Sanchez, Arthur Garcia

CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 2006
DocketPD-1754-05
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Sanchez, Arthur Garcia, (Tex. 2006).

Opinion



IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS


NO. PD-1754-05



ARTHUR GARCIA SANCHEZ, Appellant

v.


THE STATE OF TEXAS

ON STATE'S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
AND DISCRETIONARY REVIEW ON COURT'S OWN MOTION
FROM THE FOURTH
COURT OF APPEALS
BEXAR COUNTY

Price, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Keller, P.J., and Meyers, Womack, Johnson, Holcomb and Cochran, J.J. joined. Keasler, J., dissented. Hervey, J., did not participate.

O P I N I O N



This cause is before us for a third time. The appellant was convicted for the offense of official oppression, a Class A misdemeanor, (1) and sentenced to one year in jail, probated, and a $3,000 fine. On direct appeal, the Fourth Court of Appeals reversed the conviction and dismissed the prosecution, holding that the statute was unconstitutionally vague on its face and as applied, in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and also overbroad, in violation of the First Amendment. (2) We granted discretionary review, held that the statute was neither unconstitutionally vague on its face and as applied nor unconstitutionally overbroad. We reversed the judgment of the court of appeals, and remanded the cause for the court of appeals to address the appellant's further contentions. (3)

On remand, the court of appeals once again reversed the conviction, this time remanding the cause for a new trial. (4) We granted discretionary reviewed a second time, and vacated the judgment of the court of appeals, remanding the cause to that court for reconsideration of its harm analysis. (5) On second remand, the court of appeals reconsidered the harm issue, found the error to be harmful a second time, and reversed the conviction again. (6) In the alternative, the court of appeals reversed the conviction on the basis of two other, unassigned errors it perceived in the jury charge. (7) We granted the State's petition for discretionary review for a third time, on three grounds. First, we granted review of the question whether the court of appeals properly conducted the harm analysis on remand. Second and third, we granted review of the question whether the court of appeals correctly held that the errors it perceived in the jury charge were reversible. On our own motion we granted review of a fourth issue regarding whether the court of appeals was authorized to reverse the conviction on the basis of unassigned error. (8) Should we find that the court of appeals properly reversed the appellant's conviction on any one of the three bases upon which it held that a reversal was warranted, then we need not reach the other two substantive issues.

We hold that the court of appeals was authorized to reach the unassigned jury-charge issues in this cause, and that it properly reversed the conviction based upon the first unassigned error it identified. Accordingly, we will overrule the State's second ground for review, and dismiss the State's first and third grounds as moot.

RELEVANT PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The appellant was indicted for official oppression in that, acting as a public servant and under color of his office or employment, he intentionally subjected Diane Gonzalez to sexual harassment. (9) "Sexual harassment" is defined to mean "unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature, submission to which is made a term or condition of a person's exercise or enjoyment of any right, privilege, power, or immunity, either explicitly or implicitly." (10) On his initial appeal, the appellant argued that this definition rendered the statute unconstitutionally vague, both on its face and as applied to the facts of his case. The court of appeals agreed, and reversed the conviction and ordered a judgment of acquittal. (11)

We reversed this judgment. (12) In the course of rejecting the appellant's contention that the statute is unconstitutional, we resolved an ambiguity in the scope of the requirement that the sexual conduct be "unwelcome." (13) We recognized that on the face of the statute it was unclear whether the elemental requirement of "unwelcome" was meant to modify only "sexual advances," or was also meant to modify "requests for sexual favors, or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature[.]" We construed the statute to mean the latter. We also held that the culpable mental state of "knowing" applied to the element that the sexual conduct be unwelcome; (14) in other words, we construed the statute to require a showing that the appellant was aware that the alleged sexual conduct to which he was subjecting his victim was unwelcome. (15)

On remand, the court of appeals again reversed the conviction, this time remanding for a new trial. (16) The court of appeals held, inter alia, that the indictment was substantively defective for failing to allege the elements that this Court had construed to be contained in the statute. (17) Among the missing elements are two that are relevant here. First, the indictment failed to expressly allege that all of the alleged statutory variants of sexual conduct (not just "sexual advances") were unwelcome. Second, it failed to allege that the appellant knew that any of the instances of alleged sexual conduct were unwelcome. However, in a second petition for discretionary review, we once again reversed the court of appeals' reversal. (18) We sustained the State's contention that the appellant had failed to preserve his argument that the indictment was substantively defective, and held that the court of appeals therefore erred to reach the merits of that claim. (19) We vacated the court of appeals' judgment and again remanded the cause for the court of appeals, this time for that court to reconsider its harm analysis with respect to a second ground for reversal that it had identified in Sanchez III. (20)

On second remand, the court of appeals reversed the conviction for a third time. (21) The court of appeals identified three independent bases which it believed entitled the appellant to a new trial. Two of those bases were not raised in the appellant's brief, but the court of appeals reached them as unassigned error. (22)

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