Raymond David Newsome v. State
This text of Raymond David Newsome v. State (Raymond David Newsome 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.
Opinion
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COURT OF APPEALS
SECOND DISTRICT OF TEXAS
FORT WORTH
NO. 2-05-390-CR
RAYMOND DAVID NEWSOME APPELLANT
V.
THE STATE OF TEXAS STATE
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FROM CRIMINAL DISTRICT COURT NO. 1 OF TARRANT COUNTY
MEMORANDUM OPINION[1]
Appellant Raymond David Newsome was charged with one count of aggravated robbery. At his jury trial, he pled not guilty. The jury found him guilty as charged. During the punishment phase of the trial, Appellant testified on his own behalf. The jury assessed his punishment at twenty-three years= confinement in the Institutional Division of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (IDTDCJ) and a $10,000 fine. On Appellant=s motion, the trial court granted him a new trial based on jury misconduct.
The State re-indicted, alleging in three counts three separate manners and means of committing the same aggravated robbery (there was only one complainant). At his second trial, Appellant pled not guilty to each count. Over Appellant=s objections, the trial court admitted his testimony from the prior trial=s punishment phase during the new trial=s guilt phase. The jury found him guilty on all three counts and assessed his punishment at twenty years= confinement in the IDTDCJ on each count. The visiting judge, sitting for the trial court, sentenced him accordingly and ordered the sentences to be served concurrently. Appellant filed a motion for a new trial and a notice of appeal. In a single point, Appellant contends that the trial court erred in admitting his testimony from the previous trial because it violated his federal and state constitutional rights against self-incrimination. Additionally, before this case was submitted, this court communicated its concern to the parties that Appellant received three aggravated robbery convictions and sentences despite the indictment=s naming just one complainant and describing just one incident. Because we hold that the trial court did not err by admitting the testimony Appellant had given after waiving his rights to remain silent, and because the parties agree that only one conviction and sentence for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon may stand, we affirm the trial court=s judgment as modified.
In Chavez v. State, the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals held that a criminal defendant who takes the stand waives his right to remain silent under both state and federal constitutions.[2] The testimony may be used against him at a subsequent trial of the same case.[3] Appellant argues that a defendant has separate rights against self-incrimination at the guilt phase and the punishment phase of a trial and that Chavez may be distinguished because the defendant in Chavez testified in a unitary bench trial.
Appellant is correct that a defendant in a criminal trial may testify at the guilt phase but invoke his right to remain silent at the punishment phase of the trial.[4] But his reliance on Carroll is misplaced.[5] In that case, the issue was not the use of prior testimony, but rather whether a defendant may be compelled to testify in the punishment phase to request probation after waiving her right to remain silent at the guilt portion of a unitary bench trial.[6] Clearly, she cannot be compelled to testify.[7] This rule, however, would not prevent the State from offering her previous testimony to the trial court as a circumstance for the trial judge=s consideration in determining the appropriate punishment.[8] In the case now before this court, however, we are not presented with a case in which Appellant waived his right to remain silent at one phase and invoked it at the other. Instead, this case involves Appellant=s waiver of a right to remain silent during the punishment phase of one trial and the admission of his voluntary testimony from that trial in the guilt phase of a new trial. In Chavez, after pleading guilty in his first trial, Chavez testified to mitigate his punishment.[9]
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Raymond David Newsome v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/raymond-david-newsome-v-state-texapp-2007.