Meydon Lymbery v. the State of Texas

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 29, 2024
Docket12-23-00191-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Meydon Lymbery v. the State of Texas (Meydon Lymbery v. the State of Texas) 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
Meydon Lymbery v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

NO. 12-23-00191-CR

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS DISTRICT

TYLER, TEXAS

MEYDON LYMBERY, § APPEAL FROM THE 217TH APPELLANT

V. § JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

THE STATE OF TEXAS, APPELLEE § ANGELINA COUNTY, TEXAS

OPINION Meydon Lymbery 1 appeals his conviction for violating the Texas Open Meetings Act (TOMA) by knowingly participating in a meeting that constituted a quorum of the Angelina County Commissioners Court for the purpose of discussion or deliberation of county business. In two issues, Appellant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence. We affirm.

BACKGROUND Appellant was charged by indictment with violating TOMA. 2 Specifically, the indictment alleged that Appellant knowingly participated in a meeting in violation of TOMA that constituted a quorum of the Angelina County Commissioners Court for the purpose of discussion or deliberation of county business. Appellant pleaded “not guilty,” and the matter proceeded to a bench trial.

1 We note that in the trial court’s judgment, Appellant’s surname is spelled “Lymberry.” The trial court’s order imposing conditions of community supervision states that Appellant’s name is “Meydon P. Lymbery III.” 2 See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 551.144 (West 2017). When the offense occurred on August 9, 2021, Appellant was the County Judge in Angelina County, Texas, and as such, he was a member of the Commissioners Court. The Angelina County Attorney, Cary Kirby, testified that the Commissioners Court “is comprised of five members, so a quorum is considered to be three members.” 3 Commissioner Steve Smith, who Appellant appointed to replace former Commissioner Bobby Cheshire, was sworn in on the morning of August 9, 2021. A regularly scheduled Commissioners Court meeting was set for August 10, as was an executive session, to vote on whether to hire Chuck Walker as county road engineer. Kirby explained that on August 9, he received a phone call from Commissioner Terry Pitts notifying him “that there may have been a meeting [that day] which was possibly illegal under the Open Meetings Act.” Kirby viewed a surveillance video from the camera outside Appellant’s office, which confirmed that three members of the Commissioners Court (Appellant, Commissioner Rodney Paulette, and Smith) were together in Appellant’s office on August 9, 2021. Because Kirby was not present at the meeting in Appellant’s office, his only knowledge of what occurred came from viewing the surveillance video, which lacks audio. According to Kirby, an article about the meeting appeared in the Lufkin Daily News, and the article reported that Appellant admitted the meeting was “inappropriate.” Kirby eventually prepared a sworn complaint that alleged a violation of TOMA and contacted the Angelina County District Attorney’s Office to request an investigation by the Texas Rangers. Kirby testified that the surveillance video, which is approximately fifty-five minutes long, reflects that Appellant, Paulette, and Smith were together in Appellant’s office having a conversation for approximately thirty-five minutes. 4 According to Kirby, Appellant began serving as county judge on January 1, 2019, and Appellant received training regarding open meetings, as required by the Office of the Attorney General. Sallie Alexander testified that she has served as administrator for the Angelina County Judge for thirty-six years. On the afternoon of August 9, Alexander was making copies for the next day’s session of Commissioners Court. Appellant asked Alexander to prepare a folder for

3 Kirby testified that on the date of the offense, the five members of the Commissioners Court were Appellant and Commissioners Kermit Kennedy, Terry Pitts, Rodney Paulette, and Steve Smith. 4 During the conversation, Appellant twice left the room and returned. Paulette also briefly left the room and returned.

2 Smith, and when Alexander went to Appellant’s office to deliver the folder, Smith and Paulette were present in Appellant’s office with Appellant. Alexander testified, “[a]fter I saw what was in there, I got nervous. I could not believe what I was seeing, didn’t believe what I was hearing[,] and I just hurried up to get out of there. I mean, it was wrong.” According to Alexander, Smith wanted to know if Walker would be at court because Smith wanted to ask him questions. Alexander explained that Appellant was in his office when Smith asked the question, and Appellant told Smith that he would have an opportunity to question Walker because Walker would be in court. Alexander left Appellant’s office and conversed with Commissioner Kermit Kennedy and a co-worker, Debbie Lewis, about what she observed. Alexander told Lewis, “there’s a quorum in there, . . . it’s three men in there. . . . it’s wrong.” Lewis, the administrative assistant for the county commissioners, testified that after Smith was sworn in on August 9, he returned that afternoon to get his folder “for the next day’s commissioners court.” According to Lewis, the emergency management coordinator watches the security cameras, and he called her upon observing the presence of a quorum in Appellant’s office. Lewis explained that she and the emergency management coordinator were “appalled.” Lewis testified that she, Alexander, and Kennedy “were all aware and we were all shocked.” When asked whether she knew that Appellant, Paulette, and Smith were discussing county business, she said she did not, and she explained, “I heard Mr. Paulette introduce himself to Mr. Smith. That’s all I heard.” Kennedy testified that he saw Appellant, Paulette, and a third person, who he did not know, in Appellant’s office. Kennedy learned from Lewis that Smith was the third person in the office. Kennedy explained that he, Lewis, and Alexander were surprised and concerned, but he did not consider intervening in the meeting because his presence in Appellant’s office “would have made it that much worse.” Smith testified that both he and Appellant were ultimately charged with violating TOMA. Smith admitted guilt to the investigating officer and entered into a plea agreement, pursuant to which he received probation under a pretrial diversion agreement in exchange for testifying against Appellant. According to Smith, after he was sworn in on the morning of August 9, Appellant told him to return after lunch to pick up a packet. When Smith returned and entered Appellant’s office, Appellant and Paulette were present, and Smith and Paulette introduced themselves to each other and made small talk for five or ten minutes. When asked what they discussed after exchanging pleasantries, Smith stated, “we talked about . . . what was in the packet and . . . what was on the

3 agenda and . . . that Chuck Walker . . . was going to come in for the executive session so that we could get him in place. And, anyhow, . . . it was conversations related to that.” Smith recalled that they discussed Paulette making a motion to hire Walker and Smith seconding Paulette’s motion. Smith testified that he believes they also discussed Walker’s employment history, as well as “some of the budget stuff . . . getting ready to go into that the next day.” According to Smith, after the meeting ended, he went home and reviewed the material in his packet. Smith explained that he had not yet received training regarding TOMA when the meeting occurred. Smith admitted that in a newspaper article, he denied that any county business was discussed, and he explained, “I felt that . . . I had an obligation to them[,] and I wanted to fit in, so I put trust in them.” In addition, Smith testified that when Appellant “put the article in the paper,” he asked both Smith and Paulette to review it, and Smith admitted that he knew the article contained falsehoods.

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Meydon Lymbery v. the State of Texas, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meydon-lymbery-v-the-state-of-texas-texapp-2024.