the jury assessed punishment at thirty-six years’ confinement. Menard contends the trial court abused its discretion in failing to excuse a juror during deliberations, depriving him of his (1) Fifth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process; (2) Sixth Amendment right to a trial by a fair and impartial jury; and (3) Texas constitutional rights to a fair and impartial jury and to due course of law. We hold that the issue is waived because Menard did not object to the service of the juror at the time the conduct about which he complains arose and he became aware of it; nor did he request a mistrial or file a motion for new trial. We therefore affirm.

Facts

In November 2003, Bridget Martin worked as a retail clerk at a Mrs. Baird’s Bakery located on North Shepherd in Houston, Texas. In the late afternoon, a young man and young woman entered the store and approached Martin. The man pointed a handgun in Martin’s direction and ordered her to open the cash register. Martin complied and informed the man when the cash register was open. He then led Martin to the restroom where he told her to wait ten minutes before coming out. Upon later inspection, Martin determined that $65 was missing from the cash register. Martin identified Menard as the man *57 who robbed her, both during a photo spread and while in court.

Relevant Proceedings

After the jury found Menard guilty, but before the beginning of the presentation of evidence at the punishment phase of trial, the trial court inquired outside the presence of the jury whether Menard would be pleading true or not true to the punishment enhancement paragraphs and whether his stipulation of evidence was voluntarily made. Menard stated that he would plead true to the enhancements and would stipulate to the prior convictions. Me-nard’s counsel then informed the court that Menard believed that a juror had been sleeping during the guilt/innocence testimony and requested “[i]f we could, after the deliberations, bring him out, ask [the juror] about that.” (Emphasis added.)

The trial court then brought the jury into the courtroom for the punishment phase of trial. Menard pleaded true to the enhancement paragraphs, the State introduced the stipulated evidence regarding his prior convictions, and the State rested. Menard testified on his own behalf as the sole defense witness. The court read the punishment charge to the jury, the attorneys each made closing arguments, and the jury again retired to deliberate. During their punishment deliberations, the jury requested a copy of the trial court’s charge.

While the jury deliberated during the punishment phase of trial, Menard’s counsel stated as follows:

During the punishment stage, Mr. Menard indicated to me that the juror in the corner, the older black gentleman, was sleeping. I noticed that myself. I asked Deputy Wheeler to keep an eye on him, and I noticed Deputy Wheeler was [watching him] the entire time that we were presenting evidence and during the argument. I’d like to present Deputy Wheeler’s testimony in that regard for the record to — you know, to develop a possible point of appeal, that this individual did not listen to the evidence, at least during the punishment phase of the trial, and then, perhaps, after the verdict bring him out and question him with regard to what he heard during the guilt/innocence stage. Because the indication from Mr. Menard is that that same individual was sleeping during the guilt/innocence phase.

Menard’s counsel then called Deputy Wheeler, the Harris County Sheriffs Deputy assigned as the bailiff during the punishment phase of Menard’s trial. The deputy testified that when the State’s attorney began her cross-examination of Menard during the punishment phase, Menard’s trial counsel asked the deputy to watch the black gentleman in the far corner of the jury box. The deputy then watched the gentleman and noted as follows:

During Miss Kolski’s cross-examination for four periods of eight seconds, two periods of ten seconds, one period of twelve seconds, and one period of thirteen seconds, that gentleman had his eyes closed. During that period when his eyes were opened, he rubbed them constantly and he was blinking frequently when he was — appeared to be alert. Then during the reading of the charge by the Court, on two occasions his eyes were closed for six seconds, on four occasions, they were closed for twelve seconds. He was, once again, rubbing his eyes. And on three occasions, when his eyes were closed, he was visible [sic] nodding off. In other words, his chin was dropping. Then during Miss Kol-ski’s closing argument, there was one period of eight seconds when he had his chin in his hand and he was visibly *58 nodding off, and there were two instances of ten seconds when his eyes were closed. During your closing argument, there was one period of 12 seconds when his eyes were closed — were closed rather, two periods of eight seconds when his chin was in his hand and he was nodding off, two periods of eight seconds when his eyes were merely closed, two periods of 10 seconds when he was with his eyes closed and nodding off, and one period of thirteen seconds when his chin was in his hand and he was nodding off.

The attorneys then each made statements to the court regarding their observations about the juror. The State’s attorney represented that she had never seen “this juror sleeping” and that every time that she looked at the jury “the entire jury looked alert and awake.” The State’s attorney stated that she did not see any of the things that Deputy Wheeler had described. Menard’s trial attorney stated that he could not “state specifically on the record as to the times that Deputy Wheeler has logged on the. record, but I can state emphatically that I saw this .juror with his eyes closed on more than one occasion.” Later in the discussion, Me-nard’s trial attorney stated further that “I can say during my argument, and it might just be my effect on him, he was nodding off.”

Menard’s attorney requested that the trial court question the juror. In response, the trial court inquired if the attorneys wanted to agree to excuse the juror. Menard’s trial attorney indicated that ex-cusal of the juror would not necessarily be a satisfactory remedy if the juror had not “heard enough during the guilVinnocence stage that he participated with some degree of intellect during that process.” 2 The trial court then removed the juror from the punishment deliberations and questioned the juror as follows:

THE COURT: Mr. Washington—
JUROR: Yes, sir.
THE COURT: — there are some people who are of the opinion that they felt like you might have been dozing a little bit.
JUROR: I did doze a couple of times. I did, but I was really apparent of what was going on.
THE COURT: Even though you dozed a few times, you felt like you were still able to hear what the evidence was coming from the witness stand at the time?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 S.W.3d 55, 2006 Tex. App. LEXIS 1144, 2006 WL 317832, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/menard-v-state-texapp-2006.