Potier v. State

68 S.W.3d 657, 2002 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33, 2002 WL 220013
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 13, 2002
Docket1542-99
StatusPublished
Cited by548 cases

This text of 68 S.W.3d 657 (Potier 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
Potier v. State, 68 S.W.3d 657, 2002 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33, 2002 WL 220013 (Tex. 2002).

Opinion

WOMACK, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court, in which

KELLER, P.J., and MEYERS, KEASLER, HERVEY, and COCHRAN, JJ., joined.

The issues in this case involve the harmless-error rules for the erroneous exclusion of evidence that a defendant offered.

I. The Case

The jury convicted the appellant of the murder of Willie ‘Wolf’ Ratliff, and the trial judge sentenced him to confinement for 10 years. The appellant’s defense was that he acted in self-defense. The trial court excluded testimony of rumors that the appellant and a neighbor had heard from people in his neighborhood that the victim intended to kill him on the day of the shooting. The appellant complains that the trial court’s ruling prevented him from effectively arguing that he had acted under a reasonable belief that deadly force was immediately necessary to protect himself against the victim’s attempted use of unlawful deadly force. 1

The Court of Appeals held that the trial court had erroneously excluded the evidence of the rumors in the community that were relayed to the appellant on the day of the shooting, 2 but that the error in this case was harmless because the appellant’s self-defense claim had been presented to the jury by other evidence. 3

To decide whether this error was harmless, the Court of Appeals applied the harmless-error standard in Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(b), which is for non-constitutional errors, rather than Rule 44.2(a), which is the standard for constitutional errors. 4 The courts of appeals have *659 divided on the issue of which standard to use for similar errors. 5

We granted review to clarify the use of the standards.

II. The Harmless-error Standard

The Court of Appeals held that the trial court’s hearsay ruling misapplied Rule of Evidence 801(d). 6 It explained that the rumors were not offered to show that they were true, but to show the reasonableness of the appellant’s belief that the victim was going to kill him, and therefore, the rumors were not hearsay. 7 On its face, of course, this is not a constitutional error to which Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(a) would apply. The appellant argues that the harmless error test of Rule 44.2(a) is appropriate because of “the connection between the defendant’s constitutional right to call witnesses to ‘make his defense,’ and the harmless error standard to be applied when the trial court wrongly excludes such evidence.” 8

A. Due-process Considerations

The appellant is correct to say that the exclusion of a defendant’s evidence can amount to a violation of the right to compel the attendance of witnesses in the defendant’s favor. But not every erroneous exclusion of a defendant’s evidence amounts to a constitutional violation.

1. Supreme Court Decisions

The Supreme Court of the United States has explicitly stated that there is no constitutional right to present favorable evidence. 9

A defendant’s right to present relevant evidence is not unlimited, but rather is subject to reasonable restrictions. A defendant’s interest in presenting such evidence may thus “bow to accommodate other legitimate interests in the criminal trial process.” As a result, state and federal rulemakers have broad latitude under the Constitution to establish rules excluding evidence from criminal trials. Such rules do not abridge an accused’s right to present a defense so long as they are not “arbitrary” or “disproportionate to the purposes they are designed to serve.” Moreover, we have found the exclusion of evidence to be unconstitutionally arbitrary or dispro *660 portionate only where it has infringed upon a weighty interest of the accused. 10

The Supreme Court’s cases stand for the limited proposition that certain egregious evidentiary errors may violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. 11 The cases in which the Court has found such infringement have been those in which a court followed a state rule that excluded evidence.

The first of these cases may be Ferguson v. Georgia, 12 in which the trial court followed a state rule that made a defendant incompetent to testify, and that allowed him to make an unsworn statement to the jury without the assistance of counsel. Georgia was the only state — indeed, the only English-speaking jurisdiction— that still followed such a rule. Although the Supreme Court’s reversal was based on the denial of the assistance of counsel, which was the only Sixth Amendment right that had then been recognized as a component of due process, the Court has later recognized that the Georgia rule also was unconstitutional because it denied the defendant the right to testify. 13

The first case to explicitly hold that due process was denied by a state rule that excluded evidence was Washington v. Texas., 14 The state rule forbade persons charged as principals, accomplices, or accessories to be witnesses for one another, although they could be witnesses for the State. The trial court’s enforcement of the rule denied the defendant evidence that was relevant, material, and vital. 15 The Court held that the Constitution was violated by the “arbitrary rule.” 16

We hold that the petitioner in this case was denied his right to have compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor because the State arbitrarily denied him the right to put on the stand a witness who was physically and mentally capable of testifying to events that he had personally observed, and whose testimony would have been relevant and material to the defense. The Framers of the Constitution did not intend to commit the futile act of giving to a defendant the right to secure the attendance of witnesses whose testimony he had no right to use. The judgment of conviction must be reversed. 17

*661 In the Court’s next case, Chambers v. Mississippi, 18 the defense was that another person had committed the offense.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.W.3d 657, 2002 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 33, 2002 WL 220013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/potier-v-state-texcrimapp-2002.