Randy Manyvorn v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 18, 2019
Docket02-18-00451-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Randy Manyvorn v. State (Randy Manyvorn 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.

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Randy Manyvorn v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

In the Court of Appeals Second Appellate District of Texas at Fort Worth ___________________________

No. 02-18-00451-CR ___________________________

RANDY MANYVORN, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS

On Appeal from County Criminal Court No. 8 Tarrant County, Texas Trial Court No. 1470804

Before Pittman, Bassel, and Womack, JJ. Memorandum Opinion by Justice Womack MEMORANDUM OPINION

I. INTRODUCTION

This is a search-and-seizure case wherein Appellant Randy Manyvorn was

convicted of driving while intoxicated. In a single issue, he complains that the trial

court erred in denying his motion to suppress because the trial court’s finding of

reasonable suspicion was not supported by sufficient facts. We affirm the trial court’s

judgment.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Search and Seizure

During the evening of August 1, 2015, Pantego Police Officer Brian Martin

determined by radar that a silver Acura sedan was traveling the opposite direction at a

speed of eighty-seven miles per hour in a zone having a posted speed limit of forty-

five miles per hour. The dash camera of Martin’s patrol car shows that Martin

stopped in the left lane at a red traffic signal, and after a vehicle approached from the

opposite direction and continued past him, Martin activated his vehicle’s emergency

lights and siren, turned to follow, and then stopped behind a silver Acura vehicle at an

intersection displaying a red traffic signal. The recording shows that the sedan driver

had stopped the vehicle past the stop line with the sedan’s rear tires located in the

crosswalk and the front end of the vehicle in the intersection. When the traffic signal

turned green, the driver proceeded through the intersection and drove for a short time

2 before stopping. While calling in the plate number, Martin specified that the silver

Acura had been traveling in excess of eighty-seven miles per hour.

The dash camera video showed that after Martin initiated the stop, Officer

Clayton Wolf of the Dalworthington Gardens Police Department responded to

Martin’s call for backup. Martin asked the driver, Manyvorn, why he was traveling

eighty-seven miles per hour, and Manyvorn stated that he was going home. When

Martin told Manyvorn that he could not understand why he was traveling eighty-seven

miles per hour in a forty-five mile per hour zone, Manyvorn stated, “Okay. I

understand that.” Manyvorn informed Martin that he was going home from a Texas

Rangers game where he drank five 16-ounce beers. Martin administered standardized

field sobriety tests and determined that Manyvorn was intoxicated. When Martin

asked Manyvorn to identify his level of intoxication using a scale of zero-to-five,

Manyvorn responded, “Seven.” Martin informed Manyvorn that he was under arrest

for driving while intoxicated.

In his affidavit in support of the search warrant for Manyvorn’s blood, Martin

noted that he initiated the stop because Manyvorn was driving eighty-seven miles per

hour on a road where the posted speed limit is forty-five miles per hour.1 The

affidavit also contains a statement that at the time of the stop, Martin “believed that

these facts, among others, possibly indicated that the suspect was committing the

1 Martin’s affidavit in support of the search warrant was admitted as evidence “for purposes of the record only” during the suppression hearing.

3 following Transportation Code violations: Driving While Intoxicated[.]” Martin

added that Manyvorn had informed him that he “always drives 87 mph in a 45 mph

zone” and had “consumed “[five to six 16-ounce] [b]eers at the Ranger Baseball

Game[,]” and when Martin asked Manyvorn to identify “on a scale of ‘0-5’ of

intoxication, where do you [f]eel your [l]evel of intoxication is[,] Manyvorn said, ‘7’.”

Martin noted that, by his silence, Manyvorn had refused to provide a requested

sample of breath or blood. After securing a search warrant, a sample of Manyvorn’s

blood was obtained and tested. Manyvorn’s blood sample registered a blood alcohol

concentration of .105.

B. Motion to Suppress

Manyvorn was charged with the offense of driving while intoxicated. See Tex.

Penal Code Ann. §§ 49.01(2)(B), 49.04. Prior to trial, Manyvorn filed a motion to

suppress evidence on the basis that Martin lacked reasonable suspicion to stop his

vehicle for speeding, lacked probable cause to arrest him, and had illegally and

improperly obtained his blood which was the primary incriminatory evidence to be

used against him.

The trial court heard the suppression motion on the day of trial before

empaneling the jury. Wolf and Pantego Police Department Investigator Shelli

Godbold testified during the suppression hearing and at trial. Martin, who was no

longer working with the police department, was not available on the day of trial and

was traveling out of state.

4 Godbold, a twenty-year police veteran, authenticated Martin’s dash camera

recording, which was published to the trial court. Godbold had not been present

during the stop but had watched Martin’s dash camera recording and observed that a

vehicle in the far left lane was travelling faster than the limit established in the forty-

five mile per hour zone. Godbold did not know how fast the vehicle had been

traveling and was unable to testify regarding the radar equipment used or Martin’s

training on the use of the equipment. However, she agreed that the driver of the

sedan had committed a traffic violation by stopping “in the intersection across the

crosswalk.” Godbold understood that Martin had stopped the vehicle because of the

speeding violation rather than the “stop-line violation” and agreed that the dash

camera recording included no comment or discussion regarding Manyvorn’s failure to

stop at the stop line. Godbold was unable to discern the color of the speeding vehicle

as it passed Martin before he activated his lights and siren. From the recording,

Godbold could not identify whether any of the several cars at the stop signal was the

vehicle that Martin had observed speeding, and she had no personal knowledge of the

events of August 1, 2015. She agreed that she could not identify a reason for Martin

to initiate the stop other than for the alleged speed-limit violation but stated that the

stop-line violation provided an objectively reasonable basis for stopping the vehicle.

Based on the recorded conversations between Martin and Manyvorn, Godbold

believed the correct vehicle was stopped but agreed that she did not hear Manyvorn

admit on the recording that he had been speeding.

5 Wolf, a certified peace officer for more than eleven years, identified Manyvorn

as the person involved in the traffic stop. Wolf confirmed that the posted speed limit

in the area where Manyvorn was stopped is forty-five miles per hour and agreed that

the dash camera recording accurately depicted what had occurred. When Wolf

arrived on the scene of the stop, he did not know the basis of Martin’s reasonable

suspicion for the stop or whether Martin had established probable cause for an arrest.

It was during the stop that Wolf learned Manyvorn had been driving the sedan at a

speed that exceeded the posted limit. After reviewing the dash camera recording,

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