Pena v. State

191 S.W.3d 133, 2006 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 832, 2006 WL 1084004
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 26, 2006
DocketPD-0966-05
StatusPublished
Cited by179 cases

This text of 191 S.W.3d 133 (Pena v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pena v. State, 191 S.W.3d 133, 2006 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 832, 2006 WL 1084004 (Tex. 2006).

Opinions

KELLER, P.J.,

delivered the opinion of

the Court

in which PRICE, JOHNSON, HOLCOMB, and COCHRAN, JJ., joined.

The Court of Appeals reversed appellant’s conviction after determining that the Texas Constitution grants broader protection than the United States Constitution when evidence is lost or destroyed. This issue was neither raised on appeal nor briefed by the parties. We hold that the [134]*134Court of Appeals erred in failing to give the parties the opportunity to brief the issue.

I. BACKGROUND

Appellant was charged with possession of marijuana. Before trial, he requested an independent analysis of the evidence. It was discovered that the alleged marijuana had been destroyed and, except for a lab report, all records documenting the testing of the evidence were lost. Appellant objected, contending that admission of the lab report after the physical evidence had been destroyed would violate due process under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution and due course of law under the Texas Constitution.1 His objections were overruled, the lab report was admitted, and appellant was ultimately convicted.

On appeal, appellant contended that the trial court “erred in admitting testimony of test results concerning alleged marijuana when this material evidence and the original file concerning this evidence had been destroyed or lost prior to trial and without independent testing.” In support of his claim, appellant relied upon federal case-law addressing the due process implications of destroying potentially exculpatory evidence — specifically California v. Trombetta2 and Arizona v. Youngblood3 He did not claim that the Texas Constitution conferred broader protection than that ar-tieulated in the federal cases. The State’s brief likewise discussed the federal standard and argued that appellant had not made the requisite “bad faith” showing.

On its own, the Court of Appeals decided to address whether the Texas Constitution’s Due Course of Law provision grants defendants greater protection than the United States Constitution.4 The court explained that the Texas Constitution must be interpreted independently of the United States Constitution.5 In conducting this independent interpretation, the appellate court determined that the language of the Due Course of Law provision is different from and “arguably significantly broader than” the language found in the counterpart provision of the United States Constitution.6 The court also found that some other states had rejected Youngblood in interpreting their own constitutions, that “bad faith” is an unworkable standard, that serious questions concerning the fundamental fairness of the trial can occur even in the absence of bad faith, and that recent findings of negligence in the handling of evidence in crime labs across the country — and in Texas — “demand that courts exercise caution when analyzing lost or destroyed evidence.”7

The appellate court held that the Texas Constitution requires the State to preserve evidence that has apparent exculpatory value when comparable evidence is not reasonably available to the defendant.8 [135]*135When exculpatory evidence is lost or destroyed, the State’s case must be dismissed.9 When evidence that is potentially useful is lost or destroyed, a balancing test should govern whether the State’s case should be dismissed.10 The court would balance “the degree of negligence involved” against “the significance of the destroyed evidence considered in light of the probative value and reliability of secondary evidence that remains available,” and “the sufficiency of the other evidence used at trial to support the conviction.”11 After conducting this balancing test in the present case, the Court of Appeals concluded that appellant had been denied due course of law under the Texas Constitution.12

Chief Justice Gray dissented, complaining, among other things, that appellant did not argue in his brief that the Texas Constitution provided greater protection:

Although Pena claims on appeal that he was denied due process and due course of law by the State’s failure to provide material evidence before and during trial, he does not present any argument or authority as to the protection of the Texas Constitution or how that protection differs in any way from that offered by the United States Constitution. Only three Texas cases are cited by Pena in his brief and none discuss the due course of law provision. In fact, Pena specifically argues that his case falls within the parameters of Youngblood, a federal due process standard. Without argument or any briefing, the majority takes it upon itself to raise the possibility of a difference in the level of protection between the Texas and United States Constitutions and proceeds to determine the expansiveness of the due course of law provision in the Texas Constitution.
What are we doing? We’ve been told not to reverse convictions on theories not raised on appeal or in the court below. Yet we continue to do so. And, where a party fails to argue a distinction between the Texas and United States Constitutions, the Court of Criminal Appeals routinely declines to make the argument for the party in that situation. So should we.13

The State filed a petition for discretionary review. In its first ground, the State asks: “Did the Court of Appeals err by reversing the trial court’s decision on a legal theory not presented either to the trial court or to the Court of Appeals by the complaining party?” Under this ground, the State complained, in part, that appellant made “no argument in the Court of Appeals that the relevant provisions of the Texas Constitution should be construed differently, or that they provided a greater level of protection to the defendant, than those of the United States Constitution. Instead his entire argument [was] based upon federal authority.”14 The State further complained that the appellate court’s action deprived the State of the opportunity to address the issue:

As a result of the Court of Appeals’[s] deciding this case on an issue not presented either to the trial court or to the [136]*136court of appeals, the State did not have an opportunity to address whether the Texas Constitution provides a greater level of protection to the defendant than does the United States Constitution, and, if it does, whether the State complied with the additional requirements of the Texas Constitution.

II. ANALYSIS

We have previously held, and reaffirm today, that appellate courts are free to review “unassigned error” — a claim that was preserved in the trial below but was not raised on appeal.15 In conducting such a review, however, the question becomes whether certain circumstances obligate a court to assign such error by ordering briefing from the parties. We recognize that many, if not most, of the types of error that would prompt sua sponte

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
191 S.W.3d 133, 2006 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 832, 2006 WL 1084004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pena-v-state-texcrimapp-2006.