Samuel Hayden Faulk v. the State of Texas

CourtTexas Court of Appeals, 9th District (Beaumont)
DecidedFebruary 4, 2026
Docket09-25-00114-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Samuel Hayden Faulk v. the State of Texas (Samuel Hayden Faulk v. the State of Texas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Court of Appeals, 9th District (Beaumont) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Samuel Hayden Faulk v. the State of Texas, (Tex. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

In The

Court of Appeals

Ninth District of Texas at Beaumont

__________________

NO. 09-25-00114-CR __________________

SAMUEL HAYDEN FAULK, Appellant

V.

THE STATE OF TEXAS, Appellee

__________________________________________________________________

On Appeal from the County Court at Law No. 2 Jefferson County, Texas Trial Cause No. M323227 __________________________________________________________________

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appellant, Samuel Hayden Faulk, was charged by information with driving

while intoxicated, second offense, a Class A misdemeanor. See Tex. Penal Code

Ann. §§ 49.04(a), 49.09(a). He entered a plea of “not guilty” to the charge. The jury

found Appellant guilty of driving while intoxicated. Appellant then pleaded “true”

to the enhancement paragraph alleging a prior misdemeanor DWI conviction. The

trial court assessed punishment at 365 days, probated for two years with 30 days’

1 jail time as a condition of the probation. Faulk filed a notice of appeal. In one issue,

Faulk argues that the evidence is insufficient to support the jury’s verdict. Faulk

argues the evidence is insufficient to establish he was driving while intoxicated

because the arresting officer was “a rookie” with no prior experience in DWI

investigations, the arresting officer’s supervisor, while also present at the scene, had

limited interaction with Faulk, the nurse at the hospital only focused on the blood

draw, and the toxicologist who testified about the result of the blood test only

testified about the blood alcohol level.

For the reasons explained below, we affirm the conviction as reformed.

Summary of the Evidence Presented at Trial

Paul Jeffrey Vickers testified that on the night of May 11, 2019, he was asleep

at his home in Nederland, Texas, when the sound of a crash outside caused him to

wake up. He went outside to see what happened and found a black vehicle had left

the roadway, and it had crashed through his fence and hit a tree in his yard on the

side of his house. Vickers’s written statement to the police in 2019 was admitted into

evidence without objection. In the statement, Vickers notes that there was only one

occupant in the vehicle; Vickers reached in the car and put the vehicle in park, and

Vickers turned the engine off, and called the police.

Officer Peyton Collins testified that he was an officer with the Nederland

Police Department, where he had worked for the past six years. Collins was

2 dispatched to the scene of an accident at approximately 11:45 p.m. on the evening

of May 11, 2019, and Collins and his supervising Sergeant, Timothy Smith,

responded to the call. They arrived within a couple of minutes of being called, and

upon arrival it appeared that the vehicle had left a straight roadway, driven through

a privacy fence, struck a table and a tree, and the front of the vehicle was resting up

against the tree. Faulk was the only person in the vehicle, and he was sitting in the

driver’s seat.

Officer Collins spoke to Faulk and noted that Faulk was conscious, but Collins

described Faulk as acting “strange, erratic.” Collins asked Faulk if he was injured or

needed an ambulance and initially Faulk answered, “No.” Collins asked Faulk to

“put on his shoes” and get out of the vehicle, and Faulk said he could not because

“he was hurting,” so Collins called for “fire and EMS” as a precaution. Because he

did not initially detect the odor of alcohol, Collins decided to treat the situation as a

medical emergency. Collins then asked Faulk if he had been drinking alcohol or

taking any drugs, and initially Faulk said “No.” When EMS arrived, they removed

Faulk from the vehicle and assisted him onto a stretcher. Collins asked for consent

to search the vehicle, and Faulk gave consent. Faulk told Collins he would find

alcoholic drinks from that night in the vehicle. Based on that statement, Collins again

asked Faulk whether he had been drinking and then Faulk responded that he had not

but was “going to drink” alcohol. Thereafter, when Collins asked again if Faulk had

3 been drinking before the accident, Faulk admitted that he had consumed a “couple

more” drinks within four hours before the accident.

Officer Collins observed that Faulk had “[s]lurred speech[,]” exhibited “up

and down[]” behavior and appeared disoriented and confused. These signs of

intoxication led him to believe that Faulk had lost the normal use of his physical and

mental faculties. Although this was Collins’s first DWI investigation, his supervisor

was on the scene with him. In searching Faulk’s vehicle, Collins found two

prescription-type pill bottles. One bottle contained five pills, and the other was

empty. The empty bottle was labeled “Klonopin[,]” and Collins used his phone to

identify the five pills in the bottle and determined that they were “Adderall.” Neither

bottle had a prescription labeled for Faulk. Because Collins was concerned that

Faulk might have hit his head in the crash, he did not conduct any field sobriety tests

at that time. Faulk was transported by EMS to the hospital for evaluation. Collins

identified the body camera footage taken at the scene, which was admitted into

evidence and shown to the jury. After Faulk arrived at the hospital, Collins

administered the horizontal gaze nystagmus (HGN) test because it could be

performed while Faulk was sitting. Collins testified that he had been trained and

certified to administer the HGN test. In performing the test, he observed jerking in

Faulk’s eye muscles. Collins concluded from the HGN test that Faulk was

intoxicated. Collins stated he did not perform other field sobriety tests because they

4 would have required Faulk to stand, which Collins believed was unsafe until Faulk

was medically cleared. Collins identified the camera footage taken at the hospital,

which was also admitted and played for the jury.

Once Faulk was medically cleared but still at the hospital, Collins read Faulk

the Miranda warnings and requested consent to obtain a blood specimen, and Faulk

refused. Collins then sought and obtained a blood-draw warrant. The warrant was

signed at 1:51 a.m., and a sample of Faulk’s blood was taken by the hospital nurse.

Collins identified additional camera footage for the jury showing Faulk, which was

admitted and played for the jury. The video footage contains several separate

statements made by Faulk wherein Faulk states that he had been drinking. Faulk

made those statements in response to questions from Collins and in response to

questions from the EMS driver. 1

Sergeant Timothy Smith, a certified peace officer and supervising patrol

officer with the Nederland Police Department, with almost ten years of experience,

testified that he was dispatched to the scene of the accident. Upon arrival, he

observed that the vehicle appeared to have been traveling eastbound when it left the

roadway, crashed through a pass-through fence, and then struck a tree in the

1 There are other statements from Faulk on the video footage from the hospital including where Faulk answers the question of the physician about what happened and Faulk responds, “I . . . [was] driving around crazy just drunk . . . not drunk . . . driving . . . I was drinking[,]” and when responding to Collins as to whether he would consent to a blood draw, Faulk stated, “I have drank.” 5 backyard.

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