Pharris, Dennis Joe

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 22, 2005
DocketAP-75,122
StatusPublished

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Pharris, Dennis Joe, (Tex. 2005).

Opinion





IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS

OF TEXAS



NO. AP-75,122
DENNIS JOE PHARRIS, Appellant


v.



THE STATE OF TEXAS



ON DIRECT APPEAL

FROM CAUSE NO. 1016730 FROM THE 351
ST DISTRICT COURT

HARRIS COUNTY

Cochran, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.

O P I N I O N



Appellant, Dennis Joe Pharris, has appealed the trial court's denial of bail from the third in a series of indictments and complaints filed against him by the consumer fraud division of the Harris County District Attorney's Office between June of 2004 and April of 2005. Mr. Pharris alleges that "[t]he prosecutor's transparent attempt to serially charge Pharris and indefinitely imprison him violates the spirit of Article I, Section 11a [of the Texas Constitution], which is "strictly construed in favor of bail." Appellant originally requested that this Court reverse the trial court's order denying bail and set reasonable bond. The State argues that this appeal is moot because the trial court was required by law to set bail after sixty days and it has done so. Although the "no-bond" order in Cause Number 1016730 is now moot, it is abundantly apparent from the record before us that the State intends to file additional charges against Mr. Pharris and may seek additional "no bond" orders. Therefore, we will address the merits of the issue presented under the "capable of repetition but evading review" exception to the mootness doctrine.

I.

On June 17, 2004, the State indicted Mr. Pharris for the felony offense of forgery of a United States government instrument (Cause No. 991356). Bond was originally set at $10,000 and later increased to $100,000. Mr. Pharris made bail and was released on June 27, 2004.

The State filed its second criminal complaint against Mr. Pharris on December 15, 2004, for engaging in organized criminal activity (Cause No. 0101543). In that complaint, the State alleged that on "various dates between November 1, 2004 and November 30, 2004" he participated in a combination consisting of himself, Miriam Pharris, Cindy Pharris, Chisholm McDonald, and/or Juan Ballivian, to commit theft of more than $200,000 from Hibernia Bank or its employees, Peter Baldassaro, Jr., and Curtis Ward. This complaint contained an enhancement paragraph alleging that Pharris had been convicted in 1993 of wire fraud in a Texas federal district court. After a hearing on December 21, 2004, the trial court denied bail in this second case because the State had alleged that this offense was committed while Pharris was on bond for the first case, the forgery charge.

At this December 21st hearing, Jack Kuo, an assistant vice-president of Southwestern National Bank, testified that Mr. Pharris became a customer of his bank in July 2004. (1) Pharris said that he came from a wealthy family, and that his parents owned a lot of real estate near Austin and had put their assets in trust. Pharris said that the trust owned NG Holdings with a net worth of $30 million. Mr. Pharris provided a supporting financial statement, and he told Mr. Kuo that he wanted the bank to refinance some loans he had with another bank; he wasn't getting good service from them and he needed faster credit. Mr. Kuo agreed to give Pharris a $750,000 line of credit which Pharris drew down within two to three weeks. Some of the family trust depository checks bounced. At one point, the bank was down about $120,000. The bank stopped loaning Pharris money on December 3, 2004, and Pharris then cleared all of the overdrafts. He has kept up with the payments on his line of credit, but Mr. Kuo sent out an acceleration letter saying that Pharris was in default because he had not provided all of the necessary financial reports. According to Mr. Kuo, the bank was "not out any money at this point in connection with doing business with Dennis Pharris."

Curtis Ward, one of the complainants in the second case, testified that he is the Vice-President of business banking for Hibernia National Bank in Katy. He met Mr. Pharris and a business associate for lunch in early November. Pharris told him that he was a trustee of the JLP Trust, a family trust supposedly worth $28-30 million, and of NG Holdings, a company with real estate, trucking, and convenience store interests. Pharris wanted to have a business relationship with the bank. He opened several depository accounts. Mr. Ward gave Pharris a "substantial loan" of $1.8 million on a new home and gave him an unsecured line of credit for $100,000. The bank normally waits until deposits are cleared before giving credit on them, but Mr. Ward really wanted Pharris's business and thought the bank "was going to make money off of him." Mr. Ward made a business decision to issue Pharris cashier's checks before the bank collected the funds from the depository checks. Pharris drew down $85,000 of the $100,00 line of credit. A few days later, Mr. Ward shut down the line of credit because all of Pharris's depository checks were dishonored and returned as NSF (not sufficient funds). At the time of the hearing, Mr. Ward's bank was in "an overdraft situation" of more than a million dollars.

Shiela Patterson, the branch manager at Hibernia, testified that Mr. Pharris became a bank customer around November 10, 2004. Mr. Ward called her and said that Pharris was a "trustee over a huge trust and we're going to be making a lot of money with him or doing a lot of transactions with him and please give him special consideration." According to Mr. Ward, Pharris was "a big fish." Ms. Patterson said that she would not have given Mr. Pharris a million dollars of the bank's money if she had known that his depository checks would be dishonored.

Randy Williams, a bankruptcy lawyer for Thompson & Knight, testified that many of Mr. Pharris's companies were presently in bankruptcy. He thinks that the JLP Trust has outstanding obligations to banks of $10-15 million, and more is owed to trade creditors. None of that debt, however, accrued between June 27, 2004 (the date Mr. Pharris was released on bail in the first case) and December 15, 2004.

Finally, Rachel Hygh, a student intern in the consumer fraud division of the D.A.'s Office, testified that she participated in the execution of a search warrant at Mr. Pharris's office on December 15, 2004. She testified that some unnegotiated checks on an NG Holdings account were seized. They were machine-printed checks, not printed on stock from a bank. They appeared to have a facsimile signature.

Neither the State nor the defense summed up the evidence or discussed its significance. Based solely upon this evidence, the trial judge denied bail on the second (Hibernia Bank) charge. Because Article I, § 11a of the Texas Constitution requires that a "no bond" order automatically expires after sixty days and the trial court must then set reasonable bail, the trial court set bail of $100,000 in this second case on February 14, 2005. Later that same afternoon, but before Mr.

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