Rachel Raines Irvin v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 25, 2006
Docket10-05-00188-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Rachel Raines Irvin v. State (Rachel Raines Irvin 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
Rachel Raines Irvin v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

IN THE

TENTH COURT OF APPEALS

 

No. 10-05-00188-CR

Rachel Raines Irvin,

                                                                      Appellant

 v.

The State of Texas,

                                                                      Appellee


From the 220th District Court

Bosque County, Texas

Trial Court No. 04-11-13809-BCCR

MEMORANDUM  Opinion


          A jury convicted Rachel Raines Irvin of possession of methamphetamine in the amount of one gram or more but less than four grams and assessed her punishment at three years’ imprisonment.  Irvin contends in four points that: (1) the court erred by advising her that it would not accept a plea of nolo contendere in a case in which the State was recommending deferred adjudication; (2) she received ineffective assistance of counsel because counsel failed to advise her of the availability of an “Alford[1] plea”; (3) the court abused its discretion by denying her motion for new trial based on the State’s inadvertent erasure of an in-car video recording made at the site of her arrest; and (4) she received ineffective assistance of counsel because counsel (a) did not file a proper continuance motion, (b) failed to challenge the search and seizure of her van and its contents, and (c) failed to identify and question potential witnesses.  We will affirm.

Background

          According to the testimony, DPS Trooper Jay Sparkman received a citizen’s complaint about a van which was driving “all over the road.”  The citizen pointed the van out to Sparkman who began to follow it.  He noticed it driving on the shoulder, then moving back into its lane and over to the centerline, then back.  Sparkman stopped the van.

          Sparkman testified that the driver and sole occupant Irvin had difficulty locating her driver’s license or proof of insurance.  He directed her attention to a black purse on the front passenger’s seat and asked if it was hers.  When Irvin opened the purse, Sparkman noticed an open coin purse inside which contained a small baggie with a white powdery substance.  He also observed a glass smoking pipe beside the coin purse.  Sparkman took possession of the purse and found Irvin’s driver’s license inside, as well as several credit cards in her name and a credit card receipt from a Corpus Christi hotel.

          Irvin claimed that she did not know what the white powdery substance was.  Sparkman described her as being very nervous at the time.  He arrested her for possession of a controlled substance.  A sheriff’s deputy and he searched the van and found several other small baggies in a pocket in the driver’s side door and in other locations in the van which had trace amounts of a similar powdery substance and also found other glass smoking pipes with burnt residue.

          Sparkman testified that an in-car video recording of the stop was made but inadvertently erased in the DPS office by a secretary along with several other videotapes.

          The deputy who assisted Sparkman testified that he showed the coin purse containing the methamphetamine to Irvin as she stood behind the van and asked her if it was hers.  She said that it was.

          Irvin testified in her own defense.  She denied knowledge or ownership of the methamphetamine.  She explained that she had only recently returned home to Grand Prairie from Corpus Christi where she had attended her mother’s funeral.  The van had been in her husband’s possession for the three and one-half weeks she was in Corpus Christi.  He drove the van there with their children for the funeral then returned to Grand Prairie.  Irvin later returned to Grand Prairie in a rental car.

          One day after she returned home, Irvin decided to go back to Corpus Christi to settle her mother’s estate, so she drove the van.  As a result of an emotional conversation by telephone with her husband while in route, they decided that she would return to Grand Prairie and he would drive her to Corpus Christi.  At that point, she was in Waco and got confused about directions.  She mistakenly turned northwest on Highway 6.

As Irvin approached Meridian, her husband called again and told her he could not find their six-year-old daughter.  Irvin was still upset from the last phone call and tried to talk to him as she drove along the highway.  It was at that point that Sparkman stopped her van.  Irvin explained that she was nervous because of the emotional trauma related to her mother’s unexpected death and from the situation involving her missing daughter.

Irvin testified that the black purse within which Sparkman found the methamphetamine is not her purse, and she denied that her current driver’s license or credit cards were in that purse.  Irvin insisted that her purse was not in the front passenger’s seat but rather on the driver’s side of the van.  She explained that there were at least three other girls who had ridden in the van when her husband drove to Corpus Christi, but she could not say who they were because she did not ride with them.

On cross-examination, Irvin conceded that she had agreed with Sparkman that the items in the van were hers.  “I actually sarcastically answered ‘yes’ to everything the officer had said to me as I just wanted to get this over with.  I have never been arrested and it was annoying to me, the things he was saying, so I just said everything in there was mine. . . .”

She also testified on cross-examination about Sparkman asking her when she had last used methamphetamine.

Prosecutor:         Well, if he asked you when’s the last time you smoked meth would you have answered him?

Irvin:                 Actually the way he said this to me, I know what you’re saying, he told me when was the last time you smoked meth or whatever.  I’m not sure if he said meth or­—he said yesterday, day before, a week ago and I just answered at the appropriate—at whatever time I thought would just cease him from questioning me and go ahead, put me to jail.

Prosecutor:         Well, you told Trooper Sparkman that, in fact, you had smoked it about a week ago; isn’t that right?

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