Saenz, Kimberly Clark

451 S.W.3d 388, 2014 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1915, 2014 WL 6967638
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 10, 2014
DocketPD-0253-14
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 451 S.W.3d 388 (Saenz, Kimberly Clark) 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
Saenz, Kimberly Clark, 451 S.W.3d 388, 2014 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1915, 2014 WL 6967638 (Tex. 2014).

Opinion

Womack, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which Keller, P.J., and Price, Johnson, Hervey, Cochran, and Alcala, JJ., joined.

We granted review to consider whether a jury charge on capital murder under Penal Code Section 19.03(a)(7) must require the jurors to agree as to the identities and the number of the victims. We shall reverse the judgment of the .court below and remand the case to the Court of Appeals.

The appellant was indicted for five counts of aggravated assault and one count of capital murder. The first five counts of the indictment alleged aggravated assaults of five patients of a dialysis clinic who suffered adverse episodes but did not die. The sixth count charged her with capital murder by murdering more than one person during the same criminal transaction or during different criminal transactions but pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct. The jury acquitted the appellant on two of the aggravated assault charges. It found her guilty of three aggravated assaults and of capital murder. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s judgment. 1

The appellant was charged with capital murder under Penal Code Section 19.03(a)(7), which reads:

A person commits an offense if the person commits murder as defined under Section 19.02(b)(1) and ... the person murders more than one person:
(A) during the same criminal transaction; or
(B) during different criminal transactions but the murders are committed pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct.

The capital-murder language of the jury charge instructed jurors to determine if the appellant “did intentionally or knowingly cause the death of more than one of the following persons: Clara Strange, Thelma Metcalf, Garlin Kelley, Cora Bryant, or Opal Few during the same criminal transactions or during different criminal transactions, but the murders were committed pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct, by introducing sodium hypochlorite, commonly known as bleach, or other chlorinating agent into the body’s bloodstream.” 2

During closing arguments, the State told the jury, “The State has the burden of proof to prove that the Defendant caused the death of at least two of the five victims.

*390 You don’t have to agree as to which two.” 3

The appellant argued for the first time on appeal that the language in the jury-charge and the State’s closing argument allowed the jury to convict her of capital murder without agreeing on which two or more of the five named individuals were murdered by the appellant, violating the requirement that jury verdicts be unanimous.

Unanimity in Capital Murder

Texas law requires a unanimous jury verdict in all criminal cases. 4 More specifically, “the jury must be unanimous in finding every constituent element of the charged offense in all criminal cases.” 5

The capital-murder statute requires a predicate murder as defined under Section 19.02(b)(1) and any one of nine additional aggravating circumstances. 6 “When an indictment alleges differing methods of committing capital murder in the conjunctive, the jury may properly be charged in the disjunctive.” 7 “The unanimity requirement is not violated by instructing the jury on alternate theories of committing the same offense, in contrast to instructing the jury on two separate offenses involving separate incidents.” 8 To guarantee unanimity when the State is not required to elect between aggravating circumstances, “the jury must be instructed that it must unanimously agree on one incident of criminal conduct (or unit of prosecution), based on the evidence, that meets all of the essential elements of the single charged offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” 9

More recently, this Court stated that these holdings remain good law, and that “the gravamen of capital murder is intentionally (or knowingly) causing a death, plus any one of various different types of aggravating elements_” 10 We also clarified “that our holding ... applies equally to all alternate theories of capital murder contained within [Penal Code] § 19.03, whether they are found in the same or different subsections, so long as the same victim is alleged for the predicate murder.” 11

The aggravating circumstance for a capital-murder prosecution under Section 19.03(a)(7), which is at issue in this case, is the “murder of more than one person during the same criminal transaction or ... pursuant to the same scheme or course of conduct.” As we stated in John Anthony Saenz v. State, “The commission of at least one. murder, then, which is in addition to *391 the predicate murder, is the aggravating circumstance required by Section 19.08(a)(7)(A).” 12 Although that case dealt specifically with subsection (A), we have held that the same interpretation applies to both subsections (A) and (B) of Section 19.08(a)(7). 13 Phrased another way, under both subsections the allowable unit of prosecution is “the killing of more than one individual.” 14

However, our previous case law regarding Section 19.03(a)(7) does not directly address the issue presented today, which is in the context of jury unanimity.

In the other Saenz case, John Saenz was convicted of three counts of capital murder when he shot and killed three people during a single transaction. Each capital murder count alleged a different victim as the predicate murder and alleged the killings of the other two victims as aggravating circumstances. 15 We held that only one of his capital-murder convictions could be sustained because two murders must be shown to establish capital murder under Section 19.03(a)(7)(A), and the same three murders could not be used to establish separate capital-murder convictions. 16 However, there was no question of whether the jury agreed he had committed all three murders — their original verdict convicted him of all three in separate charges, affirmatively answering the question of whether he had committed each of the separate murders. Each charge alleged a specific victim of the predicate murder, aggravated by the other two.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
451 S.W.3d 388, 2014 Tex. Crim. App. LEXIS 1915, 2014 WL 6967638, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saenz-kimberly-clark-texcrimapp-2014.