Reed, Willis Deshaun
This text of Reed, Willis Deshaun (Reed, Willis Deshaun) 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.
Opinion
IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
Nos. PD-0590-06
& PD-0591-06
WILLIS DESHAUN REED, Appellant
v.
THE STATE OF TEXAS
On Discretionary Review of
Cases 05-03-00078-CR & 05-03-00079-CR
of the Fifth Court of Appeals, Dallas County
Womack, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Keller, P.J., and Price, Johnson, Keasler, Hervey, and Cochran, JJ., joined. Meyers, J., did not participate.Reed pleaded guilty to aggravated robbery and possession of a firearm by a felon. A jury found him guilty and assessed his punishments. The Fifth Court of Appeals reversed those judgments and remanded, holding that the trial court reversibly erred by failing to admonish the appellant regarding the possible immigration consequences of his pleas. (1)
The only issue that the State presented to this court for review is, "Whether the Court of Appeals erred by resolving the harm analysis in Reed's favor solely because certain exhibits are missing from the record without determining whether the missing exhibits were necessary for resolution of Reed's appeal." In light of (1) the standard of harm that we established in another case while Reed's appeal was pending and (2) the State's concession that the missing exhibits would not have shown harmlessness, we decide that the Court of Appeals' judgment was correct.
A grand jury presented two indictments against the appellant: one for aggravated robbery and the other for unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon. The appellant pleaded guilty and elected to have a jury assess punishment. (2)
In accordance with the requirements of Article 26.13 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, the trial court, prior to jury voir dire, admonished the appellant of the ranges of punishment for the two offenses. (3) However, the court failed to give the required admonition "that if the defendant is not a citizen of the United States of America, a plea of guilty or nolo contendere for the offense charged may result in deportation, the exclusion from admission to this country, or the denial of naturalization under federal law." (4)
At the trial on punishment, the State offered Exhibits 3, 4, 5, and 6, which were admitted into evidence. On the record, the prosecutor described State's Exhibits 3 and 5 as stipulations of the appellant's two prior felony convictions. The prosecutor further described State's Exhibits 4 and 6 as judgments of conviction and indictments for the same two felonies. Also during the punishment hearing, the appellant himself testified that he had been convicted of, and served an eight-year sentence for, the prior felonies. The jury found the appellant guilty of the two offenses and assessed punishment. Reed appealed.
The Court of Appeals abated the appeals to allow the trial court to determine the status of the exhibits, most of which, including State's Exhibits 3, 4, 5, and 6, were missing from the appellate record. (5) After reinstating the appeals, the Court concluded the exhibits were lost. (6) The appellant raised three issues. First, he claimed the trial court erred by failing to give the admonition regarding the immigration consequences of his plea. Second, he claimed the evidence was legally insufficient, in the firearms possession case, to prove that he had been finally convicted of a prior felony. He argued that, without the missing exhibits, his testimony taken alone was insufficient to prove the prior convictions. Finally, he claimed that a significant portion of the record necessary to the appeal of the firearms possession case was lost or destroyed through no fault of his own, which entitled him to a new trial. He argued the exhibits were necessary to the appeal because, without them, he could not discover any grounds for appeal, specifically an ineffective assistance claim based on trial counsel's failure to object to inadmissible exhibits.
The Court of Appeals held that the trial court reversibly erred in failing to give the admonition. (7) The Court, in its harm assessment, rejected the State's assertion that the appellant's testimony that he was from Fort Worth proved he was an undeportable citizen and so was not harmed by the trial court's failure to admonish him. (8) Although the record gave hints that the appellant was probably a citizen, the Court noted, there was nothing in the record to prove it. (9) The State's petition did not ask us to review that decision.
The Court of Appeals held that, without examining the missing exhibits, it could not determine whether the documents would have shown the appellant's citizenship. (10) The Court therefore found the insufficient record precluded a meaningful harm analysis and was compelled to conclude the appellant was harmed. (11) The Court expressly stated that addressing the lost-record issue was unnecessary in light of its resolution of the admonition issue. (12)
In this court, the State argues the Court of Appeals, before deciding the appellant's issues, should have determined whether the missing exhibits were necessary to the appeal under Rule of Appellate Procedure 34.6(f), which entitles an appellant to a new trial under certain circumstances when the reporter's record is lost and necessary to the appeal's resolution. (13) The Court then should have determined the exhibits were not necessary to the appeal because they were unlikely to show that Reed was a non-citizen.
The State assumes that the standard of harm is that the error would be reversible only on such a showing. This assumption is contrary to a decision that we made after granting the State's petition.
A few weeks after we granted review of Reed's cases, we granted review of VanNortrick v. State, in which the same Court of Appeals had decided appeals from the same county in which a trial court failed to give the statutorily-required admonition about the possible immigration consequences of his guilty plea to a defendant who had a prior conviction. We have delivered our decision in VanNortrick. (14) It supports the Court of Appeals' decision in Reed's cases.
These cases involve failures to comply with Article 26.13 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which requires a trial court to admonish a defendant before accepting a plea of guilty (or nolo contendere). In VanNortrick we applied a previous decision that a non-constitutional violation of Article 26.13 is subject to a harm analysis under Rule of Appellate Procedure 44.2(b) for errors other than constitutional error. (15) According to this standard, any error affecting a defendant's substantial rights is not harmless.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
Reed, Willis Deshaun, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reed-willis-deshaun-texcrimapp-2007.